Daily Tribune, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 5 July 1918 — Page 10

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DAVUGHT SAVINe IS UNPOPULAR^ ZOO

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Keepers Work Until the Animals H£e tire, So There You Have the Reason* i£.

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NEW YORK, July 5.—There is one elMM of workers that the daylight MTlns innovation has not benefited. I refer to the attendants at the Bronx Zoo. For years the hours of keepers at the Zoo have been from 7:30 a. m. until sundown. With the new scheme Of daylight saving sundown is around i 'f: half past eight at the present timet -~whioh makes a thirteen-hour day. As the .keepers work seven days a week, 'j|. *v with only half a day off every fort-

S night, it will be seen that they are much in the society of the animals.

Their pay is $70 a month, with a few iMweptiona. The head keepers receive a month. •& For the great bulk of New Yorker* the extra honr of sualight is a great boon. And for the theatrical managers .•w'ijtYv-U is a Godsend at the present time. s* All the electric signs in front of the theaters are shut off by orders from

Washington, but as it' is daylight until nearly 9 o'clock their attendance V ia not affected.

Dry Nurse 'to the DeerV

Up at the New York Zoological Gardens in Bronx park, to give it its full

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name, there Is a little, sturdy man, with & kindly red face, named, John Quinn. John is a great man in small way, and a Very kind, knowing man in a great way. If you are much of a frequenter of the gardens you have probably seen him- if you are not, you will know when you go there next by his bustling walk and his broad smile.

John is the dry nurse to the deer. That is to say when any deer are born in the enclosures of the deer ranges, John watches over them, and cares for them, and talks, of them with as much pride and solicitude as though they were his own. He watches how and what they eat, and he also watches how they thrive. If they are sickly or out of sorts he gives them a change of diet, and visits them with the regularity and punctuality of a family doctor. And if he should lose one, which is seldom indeed, he entertains real grief over it.

Quinn has been taking care deer for sixteen years so that you may imagine he knows a thing or two about them. His especial pride at the present time, are two little twin elk, which were born a few weeks ago, and he exhibits them with trfl the pride of a godfather. #.

He thinlcs nothing about himself, and he wants nothing said about himself it is sufficient for him if people will but admire and talk about his deers.

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DEGENERATES MIT IN KAISER CROWD

German Authors Picture Frightful Conditions Which Have Come Upon Hapless People.

XiONDONj July 5^—Henry Desalie, the noted historian in writing of "Germany and Her Master" says

To one who knows anything of the state of "morality" among the higher official and military classes in Germany it come® as no surprise to hear that Von Kuhlmann during the negotiations at Bucharest is now tajced by the Pan-German Deutsche Zeitungwi^h acting in a manner "derogatory to the dignity of the German Empire."

It seems that Von Kuhlmann (as well as Count Czernin) was often seen in the Roumanian capital in the company of a notorious member of the demimonde, and in his defense a German Liberal paper remarks that Von Kuhlmann "has done nothing worse than is generally witnessed at the German peasants' annual meetings in Berlin."

Having on one occasion been a spectator of one of these peasants' meetings. I cannot say that the "festivities'* were characterized by much else more pleasant' than drunkenness and immodesty. gut. that is neither here,nor there

tRRE HAUTE.

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ftecenl Evidence.

A* regards the peccability of tM present-day ruling class in Germany, it is only necessary to recall the comparatively recent EJulenburg affair.

Here was a Prince (a most intimate friend of Wilhelm II), who was denounced in Zukunft by Maximilian Harden, the editor, as a creature "totally unfit for human society." And why? Prince Philip Eulenburg and his "gang," who constituted a body of irregular advisers and confidants of the emperor, were addicted to "unnamable" vices. But one of the vices has a name—le vice allemand.

Le vice allemand had lefig been rampant in the army, but when It began to manifest Itself among the kaiser's personal friends there was at least one man in Germany who dared to publish the fact to the world—Harden, the editor of Zukunft.

It was maintained by Harden that Prince Philip Eulenburg and his degenerate friends had an immense influence over Wilhelm II that they formed a court ''Camarilla.'' The denial of this by prince Buelow In the reifchsiag had not the reassuring effect aimed at. ¥he whole affair left a nasty taste—even among the Germans. "Of all peoples, my Germans are the most moral." These are words which Wilhelm II has uttered again and again. What is the real "moral'' condition of the German people, who, according to their kaiser, are "the salt of the earth?" Iet us take only a few illuminative facts chronicled by Germans themselves. "Germany," says Herr August Bebel, "ecjoys th» unenviable I'fcputatton of qr#

IND

Every suit in this store for man' be included in this effort to make quick clearance of Everything bought for spring and summer. AII 3-piece Suits9 Tropicals, Palm Beach and

Mohairs at- clearance reductions now. They are High-Art, Stein-Block* Sampeck and other good makes, all the country's best, and looked by Myers Bros.9 unlimited guarantee. the* greatest of war-time economy to biiy now—for thls

producing the "unfdi-tu nates" for half the world. "German women," he continues, "fill the harems of the Turks and houses of bad fame from the interior of Siberia away to Bombay, Singapore and New York.

Joest, the German traveler, lays it down in his book, "Aus Japan nach Deutschland, etc." 'In no country in the world is suoh a trade with 'White slaves' carried on as in Germany, and from no country on earth are such multitude of these human wares 'exported. "This enormous business," Bays Bebel again, "is thoroughly organized. It is carried on by agents and commercial travelers as a legitimate ja fession. *f

And not only by agents and commercial travelers, but by parents themselves! Listen to this!

Says an English clergyman, Rev. E. F. Williams, in "Christian Life in Germany:" "To their shame be it said there are parents who rear their daughters for this kind of life to add to the Income of the family. In every c'ty, perhaps without an exception, this great moral swamp exists."

Life In Berlin.

Commenting on the male creatures who make considerable incomes out of the immorality of women, the German author, Boehme, says: "These persons have their own clubs, their gymnastic and athletic associations and their own bars." "procuration in Germany is looked upon as a legitimate profession."

But this is not confined to girls and women of the poorer classes in Germany. From a dozen corroborative statements, I will quote S. Leonhard: "German girls and women who live in comparative luxury, who have a calling and a good social position, are often courtesans and Dr. Moll, professor at the University of Berlin, who states that the number of these women In Germany "must be, put down 'as no fewer than 1,1500,0001"

Besides such a statement, the following, which appeared in the Berliner Tageblatt of May 2, 1912, seems a trifle, but its like is not infrequently met with in the German press: "A well-known Berlin house of ill-fame is capitalized at 1,000,000 marks and has recently declare4 .a dividend of 2jQ per cent." V

After all, the affair of Von ftuhlmann —what a storm in|a teacup:

BIBLE AND A DEMURE LOOK HELPED WOMAN FLEE JAIL

Seattle Police Balk After Copy of Scriptures Is Used as "Jimmy^ By Clever Prisoner..

SEATTLE, WASH, July 5.—Three has been all kinds of "alibiing" going on ever since publicity was given to the fact that not a single copy of the bible is to be found in or about the Seattle central police station. And therms one man whose alibi may get by.

Sergeant George E. McKnight is chief jailer of the departmental scheme. "Not so long as they can use a bible as a 'jimmy* will We hav.e a copy about the jail," said Mr. McKnight. A "jimmy," it is explained by the lexicographer, is underworld for a sharp-

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edged tool used by the burglar to affect an entrance to or an exit from a building, a desk,, or any looked door, window or lid.

The only woman prisoner i^ho ever escaped from the Seattle city jail did it through a bit of camouflage in which the biUle was her chief Instrument. Furthermore, she was one of the most sought for criminals among her sex that this city ever detained. And they only detained her three days, for she "jimmied" herself out of jail—with a bible.

Mrs. Esther Southerland, alias Rose Hammond, alias Hart, alias Miller, alias Pietro Gaffene, alias Rose Boozer, a nurse, twenty-four years of age, was arrested by city detectives. She was I lodged in the city jail, pending her removal to Walla Walla state peniten-! tiary, she having been convicted of a felony.

It has heen a custom to allow members of several religious societies to call on the women prisoners in the city jail and there hold services. Such call was made three days after Rose Boozer, as she was then best known, was locked up. and while awaiting a guard from Walla Walla.

The religious service was at its height when one of the "sisters," apparently having been called away abruptly, appeared At the elevator, rang the bell and stepped into the car at the fifth floor.

She wore the dark blue cape and bonnet of the sisterhood and no Quakeress ever looked more demure.

In her hands she carried her bible. It was opened. She was reading. She scarcely raised her eyes from Its pages, such was her absorption in the Book of Truth.

The elevator man felt' the pority of the presence, and he dropped hia lift to the garage floor at her indication.

It was almost an hour later before that look of gratitude and that Book of Beautitude Were explained. It was discovered when the afternoon services had ended and one of the visiting missionaries couldn't find her cape and the bonnet she had doffed—they, nor the bible. And the jailer could not find one prisoner.

WHY WOMEN DREAD OLD AGE

Don't worry about old agfe Don't worry about being in other people e way when you are getting on in years. Keep your body in good condition ana you can be as hale and hearty in your old days as you were when a kid. ana every one will be glad to see you.

The kidneys and bladder are the causes of senile afflictions. Keep them clean and in proper working condition. Drive the poisonous wastes from the system and avoid uric acid accumulators. Take GOl-D MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules periodically ana you will find that the system will always be in perfect working order. Tour spirits will be enlivened, your muscles made strong and your face have once more the look of youth and health.

There is only one guaranteed brand of Haarlem Oil Capsules, GOLD MEDAL. There are many fakes on the market. Be sure you get the Original GOLD MEDAL Imported Haarir,! Oil Capsules. Thev are the only reliable. l'"or sale by all first-|lass drug-srists.--Adv.

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