South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 120, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 29 April 1916 — Page 4

.-. 1 I l .triJj;(.K), APKIL 2T, 1010.

THE SOUTH bfclND NEWS-TIMES

south bend nlws-Times:::;.':

Morn in c I: veiling Sun Jay.

JOHN" H'-LN'ItY zuvKII, Hditor. GMllllKL l .-UMMi:JiH. Publisher.

.Title f r,fi wntion, too, vas controlled." The

s thf crux. It is ;in adm is.-ion that the

r''piiMi' an convention was by no means s tt fre' from 1 machine dominance. i j Speaking of thf men and the ticket, the I ti1 i- n -t ;"! t s News, for instance, makes th edifrial comment that:

o lt AsoriTr.n rnrs mokmnt. franchise t MIKK IN NORTHERN INI1NA AM ON LT PAPER KM-: 'Mm, tiik i.ti:k atio.n al. nkwm sr.uiK in I OI TII If.NI -No thr newspaper In the !.it' prote te 1 . y t'o leaned wir niht and I i y nv -rvlet; n! only i ;rfht-'li;r2in pap. r in t te oat -M P.d! innp'üi. Pnb-ahed j trrr dar f f the Ter ad twi.-o n all ein y ex ei.t Sund tr and i

lop.Iay. KutereU at the S-th l'.'.ul iBV.SWe a c-onj

THE M:YS-TIMH5 PRINTING COMPANY

Ofl'.cc: 210 Colfax Av.

fwiti rhon 1151.

Reil Phon UM

nüviit-em .inj

ask

"There are some good nun .-n the- ticket. of course, and it may een be said that, takiri; th" ticket by itself, and without reference t" the influences back of it, it averages fairp' v. ell. Hut it was chosen by a controlled convention." So was Abraham Lincoln, was Geo-ce Washincton. so wis William McKinley, so were Theodor- Roosevelt, William Howard Taft. and. so was Woodrow Wilson. So were all the resi. of them tinier the same

Call at the office or te'erd.one

for department wanted Kd'.t 'Tl.il. Advert In. ug. (.'lr-alatIon, r ,jcr-r j(;on Acrtmntlng. Kor w int ad " if J'-ur n.;u I la the tde- 1 rd. -ne directory Mil v. Ill 1- rn uN d after Insertion Ipor ! As samples of the control the News tells us that "no paper. T'.nl tphwn e. er . t had 't department with tone, for instance, had the slightest chance against Lira you .ire .V-alir;c. The New n-Tiaa-a 1 -m thirteen trunk liu-a all cf wi.h a respond to Home Ph'.-ne 1 101 hd1 1M 2100. j Adair.

Just what the convention had to do with n.uninc

M IWKII'TION uvn.v M'-nnr. jj and ICT'iiing Ed.tbn. Nir.cie I 'cpv San-la r. : M.-rninz rr Kvi-nluc Kdltion.

Adair uhib it w.is "controlled' is not o,u:t clear, since

'iwr. izKivuug tit.iij. i.j man. p'T jvar ui n . -. . Ver" hrcp democratic otn in t he j-r lu kdjace. or 12'- ij the wk. (Marc li primaries. j vote indicate then that the people arr"AHVEKTIMXG K.TI: Ak tr.e ndvrr.uin? flparlmfnt I Foricu A'ivert!in KopreM ntntl re : 'iSll. I.OUHNKN pretty strong for Adair, and the convention, r.o diT.-r-

wixIMAN. -'J. V.tlh A v.. .New Vor', f'iv anl AM v. Ul.lg.. ;

rblrago. Tbe Newa Tiiri.n enueivors to k p i,a nd vrrtlli!tf

en e liow mucVi controlled, made no effort to overthrow

eot'jrar.a fr from fraudul-nt iu:r-pr-n nt-ition. Any perou ; , j,., , vjsri slightly in contrast with soni" . 1'. if rumlerl tht'iugh fvfltronjjfc of unv jiJ vrt:i-niffit In tfi! paper win crnfrr .1 favor on tl.e luaniReintnt bj reporting 1 ihre. ts that "prett lel their convention, and whirh tiie tt.v facta completely. j.le.uh of the late Shively ahme preveiitc). DAILY CIRCULATION ALWAYS IN EXCHSSl Tll ,,n,y sort ,,f lhket ,hat wo,,,,, Mlit th0 I('"lMlca'1 OH 15,000. SUNDAY 18,000. BOOKS OPIiN state orniation. and its publicity .Tans would I. TO D'FRTJSEFv i'ne easy to beat. The one the democrats hae named does not suit them at all. and the only tiiinp the re

publicans can do is to elp about some se en-horned democratic machine. That elp is so ohl and has i-'imui so meaninRlcss after nearly a half century that the people hae learned the interpretation. That K "we

APRIL 1010.

THE MELTING POT

FILLED BY THE EDITORIAL STAFF

WITH OTHER EDITORS THAN OURS

MILITANT HARVARD. Harvard univcr.-itN . sometimes aused of l.ejng h"pe-b-ly aca-lemic in its aims and un-American in its practice s. seem liable to no su h charges ii'st now.

f a spirit of preparedness is any tcM. Harvard must be

rtn r ini'iil . I i e t i r-1 I . . .....I .1. .......... .i.-.t.-. II.- ....-:....,

Tlie students as a body Iiae j-one into oluntary mil

itary training, with a view to fitting themselves for serife rs nffieeis of volunteer troops in case of need

have no ppecific objections or fault to find so we just holler machine.' Contrasted with the keynote speech at the republican convention, (iov. Kalston's keynote was a marvel of force in that it was fact boiled down to a concise review of many excellent thincs. in the present national and state administration. Oov. Halsten told of the cancellation of the state debt which will enable a re.

More th.in that, sortie ''; H t rv a rd men luve shown j duct ion of .? ;i Oo.oc o a vear in state taxes. He recited

a score or more of the progressive steps taken in state pov eminent the past three ears. Tlie News, commenting; upon this, remarks as if in pain, and gta: piiu for

their interest in Hie primiplcs at stak" in Kurope by enlisting for servile of one kind or another in the armies of the allies.

Th faculty, too. has not been idle. Most of the p i o- st raws :

fessors have sp n p! iiiilv and ton ibly in favor ot nation-il frepa red ne,. I'rest Iv(dl has done likewise. F'x-I'rcs't n'.iot has tarried his militancy to a point of proposing a fi-'hting alliance between the t'niterl States. Ireat Hritain and lhance. proviiling an oriranization and armed basis for the ultimate enforcement of world peace.

HOUSINd AND HOSPITALS. "Hvery home its nan he.iiih resojf bids fair to hecome the slogan of the movement in South Hend for better hotisin- conditions in th mote congested dis

tricts. whil supplemental to it ..n agitation among medical men Li broken out in the past few days, proposing a new city hospital of approximately "i"0 beds, to cost Jl.iom per bed. or no.oon or upward. This hospital is being agitated on the theory that something of tlie sort is pe essary in order to care for the sickness of the masses. 'Cure" nppears to be the slogan of the hospital agitators while "prevention" is that of the better housing movement. The hospital movement appears to h.ve begun srathring momentum from the moment thai the agitation for better housing conditions started, . Iiether for purposes of detraction, realizing the force of suh preventative influences, appears to be an "pen question. One of the proposed sites for the new hospital is iti the woods Just south of the county infirmary on the county farm, and just beyond Uiverview cemetery, out Portage road with the auxiliary emergency hospital to be connected with a new pohc .-1 ition to bp built down town. Trustees of Kpwcrth and St. Joseph hospitals are quoted ns regarding the agitation ;(.- ,) direct a'taek on those institutions, which the medics strenuously deny. South Hend needs an emergency hospital to begin with, rooms at Hpvorth and St. .Io-eph hospitals not always beto' available. M !:. p-unt to the fact that wliile both the Kpwoit'a an-1 St. Joseph hospitals are as harita idc as ihir i n n m -1 . i e will jormit. a piace should be provided to which the lcs--- well-to-do can be taken, and rec attention .it the public epetue. fomo of jlic p: : : ; c i s juopos,. a hospital to be constructed and maintained by taxitioti. and others th.it It could be cor.sj ru. t d ,md maintained ' popular

"These are all good laws and good progressive steps in state affairs. You have named good men on your state ticket to carry on these reforms ami advanced steps, but they were named by a controlled convention." C'.v. Halstern recited that proper care had been taken of benevolent, and educational institutions and once more, says the News, in commendation: "We think it well that the people should be reminded that there was at the time no objection to the increase in the levy for educational and benevolent institutions. Indeed this was felt necessary. Of course the democratic patty is entitled to credit for several excellent laws enacted in the last four years." The truth of the matter is that all the people recog

nize both a crood ticket and a good platform. With Mr. Adair. Sens, Kern and TacPart, and Messrs. Critten-

berger. Stotsenburg, Hittler, Cook and other officers and judges whose names have been made conspicuous by excellent records, on a ticket headed by Woodrow Wilson and Thomas It. Marshall, the democrats have given Indiana republicans a whole lot to think about. Their worries have hardly begun.

Contribution, while still others

uld div id" the re-

spor.sIMVty, h ,v

th.

Tstru- on done by popular I for the mi i n t ena nee.

however, am!

contribution and a tax b

Th it "prev c ::t ion i : ,.-t ; , r

decidedlv !es expensive, t hough too. b- profitable to the "i t;r!.-." will pro'-.-,! ; onun ;c more aec ept-

pabiic.

THE JAPANESE BILLY SUNDAY. A Japanese preacher by the name ot Kiyomatsu Klmura, in his youth a protese of I). H, Moody, has been studying Hilly Sunday's methods and applied them to Japan. He even makes gestures like .Sunday's and has his picture taken for picto.re postals in poses of Sundaylike vigor. Han Ward, writing of the Japanese Hilly Sunday, in World Outlook, tells of Kim lira's education in this country and of how he got back to his work in Ja pa n. I Miring Sunday's month at Denver. Kimura attended every service, morninc, noon and nlrht. He did the same at Ies Moines and Philadelphia, and lived for a time with the Sundays. Then he took the Sunday idea back with him Japan. Hat Kimura doesn't go the Sunday limit. He uses the .simplest language possible, but even the strictest Methodist missionaries confess that they have never heard him speak vulgarly. "When i e.it stewed cherries." he remarks, speaking of Sunday's methods, "I don't have to eat the stones.

A MJTHAI,. Sailing or the beautiful sea. W nt the neutral vessel Nany Lee. She sailed into a zone-. That wasn't her own, And 'Afis sunk by a sub. before he could j'ce. o - Mexico seems to l,e one revolt after another. If it wasn't for tlie publicity we couldn't keep track of them. Can : oii imagipe those Mexican school kids rc iting the ll-t of presidents like v. e had to do w h n we went to school. 'Thrt Ciatits." said the operator at the other r r 1 of the A. P. wire, "are playing; i: mid-season form. .Mo Oraw has1 v, hipped nn umpire-." o 'Perfume Makes Hion Peaceful and Content." savs headline. Apparently it was not the kind of perfume, some people insist on using;. due of your youthful reporters had visited the barber shop, ge-t hihair cut, shampoo and all the trimmings. When he got home his mother insisted he had been drinkin? again. MAN V.H M.Ti;ill.l.. According to a headline in one of the Chicago papers the "Slavs use the lull to strengthen their defenses." o ou: iirsv co(.ki:ss. skxati:. Met at noon. Sen. ilusting of Wisconsin charged that the American embargo conference of Chicago was behind propaganda to induce him to support an embargo on munitions of war to I hi rope. Discussed miscellaneous legislation. Adjourned at r,::.:; p. m. to noon Friday. n )i:si:. Met at 11 a. m. Hesume-d debate on the agricultural bill. Adjourned at p. in. to 11 a. m. Friday. aim: vor? Can you carve a foul as your father i used to do. And never litter the table with the chicken stew, or buial a furnace fire that never fa Is to heat. ( r cook and bake and even fry the dianer meat. When, mother's feeling badly and takes unto her bed. And complains of racking, aching pains up in Jier head'.' Can you dres.s the baby and get his clothes on right. And put out the eat and see that the house is locked at night? Or in other words will you answer this for me. Are you half the man your father used to be? American soldiers in their chase after Villa went where Carranza soldiers never thought of going and even surprised lie- natives up in those u p posed -to-be-inaccessabl o regioiist. All of which proves that.

lDPi LAiujN; mi; ciasm(n. Hismarck. X. !., Tribüne.

j Latin and Greek literature have

often the glooms are merely to Iking. too long been surrounded with the they don't know. j barbed-wire fences of a stupid peda I antry which says the only way in Next to insanity and the unw ritten j vvhich to enter r he!r field is by golaw, stand- little old seif-defeuse as j ing around by the long road of

the best method of proving" one's j learning the languages in which they innocence. I vvere written. Moreover, the pedants n . j require not tha. the language bei Finds TroubUs Come in Pairs" studied sensibly with the object ofj

was not the heading over the story of the birth of tvvln. Cr eer up! We are going to mention Vil!a name further do.vn in the column. "Ts it true?' askei the p. j. while the tIeirraph operat'T was taking an important message, "that Carranza has had his beard trimmed?'' HIS H FA LIS. XT TOO "WET" Wife of -Ten Nights in a Harroom" Actor Savs He Rehearse? Too Much. CHICAGO. April L'v Mrs Ida Peterson brought suit for divorce yesterday against Mads Peterson, an ac tor in 'Ten Nicht. In a Harroom." She says he rehearses too much on: it ii v. Heme a diary of the cutest baby that ever was. 1 read wher you should not push things out of baby's reach. Just tell him he mu?t not touch them and see that he does it. So I determined I would do th and left a pan of peas on tlie kitchen table and left the kitchen. Of course he had to grab that pan and litter the floor but it was so cute to see him when he would step on one of the half cooked peas. I don't think he hurt his head much.

rapid reading and enjoyment, but

insanely, with the apparent object of stifling ever' possible flash of human interest by interminable parsing, construing and textual criticism. It is absurd that the treasures of Latin and Greek should be locked away from the average reader by these superstitions of an outworn academic tradition. Practically all of them ate now available' in excellent translations, needing only a little attractive hookmaking to render them popular. What might be done in this direc

tion is suggested by Marcus South-

well Dimsdale. in his "History of

Initio Literature." Tlie writer elves! a. ray of hope to those who would! like to see the classics treated as; human productie-ns. to be read and' judged by human standards. Just as we judge Alfred Xoyes or Kudyard ;

Kipling or Hrnest Poejle. The history is written, not for the student, but for the "general reader."' This means a break in the tradition. The general reader is no

longer treated as a hopeless "low- j

brow." to whom the classics are necessarily sealed thinks. And when the reader really gets acquainted with classic, ai thors. as he will thiough good translations in his town library if properly encouraged, he will find that they ure not at all the "high -brow" stuff he has been led to believe them. He is likely to

r i

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Springtime Santa paid a visit to ; f,n, Hemer er Livy as entertaining the day nursery Thursdav. .lust las the latest fiction, and laugh with

show s how the seasons are hanging. o "I got .'.Ol." said the man who ha." the net desk. "Without your handicap?" we asked. "Xo." he sai.l. :ho without my handicap. "Have you a guard for vour home?" Obregon seems t have killed another good story. Denies there has been a split with Carranza. hut Carranza lias not been heard cf for some davs. We notice it is quiet again on the Verdun front. Only the artillery is booming. "Aqgie Pitcher Touted to Give X. P. a Pun." sport headline. This is kind ef him for we feared he would try to blank the local collegian-?. o - FAllOIt. c.etting your hair cut. Waiting for your ear. Loafing. Ihijoyimr your vacation on a farm. Ali by ing. Attending an amateur performance. Praising the performers. Attending a tea. Making a speech. Working. We promised to mention Villa at

the bottom of this c olumn. H-to it !

i.

STATESMEN GREAT AND NEAR-GREAT

Hy 1 Yt (1 ICelly.

a hie ideal w it ' t he

r. 1 u c 1: rc.

IV'hips si.ojth P.end is. as

at present sit a t d. with positorie-; e.f t.lth atl '. - ri ne d of Iil'-re la-pit.; i f '

lain d'-Vots. and

de

tinue t be in ! ' d o present e nd; : ns 1: i districts, ami .'; .-:(" out. We d- nor anti' living i'0!ili!:"! w :M that it wi'.l -r-.'th

Tms is 1. p-ed to a

pita

av ii

sa i::; ;tv h.-i tO t !le

It probah'v i. at i-a-w i;h i:npr v , , .x ,, 1:

s''lv a j. i-.!-.g Tiw health res it.'" .! i f the people, .(e,i ;, a. g r db ss c f w h it t !: h

Mabe a l.-'.-pi: al of t...'re r.ecesitj if ba :;-;r ati-1 h t oved. The 5 in: i :ba "pre , vM-.n : :.: re e. :. ;:; ii a !. ' . . ,. community in v. !.a h !.- 1: . person who in case ,,f i'.ir.tat pu :c c x p " r.-.

. lo re, there and yonder, j !:::-. Pet haps it w ill con- i

;'o:n. t ,1 (rtaiu extent, w lien I 'en 1 1 ! ! ; t.ed. and the slumj - r.'th at'.. I disease, are wiped im'" t!ia? improved housing and I t'-ari ite i:m'.i alt"getl:cr. but . - it i s ; nt a 1! v i ertain. ,i;;y 1 1 s. that we a re op-I ii -r 1 r f ra hi a .; tit y hcs- ;' of ! oth the ity arid county. ! i

a.o appro i-'hing necessity: als-

WASHINGTON. April 2S. Chief Justice White and Associate Justice Holmes of the United States su1 rune e.uirt, might have been seen

I mit them at the side of m -.date ami sav nothing ! ore afternoon recently walking

- - - - I

about them." Kimura croucaes. kneels, leaps and swings when he preaches. Am. his audience sits bolt upright and listens hard. He stincs the Christians into action. Then he goes after the nn -Christia ns. He spares no one. and still he seems to have a great heart for everyone. When he makes his appeal, five, ten. fifteen personscome forward. Twenty, thirty, forty, tifty. Still they come, until seventy or eighty people have pled-'ed themselves to the new life. The official count at the end of a recent fortnight's campaign in Tokia numbered l.HOr convert about ninety a night. but even this will hardly --erve to p'acate our frightened ones on the subject of "yellow peril." We have learned ihat Christianitv does not f neces-

isitv divest a man. or a nation, of their f.ghting clothes.

slowly along Pennsylvania avenue.

j gravely and earnestly discussing sc me learned topic. IOvery little

while the talis seemed to reach a sort of crisis, whereupon the two uir.it jurists would stop and face one another and continue the conversation while- standing still. Prom which one may leap to the conclusion that it is somewhat of an effort for a great h-al mind to apply itself to walking and talking all at once.

!ii:;:''!, s-

1 as pr

O pOStM

1. Po

Christians even, are rometimes able to make themselves

Aristophanes as he does with George Ade or P.ernard Shaw.

I I l.M,l,l i IU., ILIVI.VIi,

(Rochester. N. Y.. Democrat and Chronicle. ) Dr. John H. l inley is one of the most enthusiastic advocates we have of the value of walking as a form of exercise. The latest number of the university's bulletin is rilled with praise of pedestr anism. He becomes poetical as well as eloejuent when he says: "So is the days of the open road come on. as nature begins again her laboratory coures in field and stream and mountain, may every boy find, on foot, the blessings of the out of doors, the strength that comes of battle with the natural forces that

oppose, and the joy of overcoming." 1 It is rather curious that in spite ofj

such bracing talk, Dr. Finley is opposed to military training for boys in high schools. A boy cannot be developed into a good soldier who is not a g-ood walker, and the physical training to which soldiers are subjected is directed yery largely to teaching them to walk .swiftly, erectly and with a minimum of fatigue. The trouble with many boys is that

thev do not know how te walk. A !

little instruction 3long military lines would make it infinitely easier for them to follow Dr. Flnley's advice and study the unfolding of spring at first hand. A.NOTIIFJt fJ III 'AT MKlWAIi niscovi'itv. (Fargo. X. D., Courier-News.)

It was announced nt the meeting of the Missouri Valley Medical assoeiation by Dr. Charles A. Peed of I Cincinnati that tl e cause of epilepsy j has been discovered. It is a grm

which, like the germ causing tetanus . took him just seven years 10 live j (lockjaw-), proba'aly has its natural: that picture down. habitat in the soil and enters the; ! body through Xha stomach and inMarshall Mnrcan. Washington j testines, where it continues to live, j correspondent for a Nashville paper. I The clogging of the alimentary i was in a drug store in the latter i canal forces these bacteria through j town cne day w hen a colored man, j into the blond, where thev are selfa dope fiend, came in and tri-d to ! perpetuating and cause the dread' buy some cocaine. Out of curiosity, ' malady for whicn no cure lins v-t Morgan called the man to one side ' been found. Dr. Peed has identified and Inquired what it was about the j the cultures from the human body; dope that he liked. ; with those from animals and has j The man explained as follow?: i demonstrated that epilepsy is often1 "You take one shot of it and you 1 communicated fom one persons to think you own that big skyscraper 'nother. ! yondah. You take one mo' shot ana i N, remedy lias yet hem discover- j you feed like goin' right over and i en- 1,ut thi' Isolation and identifica- ' c'lec.inc the rents." ) tion of the germ points to cure and 'also to pre-venutinn. Diphtheria has Newton T. Paker. secretary of ' become curable and smallpox tamed war. has the signature of a great ' b' sf'rJ,I1i; even cancer seems in ai man. It is almost as meaningless a ; fair wa' ,A be mastered, and this i

'bit of cliirography as any ever done ! Ia'rst ,vl11 prov welcome news to

by congressman George Holden' 1 fui.eieis nom o;v m Tinkham of i;.,?ton. who has the j ,hA mof:t distressing afflictions.

most horrible signature in the

OHIO

.ants

Automobile

nhnu in Michigan

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Trunk and tre conveniently reachc,! y our trains. Splendbl -n-vice to

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Lansing, Flint,

Pontiac and Detroit Ml of the ten largest cities in Michi-

fan are located on mo Direct service to ML Clemens, Mi-n-1, r-rwnrt

iganV lamous iimu. Grand Trunk Stations are, as a rule "located in the business sections on dt-re-t car lines. That Is particularly true

of Chicago.

r. A. h l TT. If. .t:tton.

.... . - - uth Incl. Indin

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HOWARD SCHROP, HATTER 127 W. Washington Are. and J. M. S. Lobby.

cVet'v h'me Its own ..n..,-. t,-.t "niiinnil Imm-ir" ntol "future vifetv" and

.rtiils ctah!:shed ir. the minds

Pefore he broke into the big league politically, ."-'en. Ashurst of Arizona was a deputy sheriff. He was a vigilant deputy and rarely let .1 lav pass without hushing a desperado and dragging him to jail. Iefore locking up a prisoner, however. P was ne essary for a deputy sheriff to idt the retail establishment of a certain prominent drink merchant. Pecause the key to the

signature in

United States. Canada or foreign places, including the .-ca ndina", ian.

SCRAPS ).: i,:

a number of things, make it a legitimate pastime to kill.

n to that end continued, r.- , ,.-or instance: :;.tl addition may leal to. j jhlly Sunday 's on the warpath in this country we

lockup was kept there1 on a

r.all

than

l V

a n

""i i " o 1 1 1 s will ndittoT are no

' a . vnderstand even the T. P.oosevelt warpatli.

We

behind the bar. You see, th?re wa only one key. but there were several deputy sheriffs and a great

i many people to be placed in jail.

m" ! haven't read whether Kiyomatsu Kimura copies u:iday ! so the only thing to do was to have

lit of the truism, j tne killing line or not; or whether he regard: that as " and ir.rhiitelv j ; ,r OT1, tu "stoi.es" that he puts "at tlie side of hi

plate and sa nothing about them."

i m;: v. :,;.:.! i ar.u to tue

and - ; -:. illy if he ne a w-a,;!d need be cared f"r

It is ;.:,: ir.c r.t, :: th ;nu-t ha.vc '

I.AP.OIvHD AND CONb'HSSING.

in :- , i. t :,. w reputdican e o ta - er.: d :n i : a t ! ;.i'e c onv t ::t b-n.

'ii a r.t!y h.i:i op.v ci;f.o:;, at..! have

the key in a central location sure to be open at any hour of the davor nicht. The Ibpior merchant, being a public-spirited, high-minded citizen, hospitably contributed a nail

The Chicago Tribune's "poll of the street" indicates ln iS ,''"l"1'M',IHM ,IIU1 lI"

. - , , , , . . : hung there oi: ar.o on ior a ior that M. per cent of the people are for upholding the ; Tha. naiI an,j UR localion liar.us of the president in his attitude toward Germany ! Ctinu near King the undoing of wlc-h would seem also to indicate that about the I Ashurst. A photographer snapped

. i wr., ,r,t of th r.rlo s. re 'lirwt the Tribune i f. t-icturc ;f him one .lay as he was

It I

a r.

j standang back of the

i t - the nail. Thi ph t".r.

en route fell into

It is said thut Kmperor William has decorated t he , U!1f2-;t ndly h.an Is and from the n on

named a pretiy g od 1 1 1 - t . w :u-:i the republican party, i commander of the submarine which sank the Sussex

s.iy at'out with the order of the crossed swords. Guess the kaiser

"you're ' is figuring on decorating t'nole Sam with the order of

and its i-tgan t th u. t- l i ar.oihtr."

c m

U1

'ung mear. r t

mp!;

al::;cst exclusively, that I double-crossed swords.

t was published and republished all over Arizona. Many got the erroneous impri'fsion that Ashurst. spent . . , . sf Vi t i tnr khMHti n- o limit tha

tor-s of them that sold drink?. It

worm; Tii vv iiKrom:. ( j (Huntington Press.) j I The republicar party in Indiana. I today is led by the- same crow d which I held full sway f"o and four yeas : j ago. With the republican party so I constituted the Indianapolis News

I stated: "It would be a mistake to' With only oedwlng and small ca;i:pjthink that thp republican party can' e.Uiiment. Mr. and Mrs. Carn- Grav. ever hopp for FUCCess on the oM 1 recently married in Walla V.'alla, j,tandpat Un As between such a W.ash., are -vnlking from the-r-e f..'party aRfJ the Prt?sont democratic;

ini'ir i i'.i iuesie tu in c liin. a. uisiance

of S'h.t miles.

party all men of progressive prin-

1 cipler-, would undoubtedly choose the

Tho 2or rapicls traversed by the i democrats. The republican party in last party to pass through the Grand j Indiana is worse today than ever canyon of th Colorado dropped I before, if such a state of affairs 1 thm a total . f c.or-O feet to the Galf j possible. Today we have the old j of I, wer California, the trip cover- crowd. Watson, New. Goodrich, not j

-- t....., ...v.iix oniy oosses witr.m ine pariy. oui 101 days. Candidates for or:ice." As the News -Live white fish and carp are ship- ' so aptly r.uts it. how can the re-

pod from the Great Lakes in an ex- j publican party hope for success on

press tank car. This tank -ar is the old standpat lir.es. equipped with covered metal tanks. Thus 10.000 pounds of live fish can "J one knew an eccentric ma.n." he accommodated in one car. Air .nated old Festu Peter, "who when is forced into the water to keep it he had got the Jesired number on fiesh, and the nsh reach their -.lis. "the telephone did not demand tant market in good condition. 1 tif-rcely. 'Whizz zis'." Instead he inThere are in existence onh tao variably ald civi.ly. 'This is John J. important her 3s of fur seals, one in I Poppendick, wishing to speak to Mr. the Comn. ander islands, belonging ' Puckover.' His funeral was the

S3

nsplittinqiieads

Don't have ''headache cas.

They're unrecrary and preventable. Prove U to j-ouriw-lf vrith SAN-TOX Headache Tablets. Well known ir.iyrair.e formula for 11 form rf puk er.d

che. Price 10 cer.ta and cenU

. n

ripura.iric?

c c

3S

SOLO BY

AMERICAN DRUG CO.

133 NORTH MAIN ST. CUT RATE DRUGS AND SUNDRIES "Always at your service." Open Every Day, 7 a. m. to 12 p. m.

- 9

to Puss. a; the other in the PriMP.; islands. belonging to the L'n'ted states tn err merit.. The Jat:er is rni;ch the larger and is by far tlie nits' valuuMe herd of fur sefJs in t lie woria

largest ever held in the neighborhood where he had resided, and thereat strong m-n broke down and wept like children, being" convinced that they would never again his like." Judge.

V r y y:r ' - ir

Beautiful I5ust and Shoulders

.t-.r'f.

are pcib if roa rfar a ' :e rdlf.raliT cr.

E.ea Johe Lraiere. The rfrr?;Dff weirht "f an ur.c r.f.r.c-d 1 it o retc 1 t'r e -.pportir.f niu ti.at tf.e cor; to jr cf t:.e f?'.-re i-

yrrnt y p-:t the h::t Lac 1c wl.rr it fJ'j2.V 0 '?s. pr-Tcnt tt.e f ill t.ut f-. Ti 0ß nit t..iTi.-. the Rc;ar-ri. ef f'-'fti-AffiTfr' fhm'r.ate th- Srrrr f'

crarmr: r.ulci ar,d ror.r.r tv'

flenh of tt;e hnulOff :ir tc ct

eraceful line to the entire u; pr body. They are the daintiest ar. 1 not -e.Tirab rrrrr :t ir riblf rorr.e in ad rnatma! ard tylr: ( rr; J .-ii. rront, Stir&lie. Bar!eau. etc. l":.-d -with " r:," li rustles bouir.; pernuttiDf -asLit.g without rt c ih I tare your denier nhow yr Bin Joiie r.rar. if r ca : d. ww will giaclljr aend hii. priid. aailt to .'.;' j-.-i. BENJAMIN" fi J0HNT.5, It ?nra ftwt. Newark. N. J.

tri

1! . i 4 i f r I i i i. t t

i