South Bend News-Times, Volume 37, Number 124, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 3 May 1920 — Page 3

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J THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Monday moknim.. .may z,

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THREE LOCAL MEN PAINFULLY HURT IN AUTO SMÄSHUP

Old;niohile and Ford Collide on Niles Road Sunday Afternoon. Thr--- South r. nd m.-n h id a narrow r?fa;'c from dath Sunday aftrr.,n at 4:30 o'rlo'.c a rnllo and a half north of th- I r.diana-Mirhi-;-,m -tat on thf Nils road, j a hn a . lr;p;x 1 Ford rondtor ! ;rivn by Raymond Flan.mari. 14 l'i.rtst a v., u.'is sm:t-shfl hadon y sf.on I'l-.'-ncr Oldsrnohi'e driven y A. K. I!r;. 441 I', Iis.tlh av. Ui.i'nir iri tho Ford tar with Mr. TlanaKim var.- Chark-s Hzan, G12 ! AV. Ia a!!o a v.. and Walter William. ',')?.'.' id:;., In way V. All thr-r sufIrl painful injuries, tho form of tr. Impart hurling th:n hodlly :r.r.i the l!?htr car. Mr. Flanagan : :!?-red a had vrah on-half Inch tiom hU rhtht y nnoth'-r Jacotl i.t In h!-; I f r kr.i'.', a tinier thrown i j l of joint and minor injurUx. Mr. i;::ar:"s r!u'ht U' was hadly v.ronrht I and his shinhono crarkd. uh;h Mr. William rsiprd with a fw : ai.i II cuts about his Pl-s. ' Ilr?iil:ir Parade. Th Nih road, whkh was rr--ntly ofi n-d. wa.s parked with aulornobihs, a. M-ady stream froln :thr way. Aftrr tin- an idont th Tra! hfi aint- s'alh d for a half miio on l'oth Hundreds of ; utolsts stopped to off r as.-lstanro. Arcordlnif to rye v.'itiKS.-ry, Klan:ii,Mn was hr;d-d for Niks. and I'.rh-S" wtls coining toward South i: nd wh'-n tho smash occurred. A ar in front of Flanagan was ,'oinr' nl.out 12 miles an hour :unl h de-;b-d to cro around it. Accordingly h. steered to the left and dre w up . 1 1. roast of the slower moving car hn ho saw tho llriryo Oldsmobih; ;:io!t 50 yards away coming In his lirwtlon at a terrific rate of speed. ll wan abr ast of on e,ir and oould not turn to the rii;ht. so he old tho only thir. possible, turned further to the 1 ft. Ilri.-se, who was in th center of the road, turned In iho same dirrrtion und the cars met head on. Ilu-du-d Homo. The thrto men were rushed to S.uth liend-ln another ear. where J r. J. L. Wilson attended them. The doctor took thrre stitches l-eur Flanatran's eye and then put Iiis kiifo In a cast. II Pressed the i juries of the cther two. Tho Ford ear. with the exception of the rear wheels, is .. loss. The hlsir.obile radiator and front a.le xverc badly damaged. o Bend Markets HAY. STRAW AND IK ED. (orrrt-l I)a1I ly fhw Hrrfy Miliar 'lnr i-Vvil t 4.0 . Mic-tilgan.) NKW HAY I'ajin; JLTO, tiling STKAW I'mm $V2, .dllns f 1110 O! K."- Hie. UATS l'a j lag s,,'. sehlDR $1.00l.ia NKW COK.S i'ajlcg il.lu. telling $1.70 U fl.J. CLOVi:it SKLD-PayJn,; JCJ bu.. ellALSYKi; CLOVIIIl Felllcc 1. ALKALl'A iNurtli.Tii grow u) ST.O 00. GIL1N AND KKFJ). (Corrrrled Illy l.y O. V. Iturrrll, Str MUU. IIylriiiIlo Av.) Hir.LL roKX Tajiiii; 51.0). OATS Jl.ö. I'.KAN S.-iiing JJ.70 hundred. MllILl.N(;s Sidling $.5..; hundred. CHOl'l'tD ri:i:D SelUng 3tJ per SCltATCII ri:i:D-SeHlng per twt. ;r.INIIN;S-S.' br.stxd. n 1U:AT -Paj I:ib' ?.7.. ' 1 1'ujiLi; 1 7Ü l.uehet. (Corrritod Dally l H'arner Ilro. E4 mar-. iiH y. Michigan M.) row PKAS $7 et) bushel. JAI'ANHSi: MIM.I'.T -J1.0O to $.". 00. ri.ovi:ic-j7 no. '1 1 MOTH V 57 .rO SPKl.rs- Jl.W rwt. SOt PAN (JKASS Jl prp huudred. a'.si Ki; f;s : to sjdk 'N V 1 . 0 W i: 1 1 S -Oc n o u't h1 . lMi;i: UK HAI It i' UKTCII 127.? jer bunLel. itLl'i: (iUASS ?.0O. swi:i:r rhoviru- w MAMMOTH I'LOVKK-WOt). whiti; ci.o Kit-jt5.oo svki;t whiti: -luvi:r J.v. riiihi) ri;.H $,-..00. TIÜOTHV A. ALSYKI!. mixed $10 bu. KAI'.: M KH Uivrnut Ks.-ex; $.s .00 bu. l.AWN CKASS ;."0" lb. SOJA Hl. ANS (1 to Sau) $10 bu. It.VKI.m bushel. si:L"U CUUN-lio tu.Ll. LIVK STOCK, (forrectrd Diiil L.v .Major Drov. f. L. Sn St.. MUlnkwli.) IIITAVY 1 ' A T M i;i:i:.S 1 ulr to Rood. Jcall ; prliue. i:il4o. ikmJs ico to i.o iL.., lbv t l7 Ib. li' l'ö to 2M lea, lio; 2tHJ up rRüniTt MAKKET. Corrected T'ly by Mi Itrotlier?ioil ljfwry. 23) N. U1q bt. IHTTTLU AM) lkiS -1'rcaruery butter. pnylt-.K C"v' pound, eil inj 7;V pound: -"K". d7e!i. hei:i!.t; 4v. dozen. KKfirs a n i vKi;i:rAr.i.i:-Frutti. !ifcrnl nivi.l otauih. u 4er dozen; feldaj: ?o iwt.; new cabbagt. stlllng 10! lOl LTItV AMI MKATS. Crreetrl Daity t Jlrnmle' Market, 1?! I.. Jefferson lllvd.) IU:nF Ko.irt. ;; Itdllng. 2V ; round teak, 40c; bi;'oir. tOc; porterLoufe. 7i-. l'Oli K LOIN CV. i.Ai:i jiv. C U 1 CK 1: N s 1) re ..1. :o 111DL-H AN D TALLOW. (Corrected Tod.iy by . W. Lippniarj, ilO . MiJn t. HIDCS l.V-.-O- en'.fsklns. r.OüöO; ienle.-fd tAli. rJv a lb.; -ouga talA L F A LFA $-7 b u -hel . low, :C3c a lb.; tifotwu. PATROL SERGEAMTS SCARCE SIM DAY MIGHT Th'1 expornr.rr.t of lo.ivir.tr th ( it y witho:t olico protection at night, as pi:ut!ocd hy Thief Klino m crderir. tl nicht force to attend the Hob Jems ervics recently, wns evidently such a success t;at tlie chief d'Ciled to adopt the jdan as part of l;i e:!clent administradion of tl: dei.:rtracr.t. Kline int rodviced ;'noth.r Innovation Sunday mcht by not having any 1 atrd s recants on c!uty out-f-iiie Ihr police station. Serjeant Joscrdi 'h.xppell was df tailed to relieve ("apt. James Schock, on the litter's nicht off; Serpvant Feter Hudyr.skl re'.iv. d Patrolman James .tt:n.T. who h.i? been doir.c a captain's duty at the station. ;md who ! on hi vTcation: and S-rrceant F.en Robert", the third :.!?ht patrol rKar.t usnl'.y on duty, took Iiis regular bi-m-nth!y niclit off. The day rhe'i th- .. !k n the for e, which is on dutv I ub'.ic ha- ;ic h vti. e h.i .1 ch.ii.i'.' Ca'.Ied upoii to t 1 to .;c I. ovcred. W.. furnish any r.i-n n ivliec shortage of m u at iKoht. the

IMPERSONATES "MAID'S" CHILDHOOD.

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Mii Virgrinia Madijan, vrho will be teen a Joan ol Arc amidt Kr sheep. On the afternoon of May lti a solemn ceremony will take place at Home, Italy, and another at the Fordham University campus, in New York city, to commemorate the canonization of tne "Maid of Orleans." commonly known here as Joan of Arc. The Stc. Jeanne d'Arc pageant will bo under the patronage of III Grace the Most Hev. Archbishop Patr.ck J. Hayes. MI53 Virginia aladlgaa, daughter of Patrick J. Madigan. publicist, will take the role of the little eight-year-old Jeanne before she heard the C411 of her God and her country, and will be shown with a flock of sheep la a typical Trercr country scene of the fifteenth century. Tbe French jnha&sador. Jules J. Jusenuid and the French Consul, Gaston I.Iebrrt, l will baTO the plnce of honor with the representative of the Prcsldnt or the United States. The pageant will have some 15.S00 participants, of -vblch KUOO will be children.

MARSHALL TALKS AT GATHERING OF INTER-CHURCH MEN Vice President of U. S. Says Church Must Prove Its Work by Faith. Vy A?ecLited Tress: WASIILN'GTOX, May 2. Vie Pres't Marshall Fpcaklnir Sunday with Sir Auckland Geddes. the IJritish nmhassa.lor, at an inter-church world movement mas meeting, declared tho church mustp rovo ihs work by its faith and that It "ia idle to P-gislate for purity if the priest, above hi.-? book, is to leer at his neighbor's book." "It is vain to enact laws funlshing murder." the vice president added, "if the elders are to continue working little children to death. It is needless to forbid larc- ny if the deacons mak'j lare church contributions out of exceis profits wruns jointly from labor and the ultimate consumer." Kpre-ssvs Holief. Sir Auckland expressed the belief that the church had not kept pace with the Industrial revolution of the last century and that religion on which, civilization is based had been forgotten In the i;reat cities. "The materialist of the city today," the ambassador "declared. "Is the millstone around the n"ck of democracy, which is draKSlnir democracy down and making it posible for a determined minority, throuuh blackmail or corruption, to compel the people to agree to vote for th things they do not want. That way lk; destructian and disaster anil tbo

LATEST FASHION HINT.

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M .C ;rv-.i :- :l .. " loss of all freedom th.it the centuries have won. "Tho expanse of men's minds, flowed and harrowed by tho horrors of war, lies open like a held ready to be Fown; and Just as it i ready for the right seed, so it 1m ready to iccclve the seeds of poisonous weeds. It Is the sowers that we need now." suito I'aiN. Vice Pres't Marshall told the audience that the church with a complaisant Kmile had turned over to the state the enforcement of the moral law, and that the state had failed, while the m in on the street tinkered. "Awake. O Zlon, and if you really bdiove in the communion of the saints, prove it by consistent conduct." Mr. Marshall said. "The man on the street is not tired of the words of the Zazarene, when the church takes back the disciplining of the moral and religious life of its members, when It trains up its children with lixod views, when itp roves its faith in the communion of the saints by Its works, its courts will be thronged with worshipper?, and there will ho no need for patch work legislation to reconcile labor and capital, nation and nation. "This. Clod, make the supreme desire and the .nr motive of all thoso engaged in this great movement. If it be not, then our money might as well be sp nt upon a Kornau holiday." miiavai:ki:i;, wis Fred Hamilton. years old. did not inherit the arth by hia meekness but he got a divorce. He testified that his wife beat him with a club, lost his money playing poker, opened his mail and Indorsed his check?. TIIlltSDAY Sr. DAY. .Yt Thursday, -May (itli, is $5 day. : v- .v

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THIRD WEEK OF JONES REYIYAL PROVES SUCCESS

Ten Tliou.-ainl People Hear Word-; of Eva ncc lists at Simdav Service-. (CONTI.VTKD FROM PAOH ON1M contemplation. Hue the mst certain thinir, he said, wa.s not man's picture of hell but tho certainty of hen and the certainty of losing salvation. Mii.k os Contrast. "There is ft woman who walks tho 8tret -with a ruined soul and no respectable woman will speak to her. the dirty devil who brought about her ruin sits tonight in this house with smo innocent girl. Don't tell mo that a great God hasn't lixed a punishment that will even such things up. Hell is God'3 hospital for incurables in eternity. He'.l is a place of terrible memories. You've never forgotten some of the sins you have com.jnitted and you never will forget." Fullv two-thirds of the C." converts who made thtir way to the platform after tho services and declared their faith in God were men. Twenty-one answered the evangelist's call at the afternoon services while 14 came at the night service. Talks to Women. Mrs. Loren Jones in her talk to the business women Sunday afternoon compared the fate of the rich young man who plead with Christ to show him the way to happiness b it uho refused to give up his worldly riches to follow the road with the many modern women who M through life restlessly seeking peace and hanpine.-s. She brought f-ut the point that while this jnun,' man had the opportunity to be cm of the founders of Christianity he refused to make the saerhiee ;md was heard from no more while those few faithful who accepted the word of Jesus have intlueneed the world for L'O centuries. "The women of .South lUml have the sim opportunities to influence the lies of those about them," she fa id. Mr-". Jones reports that the work among the business women of the city has be n lis successful as any feature of the campaign and that many of them are active in work among their social and business acquaintances. MOTOR TRUCKS TO COMPLETE JOURNEY Return to South Bend Sunday Makes Hit Willi Farmers. or The l-'arn .nick le;noniration tour will roll out of Soiitli I lend again Monday morning on the lapt leg of its scheduled trip -which will include Xorth I-lberty, "Walkerton. Hamlet, Knox, C"lver, Flymouth. Bourbon, Iirrfnen. Napanee. Goshen, and thenco to South Bend, landing here on "Wednesday night. J. 1. J. tarneman, tour commander, in commenting on the first half of the trip had some very interesting incidents to relate, such as farmers along the route "framing up" Komeard stunts for the trucks to perfarm. He told of how in ono village they were requested to haul a load of crushed stone out through some swampy land for a new road where teams had failed to go, but the sturdy pneumatic tired trucka plowed through as though tbey were on polid roads, and to make the ! demonstration even better, they loaded tho trucks with logs and came back through some woods where the larper trucks had barely room to squeeze through on a narrow muddy wagon road. Amaxj I'ariiiers. Mr, Farm-man further states that this tour has utterly amazed tho farmers, as they had no idea as to what a pneumatic tired motor truck could do. and he also says that the dealers themselves have had their own eyes opened, at tho possibilities of the truck on the farm, as but few of the truck dealers have, had an opportunity to actually sen their machines put under a real farm test. The tour committee in tellirg of the return from New Carlis'.o on fjrday, said they vere very glad there were no motorcycle cops on the road, as the caravan wa late in getting started for homo and ivory body aboard was tired and hungry, and especially the Jackie Band bc'ys. so the word was given by Tour Commander Farneman to step on tho gas. and they claim the trucks, even including tho big two. and a half tenners clipped off close to r.O mile3 an hour. SECRETARY COLBY SAYS WORLD FACES UTTER DISASTER Ry Associated Press: NEW YORIC, May 2. In a plea for succor to ths distressed of Furope. made at a relief meeting here Sunday night. Sec'y Bainbridgo Colby declared "the world is really at the brink, not of a great disaster, but of utter disaster." Emphasizing the need for physicians and medical . supplies in cVlain areas of Europe, he urged the gathering "to tee that the great workaday world of preoccupied men and women ,of well meaning and well disposed but humanly selfish men and women, are ro-a.-el from their distractions and their pre-occupatlons. B0LSHEVIKI SHOOT MAM FOR TREASOM WAKS-W, May 2. It Is s.-mi-orllciallv announced that a man n:i n-Pil Prosrr dnicke. who i.S clared to have- been one of the group which asus-'lnateii ferner Emperor Nicholas, was taken from jj ail and handed ovt r to the bolsheviki who took him to the red front. There he was shot for high treason. A dispatch from Copenhagen last iHce-n-.U-r said the soviet authorities in Ilussia had punished tho individual by death held immediately responsible for the execution of Nicholas and his family at Yekaterinburg in June, 191$. The name of the man put to death wa.s pivi-n as Jachontoff. who wa said to be a number of the Yekaterinburg soviet.

a HALTS TltAinC. A broken trolley wire on N. Michigan st. in tho 500 block, hld u; street railway transportation and general traflic for about an hour Sunday afternoon. The break in the trolley was caused by a pole falling across the street. It had rotted off at the ground. Fortunately no one was injured by the accident. Frank A. Dorschner, 705 X. S. Joseph 5t., did valiant service as a self-appointed tratlic cop by directing all traffic east on Portage av. DE A THS -MAItY A. Ji:.MX(.S. Mary A. Jennings. 71 years old. died Sunday noon at 12:13 o'clock at tho homo of her d iughter. Mrs. Ia. 11. Martin, 020 Hex st. hhe is survived by her children, Mrs. 11. V. llarrod. Mrs. G. H. Pabbitt. Mrs. It. .Martin and Mrs. W. F. Kuss. She also had one brother, John YV. Parker. She wa-s born in Martinsville. Ind., Dec. 30, 1S40. Funeral arrangements will be announced later. WASHINGTON SCARED AT INDIANA ISSUES Ilavs and Watson Decide That Goodrichim Should Not Be Discussed in Campaign. Special to Tbe ws-Tiraes : WASHINGTON". May 2. Various reports are being circulated as to th,j information laid before Sen. James E. Watson, of Indiana, by Will H. Hays, chairman of the republican national committee, during their recent conference, behind closed doors. Just what transpired! at the meeting has not been published as yet and possibly the verbatim account of the conversation never will bo made public. But it is pretty well understood now that Hays brought from Indiana rather discouraging news for Wataon and his friends. The story being tcld in Washington political circles is that Hays not only brought elepressing information as to the situation with regard to the republican presidential campaign in the state, but that lie also brought the story that Sen. Watson's future and the future of the entire Indiana republican ticket are threatened with catastrophe in the next election. Indiana Ixxks Bad It appears from these stories that the Ooodrich menace has grown rather tha lessened, and that unless something (b ilnite is done at once to detach Sen. Watson's future political aspirations from Gov. Goodrich's administration. the chancea for Watson's election are remote. What can be done is the question. That Watson and his friends aro ready to do anything to rid the party organization of Goodrich of course has been known for some time by those do.-ie to the organization but every time a decision is reached to eliminate Goodrich, tho possible disorganization of th Watson machine looms beyond the horizon find ;he plan is abandoned. , According to the story Hays is said to have told Watson, Goodrich! Jumps over tho traces on the slight-j est provocation and is not willing i to bo repudiated or even slighted That Goodrich is theatening to show that he car. not be buried entirely Just In ord.T to gratify Watson's ambition for a return to the senato is the word which has gone down tho line since Hays arrived. Avoid State1! Issues. Goodrich, according to the story told about the Hays meeting. Is insisting that tho Indiana republican campaign shall not entirely avoid discussing state matters. It is said tho Indiana governor ha.s given his friends to understand that he Is not ashamed of his record as governor and that he is not going to be silenced. Nevertheless, Watson's friends insist that the campaign must be made on national issues and that only passing mention shall be made of the record of Gov. Goodrich. The mention would rot be such as to lead tho voters to believe that Watson approved of the state administration, but "would go just far enough to mollify Goodrich. For a time, Watson's friends insisted that he would gain by openly repudiating and denouncing Goodrich, that the losses he mie;ht suffer from rmong Goodrich's friends would not be as great as tho losses which would bo bound to follow- endorsement of the ndminis-J tratlon. TOO LATH TO CL.SMI"V. T)ST Kastern Stir pin. about foftr o'clock Saturday on N. Michigan ft.. ; between KllswortLs' store and corner f . H':ishlnj;ron ar. Howard. Return to .V Lincoln way W. r.MO-4 j i FOIt Iti:.VT Ori. light lious' keeidng room ; no objec tions to one child ever ! two years old. Call at L"l S. Taylor t. ' .1449-3 ! JOST Pocket book with three $10 bills and two $5 Mils: als money ordr r'oMpt for M. Howard. C. Johnson, af. , Tel. Co. KK1-3 , SAM'L SPIRO & CO. 1J0-121 S. Michigan SL Homo of RS.&M. Clothes Union Trust Company Safe Deposit Boxes with epeclal facilities for the privacy of customer!. Save money by patron W"ng merchants that advertise.

CAPTURE WHISKY RUNNERS ON FARM NEAR BERTRAM)

Bootlecsers Sav Thev Har Been Fiirnihing Liquor to South Bend. Boctleggers and "soft drink" saloonkeepers of this city are facing a curtailment of their supply as a result of th arrest of Alex I'atus and Steve Fayore at Xiles by federal ager.U According to their own story, the two men moved their still from South T.end to a farm in Hcrtrand township a few months ago. and finco that time have been selling whisky to a number of South Iiend saloon, making almost daily trips to this city with automobile loads of whisky. The arrests came as a result of the. investigations of railroad detectives under the direction of John Kuespert. chief of the New York Central lines detectives in this district. Tho detectives locat?d the stills while running down pomclues on connection with the theft ef automobile tires from a railroad tiding near Notro Dame. They nporte l the matter to federal agents, who made th raid on the farms. Find Men. Tho officers found both "Patus and Faycre engaged in operating tho ? tills. Fatus was found working ankle-deep In mash and water when the officers entered the farmhouse cellar. At tho Fayore farm, the Mill was found in the cellar of tho barn, entrance being effected 66 The desperate efforts of such Democratic organs as the Indiana Daily Times, The New York World, the Fort Wayne-Journal Gazette find others; and of such Wilsonian organs as the Terre Haute Post and the Evansville Press, to belittle Wood and lionize his opponents, were unmasked early in the primary campaign. Tho Democratic Press and its allied forces have been frightened into panic by the increasing momentum I of the Wood popular- rj ity. There is only on ö i reason for Democrats to seek Wood's defeat only one reason that would lead them to fear his success.

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Wood is the strongest candidate and if democrats know his election next fall

If Wood were the ferocious and iniquitous character that the Democratic Press has painted him to be, the Democrats know their proper cue would be to aid his nomination, thus making his defeat as a Republican candidate more eay of realization at the polls In November. But the fact that Wood is the dominantly popular Republican candidate

THE HEIGHT OF FOLLY (Editorial from Ft. Wayne News-Sentinel) Many people in Indiana are planning to vote for Hiram Johnson simply because he affords them the most speedy and direct opportunity to record their protest against President Wilson and his League of Nations. It would be well, however, for all such persons to remember that Johnson also stands for other things for things which they do not like and do not want. There will be plenty of other opportunities for them to get action on President Wilson and it is the height of folly to endorse the impossible Mr. Johnson merely because he represents a single phase of their resentment.

thro-jph a trap-door i.;riod bpr.e.i!h ' a j-rnall h;y mow. Both men admitted that thM- 1, id i tern making and selling wh:kv for s' viral months. They" h.r. e bgetting $15 a cal'.on for th ir pr- '- I

j uct ttom South lier.,1 j-uloon k.-- per-- , aii'! bo-otlecgers. thy ?aid. Ht Hi Hur.gariar. :ood v. j;e wl.t n arraium-d in justh eourt at Ni!. and v r o rr r.in .'..1 tn ti.! oar.t j-.il upon failure to furnish jr"0 bor.d. Th v w :'' :. iri'n . i. i - . . . ii- .i ; i.. in-' w r. k THREE KILLED IM MAY DAY RIOTS IM PARIS 15y Asoainted I r

paws. .May 2. !f'.ci.i : gi:r i- i Heavy Drafts Made. On I'Jrfrtm fdVr , r1 T-1 " Crude Petroleum Stork as three dead and 102 wounded of ' ' whom six remain in hospitals, two : r' v Ai0 ':Ht'"i rr : of them in a dangerous condit -n. WASHINGTON", M.ty :. i! . -Tho arrests aggregated p". Th ! Jraft wa re ir.ado ::i Marr :: foreigners among thov, arr s:ed are ' roverve storks i f t rude j-.tr.''.- .: . t.T b. dep;rted. Alevan.br H:.ir.- j r.rtw;th:ar.d::"".g a 2 ' ir;er;t extreme st.ciah- ieputy who cr a" ir. produ -tii . aceordir-..: : injured in Saturday's clash with the ! a r pert Sunday by the United Statpolite, will be jirosecute-d on a ' oViral survay. The total :.r - e;arge .f ;i!n; r the police. Par- '"r.a" i:; output if the U; . 1 liamentary immunity, it is said, will ; Stat i: March compared u .: a r.ot apply to his case, which it is ' M.itcii. 1 : 1 wn C.0'"'.0"" 1 1 !rsert d. was a tlaurant dTense. M. ; 1 -a the lucre as. d i o:.s,i:; ie

Flam- was .n- f the deputies who met th r mar.s i:: Switzerland during the war at an inter:. atL r.al cialist conf rcra suhoon; it e uim:. i l'.y .e,-i.1te, : NEW YOKE. M IV ".--The

wtgian meter sohoer.. r Hi.,,, r I.oNbCiN. M.iy 2. Ilus.s.i's tiad1 caught tire and w as abandon' 1 at !!, ptim at L'-n nhag n ha d. -sea abiut e tnil s s.;ithoasr ef ' :d d to i . tarn to Kussii owlr.g tc Montank Peii:t Snuda;.. a cc nl to the r. j.. : T il refus,il cf Ir-. p.r.tala a wir-b'ss m. sv.,-.. r ivd b. : - t,y I t. ..dmst M Eitvir.otT to England th) r.aal -m tun ni. a t ion r ;c ' a n 1 b-'-au-e i.o ar.sw-r was- inciv 1 from tb.e st.inor (itv of "ar-.teti. t it- app.il to the Sah K ri.o o: -w!:ich is bringing the s. hoor. r's i t : .. th.at the trai, negoti., io- --rew to this p.rt. The Kiseer b ft : be tr.tr. t rr-d to soni dh-r. sa -N'crfolk. Va., las Thursday for I. n-ja d;spatdi t. the Daily Herald fron, mark. Sl;e r g:ten-.l l. 't:: tons. J tlie 1 antsh api:d.

emocraoc rress day

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IT'S A DEPLORABLE STATE OF AFFAIRS FOR THE DEMOCRATS Without hope of a positive victory in the fall, they are trying to win by fighting from behind. That, Mr. Republican, is the cause of the repeated attacks on Leonard Wood, a candidate whose nomination guarantees Republican success.

MAKING HIMSELF IMPOSSIBLE? (Editorial from Chicago Tribune) Senator Johnson is remembered the man who interposrd his elf-will when Roosevelt was trying to beat the old guard into surrender to political riht. and a the man who swept California when Hughes lost it, and with it tlie presidency. "Does Senator Johnson wish to create the impression that now in a third campaign his endeavor? will be to make himself impoiblc as a candidate of the party and any candidate of the party impossible for election?"

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lias causae the exponents of Democracy to be seized with colel chills and hot fever as the spectre of ciefeat looms more clearly. I he opposition has alternately attackeel Wood as a swivel chair hero and a militarist. These were the same tactics employed against Roosevelt when his opponents were combatting him.