The Syracuse and Lake Wawasee Journal, Volume 13, Number 9, Syracuse, Kosciusko County, 1 July 1920 — Page 2
yr *- ■ ; . ?k\S" w*l .• Ilk?’/• LT£.„. mm «&W&iW¥ '* <s &-' i" w¥ >PA> ws-eMll »1O x w ; - ??.*, (,-*-& <■' -?> MdWMCTSffmm im fm. .^nfmif. Lfc - ® ■■■ Jk? vIMKFSMI - y^rggs-?, ?* .k--^Sr^ 3 I * f IIIbA ; W' > - WbiPL iob ** WKfcw™.. ' * W''^^^ r \ W B'i '*» 1... oW'iFvjoeyk J^^^^^p: : nMtkr«LwO.OO ¥ : JiS '< : ::’^AyßßS?^M&«n?B?¥ ; xSW^SWSSBfc>-?gSS^BasS»fs>«sc«S^. ■kx**.-'*-**'* I—Catherine Levering, the first visitor to Zion National park, signing the register on official opening day. 2—American and Russian vessels leaving Novorossisk harbor under bolshevik attack. 3—Funeral of George W. . Perkins, celebrated financier, leaving Presbyterian church In Riverdale-on-Hudson.
NEWS REVIEW OF CURRENT EVENTS Much Guessing As to Action of - the Democratic National • ' ■ -* Convention. TWO BIG QUESTION MARKS Attitude of Wilson and McAdoo a Puzzle—Platform Issues Promise Fight—Side Parties Interesting —lrish Situation Is Grave— France and England to •■* i ’' .>»• War on Tiirk. By E. F. CLIPSON. Political wiseacres are at this time as busy in naming the nominee of the Democratic convention at San Francisco as they were a short time ago in making wrong predictions about the Republican affair at Chicago. Indications are that most of them are guessing. In fact, It looks like a good oldfashioned guessing contest. If you are lucky, you win the barrel of flour or the ladies’ watch. Straws are no guide to the direction of the political wind for they are pointing in all directions, especially straw ballots. Possibly President Wilson, Mr. Bryan or one of the other party, power? knows who will be the standard bearer,' but he is not telling. ■The big interrogation point which has Jbeen planted in. the public mind concerns chiefly William G. McAdoo and also ‘ President Wilson himself The "former" secretary had for some weeks been boomed- so persistently that many, political forecasters believed he was going to make a runaway rade of it; But just at a critical time came his announcement that he was not seeking* tlie nomination and preferred' that’ hfS name should not be placed before the Convention. Ardent supporters point out that he has not definitely refused ..the honor and are proceeding on the theory that he will accept if it comes to him unsolicited. Several state delegations which have •been for McAdoo announce their refusal to take his declination as unalterable • and-their intention of voting for him in the convention. “President Wilson is the great enigiria just as he has been all through the months since his early illness and the ambigpous bulletins and interviews issued by his physicians. The first Interpretation of Mr. McAdoo’s voluntary withdrawal from the race was that ,th.e Republican platform having largely made Mr. Wilson the issue In the campaign, it was fitting that the president should meet it by becoming the opposition candidate. This view was considerably strengthened by an Interview which the president gave to a 1 represetkattve of a prominent New York-newspaper, In which Mr. Wilson discussed issues but not candidates and stated that he appeared to be the principal issue. The interviewer stressed the point not of the president’s complete recovery, ■ but of his improved physical condition. Newspa- . pers throughout the country have been flooded with recent photographs of the president which Indicate a fair degree of vigor. Sources close to the White House, notably Seriator Glass, scout the third term, idea, but the inference gained in many quarters from the Interview," the photographs and a few minor IstratvS, is that the president, if not an active aspirant for the honor, proposes to be the power behind the office. Those upholding this view believe that‘Mr. McAdoo sought to eliminate himself In ‘ prder to give his father-in-law a clear field. Others modify the view and Incline to the belief that there is a divergence between the president ‘ and Mr. McAdoo on the League of Nations question. The .fight in the resolutions committee will be on the question of endorsing the Administration’s peace treaty and League of Nations policy, on the Jiquor issue and on Ireland. A large'share of opinion is to the effect that the committee will back the administration in its league plan, possibly insert a mild declaration for liberty without mentioning either light -Vines or beef, also a declaration of sympathy for subject
ROUMANIA SEEKS LOAN HERE ,'.k •. . - ■" — 1 1 Money Necessary for- the Reorganization of the Finances ■ • 'of the Country.’ Bucharest,—Roumania is seeking to place a loan In the United States, giving as' feecu-Aty her' sit per cent national bonds, without lien on her forests or her oil 1 properties.- i?' According.to.,lie.Erdgres, jtbe.wtm-' try’s most pressing problem is .thf reargahlzatlon ot which are in
nations desiring independence, without any specific mention of Ireland. Inasmuch as the Wilson league covenant will be opposed by the Bryan faction, the Democratic senators who voted for the Lodge reservations and by other anti-administration elements; and as strong forces are working for a modification of the Volstead prohibition enforcement act, either of these questions is regarded as sufficient to force a fight on the floor of the convention itself. While there are many friends of Irish independence in the convention, it is not a domestic question, and may go through in any manner In which the resolutions committee decides to treat It. s Both Republican and Democratic candidates for the presidency will have the. usual amount of company in the way of side parties. These are very interesting this year. Certain elements among the suffragists are threatening an independent party on account of failure of Democrats and Republicans to force a sufficient number of states to adopt the suffrage amendment Certain drys threaten a party because Republicans and Democrats are too wet or neutral. The wets threaten a party because the other parties are too dry. Some negroes threaten a party of their own and propose to substitute William Hale Thompson, mayor of Chicago, as their patron saint. Instead of Abraham Lincoln. Radicals, each one of whom is a party to himself, are going to try arid unite under the banner of the ■“Committee of 48” with much enthusiasm for Senator LaFollettq of Wisconsin for president; notwithstanding the fact that the senator in all his past periods of disgruntlenrent over the actions of his party, has overcome his disappointment and remained “regular.” Editor Hearst, who failed to dictate the nominee of the Republican party and whose counsels seem to have lost some of their weight in the Democratic party, is trumpeting loudthe formation of a new party. Mayor Thompson, who was a Republican until defeated for national committeeman and until the supreme court of his state heaped an indignity upon him by knocking out a primary law under which his 1 machine had been successful,’ is said to be building a springboard to make some kind of a flop. Editor Alexander Moore of Pittsburgh, a rampant Progressive, has come out for Harding. Senator Poindexter, who was regarded by many as the only real “Bull Moose” in the senate, has announced his Intention to support the Republican ticket Neither the Harding-Coolidge forces nor those who will nominate a candidate at San Francisco, manifest much perturbation over the various independent parties threatened. Their attitude seems to be serenely that of “the more, the merrier.” The more conservative branch of organized workmen, as represented in the American Federation of Labor, closed a two-weeks’ annual convention at Montreal, Canada, June 19. Samuel Gompers, the re-elected president of the organization, succeeded after a stormy opposition from the friends of Ireland in securing an Indorsement of the League of Nations without reservations. The opposition was against the covenant because of the view that it guarantees the integrity of the British empire. Labor’s program as formulated by the convention demands follows: Ratification of the peace treaty. Government ownership with democratic operation of the railroads. Curb on profiteering and high cost of living with jail sentences for prof-, iteers. Right to strike and abolition of compulsory arbitration and anti-strike legislation. Hands off in Mexico by the United States government. Indorsement of the Irish republic. Right of collective bargaining. Advances in wages wherever necessary to maintain the American' standard of living. Shorter workday if necessary to prevent unemployment. These recommendations will be launched agillnst the Democratic convention at San Francisco, with a strong effort by President Gompers and other leaders to secure their in-
a confused condition, partly due to the dumping in Roumania of several billions of Austro-Bulgarlan crowns. Russian and Ukrainian rubles and other worthfess mdneys. Within the past ten months the value of the leu has decreased from ten to the dollar to 55.80 to the dollar, according to the fluctuations of the market This depreciation Is,also due, it la stated, to an illegitimate Ihflqx of pa- * per money from Germany. -During the Gerpfen occupation, • the Germans established the General Bank of Rou- • t' ■ •'
THE SYRACUSE AND LAKE WAWASEE JOURNAL,
corporation in the platform. The executive council of the federation also was Instructed to consider a plan for procuring control of a number of dally newspapers to represent the cause of labor. If no strikes occur and present conditions of production continue, there is less prospect of a famine tn soft coal next winter. The United States geological survey announces that production so far in 1920 is about 89,000,000 tons ahead of the same period last year. The action of the interstate commerce commission in providing more cars at the mines and in granting preference and priority orders for the transportation of soft coal have had a favorable result. Nevertheless, forehanded people, warned by the experience of last winter, are laying in coal wherever possible. Coal prices show no inclination to drop. Although a condition very much resembling civil war has existed for more than a week at Londonderry, Ireland, with rioting, street barricades and casualties mounting into the hundreds, it is not believed that It Is the match which will touch off the great conflagration involving Unionists. Nationalists and Sinn Feiners. While conditions have also been bad in Belfast and a few other places and the general situation is regarded as-grave, it is pointed out that the disturbed areas are the centers of violent partisanship and frequently subject to turbulence. The government statement says that such outbreaks are to be expected and do not indicate that a state of war throughout Ireland is Immediately impending. The railroad situation, wherein the employees refuse to operate trains carrying <oldiers or military supplies is the most serious with which the government has to deal. The authorities have made two threats against the striker*, one ta operate the trains with, troops, and the other to stop rail traffic entirely. The course of near events appears to hinge upon the government’s ability to handle the transportation crisis. With the ending of the armistice between the French in Cilicia and Mustapha Kemal Pasha, leader of the Turk Nationalists, came the announcement of a conference between Marshal Foch of France and Sir Henry Wilson, British chief of staff, at which it was decided to wage a strong campaign against the Turks, Neither France nor England being willing to send more soldiers, it is reported that Greece will furinsh the troops and the two allied countries most of the officers. As a reward Greece IS to have Smyrna. The Turkish situation Is regarded as a serious one. The peace treaty practically abolished the Turkish empire, parceling the richest portions among the allies and confining the Turks to a small district in Asia Minor without a port, which leaves them ringed by Greeks, Armenians and other hostile nationalities. A realization that this would occur was responsible for the revolt under Kemal. The total French casualtlM during the temporary occupation of Cilicia were 6,000 men, including Ar-’ menian troops, and 124 officers. Already the British have suffered heavily from Turk, attacks, although their casualties have not been announced. Troops are on the way to meet Kemal’s forces, which are said to have advanced beyond Ismid in the direction of Constantinople. Last week British ships were reported bombarding the approaches to Ismid. American Red Cross units are engaged in handling refugee work for southern Russia from Constantinople and general relief work in Poland, the Baltic states, Montenegro, Albania, Serbia, Czecho-Slovakia, Greece and Italy, but activities df the United States in foreign countries are rapidly being . curtailed. Outside of Germany, the only military mission of the United States is that beaded by Col. W. N. Haskell, which Was assigned by President Wilson In November, 1919, to assist the near East relief committee in its work*in Asia Minor. In Germany 30 United States officers are serving on the inter-allled • high commission, being included among the 771 officers who, with 16,631 enlisted men, constitute the United States army of occupation.
mania, and Issued large quantities of paper money bearing the name of this bank. Since the armistice the Germans have smuggled into Roumania more of this money printed up in Germany. Le Progres states that at the beginning of the war the Roumanian national debt was only 500,000,000 leu and that now It Is more than 80,000,000,00 Q. The standard paper money of the country at the' present Is that Issued by- the National Ban* of"Roumania*
Happenings of the World Tersely Told
Washington The Herrera government in Guatemala. which succeeded that of Dr. Estrada Cabrera, has been recognized by the United States, it was announced at the state department at Washington. • « • The population of continental United States under the 1920 census is approximately 105,000,000, according to an estimate worked out by Dr. Joseph A. Hill, chief statistician of the census bureau at Washington. « * « Benedict Crowell, assistant secretary of war at Washington, has resigned, effective July 1. He will enter business. • • « Appointment of Van S. Merle-Smith to be third assistant secretary of state, was announced at Washington. He succeeds Breckenridge Long, who recently resigned to enter the campaign for United States senator from Missouri. i • • • Secretaries Daniels and Payne of Washington will go to Alaska next month to study conditions there as relating to their respective departments. « • • Philadelphia’s population was announced by the census bureau at Washington as 1,823,158, showing the country’s third most populous city to have a numerical increase for the ten years of 274,150. • « • President Wilson at Washington sent a message to the railroad labor board at Chicago urging that it make an immediate award in the wage controversy. « * « The president at Washington, in a telegram to Gov. A. N. Roberts of Tennessee, urges that a special session of the state legislature be called to vote on the Susan B. Anthony amendment. Thirty-five! states already have ratified the amendment, and only one more is needed to make it possible for the women of the country to vote at the coming presidential election. With a view to restoring confidence in the wool industry, the federal reserve board at Washington has offered to finance wool growers during the present market emergency. • • • Exports for May increased $55,000,000, while imports fell off $64,000,000, as compared with the trade figures for April, it was announced at the department of cojmmerce at Washington. • • • Edward Capps of New Jersey was named by .President Wilson at Washington as minister to Greece, a recess appointment. • * * Domestic Railroad workers of the country were called upon by their chiefs at Chicago to remain at work pending announcement of the wage award by the United States railway labor board, July 20. • • Hailstones as large as apples crashed through roofs at Hillside, 12 miles from Cheyenne. Wyo., and reduced two farm buildings near there to kindling wood, according to telephone reports. • • * Fire, said to have started from an explosion in a room at the rear of the Criterion theater, 1220 Sedgwick street, one of the oldest playhouses in Chicago, (jestroyed all of the building except the walls. An increase of 10 per cent in the pay of all its employees, effective July 1, has been granted by the Boston Edison company, it was announced at Boston. Abodt 2.000 workers will benefit by the increase. • • • Preliminaries to establishment of trade relations between soviet Russia and Canada have been completed, according to announcement at New York by Ludwig C. A. K. Martens, soviet “ambassador.” « «■ « Gimbel Brothers of New. York, operators of a large department store } there and controlled by interests which own similar establishments in other cities, were indicted on 207 counts for profiteering in clothing. A nonstop flight to New’ York will be undertaken on the return trip of the all-metal airplane which arrived at Omaha, Neb., John M. Larson, the owner said. Mr. and Mrs. Larson came to attend a wedding. * ♦ ♦ A gift of $500,000 by August Heckeqher of New York city was announced at Ithaca, N. Y., by President Schurman at Cornell university’s fifty-second commencement. The university conferred 655 first degrees. * * * " Fourteen persons awaiting deportation as alien radicals were ordered released by Judge George W. Anderson in the federal court at Boston. ° ♦ * * ■ The Loyal Order of Moose in annual meeting at Mooseheart, 111., awarded the 1921 convention to Toledo, O. *♦ ♦ . Wreckage of the Western Cartridge company plant near Springfield, Bl.; partially destroyed by fire following a powder explosion, has yielded the bodies of two men, William Dillard, nineteen, and William Ingram, twentyfour. * * * Martial law was proclaimed at Waterbury, Conn., following terrific rioting in which one striker was killedand .Police, Lieutenants Richard Leroy and John j. Bergin were critically wounded. .
Britton I. Budd, president of th« Chicago Elevated railway, presented a petition to the public utilities commission asking for a 10-cent fare on the “L” lines to go into effect July L • • • Politics Governor Coolidge and his military staff and President A. Lawrence Lowell led the Harvard commencement procession to Sanders theater at Cambridge, Mass., where the senior and j honorary degrees were conferred. I Senator Warrgn G. Harding issued directions at Washington that his campaign for the presidency be supported l only by small contributions. • •» ‘ • i Nomination of Frederick H.. Park- ; hurst of Bangor for governor on the Republican ticket was assured with ■ the completion of a tabulation of re- ; vised returns of Monday’s primary at Portland, Me. ’ t. ♦ • • B The Democratic party organization | is to be reconstructed so as to give women an equal voice with men in the direction of all party affairs, Chairman ! Homer Cummings announced at San Francisco. ’ • • • Personal Edward Ford, founder of the Edward Ford Plate Glass company, owner of the Ford and Dime Savings Bank buildings in Detroit, died at his home at Toledo, 0., after a long Illness. • » ♦ The thirteenth meeting of the northern Baptist convention opetfed at Buffalo, D. C. Shull of Sioux City presiding. * « « Mrs. T. G. Winter of Minneapolis was chosen present of the General Federatiom of Women’s Clubs, it was announced officially at the Des Moines (la.) biennial convention. Mrs. Win. ter received 760 votes. , • « « Foreign The commission of jurists In session at The Hague for the formation of a permanent court of international justice, has unanimously decided that this court shall be at The Hague, wPerfect peace prevails at Londonderry now. after a week of bloody civil war that cost many lives and turned part of the city into scenes of ruin recalling sights in northern France during the great war. • • • The American ambassador at Paris, Hugh C. Wallace, gave a luncheon in honor of Gen. Peyton C. March, chief of staff of the American army. Marshals Foch and Joffre and several cabinet ministers were present. * • * The Greek legation at London has received official information that the Greeks campaigning against the Turkish nationalists in the Smyrna district surrounded a Turkish army corps in Philadelphia (Ala-Shehr. S 3 miles east of Smyrna), taking 8,000 prisoners with guns and other booty. • ♦ » The German chancellor. Konstantin Fehrenbach, has completed the formation of a cabinet at Berlin, it was announced. • » • Two hundred cases of cholera have been reported in Japan, according to Tokyo cable dispatches to the Nippu Jiji, Japanese language newspaper at Honolulu. • • * A report has been received at Belfast from Omagh that Constable Michael Horan was fatally shot while dn temporary duty in Tipperary. » * ♦ It is estimated that the total number of rioters at Londonderry was never more than 100 on each, side, this meaning that there were 200 desperate men holding up the city of 40,000. * * * Military authorities have gained control and are holding the city of Londonderry in an iron grip. * * * According to the Paris Petit Journal, three ambassadors to Germany have been selected—Charles Laurant, representing France, Lord Abernon, Great Britain, and Signor de Martino, Italy. ♦ • • A call for national elections issued by the secretary of the interior at Mexico City sets the date for the congressional elections for Sunday, August 1, and a new president is to be chosen on Sunday, April 5. Street car service at Toronto, Ont., except in the outlying district, was completely suspended when the longheralded strike of trolley men went into effect, to enforce demands for 66 instead of 55 cents an hour. Three persons were killed and 40 wounded in a riot at Milan. Italy, during a socialist demonstration over the railway situation. The marching socialists refused to disperse and promiscuous shooting followed. Numerous arrests were made. Sharp fighting between Czechs and Polish frontier guards is reported from Karwin. French troops have occupied this region and the Italians have moved into Teschen. A total of 17 persons have been killed and 29 wounded during the fighting in Londonderry, according to an official statement issued by the police. ♦ • * Premier Giolittl has announced at Rome the promulgation of a decree to confiscate' all fortunes created by the war. All barracks in Mexico City are to be sold at auction and soldiers are to be quartered in cantonments in the suburbs for the purpose of securing more healthful living conditions. • * * Prince Albert, recently created duke of York, took , his seat in the house of lords at London. The queen and Princess Mary were present and the galleries were crowded. All mechanics In - the railway shops of Tampico, Mexico, have struck, de- I mandink higher wages. I
SLANGJNCLASSIC Pages of Cervantes Fulf of CoK loquialisms. . * . Variety of Terms by Many. Thought to Be Modern Can Be Found in “Don Quixote” and in Rabelais* Works. “They now spurred on toward the Inn, and soon overtook on the road a young fellow, beating it on the hoof pretty leisurely.” “No. no, it shall never be said of me, the eaten bread is forgotten, or that I thought it working for a dead horse, because I am paid in advance.” Extracts from a recent western novel? By no means; quotations from a world classic written 400 years ago. In a recent reading of “Don Quixote” I have been struck by the fact that it is a vast storehouse of what we fondly believe to be American slang. And* this is not by any twisting of the sense: the terms are used strictly in theiz modern significance. It is true that I do not read the book. In its original tongue, but the translation is that of Peter Anthony Motteaux, and was made more than 200 years ago, so that it has a fair degree of antiquity. This Huguenot merchant, who settled in London after the revocation of the Edict of Nantes, picked up a remarkable knowledge of homely, idiomatic English, and his language is always racy of the soil. “Take it from me. you will lose j’our labor,” says th& Knight of the Sorrowful (not Rueful or Woeful in Motteaux) Countenace to Donna Rod- ° riguez, and this is one of his favorite phrases. “I hatl a mind to cabbage some of his cloth,’’ confesses the tailor brought before Sancho as governor of his island of Barataria for judgment. When Altisidora sang her mock sere-, nade to the incorruptible and unyielding knight, she declared herself a “virgin pullet," a “tender chicken,” and thought that Dulcinea “well may brag of such a kid.” “I had not cared a pin though she had died of the pip,” was Sancho’s philosophy, and he begs his master not to “die merely of the mulligrubs.” The squire complains that he had been “ribroasted by above four hundred Moors,” and admitted that it was not for “such scrubs as myself’ to be mentioned the Same day with knightserrant. Although by his own admission a mere clown, Sancho says, “I know what’s what, and have always taken care of the main chance.” He tells his master that the latter “had the wrong sow by the ear;” his “belly cries cupboardhe is “cocksure;” he believed that the giant in the adventure of the wine skins had “gone to pot,” and he reproached the knight for not “going snacks” in his beatings. One of the galley slaves would have gone free for 20 ducats “to have.greased the recorder's fist.” The don Chides his niece that she should “presume to put in her oar and censure the histories of knights-errant ” Motteaux finished Sir Thomas Urquhart’s partial translation of Rabelais. The Frenchman and the doughty Scottish cavalier had equal knowledge of Anglo-Saxon colloquialisms, and jrhere can one find more racy, pungent, downright English than in these two master translations? —Frank W. Hoyt in_Jiew York Evening Post. a Women’s Rights in China. A paternal government in the province of Hupeh, China, is endeavoring by official action to bring the women to order and reason, in the matter of clothes. “Women and girls are not permitted to wear extraordinary clothes,” runs the official order which the police have been instructed to enforce. “The women’s dresses, which were generally adopted by the Chinese gentle sex previous to the first revolution in 1911, are better suited to young women because they are not too short or too narrow, and they should be used again.” The official order gives further particulars of the abusesiwhich it alleges have taken place by which, in the matter of clothes, it is not possible to distinguish the Chinese women of “respectable and good families from , those who are not.” But the significance of this solicitude on the part of the military governor of Hupeh is found in the part of the order which states that the importance of bearing irtd clothes is to be recognized, “in view of the fact that women are playing an important part in modern politics in western countries, and there is sufficient reason to believe that this iwakening of the gentle sex will soon oe extended to the far East.” Flying Fox Australian Pest. The flying fox has appeared in South Australia as. a new fruit pest. Farmers have killed quite a number of these creatures. A correspondent at Port Wakefield writes: “This morning some crows, while marauding amongst the brushes near the rifle target, put up a flying fox, which took a direct course for the river, about a mile distant. The crows followed, but when the fox looped the loop amongst them they quickly flew in another direction. The flying fox appeared to be nearly 3 feet wide across the wings. It had a fair amount of speed on the wing and much resembled a bat.” The dying fox, so-called because of its foxjhaped head, has been previously fouqd in other parts of Australia and Is sometimes known as the fruit bat. If She Doesn’t Talk Too Much. The worst woman hater I kndw is my husband’s brother. He is a bachelor M. D. and although busy with his patients, never forgets himself. He seems to dislike women through jealousy of them. As he is only fortythree, we intend starting a campaign it once to convert him. I have invited aim to dinner Friday evening. I have also invited an amiable and beautiful young woman, who is a practitioner 'at ’the bar of justice. She has my cue to hold the floor for and-in favor »f women everywhere She may win Mm over.’ If this’ interests you I will JCud you the next'chapter.—Exchange, ,
If YouNeod a Medicine You Should Have the Best Have you ever stopped to reason why it is that so many products that are extensively advertised, all at once drop out of sight and are soon forgotten? The reason is plain—the article did not fulfill the promises of the manufacturer. Thia applies more particularly to a medicine. A medicinal preparation that has real curative value almost sells itself, as like an endless chain system the remedy is recommended by those who have been benefited, -to those who are in need of it. A prominent druggist says “Take for example Dr. Kilmer’s Swamp-Root, a. preparation I have sold for many years and-never hesitate to recommend, for in almost every case it shows excellent results,' as many of my customers testify. No other kidney remedy has so large a sale.” According to sworn statements and verified testimony of thousands who have used the preparation, the success of Dr, Kilmer’s ■ Swtimp-Root is due to the fact, so many people claim, that it fulfills almost every wish iru-overcoming kidney, liver and bladder ailments; corrects urinary troubles and neutralizes the uric acid which causes rheumatism. You may receive a sample bottle of Swamp-Root by Parcels Post. Addresn Dr. Kilmer & Co., Binghamton. N. Y., and enclose ten cents; also mention thia paper. Large and medium size bottles, for sale at all drug stores.—Adv. What’s the Use? Cortlandt Bleecker, the New York clubman, said at the Ritz: “I have just come from a spring display of new!gowns. The gowns were superb—daring, you know, but superb. The mannequins who wore them were also superb—lovely girls of eighteen or nineteen summers. , But the women who bought those superb, tbos4 daring gowns—” Mr. Bleecker made a gesture of hopelessness and disgust. “Pshaw, what’s 'the • use,” he said, “of old hens wearing chic clothes?” FRECKLES Now Is the Time to Get Rid of These Ugly Spots. There’s no longer the slightest need ot feeling ashamed* of your freckles, as Othine —double strength—is guaranteed to remove these homely spots. Simply get an ounce of Othine—doublestrength—from your druggist, and apply a little of it night and morning uni you should soon see that even the worst freckles have begun to disappear, while the lighter ones have vanished entirely. It is seldom that more than one ounce is needed to cotppletaly clear the skin and gain a beautifulclear complexion. Be sure to ask for the double strength Othine, as this is sold under guarantee of money back if it fails to remove freckles. New Zealand. Discovery of the island of New Zealand is attributed to Tasman in 1642, but exploration did not take place until the time of Capt. James Cook, 150’ years later, while colonization was delayed until 20 years before the American Civil war. Colonization resembled the settlement of the American colonies in that settlements were made in half a dozen places instead of being promoted from a central base, according to the usual British method. Indigestion produces disagreeable and sometimes alarming symptoms. Wright’s; Indian Vegetable Pills stimulate the digestive processes to function naturally.—Adv. ' New York’s Great Fire. One of New York’s greatest fires started on September 21, 1776, six days after the British captured thecity. Trinity church and 493 other buildings were destroyed, says Gas Logic.
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