McHenry Public Library District Digital Archives

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 15 May 1919, p. 3

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THE PLAINDEA f f nirffili' tMmAclmHrKnimN RT, TLIi. n L-WBE ANARCHIST PLOT Arrests at Chicago Thwart U. S. tterror Reign, It H £% ' Said. • NOTORIOUS REDS TAKEN i^iiholesale Sabotage Set for July 4 as ¥• ^Deportation Protest -- Released From Wisconsin Prison by % • ' . •-;-i State Supreme Court.- 'fMeajro, May IS.--A nation-wide Campaign of terror, including a series of bomb outrages on July 4, is believed to have been nipped at its inception with the capture of four notorious anarchists here by Detectives Bffan and McDonough. •' In their possession was found literature indicating thtot Independence day had been marked for a wholesale uprising of anarchists to liberate imprisoned anarchists and radicals and as a protest against the deportation of rods. It was thought by the federal authorities following the arrest that the prisoners might possibly be connected with the recent "Glmbel bomb" affair, in which bombs were sent to a score of the leading officials and citlasns of the country. A lengthy examination of the prisoners, however, revealed to the authorities that the anarchists could not have actively participated in the plot. They have all been recently released from the Wisconsin state prison, at Waupun. •' They had been sentenced to 25 years' imprisonment for alleged complicity in the bomb explosion in September, 1917, at Milwaukee, la which nine policemen and a woman were killed. They are Marie and Pasquale Narjflinl, husband and wife, and their sixjrear- old son, Reno, and Joe FratifTe and Adolphe Fratesi. Marle Nardinl Is known nationally to police and radical circles as "queen of the an- Hjjrehlsts." , Much comment on the failure of federal officials at Washington to act toward the deporation of the anarchists when they were released on April & from Waupua was voiced by the police. The quartette, with two other anarchists, were ordered released from the penitentiary by the state supreme court of Wisconsin after a rehearing Of 4heir case by that body. ' The anarchists were sentenced on a Charge of attempt to Incite to kill. IVE" TRIATY--EBERT WHERE THE QCMANS LOSE TERRITORY President of Germany Says ^^Peace Pact Wil! Bring f New Wars. DEMANDS "PEACE OF RIGHT" fLANE PATROL STARTS JUNE 1 Army Airships to Spot Forest Flrea* In National Reserve--Routes to Be 100 Miles Long, ~ Washington, May 10.--Patrol of national forests by army airplanes tog give early warning of forest fires will . begin June 1, with the inauguration *»(Kf two patrol routes from Marchfleld, ~&ear Riverside, Cal., according to announcement here by the forest service of the department of agriculture. -MJn the same day observations covering a large part of the Angeles Na» tlonal forest will be started from a «nptlve balloon stationed over - the - army balloon school near Arcadia, Cal. Two airplanes will be used on each |f the patrol routes, which will be .libout 100 miles long, and each route if,i1f7r lll be covered twice a day•. JIG WINTER WHEAT CROP ; ^. t L|)|lII Records Are Broken and the ; World's Needs Satisfied, Government Report Shows. JS Washington, May 10.--A winter ^flfheat crop of 900,000,000 bushels in *}1flound numbers is estimated by the Hiepfcrtment of agriculture In Its fe- Hjort for May. The crop thus estimated sets a new record, and Its total Held Is within 17,000.000 bushels of total winter and spring wheat fcrops of last year. r;ui With an estimate of 350,<MXM>00 ' |>ushels of spring wheat, part of which fias not been seeded, a total wheat crop of 1,250,000,000 bushels is possible for the United States. Argentina to Deport 17 Women. Buenos Aires, May 12.--Within the next few darys 300 anarchistic agitators will be deported, the most of them being Russians and Italians. Among them are 17 women. The chief of police expects soon to h*ye 400 more. Executive In Proclamation Says Pact Would "Deliver German Labor to Foreign Capitalism"--Appeals to People to Stand Together. Berlin, May 12.--Germany's reply to die terms of peace presented at Versailles on Wednesday will be a proposal "for a peace of right on the basis of a lasting peace of the nations," according to a proclamation to the German people issued here by President Ebert. The proclamation says the treaty would "deliver German labor to foreign capitalism for the indignity of wage slavery and permanently fetter the young German republic." The proclamation closes with an appeal to the German people to stand together, knowing no parties, "and to preserve with the government mutual trust in the path of duty in the belief of the triumph of reason and right." The text of the proclamation follows: "The first reply of the allies to the sincere desire for peace on the part of our starving people was the laying down of uncommonly hafrd armistice conditions. "The German1 ^people, having laid down its arms, honestly observed all the obligations of the armistice, hard as they were. Notwithstanding this, our opponents for six months have continued the war by maintaining the blockade. "The German people bore all these burdens, trusting In the promise given by the allies in their note of November 8, that the peace would be a peace of right on the basis of President Wilson's 'fourteen potats.' "Instead of that the allies have now given us peace terms which are in contradiction to the promise given. It is unbearable for the German people and is Impracticable, even If we put forth all our powers. Violence without measure would be done to the Germau people. From such an imposed peace fresh hatred would be bound to arise between the nations and, in the course of history, there would be new wars. The world would be obliged to bury every hope of a league of nations liberating and healing the nations, and insuring peace. 1 "The dismemberment and mangling of the German people, the delivering of German labor to foreign capitalism for the indignity of wage slavery and the permanent fettering of the young Ge> man republic by the entente's imperialism is the aim of this peace violence. "The German people's government will answer the peace proposals of violence with a proposal at a peace of right on the basis of a lasting peace of the nations. "The fact that all circles/Of the Ge> man people have been moved so deeply testifies that the German government is giving expression to the united will of the German nation. The German government will put forth every effort to secure for the German people the same national unity and independence and the same freedom of labor in economical and cultural respects which the allies want to give to all the peoples of Europe, save only our people." , M0W STETTIN Munich fl O y 4 /r 33rd Division Now In Brest Brest. May 9.--The Thirty-third division headquarters and the One Hundred and Eighth sanitary train arrived at Brest. Edward L. Henry, Painter, Dies. New York, May 13.--Edward Lambert Henry, distinguished American artist, and member of the National academy slncfe 1800, died at his home In Bilenvllle, X. at the age ttftr enty-elght. i • > Dutch to Yield Ek-ttalser: London, May 13.--The Dutch government has decided to. surrender the former kaiser to the allied and associated governments, according to a dispatch from The Hague to the National News. Daniels With Thirty-Third Division. Brest, May 12.--Josephus Daniels, the American secretary of the navy, arrived at Brest Friday from England. He embarked shortly afterward on the transport Mount Vernon to sail with Ifce Thirty-third division. v Belgians Greet Bratltlan Brussels, May 12.--Dr. Epita'cia Pesson, president-elect of ^Brazil, arrived here. He was met at the station by King Albert and Queen Elisabeth and received an ovation from -a large crowd. {v. iV:... CONGRESS MEETS MAY 19 President Wilson Issues Call for Special Session by Cable*--Unable •to Attend Opening. Washington, May 9.--President Wilson issued a call by cable for a special session of congress* to meet Monday, May 19. Secretary Tumulty, in making the announcement, said it would be impossible, of course, for the president to be here on the opening day. The date fixed for the special session was much earlier than Democratic leaders had SKpected. White House offl<4hls said that in naming an earlier date for the session. President Wilson was guided largely by the advice of Secretary Glass as to the necessity of passing annual appropriation measures, which failed In the closing days of the last seaslop. * War Reunites Couple. Sandusky, Ohio, May 12.--Mrs. Florence Berry and her divorced husband, Benjamin Berry, Boston, just out of the air service of the United States army, met unexpectedly on the streets here Friday might. Saturday morning they were remarried. They had separated three years ago. Three British Flyers Drown. Dover, May 12.--The bodies of three British aviators were picked ,up by a destroyer. The men were Lieutenants Stokes and Evans and Sergeant Fil more. They had attempted to the channel in an airplane. Foe Tried to See Wllsoftl A Parts, May 13.--Count von Brockdorff- Rantzau, German foreign minister and chairman of the peace delega tion, tried to obtain a personal interview with President Wilson, but was refused, says L'lntransigeant, ' * • Reds to Fight to Flnilj^ r Copenhagen. May 10.--The Hungarian communist government has refused the armistice terms offered by Roumania and has decided to fight to the utmost, a dispatch from Budapest saJ8- • . -------------- Peking Wires Cut. ' 1 Parfs, May 10.--American MTmster Reinsch at Peking has informed Secretary Lansing that all lire communi cation out of Peking has been cut exoept for one wire which goes to berin. AMERICANS 101 DOLUB CHASERS President Tells French U. I. Has « High Sense of Humanity,; ^ and Justice. GERMAN (DEA IS All WRONG 8trike! Just for the sake of poetic Justice, why shouldn't a movie vamp and a baseball umpire match up and have m lcJpa! married life? Talk Garden ta 'Em. Tell your victory gal to the world, says thegarden commission of WasWn eveqr gardener. 1--The district in Denmark where a plebiscite of the people will decide the future government. 2--The district of Eupen and Malmedy, which will go to Belgium. 3--Alsace-Lorraine, which will go to France. 4--West Prussia, showing the districts which the Germans will lose. 5--The free city of Danzig and its immediate neighborhood, by which Poland will be given an outlet to the sea. 6--East Prussia, where the Germans will lose much territory by the treaty and where other questions will be decided by plebiscite. Posen, a large section of which goes to Poland. 8--Silesia, the upper part of which must be ceded to Poland. 9--The district about the ^clty of Memel, where the Germans will lose large possessions. 10,000 HAPPY YANKS THREE BIQ TRANSPORTS ARRIVE FROM FRANCE. LOAN OVER THE TOP MORE THAN 15,000,000 INDIVIDUALS SUBSCRIBED. Faiweue 125th Infantry, Former Michigan National Guardsmen, Arrive* on the Great Northern. New York, May 10.--Three transports, bringing about ten thousand men, arrived here. The arrivals with the units aboard were: Mongolia--From St Nazaire, April 28, with 4,605 men, including 53rd field artillery brigade headquarters, ten officers and 55 enlisted men; 107th field artillery, field and staff, headquarters, first and second battalion headquarters, headquarters and supply companies; ordnance, sanitary and veterinary detachments, batteries A to F inclusive, 33 officers and 1,511 enlisted men; 109th field artillery headquarters, field and staff, headquarters first and second battalions, headquar* ters and supply companies, ordnance and sanitary detachments, veterinary units 7 and 8, batteries A to F inclusive. 38 officers and 1,588 enlisted men; 103rd sanitary train headquarters, headquarters ambulance section, medical sanitary train, ambulance companies 100 to 112 inclusive, headquarters field hospital section, field hospitals 109 to 112 inclusive, 17 officers and 855 enlisted men; 103rd engineers detachment, nine officers and ten enlisted men: 28th division headquarters, three officers and four enlisted men; fifth salvage company, two officers and 23 enlisted men; lltli casual company, transportation corps, casual companies Nos. 667, California; 668, Washington; 672, Iowa; 674, New Jersey; special casual companies Nos. 689 and 673; sick and wounded, 48 officers and 32 enlisted men. Great Northern--From Brest, May 2, with 2,971 men. Including 125th infantry (less third battalion), 75 officers and 2,062 enlisted men; 63rd infantry brigade headquarters, two officers and 21 enlisted men; Brest convalescent detachments Nos. 225 to 230, Inclusive^ 750 enlisted men, all sick or wounded : 38 casual officers. Santa Cretla--From bordeaux, April 27, with 2.002 men. including 307th engineers headquarters company, sanitary and ordnance detachments, companies B and F, inclusive, 32 officers and 1,1*9 enlisted men; 325th infantry first battalion headquarters, companies A, B and C. 10 officers and 741 enlisted men; 535th special casual company, 308th Bordeaux convalescent detachmen, 10 enlisted men, aliefcdt «r wounded. • Secretary Glass Says Practically In- $•« Country Took Quota Withe**: • - Banks' Assistance. Washington, May 12.--There were more individual subscribers to the fifth Victory Liberty loan than the total number of buyers of the first and second issues combined. The third and fourth loans, however, exceeded the present in individual subscriptions, the treasury department announced. The figures are as follows : Number of* subscribers to first loan, 4,000,000. Number of subscribers to second loan, 9,400,000. Number of subscribers to third loan, 17,000,000. Number of subscribers to Victory loan. 15,000,000. Treasury officials said that the official money total of the loan will not be known before May 26. While no returns were received from the federal reserve hanks which would enable the department to estimate the amount of over-subscription, it waa stated that It was "heavily oversubscribed." Banks will have until May 20 to get their returns into the federal reserve banks, and the federal reserve banks will have until May 24 to get their reports to the treasury department. The federal reserve committees which were able to place estimates on the number who subscribed In their various districts reported approximately as follows: Minneapolis district, 1,000,000. Cleveland district, 1,560,000. Chicago district, 1,200,000. San Francisco district, 800,0001 Kansas City district, 906,000. The New York and other districts are officially over, but accurate figures are not available. Secretary Glass was beaming. "Reports from all districts," he said, "indicate that in practically the entire country the quota was taken without material assistance from banks." ASK U. S. RAIL OWNERSHIP Farmers' National Council to Urge Legislation by Congress as Part of Reconstruction Plan. Washington, May 13.--Government ownership and operation of railroads, packing plants and the war emergency fleet will be advocated by the Farm ers' National council during the next session of congress as part of a "reconstruction program," which it will endeavor to have adopted, according to a statement given out by George P. Hampton, managing director of the organization. The council also will endeavor, Mr. Hampton said, to obtain the repeal of the espionage act and to retain legislation levying the highest rates on incomes and war profits, and will oppose all legislation designed "to give away any more of •he country's natural resources." U-Raider in London Tower. London, May 12.--The captain of a German, submarine arrived in London from Spain and was placed in the tower. The Star understands that he was the commander of a U-boat which sunk several hospital ships. -- ip,.* Czechs Drive on Budapest. Copenhagen, May 12.--Superior Czech forces, after a bitter struggle, have gained a footing in the town of Nagyszeseay. the Hungarian supreme army command announced, says a message from Budapest. Eight-Hour Day for Telegraphers. N^ew York, May 10.--Charles P Bruch, general manager of the Postal Telegfaph system, announced here that, effective June 1. the eight-hour day and time and a half for overtime had been adopted. =~ " A Liquor Men Make Appeal. Atlantic City, N. J., May 10.--A pro test to President Wilson against the enforcement of the July 1 dry execu tive order was adopted by the Na tionnl Liquor Dealers' association in session here. MEXICANS KttL U. S. MAN Immigration Inspector Slain and Two Others Wounded During Battle With Smugglers. Laredo,. Te^., May 12.--Immigration Inspector Charles Hopkins was killed and two other officers were seriously wounded in a battle between Immigration and customs officials and a band of Mexican smugglers. The wounded men are Ira Hall of the Texas state health service, who was with the government party, and Jose Valdez, one of the smugglers. The Mexicans opened fire when the Americans called upon them to sui1- render and Hopkins was killed lh the first volley. ' Inspector Dudnoway of the Immigration service had his thumb shot off during the fight. Food Chief for Canada. Ottawa, Ont., May 12.--The appointment of Dr. J. W. Robertson as: Canadian director of food supplies, a position which has been created at the request of the supreme economic council of the allied governments, was announced by T. A. Crerar, minister of agriculture. Doctor Robertson's duties will relate only to the sale of Canadian agricultural products In Europe. Junior in Yale Ends Life. New Haven, Conn., May 13.--Richard Hartwell Mathers of Toledo, O., a. junior in Yale university, committed suicide by shooting himself in the head. The medical examiner sal<| tifprwork probably was the cause, Wilson Says Freedom of Speech Is Greatest Safety Because When a Man |i a Fool Beet Thing II to Let him Advertise Fact. Paris, May 14.--President Wilson. In his address to the French Academy of Moral and Political Sciences, vigorously denied that the American people were largely materialists or dollar worshipers. "I have had In recent months one very deep sense of privilege," the president said. "I have been keenly aware that there have been times when the peoples of Europe have not tinder-, stood the people of the United States. We have beeu too often supposed to have been devoted chiefly if not en-,^ tlrely to material enterprises. We Have been supposed, in the common phrase, to worship the almighty dollar. "We j have accumulated wealth, we have devoted ourselves to material enterprises with extraordinary success, but there has underlain all of that, all the time, H common sense of humanity and a common sympathy with the high principles of justice which has never grown dim in the field even of enterprise, and it has been my very great joy in these recent months to Interpret the people of the United States to the people of the world. "I have not done more, I have not uttered in my public capacity my own private thoughts. I have uttered what I have known to be the thoughts of. the great people whom I represent. I have uttered the things that have been stored up in their hearts arid purpose from the time of our birth as a nation." President Wilson alluded to hit studies in the field of political %ienc« and the attempts he had made "to put into the words of "learning the thought of a nation, the attitude of a people toward public affairs." He continued: "A great many of my colleagues in American university life got their training, even In political science, so many men in civil circles did, in German universities. I have been obliged at various times to read a great deal of bad German, difficult German, awkward Gennan, and I have been aware that the thought was as awkward as the phrases, that the thought was rooted in a fundamental misconception of the state and of the political life of peoples. And it has been a portion of my effort to dlsenguge the thought of American university teachers from the misguided Instruction which they 'had received on this side of the sea. Their American spirit anticipated most of them, as a mutter of course, but the form of thought sometimes misled thein. They speak too often of state as a thing which would Ignore the individual, as a thing which was privileged to dominate the fortune of men by a sort of inherent and sacred authority. Now as an utter democrat, I have never been able to accept that view of the state. My view of the state is that it must stop and listen to what I have to say. no matter how humble I am, .and that" each man has the right to have his voice heard and his counsel lieeded In so far a«^ It is worthy of him. I have always been among those who believe that the greatest freedom of speech is the greatest safety, because if a man Is a fool, the best thing to do is to encourage him to advertise the fact by speaking. It cannot be so easily discovered If Vou allow him to remain silent and Ipok wise, but If you let him speak the secret is out and the world knows that he is a fool. So it Is by exposure of folly that It Is defeated; not by the seclusion of folly, and in this free air of free speech men get Into thut sort of communication with one another, which constitutes the basis of all conjmon achievement. France, through many vicissitudes, and__thr»ugh many bitter experiences, found tlie way to this sort of freedom, and now she stands at the front of the world as the representative of constitutional liberty." „ What is Castorla CSTORIA b a harmless substitute for Castor OH, Paregoric^ Drops and Soothing Syrups. It is pleasant. It contains neither Opium, Morphine nor other Narcotic substance. Its age is its guar* •tttee. For more than thirty jesxs it has been in constant use for the relief, of Constipation, Flatulency, Wind Colic and Diarrhoea; allaying Feverish* Bass arising therefrom, and by regulating the Stomach sod Bowels^ aids the assimilation of Food; giving healthy and natural sleepjj^ The Children's Panacea--The Mother's Friend. The Kind Yon Have Always Bought, and which has been in use for SO years, has borne the signature of Chas. H. Fletcher, and has been madeaadef* his personal supervision since its infancy. Allow no one to deceive you tatUaii All Counterfeits, Imitations and "Just-as-Good" are but Experiments thafj trifle with and endanger the health of Infants and Children--Experience against Experiment. Genuine Oaetoi Is always bears the signature of Free Girl Who Poisoned Wffe. Seattle, Wash., May 13.--Ruth Garrison, eighteen, who confessed she poisoned Mrs. Grace G. Storrs, wife of D. M. Storrs, whom Ruth loved, was found not guilty of murder because of mental irresponsibility. Opposed to German Union. Basel, May 12.--The majority faction in the Austrian national assembly, according to a report from Vienna, has decided to renounce the idea of the union of German-Austria with Germany. Ex-Crown Prince Makes Tift Washington, May 12.--The former German crown prince has gone into the pottery business, according to offlrinl dispatches received here from Holland. A -new company has just organized. A stupid man compliments a worn-1 You cant Judge the stxe of a man** an's teeth, but a clever man makes her I brain by the amount of noise he laugh. I makes. --- ' iiiiwiFii 1 Vi: Iiif-n.:' life THE MOST DANGEROUS . ! OF ALL' DISEASES No organs of th«s humi&i body are so In port ant to health and long life as the . kidney*. When they slow up and com- Sence to lag in their duties, look out! unger is in Right. Find out what the trouble Is--With-* «et delay. Whenever you feel nervous, weak, d.zzy, suffer from sleeplessness, or have pains in the back, wake up at dace. Your kidneys need help. These are Signs to warn you that your kidneys •re not performing their functions Broperly. They are only half doing leir work and are allowing impurities to accumulate and be converted into nric acid and other polmum, wWu are causing you distress and will destroy you unless they, are driven from your system. Get some GOLD MEDAX* Haaitas Oil Gapmiles at once, They are aa ol^ tried preparation used all over tfc* world for centuries. They contain eajr old-fashioned, soothing oils i iiinhlasii with strength-giving and system-dean** ing herbo, well known and used by pfcyuidans in their daily practice. GOID MEDAL Haarlem Oil Capsules are la- Sorted direct from the laboratories fes olland. They are convenient to tabs, and will either give prompt relief er your money will be refunded. AA far them st any drag store, but be sua to get the original imported GOLD MEDAL brand. Accept no substitute In sealed packages. Three sixes. The belle In the choir often brings more young men to church than the bell in the steeple. The man who Is looking for a son place without honest labor can uaaafr ly find It right under his hat Em WHEN BUYING ASPIRIN ALWAYS SAY "BAYER" A«ir for "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin" In a Bayer -package--marked with "Bayer Crow." Yanks Play Soccer Ball. Ooblenz, May 14.--The world's longest soccer football game was played here on Saturday when the Sixth division won the #rmy championship from the fifth division in a three-hour struggle. A team from the Third division, headed by Lieut. Paul of Boston, won the tennis championship of the Third American army. Spain Seizes German Ships. Madrid, Muy 14.--With a view to preventing possible acts of sabotage, the maritime authorities have taken charge of the German ships interned In Spanish p<nts. Six of these ships have been provided with French crews. Yank "M. P." Slain In France. Nice, May 14.--Two American military police were attacked by a gang and one, "Herbert Larsen. was wounded fatally. Five revolver shots were fired point-blank at the po}iee}ueifc three of them striking Larsen. Villa on the Job. El Paso, Tex., May 14--According to Information received here from Parral, Francisco Villa retook that city Thursday and made prisoners of the garrison of 2»J0 men under Col. Gomez, who had captured the town. Don't buy Aspirin tablets In a pill box. Insist on getting the Bayer package with the safety "Bayer Cross" on both package and on tablets. No other way! You must say "Bayer." Never ask for merely Aspirin tablets. The name "Bayer" means you are getting the genuine "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," proven safe by millions of people. Beware of counterfeits! Only recently a Brooklyn manufacturer was sent to the penitenttary for flooding the country with talcum powder tablets, which he claimed to be Aspirin. In the Bayer package are proper ®- rections and the dose for Headache^ Toothache, Earache, Neuralgia, Rheumatism, Lumbago, Sciatica, OoMfc Grippe, Influensal-Oolda, Neuritis and pain generafly. "Bayer Tablets of Aspirin," can made and owned, are sold la pocket boxes of 12 tablets, which cost only a few cents, also In bottles of 24 and bottles of 100--also capsules. Aspirin Is the trade mark of Bayar Manufacture of Monoacetlc a lI dsatSV of Sallcyllcacld. HIS COSTLY PLUNGE LASTING Millionaire's Bath In Champagne Possibly Has Made Him Disdainful . of Humble Water. » __ A Kansas City man with extensive Interests In the new Texas oil fields has come back with a new story concerning the foibles and follies of oil millionaires. "There's a fellow down tn the Banger field who made a couple of pnllllon or so. He never had possessed much money before; probably l-.ad had trouble meeting his grocery bills and rent. Just as soon as he got hold of those millions he made a firm declaration of his Intents and purposes. 44 Tm gonna go over into Louisiana and take a champagne bath,' this newmade millionaire declared. "And he did. Took a bath in the finest champagne he could buy. Had cases of the bubbling stuff* brought up to his hotel suite and dumped into his bathtub. And now he tells everybody he meets about it "But the funny part of It Is that he seems to have sworn off bathing altogether after that $1,000 ablution. Maybe he disdains bathing in mere water now." Cousin Bill says: "The crow may be a troublesome bird but he never gets noisy without caws." PROVED NOTE WAS INCORRECT At Cost of Some Personal O fort Collector Found It Did Not State Exact Truth. At the head of a large business-flM* cern Is a very pompous man, who not only Is very careful of his dignity, but Inclined to irritability if things do not go exactly right with him. Wishing to attend to some correspondence and having been troubled much of the day by visitors, he ! pi need a note on the outside of his prl- r vatc office door the other day which ,, read: "Mr. Blank cannot be disturbed." A collector soon afterward appeared at the door of the private office, walked past the secretary, read the note and strode in, but soon came out the door much more rap- ' idiy than he had entered. "Didn't fou read the note?" the aee* rotary asked of the disheveled Cotlector. "1 read it," the latter admitted, "but I didn't believe It and went in to find out. I discovered that I, right, for he can be and was." In Bad With Beth. . ' "Mr. and Mrs. Wombat seem to hata you, yet you were an early friend at each." "That's the point. I Introduce* them."--Louisville Coorler-JouraaL Government to Sell Cars. Washington. May 14--Locomotive cranes ruilroad cars and other equipment to the value of $18,000,000 have turned over by the war departto the railroad administration ml# to tin* raii«»«is. ' ' ' ' ' ' i mcnt . I been J tneiu ECONOMY IN POSTUM Baal Poafam as long as yen pIoM^ V and you will extract only healthful goodness. You'll g?t no caffeine--; the coffee-drug--for there* I; Postum. THe Original POSTUM CEREAL in fact, should be boiled fully 15 minutes, and if desired the pot can kept going from meal to meal, adding more Postum and water for the new service. Postum is die favorite of large fiombepi of former coffee-drinkers and can N. . secured from grocers everywhere. Two Sizes, usually sold aft 15c sad 25c» r- .: 3* .. Jt Delicious, Invigorating and Healthful Drink . 'ftC-;' II There's a Reason' •> / •/'"••I- \ 1 J ifa. L . : l l f e i f r M n ' n i M -- ' I -

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