Norwich Bulletin Newspaper, September 11, 1919, Page 4

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Sorwich Bulletin and Gonufied 123 YEARS OLD Somsristies sriee (20 & week: S0 @ mowth: SE.00 CIRCULATION WEEK ENDING SEPT. 6 TREATY RESERVATIONS. Will President Wilson squarely join with the senate and ¥ that reservations to the are neither wise ations com- enge by pre- reservations, t the ntend only to e country. that the the league the United country be integrity of aggression. to or to declare nsent of determinati aquestions be I 1 ted States. the future as in place our own inter- the Monroe doctrine. find in these formal policy nd principie endangers the peace of Do contain any ele- st another coun- try” Are they not in form and in fact expressive of a desire to secure the d perpetuitv of our liberty institutions? triotic statesmen careful con- hat the guage of the uld be made clearer by an tion on the part of this of unusual conditions there was no greater number of serious transgres- sions. FIVE HOURS AND COAL. President Wilson’s plea that this is no time to attempt a cure of the high cost of living by the remedy of in creased wages has evidently fallen up- on deaf cars as far as the mine work- ers are concerned. At their conven- tion in Cleveland they have an- nounced their intention of demanding wage increases and shorter hours. 1t is freely predicted that their wage demands may even run to 100 per cent. and there will be_a declara- tion for a thirty hour week. meaning five working days of six hours each. Such a declaration, according to prediction, will be semt to Buffalo where the convention is to be followed by a conference later in the month. It is to be supplemented By the recom- mendation that. if necessary, what is termed a continent-wide strike be called. There is in the advance guard already. assembled _a sentiment against making the demands to be filed 100 exacting, but it finds com- parativelr mild expression. Prices of coal, it will be generally agreed, are factors in the high cost of living, and coal prices can not be disassociated with cost of production. How the mine workers propose to re- duce the high cost of living by add- ing to coal prices through a 30-hour working week is certainly a relevant | auestion. OPENING UP ALASKA. One more of the lands ot romance, | which once was to be sought only by hardy adventurous spirits, is to be made available to any one with the price of a railroad ticket when the new zovernment railway to Alaska is compieted. The old Alaska of’ winding trails, towering mountains, roaring cataracts, and impenetrable forests .was closed to all but the hardiest of the race who were drawn by the lure of gold and the pioneering spirit; vet it drew men by the thousands. Alaska wi still be far enough away to appeal to the young men of mettle who want to break away from the avenues and electric lights and cabarets and set up their tents under strange stars. Alaska has miles of awe inspiring cenery, thousands of acres of ag- ricultural and timber land, great mines and still greater mineral de- posits to be developed, millions of tons of coal untouched. and exten- sive and richly paying fisheries. The government road, when finish- ad. will comnect Seward, at the ex- treme south of Alaska, with Fair- anks. some four hundred miles to the north. The total cost of the road 1s about $45,000,000. With the new railway completed, the adventure of Alaska will offer reasonable assurance of good business returns %o far as its own welfare is | from oig- | enan | m. Desire | Malines, | America of ever a nobler, | et German heel, < cepinz the Bel- ence ciear and national| Th n Rome r ded in 1914,{ - H e e va- | - Eistinas misasage he herok e &% R at the power| Belgian people immunity ac | It was Car- | branded the ser cabled to had | severe | rocities ey began ior [ | i | basemen: of bumanit It is doubtful if force of 2,000 000 men ce in a for- e come ou has been vestigations of abroad, it is shown that ten men out of o of 2,000,000 paid wi thetr penalty of having com- *nitted great wronmgs. The record is that e American soidiers were hanged. one was shot for violation of criminal laws. Two of the hangings were for murder, six for assault and one soldier was shot for desertion. The men were from every state and from some of the island possessions, from every walk of life, and in the| thremg every reiigion and every b lief that combatted religion were found. There wers men with crimi- |mal records and men who never had violated any sort of law. There were white men. biack men, Indians and orientals. Two millions of these men were taken away from their homes and families. They were placed under an iron discipline that was new to the majority and irksome to many. Their environment was changed and they were subject=d to severe tests of courage day after day. It is a great wonder that more of them were mot guilty of wrong doing. So much i m | heroic | perishable names “There go two more of em,” the tall, }lank housenolder _said indignantl parting the vines shading his front porch from the street. “That makes seventeen since dinner time. What the world coming to?” = “You are more wrought up over this idea than vou ever were over the beaux of Phemy-across-the-street,” declared his wife annoyedly. “Let ‘em alone—I guess things will comie out all right.” Never.” mourned the householder. “The ho; is tall. lank of the pres- no use for eaeh other. Why. you nev er see ‘em roaminz around together. A regular procession of pretty pink and white creatures in fluffy organdy gowns going to the movies together, eating ice cream soda together, dis- consoletely promenading the streets together trving to vretend they are having a perfectly good time and aren’t wondering a bit where on earth all the boys are—and where are the darned-bovs? Tearing by at fifty miles an hour in father's car, whooping it up and quite indifferent to the _pro- cession of deserved maidens. “The only excuse a boy that age has for encumbering the earth is taking some zirl around and making her hap- py. That's what they are for and I am pained and surprised_at the way they dodge their duty. When I was a younz man things were different. If only T had a multiple personality and were vouthful I'd take on several of these girls who wander by here with sadness hide in their hearts, though they beneath perfect marcel waves the best brand of face powde: Why. several of my friends are dowered with blooming daughters and T never hear one of them putting up the time-honored howl about the raft of trousered visitors overrunning the verandas. Rather they exclaim over the lovely females who come to call on Molly and spend hours deciding whether it is worth while to walk to the drug store and purchage a phos- phate thev don’t want or stay where they are and talk of their dismal lives. it ent day and the girls have absolutely| MODERN COURTSHIP They say naturally sweet tempered girls just snap and bite at each other Through_sheer boredom. I don't blame them. When you've spent hours sew- ing lace ruffing on your sown and " more hours fixing your golden hair and many minutes applying face en- amel warranted to stick and know that you look perfectly scrumptious. T tell you it undermines your placid dis- ‘position to face the sordid fact that the only living soul you are goinz to see who will see vou is Mamie Jones or’ Dorothy Bump. both of whom will i think _they look better than vou do. What a darling dress,’ Mamie will ‘What are vou goinz to do to- zirls, to kill time? ‘T bough! it at yesterday's sale. savs Mol ‘Goodness. I don’t know—what is there to do? Say, Charlies went hy here a few minutes ago and he almest ston-| that?" 0 you think of Zoodness!” gurgled Dorothy, round eved. ‘But vou do have luck! Nobody has ever walked by on my side of the street for weeks. I saw a streak of dust. yesterday that T am almost sure was Chuck’s car, still it might not have been. Oh. let's go get a soda —we mizht as well’ And that's their thrilling evening. Why. all those girls should have crowds of sighing swatns hovering about them. Nothing makes a girl so cheerful as the ‘shivery feeling that two or three men are on the point of cutting each other’s throat over her. They all ought to be able to prance own the aisle at the movies with andsome voung .fellows, in _their wake. T ‘tell You they are denied the rightful perquisites of pretty girl- hood and T am all upset over it.” Tt's too bad,” agreed his wife. | “Still, T notice that just about as many young people are committing matr mony today as there ever were.” ‘Maybe,” admitted her Thusba “But how they do thei me. 1 guess th must just ring up on the phone the girls they have pick- ed out and say they will be around soon to marry 'em. That's exactly what the younz scoundrels do doggzone ‘em!”—Exchanzc. IN THE DAY’S NEWS The Island of Yap. ment by President Wilson that the island of Yap may be acauired by the United States as a reparation for the sinking of the Lusitania and as a In wireless and cable station, the fol- lowing bulletin is issued by the Na- tional Geographic Society: “Yap. the westernmost of the West- ern Caroline Island, is situated about 500 miles southwest of Guam and 800 miles east of the Island of Mindanao of the Philippine group. It has a pop- ulation of about seven thousand and was_the administrative center for the Western Carolines, the Peiew and the Ladrone Islands. The Germans had made plans to locate a wireless Statiim ‘there bix were prevented) when “Australian troops captured the islands in October, 1914 “Yap is strangely old and strangely EDITORIAL NOTES. up to date. _Its inhabitants are still in the stone age and progress and Harvard football huskies certainly| . i,* st the oniy cxport. but have (I s there are features in their life that wielding nightsticks. . | seem uiltra-modern as the latest so- The actors will now have to drop back to the legitimate to get their| names in the papers The man on the corner says: The profiteer i all modesty when. it comes ) proclaiming his deeds. Rumania savs she trusts the United | but at the same time proceeds | her own map making. praises cool speil. cdme of an There should be no delay in Nor- in providing the money needed he Welcome Home celebration. Senator La. Follette is still strictly form. He d thirteen hours other day in talking on one sub- the weather clerk The city was just ice famine. Brockton thi ne wich the New York schools have opened with 40000 on part time basis. Even the opolis can't keep up with school { | neeas would a good American hus- be worth if women in Russia are paving $300 for husbands not worth 30 cents? Wwh band that no welcome Pershing more than 35000 New York we'nl pleased school rrant General given him by children. the Prince ght of on the welcoming Temporarily. at least, of Wales has been losi fron: pages while we are own war hero. our The knightly Cardinal King Albert and the Mercier are two im- that Belgium has given to the world. Well, anywa; y., President Wilson's ought to boom Paris stvies in the west the women in his au- diences take a peek at what Mrs Wilson wears. With Cardinal Mercier and General Pershing both there at once New York's reception committees will have a heavy task before them, but they will prove equal to it. A Fifth avenue milliner just re- turned from Paris sa¥s that American soldiers have married so many of the little French dressmakers -that there is a great shortage in that line of la- bor. Berger says all he got out of be- ing a member of the national execu- tive committee of the national social- ist party was a twenty-year prison sentence. And he knows of that only hearsay so far. It takes vigilance to beat the prof- iteer. In New York it has just been discovered that army food has been tought by wholesalers and resold at a large profit. Prunes bought at 18 ents were resold for 23. Carranza declares that if Ameri- cans want to go into.the Tampico dis- trict they must look out for them- selves. And then he wonders why for- cign countries complain because Mex- ico doesn't protect subjects of other countries. The president says that If the treaty is accepted our soldiers will never was going on around them that was strange: so many temptations were placed before them. in spite of all their officers and the welfare workers could do. The wonder is fhat under the stress £O over the seas again. Yet they are telilng us it will take 100,000 Ameri- cans to nolice Armenia and other parts of Turkey and Americans are wanted to ald in giving protection at Fiume. | | | | | i | ea hands and lezs wh | her as a mispil or “queen of clalist doctrines. “On the isiand of Yap. the natives are strict prohibitionists, made so by the race that made Pilsen and Munich tamous. Children belong to the community, are frequently adopt- ed or cxchanged, ad throw off pa- rental control at an ‘early age. Bachelor clubs, closed 10 the women, ands. What correspods to ress suit cannot be bought dot tae the Yap he burden of wealth that a single coin of sometimes weighs the meaning of when one hears stone money ings at the “club” If one of them eventually marries the hostess he sets up a new home for her, but the tattoo- b distinguished he club” remain prove in her weazened old age that guce she was the darling of the district. If the mispil shows a preference for any one member of the ciub. that to seek otner fields for his social zraces and the party goes on without any bad feelings. _ “The chief decoration of the male is a string of pink shells made into a necklacc, and since no man isrich enough to ‘own such a treasuro best ones are lcaned out for such a period as the wearers may choose to be dressed in the height of fashion. As there are no buttonholes. the man may wear two bouquets in each —a sort of corsage bunch in a large hole in the lower lobe and a small boutonniere in a smaller hole higher up in the ear. Shell cuffs made of conchs add the finishing touch to the correct attire. ap women do not wear the veil Their only dress is a_ voluminous skirt made of leaves or fibre and com- posed of four or five thicknesses. Although one month is average life Buttermilk Creates Beauty Overnight Delightfal New Vanishing Cremm Con- tatning True Buttermilk Makes You Look Years Youmger or Monmey Back. member is toid 1 The first application of Howard's Buttermilk Cream will astonish you. It creates beauty almost like magic, but the most wonderful thing about it is the fact that whilst it turns the dullest and most lifeless complexion to radiant beauty and makes red or rough arms snowy white, yet there is not the silghtest sign of its use after applica- tion. Tt actually vanishes from signt and the most heated atmosphere will not produce the least shininess or greasine: of the skin. There is no secret about it neor there any doubt about the result—it’ just _common ordinary Buttermilk in the form of a_wonderful cream mently massaged with the finger tips around The Cotners of the eves and moutn. To prove this to your complete sat- isfaction, obtain ‘a “small quantity ot Howard s Duttermilk C#eam from your druggist or any toilet Koods counter on the moner back if dissatisfied plan. The ‘directions are simple and It costs =0 little that any EiFl or woman can afford it. hundreds of pounds. Yap. or Uap. when translated mea the land. and is the only land that many of the islanders know, although | many a native from this island has been driven hundreds of miles away from his home and.returned without chart or compass among 1slands whers | he could mnot speak a word of the uage used. Yan is surrounded by atoll but is itself of volcanic or Tae only good harbor is Tomi “Married and unmarried men aliké belong to the club which maintains a fine failu. or bachelor house. the hos- tess of which must be secured by force or cunning from some distant tribe. There she lives under a poly- andreus svstem where ho man bec Jealous and the wives of the village never object ro their husbands’ even- thel but is rented to the voung heau who desires to shine in society. And since food and drink and clothes all grow, on trces, where any one can secure| them, the money of the island repre- sents labor rather than any material | hiz. But one can better understand | of a woman's dress and it is necessary for any one to sweep up abundle of discarded dress goods after every fe- male gatherinz the style does not change. But this voluminous skirt has little to do with the modesty or im- modesty of the wearers. What cor- responds to the veil of the harem beauty in Yape is a thin cord of fibre which every woman, o!d or voung. must vear about her neck at all times. “The large money’ of the island con- sists of stone-like disks of lime- stone from Babelthuap, 400 miles to the south, and one of these disks four feet in diameter is the usual price that is paid when the bachelor club abducts a new mispil. Such a piece of carrency may be worth 10,000 co- coanuts. “The small change of the island is made of sheils, which the natives car- ry strung on fibre strings as does the Chinaman with his cash For extern- al trade the cocoanut is the common standard of exchange. “It_is not necessary that Yap Croe- sus hhould shelter his entire ‘pile’ in his house. Iie simply lets it be known that that particular half-ton piece of money belonz to him anc no one steals it. On one occasion a very fine piece of money was shipwrecked in transpor- tation and its owned is credited with the wealth represented in that fine bank pile which is now reposing in a safety deposit vault composed of 100 feet of ocean water. When the Germans wanted to have the -roads repaired they devise no way of fining the people until they bethought themselves of ‘attaching’ some of these imestone pieces of currency. after which the roads were STORIES OF THE WAR From Prison to Presidency. on repaired.” (Corresponcece of the Associated Press.)—One of the men -who were arrested by Austrian authorities aftei the assassination of Archduke Fer- dinand in 1914, is now president of the provincial zovernment of Bosnia. Herzegovina and is recognized as one in the new kinzdom of jugo-Slavia. He At Shola. He was kept in prison labor during the,war. In his office in what was formerls part of an Austrian palace, Mr. Shola described his vears in prison and sub- sequent rise to power. He is a Herze- govian. forty-two vears old and co sidered a man of exceptional “On hundred and ffty-six of the leaders s nasije at hard were placed under in_Juniy 1914, he said. “The no " proof that'I was in sympathy with the Jugo- Slay propaganda, but the authorities suspected what was in my - teen of the men arrested at that time were condemned to death. The death penalties were n beause of e remoV¥strance King of | Spain, but the prison all_ made eficctive. “I went to prison on July 28 1914. My ceil was a small one——a mere cage. and’I was kept at hard Jabor. In C tober of 1918, the peovle of Bosnia- Herzegovina. as in_other Jugo-Slav provinces of the Austrian Impire, anticipated the debacle of the empire. and organized a National Council for the conduct of affairs. As soon as the Austrian army fled this council came into full executive power and the men wrongly was berl were liberated. I prison on Novem- 1918, and aimost immediately ¢hosen by the National Council president of the government of imprisoncd released from courting gets) sentences were | cople generall; were in sympathy with the central Juzo-Slay. government at Lelgrade. Troops to Remain In Germany (Correspondence of The Associated Press)—Composition of the final per- manent guard of American troops in Germany has_ just been _announced. According to the terms of peace the ‘Americans are o have the choice of ihe best barracks formerly occupied by the Germany army The Eizhth Infantry. as has previ- ousiy becn announced. will form the main body of combat troops. A crack cavalry detachment of two troops has been organized and wiii be undcr com- inad of Colonci J. M. Wainwright. This mounted. unit will be used for the pairol of t3C American zone in the occupicd territory _snd as a head- riers’ guard. The two companies of the Severin machine-gun battalion, memiers of which claim the distic- tion nf Leing the only American unit which _ever fovzht in the city of Cha- to the Third ttalion was atrached | teau-Trierry Siieif, will form pert of | the United states garrison 6: the | 7thi The Sevents machine-gun | | { division which was intrumental in lopping -lonz the Marne the last great German drive on Paris. |~ The list of urits in the permanent ! garrison as announced at the Coblens | headquarters foliows: Commanding gencral, Major General Henry T. Allen and staff: headquart- crs field clerks: cre copincd head- quarters and military police company the Eighth Intantry regiment; the Seventh .m:toiized machins-gun bat- talion, two companies: one supply truck train: one mobile ordnance re- pair shop: the first field signal bat- ialion; Company A. First engineers: Quar-ermasters Corps and a_bakery unit; ordnance Getachment: the Sec- ond 'bateaifon. Sixth Field artillery aad a medical department. The forces will consist of beiween 7,000 ad 8,000 iicers and men {MAN-OF WAR TOSSED ! i ABOUT BY EARTHQUAKE Dispatches stating that six dread- naughts of the Pacific fleet were shak - en by an earthquake off the coast of AMexico recalls an amazing incident in the annals of the American navy in which 2 United States man-of-war | was carried three miles up the coast, jtwo miles inland. and set down, en- | tirély unharmed, upon ihe beach. | within a hundred feet of the Andes,” says a bulletin from the \Washinsion | headquarters of the National Geogra- phic Society. This thrilling incident is recounted in a communication to The, Society by one of the participants, Rear Admiral L Billings, U. 8. N. retired, as fol- lows In 1868 I was attached to the U. S Wateree, then on duty in the South acific—one of a class of boats built t the close of our Civil War to P the narrow torturous rivers South; she w jer ring was quite flai-hotiomed—a conforma- tion which, while it did not add to hel worthiness, enabled her to carry a large battery and erew, and eventually saved our lives, in ' the catastrophe ich was soon o come upon us. ust. 1589 found us quietly | wichor off the pretty Peruvian town of Arca. whither we had towed the old United States store-ship ‘Fredonia’ to escape the ravages of yellow fever, then desolating Callao and Lima. “There lurked the ever-present fear the native mind of another earth- quake, for Arica seemed a sort head center’ for such seismic dis- | turbances, having been twice before i destroyed with great loss of life. While the anchorage was o dstead of almost unlimited exteft it proteced from the pre- ds by Alcaran Island, small |and apparenily a lump of rock broken | off from the Morro by some prior con- vulsion. ANl the merchantment were clustered rather closely under the lee of this island. near the Morro, mavbe 4 quarter of a mile from the usual man-of-war anchorage, and about the same distance from the shore. The men-of-war anchored more abreats of the town and possibly half a mile | distant . “It was August 8, that the awful ca- lamily came upon us. like a storm from a cloudiess sky. overwheiming us all in one common ruin “I was sitting in the cabin with our in A Voies From Sio PE-R atl was coming to their aid, and ot f an open’ trembiing of the ship, similur to the effect produced by letting zo the an- chor. Knowing it could not be that, we ran on deck. Looking shoreward, our attention was instantly arrested by a great cloud of dust rapidly ap- proachini from the southeast, while a terrible rumbling grew in intonsit and before our astonished eyes the hills | seemed (o nod, and th ground swayed | like the short, choppy waves of a| troubled sea. “As the dust slowly settled we rub- bed our eves and -looked again and | again believing they must be ploying us a trick: for where but a few short | moments before was a happy,prdspe- | rous city. busy with life and activity we behéld but a mass of . shattered | ruins, hardly a house left standing: not one verfect, the street blockd with | debris through which struggled fran- tically the least wounded of the unhap- Py wretches imprisoned in the ruins of the ruins of their once happy homes: | while groans, cries and shrieks for| help rent the air. | “Our prudent eommander. however, gave 'the necessary orders to prepare | for the worst. Additional anchors | were let o, hatches battened down. suns secured, life lines rove fore and aft, and for a few minutes all was the | orderly confusion of a well-disciplineq | man- of-war prepuring for actign. Many hands made short work, and in a few moments we were prepared for any emergency. “But our troubles then commenced We were startled by a terrible noise on shore, as of a tremendous roar of mus- lasting several minutes. Agan| the trembling earth waved to and fro. and this time the sea re- ceded until the shipping was left stranded, while as far to seaward our vision could reach, we saw rocky bottom of the sea, never be- fore exposed to human gaze with struggling fish and monsters of the deep left high and dry. The round-| bottomed ships keeled over on their beam ends. while the ‘Wateree' rested easily on- her floor-like bottom. and when the returning sea, not like al wave, but rather an enormous tide, came sweeping back, roiling our un- fortunate companion ships over and over, leaving some bottom up and oth- ers masses of wreckage. the ‘Wateree' as the rose easily over the tos waters, harmed. ‘From this moment the sea seemed to defy the laws of nature. Currents tan in conira directions. and we were borne here and there with a speed we could not have equaled had we been steaming for our lives. At irregular intervals the earthquake shocks recurred, but mone of them so vislent or long continued as the firs “The Peruvian man-of-war ‘America’ said 1o be the fastest ship in the world at that time. had hasily gotten up steam and attemped o get to sea. She was well out when the receding water left her partly afloat and broke her back, of course destroving her engines. With her funnels still vomiting biack moke and apparently under full com- mand of her people, she backed down toward the helpless ‘Fredonia.’ which was then rapidly setting in toward the Morro. as if intending to heip her. “Lieutenant Commander Dyer. cor manding the ‘Fredonia’ saw the ina- neuver. and, thinking the ‘Ameri that a involve on nearer approach would ~only them both in destruction, rin Bt of Her Child. - AUDITORIUM—100AY YOU WILL NEVER SEE ANOTHER PICTURE LIKE IT AND THE CHILDREN PAY The Theme of the Picture Is the Most Vital and Far-Reach- ing for Women Ever Presentzd On the Screen—Nothing oser to the Heart of Any Mother Than Moral Welfare POPULAR — KEYSTONE COMEDY—“The Tamaley Army” GAUMONT GRAPHIC PRICES —IN— THE FOUR FL! A 5 ACT DRAMA IN ADAPTED FROM GEO M'CUTCHEON'S F NOVEL N BreeD) THEATRE —TODAY— HALE HAMILTON METRO COMEDY PEGGY HYLAND COWARDICE COURT HAROLD LLOYD COGUNT YOUR CHANGE USHER RGE BARR AMOUS then but a _few yaras distant You can do nothing co ahoy! our bottom is- crushed selves. Goodbye.” Then station among his siler crew he ran again. The the ‘Fredonia’ was crushe ill-fated company not while @ counter curi Peruvian ship drove another direction, “About 8:30 p. m.. the the deck and reported proaching. first, a thin line of light, which loomed high until it scemed to touch crescent, crowned with th of phosphorescent glow, sullen masses of waler alded by the thunderin thousand breakers dreaded tidal wave was Of all the horrors of time. this seemed the to the spot the preparati skill could suzs: the monster wave susaining help of ship could ride water-about to overwhel impossible. We could or life line and wait the c ent her made 1gh Looking seaward, we helpiess to escape. “Amer! for u; Save your down to his unshrinking next moment 1, and of that was saved, cat¢hing the rapidly in ookout hailed brenker ap- hosphoresc er and hig the or its light the Her- of mbifed ! this * areadtui Chained with all Which human the { ot | That he m srip the oming catas- AVI THEATRE ~TODAY— BESSIE BARRISCALE e “THE WHITE LIE” PART SOCIETY DRAMA INTERNATIONAL NEWS PATHE COLORED REVUE VOD-A-VIL MOVIES EDDIE POLO In the 13th Episede of “The Lure of the Circus” “THE PLUNGE FOR LIFE” D 5 The Messenger Boy HANK MANN COMEDY COMING—Friday and Saturday CHARLES RAY in The Busher ETHEL CLAYTON in Vicky Van CHARLIE CHAPLIN ing Comedy in a roar- trophe. “With & overwhelmed a semi-solid For o b¥ea merged; then, br, the staunch old again to the surface, wih ner gaspin crew stilling clinging to tha Lf: | some few seriously wounded. bruised and batered; none killed: no eve: missing. A miracie iL seemed to then, and 1 look back tarougk yes it seems doubly mira ow. “The morning sun tion seldom high indentation, wad been cu up the coast and nea The wave bad carried ines bordering vailey and ove traclk, leaving us at the ool coast range of the Andes. On i ly perpendicuiur front parks of the tidal wa urement, found it to [ not including wave carried up 200 would inevitably have pieces against the mountain gallant buried deep and and were sub every tim struggle chip wa benea mass of groaning W we n broke on witnessed ipal -1 We ttle the som of deso found our oustline miles inland the sand of moun ‘ Had further dashed side teet Sqe Wfotl Horl & Fotlnfants, Invalidsand G The Original Food-Drir poop and haiied the approaching rowing Children k for All Ages NFANTS and INVALIDS e 3K FOR iy tlorlick’s The Original Asoid Imytntions asd Substitates Rich milk, malted grain e: PH«"éul No Cooking — Nourishing — Digestible ract 500 PAIRS MEN'S FIRST QUALITY Rubber Boots ux City, Jowa, cays U-NA Worth Its3Welght in Gold You cannot mistake the words of Mr. W. W. Narthrup, of988 Fourth Sioux City, lows. et PER cent letter from him ;— and: He is enthusiastic about bis preseat health and U-NA and wants everyone to know it. Hereisare- “PE-RU-NA is worth Sts weight In gold then some. 1used to think it calys wo- man's remedy but have chenged my mind. I bad a couch, especially in the mornias. After using balf a tettle of PERU-NA muchbetter. I would cousgh wp chuaks of phierm aad muces, my ayes itched aad both- ered me. Judging from the symptosts given in yous almasac it was caterrh. Aly stomach tsin mauch better comdifion since msing year medicine.” ““Use this testimosial, it you wich. Dea’t Basitate toadvertise the mesits of PR-RU-NA.™ There are thousands like MMMIWfltPE—E-NA. (Signed) 'W. W. NORTHRUP. Mr. Northrup, skeptical at first but DON'T BE AN UNBELIEVER. ‘trouble is of a catarrhal nature, try PE-RU-NA, then tefl your Mdfil’orw & If your' friends. It is fine after an Sold Everywhere Tablets or Liquid FOR CATARRIN AND CATARRMAL CONDITIONS SLIGHTLY FACTORY DAMAGED Men’s Knee Boots, red and black, - - $2.95 Men’s Storm King Boots, redandblack, $3.45 ‘Men’s Hip and Sporting Boots, black, §3.45 SPECIAL LOT! Men’s Pershing Hip Boots at - - - $4.45 THE KIES CO. POSITIVELY NO EXCHANGES

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