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' :.&“-l"—""'“"“' WEEK ENDING APRIL 3, 1920 | &ome of them ate. city and. federal au-| him sitting interestedly 10,624 FULLY QUALIFIED. While of course it rests with the republican caucus to select the party candidate for mayor at the June elec- tion there will nevertheless be gen- eral satisfaction over the fact ‘th “the existing i 1o anbther Tatier which wil £t attention. If they could not meet re- backing of the municipality o A 3 ok A P SN 1 NEW YORK MUST DECIDE. Kithough-he gathered his facts in the open and in the same way that wthers might do, Rev. J. R, Straton by the disclosures : made regarding the wide open conditions in New York ity seems to have stirred up the sit- wation there a bit at a’'timé when vice conditions are getting a little more than the usoal amount of atten- tion. ind _What tHe outcome will be there is fo way of telling. - What it ought to be e another matter. Rumors of the resignation of the police commission- er who was in by the present ad- ministration are already in circula- tion but there is- nothing definite In response to the revelations made by the minister there are those, and thorities, who detlare that he ' has told them nething, that they knew these things all fhe time, and there are others who maintain that it caf never be expected that New York will be purged of law violation and vice: Whether New York can be cleaned up spotless and puré, is doubted. That edn upon by they work hard at in your neighborhood,” his friend him unfe ’ : “They nearly got pneumonia the oth- er night of their windows at retorted sane and reputable i W in a foot of snow on ;rws at that time ;m.l; thodlhu'in - er disappearing downward. I wi pained and amazed myself. I since that night I have viewed wi suspicion the theories of those h faddists who recognmuend paddil about barefooted in the driven snow. It is not up to specifications in the least, let me assure you! : “Our infant cat,” amplified ths Hyde Park man, “Orange Pekoe, flattenetd himself after the surprising fashion that cats have, and got out through a forgotten two inch space beneath & raised window sash opening upon tle extension ;. ne - discovered amid the snow Diles, surveying the moon, when she ‘Went to raise the bedroom window for the night. \He remmined ~ absolutely oblivious to her entreatles to return t6 his own fireside. “When Imogene's wails awoke me I did the obvious thing—I said let thef that she 2 _of the -electoral college in wisdom should choose the pires- free from all ouiside pressite of influence. But it was proposterous that this great office, with its im-! mense powers, should be_left:at the absolute disposal of a few meéh in a secret coneldve, and the electoral ol- .| lege _never has n. more than a h and Judy show. 1 At first the electors wefe nominat- ed and instruct: managing politicians; next the ination of presidential cahdidates was ‘made by congressional caticusés and after that by state legikintures. Thé Jacksonian revolution, in giving birth | to norhinating conventions, bfought the choice nearer the people. Not that the people = yeét i their presidential nominees, A chine does that but its ‘wanipulation man—whe. Lent on getting | present. vt o 3 very time I would get within hajling distance of }'Tkoe he would dash to the extreme edge of the roof, perch in_the icy gutter on twp feet Whith 18 scratohied ‘his ‘sar with the rest of his nidal ex Kemitiss balanc- ing by a hair and dafing e to star- tle him. 1 nau picuy, ui advice—the man ‘noith of me oifered a gun and somebody . further - away the people. Nevertheless the introduction of’ is tempered by the latefit powsr of | the convention was folldwed by a dis- |’ very few places, if any, but bers of the town cemmittes dof,, ;,.stion what what much.can be|Wh not deny the report to the effect that| ;. "i¢ there is the disposition to- it will present the name of Herbert M.| 5o1q climinating the tonditions found 't Sle€p a wink, not knowing ' bricks or a swift kick. After- | was * het pét had walked off thejcompletely frozen as to my own feet the *and legs, my teeth chattering and my down the flue tinct decline in the quality of the presidents it producéd. The homina- tion of Lincoln seemed at Jast to vin- dicate and glorify it. Alas, the irony Lerou to the caucus for its approval. “Mr. Lerou is a well known business man whose qualifications for the posi- tion cannot be questioned. He has Peen prominently identified with the republican party in Norwich for many years, has had experience In adminis- fering the affairs of the city and has Wiways been keenly alive to the im- portance of efforts which are for the welfare of this community. In this in- stance where the office is seeking the Juan there can be mo question, how- ver, but what it has looked in the right direction to get a man who-will Weasure up in every respect to re- Quirements, and when Mr. Lerou, not as & candidate, but as one upon whom the honor might well fall, declates that if he is selected by his party and! later elected he will endeavor to give the city the same businessifke admin- istration that he would insist upon fn the condition of an enterprise of his| own it cannot fafi to impress the peo- ple of Norwich with the fact that that is just what the city needs. For Mr. Lerou to say that is no empty statement, for the manner in ich he has assumed the responsi- bilities in connection with the public offices he has held make it certain that he believes in deéds and not ds and it can be confidently be- ed that he would as mayor give e businesslike attention and guid- ance to municipal affalrs that the city lagks. The people of Norwich regard- leds of party could well endorse such for net only @id Mr. Hoover escape from belng the tafl ender on the re. publican ticket but he proved to be the leader on the demotratiec Hst, even tate of affairs an state in view of the fact that Mr. Heover has de: clared that he is to him as to whether he would accept a democratic nomination if offered to him, Whether the Michigan result is ae- cepted as a clear cut decision on the wish of the people relative to the treaty it has been shown that Mr. Héover has a following in botlr par- ties, but the real fight Between him ond Mr. Johnson on their treaty posi- Hond ean be reserved for California. where such may be madé more of an lssue. N however, seemed to have made H of an impression in New York state. But “whatever surptise may have pitanded the Michigan results among the republicans there mmist have beeh even greater among the democrats for a republican carried away the honors, the second highest made his #howilig on his “wet” arguments, the third, Colonel Bryan, being an oppo- nent of the administration while the real two administration props were leit to bring up the rear. administral Phlicies among the democrats even in 4. strong republican state. Michigan doesn’t give the adminis- tmition a bit of comsolation and it <cannot give thote running as ite #ponsors much to base futtwe efforts tpon it they attempt to get any smte fsfaction out of the figures of that Mate's primaries. MUNICIPAL Tfl;;LTEYB. Knowing the tendency in that city! the action of the pesple of Detreit in Yoting to bong the ci | ! i i ! ‘;‘ k § L i Ey i § aig’ ! i iz il T by the minister’s investigation party. 1t is certainly the ble dis- credit for a city to know ‘what is go- in#®on In the way of open vice and not have its authorities endsavor to stop it, but on the .other hand permit it to exist through protection, New York has had conditions re- vealed_ before, and perhaps it doesn' neeg any at the present time, but un- less it is willing to-countenance such flagrant mstances of disregard for law and vice, after having them brought to public noticé,s it must undertake what it“has gone through several| times before—a timely housecleaning| and without delay. It rests with| New York to say what's going to be done and how rotten.dt is -willing to remain, - STILL GROWING. . - Satistying the deniands, of the peo- ple of this'country is not an easy task. It few't what i* i§ thought they | require but what, they actually de- | mand that must be met and ‘how far apart those who take the forfiier view are from those Who have to meet the| demands is no better fllustrated than in the manufactdre of automobiles. For many years the autoMobile in- dustry has been undergoing great de-| velopmrent. It hasn’t put the horse out of business but where the streets of @ city: were filled with- horse-drawn vehicles a eouple of decades ago. they | are now crowded Wwith automobiles of | all types from the light runabout to the monstrou§ trick. For years the many plants of the cowntry have been turning out machiries by the thous- ands. Millfons of dollars are spent for thén each year-and yet it is im- possible to keep up with. the require- ments. The -mnglon of the auto in- dustry has ibeen much (ke the way the craze for bicycles spread over the|) @0lintry hait «%-- ~na wad to a ceb- tail extent témporary the other is getting more firmly entrenched every day. The auto indistry s still des veloping, plants are’ expanding and new concefng dre cntefing the field. 1t is a _way from reaching the inds to say nothing of passing. i Hven during the past year when the country yas far from norm there were produced in thig countty nearly 1,900,000 motor vehicles of & valie are today ‘over seven million cars in the country and this pfeduction is not able te take care of the demands of the people of this try to say nothing' of the foreign field where the tmnortance of the auto doesn’t appear as yet to be'fully understood. The have undergone tre- expansidn but - the:record is h apparently not yet established. EDITORIAL NOTES." ‘The echances, -are - against seeing’ much more snow thisg spring. With the opening of April we ought| 2% not to be without direct boat service to New York much longet. The voters of Hartford Hke those of | tay the coufitry, have expressed thelr dis- satisfackon with democratic control. The day of the illegal strike is nat over, ang if thete ig any penaity af- tached it doesn't appear to be very ef- fective, The man on the corner.says: Some pedplé have the mistaken idea trouble for. others is-the joy ot 1 X T AR Conditiohs in. Mexico are said to| be improving but they will have to. Progress & long time before they will be neticed. — ' After the whole world has had reason to distrust ‘Ge: any there i 800d reafon why France is still taking precautions, Those Who are doing the most to mmmnlflmmmue the who are doing the most kicking. about the unjust conditiens. With Attorney General Palmer can. celling ‘a speaking efigagemient in Georgla becdise. of sudden ilness it 160ks as it We had heard from Michi- When anyone intimates that egg cannet ‘where they are g n% one Wl be surprised. The Ahat a temporary drop was Py o ek Of course it you-cowldn’t, or didn’t lere are other Sundays coming, tHOUGH the parade cannot be indefi- nitely postponed. ¥ More motive’ power Haven. road shounld,be of great assist- eetléna ~the transportation the Theré are some of the small places throughout the country that are heard of till they are swept way by a of over $1,807,000,00) and therd | BT +|mortal soul” He seems for_the New|In Re m-mm“:::lm chimney | o or jumped to the window sill of the % _and entered and be dev by startled and out- raged dog. ! 8 WAs nothing domzl in the sl for our family, un- | til the cat wed Sfely housed and tucked in for the night. i “Fully awake by, this tife; 1 dis- covered JImogene, clad in filmy aftire, was Balf way out of the win-| dow 1n e ohilly blasts, entreating B cat. I promiptly yanked pack and told. her my| heartfelt- opinfon of her rashness and she insists that tlie slumberers for & hlockm must have heard me. I've t they did, as people do. seem to. have af -unhappy faculty of} overhearing all one's family rows and of being away from liome when you are mni\y affectionate for all the world to soe.. “I intended to finish the absurd LEYTERS TO THE EDITOR| What's Needed at Mohegan Park Mr- Eitor; THe article signed Park LOVer” is‘ofie of frst signs L} have motiéed thet. peopit of Norwich Knew..they owned & park. 1 wonder if they realize what a beautitul pm‘k‘myr ha¥e. One can go into many citit rom mmy to ocean, | and not find lg’c@u.l, 48 ity beauties re natural, just as God made them, | mstead of a combination’ ¢f man's idas and cement, Very gowd in iheir way, but appearing just what they are, artificial. - ‘Ihe lake is beautiful, - aid a walk around its shores would - be ideal | What can one imagine more pleasant | chan_start from stand as con- | cert begins and 2 circuit of the lake, listentng (o the ouglc as it rip- plies dcross the water. T all'tight, not the Music, at presefit is pos- 1y g e comis money t6 buy ing. t0 a® that end o TRIS ides < 3 ufivmnfiea? . mr:i they have- ‘:fi o;‘ t u.( and now-thiere is talk of it jbeihg. cu up into. sites. v%or,yu::gflows K h Zaeta Ay, - g Thise the feeessary funds in firp}tfin;ib&i & one Far Away Frem the Question Mr, Bditor: -1 and ' otfier - students have read the article of Rév. Jonn D. Nutting, of the Utah mission of recent date, but thust confess that wé can see nothing 1 i€ but a confused mags of Seripture quotafions, some of which are miles away. from the question in_ hand, - “the im-! Jumble to- gether this life which is! merel aft o XXHI—THE BIRTH OF THE CON- lasting in its. o 4. that the wi will be to ashes”it will leave Wyem neither “root not branck” ~ Rven the author of evil will be déevoursd by fire, and “he will- never.he uy more” —eternal destruction., This is the end of the wicked and their Jeadér—Burnt up forever and ever—not burning. m, 217 we are. urgéd by St. ul to ';‘:at- ‘;of Imaicedglity” Th Lp oS evident saw need” of seeking tis by. earnest praver, and right living. This passage would be meaningléss t6 Mr. Nufting, because, Why seek for what you already pos- sess? 1 made up s blackbourd illus- tration last night during my lecture Westerly, g Wwhich I will mc you_a small o proving positively, and of the ’ nat- 1 Tim absolutely, ] im “God o | spiritualism decided) jserved about middle of streak, - blood congealed, Pekoe gave a fin- al flirt of his tail and :uhed#hrwch the window of his own.accord, ing in'the middle of thé white ts with his sooty, snOWY paws and pro- cfisdh:: wth'p; ‘m’n fa af‘m as though 10 . haj < “Amid memfiaun’g‘ of the rellevéd neighbors 1 followed, him and he had sefise enouigh to depart at once from my vicinity, He wof't come witnin touching: distance of me yet and it's just as well. Among the vatious tales going about is that I thfew both my wife and the helpless cat out into the spow and refused to 16t them come in, though possibly the favorite is.that 1| hung~them -both over, the roof edge threatening to. drop them phless they made a will in my favor. Don't ever tempest in a 5 o'clock teapot. - / own a kittenl” F= “Well, my,hoy wants & marmoset| At first Jackson wanted only one monkKey,” Teported the ~ Woodlawn | term for himself, when he intended man.—Chicago News. | to give way to his favorite. - As®us~ b ual, when the time came, he was in need of vindication.in the form of a re:election, and he decided to give Van Buren the vice presidency as a step- ping stone to the W\ite House, four sears later. p The legislature of the president’s { own state being opposed to Van Buren, | the usual method of nomination by legislature was digcarded. Moreover, there was need of ¢htaining some sem- blanice of a more popular_selection. for this rubber-stamp cindidate, snd the | first démocratic national convention wag called—“fresh from the people,” as Jackson sald—to nomiinate not a - president, but -a candidate for vice Here is & simplé an@ weil known |president. Four years _ afferward| scripture often overlooked. “Cod so|another convention ratified Jackson's | loved thé world, that Me gave Hix‘.!e(ectlon of Van Burén 4s his Sue- ¥ nomindted under the impression that he was a mediocrity in comparison with Seward. Jackson had hardly tuore thaa Seated hismelf in the White House than his fayor #r the succession fell upon his secretary of state, Martin as the old président fondly called his Van Buren of New York. “Matty", political heir, was & clever politician, with ingratiting manners, and, being a_widower without any women folk to complicate the situation for him B was free to adyanise himself in the approval of his chief by the ready So- upon Pezy O'Neal Eaton, wher sh> was being cruelly tossed about by a §:15:16. g The dead Know nothing. They have no memory. They cannot love. ‘They cannot late. i They c4nnot efivy. (Ece. 9:56.) hey know notning about sons. Job. 14:21. 3 They walt until the ghange. Job. 4:14, The grave is the waiting station. Job. 17:13-16. The change and when it comes. 1 Cor. 15:51-53. ohly - begotien Son, that . Whosoever | cessor in the presidency, which was! believéth in Him should not perish, but ; duly followed by a ratifiction at the bave everlasting life.” . This is the|polis. only way to obtain jmmortality. The last president in' 10 years to We certainly wish Me, Nufting|see a man of his own choosing sue- great _success in combatting = the|ceed him, the aged leader retired to Mormon_evil, which is & menace to:his farm, the Hermitage, where he American fanilly, but in his last | enjoyed” through his few remaining article . he is fayoring and aiding | years, though haunted by poverty and Qebt( such an unbrolen continuance of the people’s confidence and” affec- tion as has sweot*ned the retirement of no other president since Jefferson. Tomorrow: The ly PASTOR W. R. UCHTMAN, Westerly, R. I, A 1920. Did Othérs See the Méteor? _ Mr. Editor: Last evening about 6:45 my boy, girl and I were stand- ing on a hill above. a littie cflvcul st Politician. watching ih the gloaming to. see if we could Se¢ any muskrats swimming il ihe dOVE.S Ve wete oif the sast covered, The sun had gone behind | Street. “Why are you out so early?” the hill probably a half hour. Sud- |he asked. “When 1 called -up. your denly the girl exclaimeéd,. “See m,“nue at nine o'clock theéy said you meteor!” ‘The boy and I bad our cap | Were already down town, and I—— visors down to énable us to see better | - “Well. there was a dress sale,” be- on the dark water, so failed (o see the | €0 the young women, “and I had to metéor, but could ses plainly jtsioome downtown eafly to get a bar- course, which was from nerth &t an 1 got one, too—367 dress' for bout : : o | $25. ‘u:fi:? oA‘v;pfent!;5 telg:\?:d ‘&': *v:’rt‘ “Well, you've nothing on' me, re- The streak of light lingered and comd | SPoNded the man. “I bought a new be seen almost 4s plainly fivé minutes | SUit Myself this morning. Only-the after meteor's fall as at first, and | 12Dles were turned with me—I got a dimly when moon rose about $25 suit for $67. minutes after fall. About 6neé minufe Do They? after the fall a behid - could_ e ob-| The question was asked of Marjory, ed five, “Does daddy ever spank Stories That Recall Others A Fair Exchange. elapsed, | yo Ing larger as the rinul it and fii{° “Spank me! You ought to be line each with the othes, but finally | around here some of these nights!” the whole Dbecoming merely a liftle| “Does mother spank you? .cloud of vapor. i Streak at first| “Spank me! You ought to see her!” appeared about &s long &bove the tree- | *“Who spanks the hardest? f:pl a8 the tr::; war !;lg:i w.::z was| “Both of them, every time.” we saw, eoric es or o - g smoke lighted by the sun’s rays? I |H NEW have never before seen & metéor or IN E DAY’S S its trail during dayltght, fior héve I Barbados. ever read of such phemomena. It| “Barbados is one of the most inter- must have fallen not far from us. Did | esting and less well known of the pos- any other of your readers observe its |sossions which William G. McAdoo fall and trail? = woéuld have Great Britdin offer in part Ruskin said: ““T6 séé something; payment of her debt to the United and te]l what it saw. i1 & Plain way | States,” says a bulletin from the Na- is the greatest thing & human soul|tional Geographic sociéty. ever does in this world.” I have séen| ‘Pear-shaped, solitary, farthest east somethings and told what I saw to|of the West Indies, Barbados generally the best of my ability; angels. they|is accounted the most heaithful of the say can do no more, group, even though it is the - most "Very truly yours, populous country in the world, per & square mile, except China, afid. George Canterbury, April 4, 1920, ‘Washington carried to his grave the marks of the smallpox contracted on a visit there. “The island—there is hut one Jespite the_misleading plural name—is but an eighth the 'size of our Rhode Island, but has twice as many inhabitants per | square mile as our smaliést and most densely. populated state. | “Seldom does a ‘voleans beédome an ! asset. Volcanie eruptions have ocon- tributed largely to the fertility of Barbados, When the sun was ob. scared throughout one day in May, | 1912, the rhedans weére panfc- | steicken,/but when the gentle rafh of black dust subsided the deposit was ' found fo be ashes from an eruption of i St, Vincent Soufriere, neatly 100 miles | to the west, which enriched the soll. ' Mdg"xnfi before that timo,’ though, dos was productive. . Oldest of iBritish colonlal possessions _exespt | Néwtoundland, it also was the first plage in the British emnire where | aged 78, ’-up,r“e}:: was y;}!tgup% é\‘a avérage s ™ © & now od commod - Jackson. lett the presidential Cchaie ltr;,p is 50,000 tons. It also has 2,000 the most popular man who\has evef!;cres planted in sea island or, long- €at in-it, with Roosevelt the ONIy re-|siaple cotton; raises 40000 binehes taining president to approash. hifd 1| yearly of the Clinese banand and ex- Dop - Since . Washnigton and | ports molasses. LA Jdefferson; no otheér presideNt What-i “There aré no pelcanoes on Barba- ever has been témpted with 2 realidos, nar are thers anv streame of ap- chafice to prolong his power 8 a third | prediuble size. Water sefps fhrotgh elegtion, and no dther since his day,|the porous ol dnd reaches the sea by of. Roo: 1t, haslundergronnd - channels. Bathers at have. digtated thelFreshwater v are ant to experience _of his successor. 'The almostia rocking sencation on thé gurf sands idolatrous loyalty of hi€ followers|like that at some of the trick ammse- gave point fth the common saying|{ment devices of Coney Ishand or Lunn that 50 yeafs after his death thé|Park. The undnlations underfoot mark demoerats’ stll were VOUNE for Jaok- | the. outlgts, helw sea level of thece son. / subtérranear streams, Jackson found polities fi the par<| “One phemoménon of. Rarbades hs lors of the féw and he Tl it in the|not been accounted for. . For years fhe -corner grocery and ‘the .crossroads|so-called Rabados Coffin. Stor postoffice, where 1t. properly be- fni 2 myst lmnuwfi’stdw-dw«m%tmpfi i VENTION 1829-—Jackson chrose Van Buren 16 succeed Him. X 1831—Called first democratic na- tional _convention, 1835—Van_ Buren President. fected. 1837—Jackson retired. 1845—June 8, death of Jacksen, nominated for hich would interest In c investigators, / -mented stone. of that exception is that he, t00, was}' Town is a churchyard burfal ‘vault | hewn from rock and arched with ce- A woman was. butied there in a lead coffin, according to Barbadan custom. Several years later | when the vault was opened asain to . tecefve another body, the cofiin had | en removed from its original post tion. “Upon the second occas'on special precautions were taken to seal the vaalt. Several =~ times’ thereafter, | though seals were unbroken, there seemed no.:other mode of enter- ing_the solid rock and masorry, the coffins were displaced. ~ Finally. the mouth of the vault was cemented, and When it was-t'me to receive another body, officials of the island and an immense - crowd gathered / for the ceremony. Once more all ‘the leaden caskets were found to have been dis- turbed and the family haq their dead removed to another burying No satistactory soluton of these strange occurrences has been offered. ridgetown, the island capital, is.a dot dusty city of about 30,000 peo- ple. It is espécially busy on Fridays when planters. flock to town for bus- iness and buying, Its Cathedral was built principally by funds obtained President Of Haiti KEYSTONE VIEW CO, NEW YORK | Philippe S. Dartiquenave, the lit- tle known President of the island of Maiti, who is serving his' four year term and conducting the af- fairs of Haiti in a2 most eflicient manger. LINONINE] For the Ailing and the Weak, for Coughs, Colds and Their Complications, It posse: the healing, body-build- ing elements of flax seed in a form that s readily absorbed by the system. LINONINE SUPPLIES T H E NOURISHMENT AND FOOD THAT RUN-DOWN - SYSTEMS HUNGER FOR. Linonine restores strongth to those | whose systems have besn weakened by grip, colds or wasting diseases — builds up, it is a most helpful medi- cial recognition w¥ieh Mhe' bestowed|the yard of a church near Oistin’s | from a lottery authorized by the leg- inlature, after the original building h_;;l had cane A the ‘A called flowers being sét. wo greeable are the Manch n trees, along the shores, whose leaves blistér the skin and contam- &0 Dpois inate “Labor i comp: and | this condition was great by the us labor STORIES OF THE WAR Mdjor Joseph C. ‘y-three years old 1 Major Joseph C. Stellin, a twent: three ground. | {#¥°F three list under the Lettish flag in the war against the Russian bolsheviki. his services are. accepted he have ca, Sin been Poland and Letvia, in' tufn, have won his all been_ blown down by & hurri- in 1780. atural curiosity of Bsrbedos is!'th al Flower Cave,’ the so-) the water. 0 plentifal that then ete with beasts of burden. But|yet 24 improved | flags. of considerable Barbad in building the Panama Canal’ Gone to Fight Bolsheviki. St a twen iator of Bry fought armies, has gone to Riga to en- Ie will ce last fall Major Stehlin Has fighting in the aviation bfanch of the Polish army and in that service took 10 When the Americ: part in sh drivé which out of Dyinsk, s formerly % life eepshead Bay. Brooklyn, rance in 1917, and joined the ing corps where he won was promoted {0 be army came 6ver ‘ance transferred his Stehl! allegiance to the American flag, ed 2 _comm! served under four flags in four years. The colors of France, Ameri- on as first licugen- ant of aviators and took part in action in th tion captain. Last September he joined the Polish force: commissioned a land northeastern front. mont] ron, the only American with the Poles on that. particular front and partiei- pated in all aviation work preceding, and during the Polish aftack on bolsh tehlin has flown over /parts e~ Champagne, Verdun and Sois- sectors, After the armistice he United States and is to have joined the Aviation sec- of the New York police as a s recruited in New York, was captain, went fo Po- gned to duty on the He spent four Polish flying squad- and was hs with a megE. the eviki in the region of Dyvinsk. ot |afl fi Elvita Capeul fhe bladder and kidneys, p ELVITA DRUG CO, 3 Tremon: Boston, Mass. The Famous Elvita Remedies sold {ass drug Stores.—Adv. France, Belglum, Spain, Po- ke is sad e Ui States has Bopes of secing Lelvis abd Riph from the air in his service with Letts. Major. Stehlin says he has 1o s. Not| what vocation Be will take wp fl‘: eel, or|war shourd end in Burope, but he feels certain that he cam never go back to the prosalc dutles of a life That game is who has fought under four Slandering the Turks. The Turke say they have been slan- dered in the stor it may be, but slandered, of the massacrés. Ty it Turkey hes been theré are more ingenious and skilful liars over there than amy- body bas ~ suspedted. h News and Observer. A ptice mark looks all right of af- most anything but a man, emaretersdieenne— e bl ELVITA PILLS *OR WEAK AND NERVOUS PEOPLE Eni > h the Blood, Elvitd Pills Bave stood. the test for 50 years. Thousands praise tem for fin d o w n_ conditione, gencral debility, ner- vous p o nervous weal 4 nervous exbaustion, mental depression and unstrung pétves caused by the influenza or from Gver indulgence in ajcoliol, tobacco Or ex- cesses of any kind. Write today for titls valuable meli- cing, send .10 cents to pay postdge and sealed package sufficient for one week's tredt- Countless grave sicknesses are re- All droggists, 60c and §120 7 - e VICTROLA WITHIN THE REACH OF ALL No matter how small the amount you can afford to pay, you may (7% find h:re, in our spacious show- \ a Victrola within rocms, means. Mod:I illustrated, $150; scld by us on terms of only $12.50 a meondk