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r TWO PORT JERVIS, Y. THE EVENlNa OAZETTPj Chips off M Block IH J U K I O R S - Little N?s k One-third the regu- l l a r dose. Made of f 8 a m e ingredients, then candy coated. , Por children and adults. QUICK’S DRUG STORE KEIIALHULy^ UNIOUEPLftCE History May Record Him Among Great Generals of Present. EASILY ROUTS SiiPERlOR ARMY Turkish Dictator Organized His Forces Without Money and. Drove Enemy From Country Which He Cpveted as Birthright of His People—Stran ger Meeting Him Would Mistake Him for Ordinary Soldier—-Wants Reunited Turkey. If One Would H a v e Frjenus. He who has frien d s th a t really count Is he who has the virtues that win and hold those friends. Tact is everything. Forbearance is absolutely necessary. Generosity plays its part. The ability to forget must equal the willingness to forgive. T h e crude jest at another’s expense must be guarded. F o n d n e ss for argument must not surpass the power to keep silent. SAGE AND SULPHUR DARKENS GRAY HAIR A lm o s t ev e r y one k n o w s th a t J T e a a n d S u lp h u r p r o p e r ly com p o i ed, b r in g s b a c k th e n a t u r a l co lo r and lu s t r e to. t h e h a ir w h e n fad e d , strea k ed or gray. Y e a r s ago, th e o n ly w a y to g e t th is m ix t u r e w a s to rhake it a t h o m e , w h ich is m u s s y an d tr o u b leso m e , N o w a d a y s , by a s k in g a t a n y d r u g sto r e for “'W y eth’s S a g e and S u lp h u r C o m p o u n d ,” you w i l l g e t a la r g e b o t t le o f th is fa m o u s old r e cip e , im p rov;ed *by th e a d d it io n of o t h e r in g r e d ien t s , a t a sm a ll co s t. D o n ’t sta y gray! T r y it! N o on e ca n p o s s ib le tell th a t you d a r k e n e d r hair,air, a s it d o e s it so n a t u r a lly pen a sp o n g e md d r a w th is ou r h n d even ly. Vou or so f t b r u s h w ith it ai throu,gh yo u r h a ir, ta k in g on e sm a ll a f ter a p p l ic a t io n or tw o yo u r h a ir b e c o m e s b e a u t if u l ly dark, g lo s s y and a t t r a c tiv e ,— ^Advertisem ent. str a n d a t a t im e : by m o r n in g th e gray h a i r d isap p e a r s , and a f te r anoth< Pathetic Russian Pla>d:hing. A very primitive doll can be found in Russia. It is the moss doll, and it expresses the poverty and loneliness of Russia’s forest regions. It is roughly made of wood, with a face of pathetic sadness, and is dressed in hood and clothes of forest moss. The male doll is distinguished from the female only by the hatchet which be carries. NEW YORK MARKET Fruit and Vegetables O F AJ u I j IU N D S Received Fresh Daily OYSTERS AND CLAMS R IN SEASON SPECIAU RATES TO Hotels. Restaurants, and Boarding Houses W H O D E S A L B ----------- R E T A I L Cor. PIKE AND FRONT STS. Telephone 614-J Habit of Catfish. Some South American catfish hav« a remarkable way of getting upstream. Being encased in a stiff armor, they cannot - jump. So they deliberately leave the water, using their side fins which have sharp spines, like feet; and crawl around the falls, entering the water on the other side. JOE’S CASH GROCERY 110 Jersey Avenue ONIONS Buy your winter Onions, fancy red and yeUoAv, 100 lb. sack, $ 1.75 Tel. 688-J Free Delivery Long Words. In respect to legitimate words most authorities agree that first in rank comes “antidisestablishmentarianism” (28) letters, followed by “honorifi- cabilitudinity” (22 letters). AH! BACKACHE GONE! RUB LUMBAGO AWAY ' A h ! P a i n is g o n e ! St. Jacob s Oil a c t s a l m o s t lik e m a g ic. Q u ick ly ? — Y e s . A lm o s t in s t a n t re lie f -from so r e n e s s , s<tiffness> la m e n e s s a n d p 4 in fo llo w s a g e n t le ru b b in g w i t h St. J a c o b s Oil. R u b th is ?oothin g , p e n e t r a t in g oil r ig h t on y o u r p a in f u l back, and r e li e f co m e s . \ St. J a c o b s Oil is a h a r m less b a c k a c h e , lu m b a g o an d sc ia t ica cu r e w h ic h n e v e r d isap p o in ts an d d o e s n ’t burn th e sk in . Straighten upt Quit complaining! Stop those torturous stitches. In a rliTstiff m o m e n t you vdll fo r g e t th a t you ever fer! Get a sm; ^aek,^ b e c a u s e it w o n 't h*a^d fer!^ honest St. Jacobs gist now and get this lasting Aflvcrtiseinent. or lam e . D o n ’t su f - a l k t r ial , b o t tle o f old, s Oil f r o m yo u r d r u g - r e lief.— With the hard blue eyes of the pro fessional soldier, brown, almost yel low haired, Mustapha Kemal Pasha, dictator a» to the placfe Turkey is to occupy in the comity of nations, sat for weeks ^t his headquarters in the little village of Geuz Tepe, ten miles from Smyrna, which his troops, regu lars and irregulars, had taken and sacked, awaiting allied action on bis demands, and to which demands the allies finally capitulated. Mustapha Kemal Pasha probably will go dowm in the world’s history as one of the great generals and dictators of mod em times for his feat in organizing an army without money and driving an opppsiig superior army out of the country which he coveted as the birth right of his people has few parallels. Outside of his lean face, tight mouth and cold eye, which never shows a spark of warmth, Mustapha Kemal might be taken for an ordinary soldier if he should be met on the streets of Smyrna or Constantinople by a stranger. He wears no gold braid on his uniform of olive drab, there are no insignia except a small silver star on the red tabs of his collar, his black riding boots are the ordinary boots of any mounted man in tbe East, and his black astrakhan is the same as is worn by all his officers without any distinguishing mark. In the town of ^ Geuz Tepe at the end of a street car line, the cars of which are horse drawn, Mustapha Kemal has his headquarters in a beautiful house overlooking the Bay of Smyrna and the city itself, and while he watched the smouldering ruins the middle of September, the scen t o f flow e i’S from th e gardens sur rounding h is tem p o r a r y hom e \s’as v a f t e d in to his office by every breeze from the placid and sunlit bay. Soldier of Unusual Aibility. Mustapha kenuil Pasha is a man. Let no one make arly mistake about that. He is also a soldier of unusual ahilitv. Because he was a soldier of unusual ability, perliaps he was a colonel in the Turkish army at the outbreak of the war. and now, at the a.ge of f(*rly-tvo he is the dictator of Turkey, and at the same time the dic tator to western Europe as to what the future of Turkey is to be. For months he has wanted the Near East question settled diplomatically and without further fighting, but this settlement, he insLsts, must include the withdrawal of the Greek.s from the Asiatic shore, and the withdrawal of 'the allies from Constantinople as the controlling body over that city. He wanted this diplomatic settlement before he began his drive on Smyrna when he drove the Greeks 300 miles | in twelve days thi-oiigh the interior, j thrpngh Smyrna and onto ships which ' •took them to Piraeus. When any ' army retreats 300 miles in twelve days | it is not doing anv fighting and the ! only thing the Greeks, did on this re treat, according to the Kemalists, was to set fire to the villages tlirougn which they beat their retreat. This fact has been established, not only by the Kemalists themselves hut by allied observers -who were present at the time. Because he couldn’t get this diplo matic settlement from the allies he began that memorable drive which cleared the Greeks from Asia Minor and which caused the loss of hundreds of lives of innocent victims. Thou sands fled before the advancing Kera- ilists when the Greeks burned their 'homes and towns, because they know, as any one would know in like .cir- ' iimstances, ■ that the pursuing army would take retribution for the dam age done to their country and people. Mustapha Kemal Pasha refuses to ■make any definite statement about the killings in Smyrna or about the origin of the fire when 'talking to nc/wspaper men. He told the allied cpHsmaxiders fhat there were bound to be .some •-illings and some looting, as would be rhe case in any army under like cir- ■umstances. Investigations' by Ad- ninil Diimesnil, the senior allied com- nander, and his officez*s throughout 'he burned area qf Smyrna during several days brought to light only a ew bodies in the ruins, and it is the pinion of this French officer that the otal Of killed by the irregular Turk- h troops who looted the town / was •onsiderably less than 500. He de- lares that the Turks showed great eIf-cf»ntrol under the circumstances, rnplying that the Greeks in tlieir re- reat killed more innocent persons hnn did the Turks in entering and t oting Sniyrna. Kemal Near His Goal. Kemal’s objects are nearly accbm- ollshed at tile present time. He wanted the Greeks out of Thrace, tlK •ontrol of Adrianople to be Turkish and the allies\ out of control in Con stantinople itself. He was willing U accomplish these objects through di plomacy, but if he could not get result;- In this way j^e was willing to fight ( f o r cncm. tie >vus wai ng to promise the freedom of the D^danelle.s to all nations, and said so on several occa sion s. not only to allied representa tives but to newspaper men. Besides the evacuation of Asia Mi nor by the Greeks. Kemal demanded an indemnity 1,000,000,000 Turkish pounds for the damage the Greeks had done in their retreat to Sihyma. He said thfs indemnity was not because the Greeks had been beaten, but be cause of the damage they had done, taking the same stand as France to ward Germany in regard to the de vastated regions in northern France which the (Germans had laid waste in their retreat. Naturally Kemal has no warm re gard for the British, who have been charged with backing the Greeks in their offensive campaign, yet be seems to have no rancor as far as they are ‘Concerned. On the other hand, he has a warm regard for France and the French and will receive officers of the French naval forces at his' head quarters at any time.- Further, he has no animus toward the United States and believes that when the people of America understand just what are the aims of the Turk.s, to run their own affairs without outside interfer ence, the Americans will approve of his progi’am. Kemal is anxious to create confi dence throughout the world in his aims and his program. He wants the world to know he is not and never has been a bandit and that he is -working and' fighting for a reunited Turkey, the same as would a patriot in any country in the western world under like eiretimstanoes. ' EHIDAY, DECEMBER 8, 1922 WORLD’S YOUNGEST EDITOR HAS READ 1.0C0 VOLUMES STOP COLD QUICEY Before they Lead to Com plications, with ETHICUS TABLETS, and DIRECTIONS by HIGH MEDICAL AU THORITY. AD D D R U G ST O K E S — 60 CEONrS Life of Queen Ants. Queen ants have been known to live for 15 years. Services to Prevent Robberies. Science, which has rendered us so many services, has now attacked a new problem. Inventors are pitilessli hunting the burglars of Paris. Many are no-w in search of means of defend ing the stores and hanks against crim. inal attacks. One of these most curious inven tions con.si.sts of a pedal situated ir the interior of the store. The burglar If he w a t c h e s tbe h a n d s of tlie m an cannot at the same time see w h ere he puts his feet. Then the peda* starts an electrical clockwork nnd a; the same time an illnminnted plat- eallirg for the police appears on th« outside of the store. Among the other Inventions th e r e is an overeoat witl a S])ecial pocket for carrying a re volver. The weapon is so placed tha' when the attacked person facing the burglar raises his arms, the revolver Is brought Into position for firing and the act of raising b’s hands pulls a string which discharges it. Must Glv^ Service, , ' . The man who fails to render to so ciety the service of wl^ch he is capa ble has no.ciaim on it. Indeed, he for feits all .consideration from society and, for what he receives from It, be comes in the full meaning ef the term a “subject for charity.” UlHOOPINGCOUGH V w No “cure”—^but helps to re W W duce paroxysms of coughing^ VISJSoS Opcf / 7 Million Jars Used Y e a d y HAPP’S PLUM PUDDING STRICTLY FIRST CLASS ORDER FROM YOUR GROCER Quality That Cannot Be i^ettered af Prices ThaL Cannot Be Lowered LOINS OF FRESH PORK 24c ib. REGULAR FRESH HAMS 24c Ib. ■'t / / Robert Lonis Oampben, aged nine, of Brown.shiirg, Tnd., who edits and prints the Hoosier Boy, a 6 by 9, four- page paper, ’ doing all the work him self. The youngest editor has al-. ready read moi-e than a thou.sand vol umes, drawn from the public library of his home town. Liner Delayed to Save Life. Tbe value that we set on human life today has been dramatically i l \ lustrated by an incident on the Atlan tic ocean. An explosion in the engine-room of a freight ship caused terrible iny juries to the second engineer, a young man named O’Neal.. There was no doc tor on board, so the captain sent out wireless calls for assistance.. Seven ships replied. In six cases doctors told the captain what treat ment would be likely to give the best results. But one passenger liner did more than this; it put 150 miles out of Its course and sent a lifeboat with the ship^s doctor in it, who attended to the patient and then had him .trans ferred to his ship. When the liner reached England he was comfortable and on the way to recovery. That’s It. Mr. \Vampoodle was trying to ex plain. “Tou know what I mean. It’s the play where th e / have the witches’ cauldron.” ‘‘Witches Cauldron.” “Yeah.” “Oh, yes, I know.” “Yeah.’ “You mean the home brew scene from Macbeth.”—Louisville Courier- Journal. FRESH CALA HAMS, 18C. LB. Prime Corn-Fed Native Beef PRIME RIB ROAST TOP and BOTTOM 29c. Ib. Best Cuts ROUNO ROAST 34c. Ib. Top Round or Sirloin Steak - 36c. Ib. FRESH KILLED CHICKENS FRESH KILLED FOWL 32c. KILLED SELF IN SLEEP Hubby and Wifey. •'I’ve learned one thing from this fishing trip.” “What is that, dear? “You will' wait more patiently for a Man Fired Bu,!let Into HU Heart Dur. cheap fish than you will for ■ your ing Sleep-Walking Spell. ' wifo” wife.”—Louisville Courier-Journal. Extra Special Prime Chuck Roast 18c AMERICAN PROVISION GO., K 60 PIKE STREET PORT JERVIS, N. Y. Firing a bullet into his heart as h e __ day sleeping in bed at his home at j Birmingham, Ala., .T. V. Osborn, a business man, unintentionally commit- £ ted suicide. He wa§ found dead the ^ next morning by relatives. ^ Evidence obtained from relatives of K the dead man at the Inquest showed TA that Osborn had been a sleep-walker i® for many years and was known to do njj unusual things while asleep. The cor- 0 oner then gave a verdict of uninten- p r tionaJ sueide. WA There was no known reason why [(A the man should have killed himself M had he been awake. It was brought j M out. He conducted a successful busi-1 “ ness, was in excellent health, and had | H no unrequited love affairs. When last j seen by relatives a few hours before his death he wa.s in unusual good spir its, they said. With these facts before him, the cor oner decided that Osborn, while sleep ing, took a revolver which he kept near at hand and unconsciously fired the shot which ended his life; a mor ally guiltless'suicide. WHITNEY & DENTON ELECTRIFYING FRENCH RAILS Government Proposes to Run Fast Trains by Power, Trains operated by electric power on the pre-war schedule time, • or faster, are provided for in the French government’s program for rehabilita tion of the railroads so thoroughly disorganized by the war. The electri fication of the lines has been cere moniously inaugurated between Tarbes and Lourdes This first small stretch will not be opened to the pub lic, however, for some time. The ceremony consisted in the operation of the first electric locomotive built in France. The electrification program calls for operation of a 200-mile stretch by next summer and for' the ultimate opera-, tion of 6,000 miles when Prance’s un developed water power is finally har nessed. \ - - A ; Woman Wills Postman $6,000. As a reward for oourte.sies shown during a lifetime, Cecil Thompson, a postman of' Terre Haute, Ind., re ceived $6,000 by the will of Mrg, Sarah Rose Bryant. Special Sale of Coats and Wraps THREE SPEQALS M All our $25*00 Coats, This S a l e ....................... $19.49 f All our $29.75 to $35.00 Coats, This Sale . . . $24.98 B All our Coats, up to $65.00, This Sale . ............. $49.98 M They are all of the most recent Winter Models, design- ■! ed for street and dress wear— included are cleverly drap- B ed wraps, wrappy coats, and blouses or straight lined [S coats. Fabrics are Fashona, Pannvelaine, Sonora and IB Minerva. Beautifully trimmed with Gray Squirrel, Bea- WA ver, Wolf, or all self-materials, if one prefers. Lined with |S silk or crepe. We also still have a. fair assortment of that two-faced W a heavy cloth coat—^with body and sleeves lined .$12.98 m FUR COATS—Our. assortment of these is-most com- W plete— price range fro m ................... $55.09 to $169.00 IS Just received a nice assortment of Coats for the Chil- l | dren. [S PLAITED SKIRTS— An assortment of plaids and striped plaited skirts, $4.98 lH value, This S a l e ............................ .. . .. ....... .................. .. .............. : .......... .. $3.98 8 TABLE LINENS K 72 inch aU linen table damask, . .. .............. .... .. .. $2.49, $3.98, $4.50 per yard y With all linen napkins to match IS I^attern table cloths, Pattern 'Table Cloth Sets, in linen and mercefizeil. ^ Centerpieces, buffet scaHs, doilies, large variety of paltems. Y d f