{ title: 'Watertown Daily Times. volume 2 (Watertown, N.Y.) 1894-current, May 28, 1920, Page 5, Image 5', download_links: [ { link: 'http://www.loc.gov/rss/ndnp/ndnp.xml', label: 'application/rss+xml', meta: 'News about NYS Historic Newspapers - RSS Feed', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84035541/1920-05-28/ed-1/seq-5/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84035541/1920-05-28/ed-1/seq-5.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84035541/1920-05-28/ed-1/seq-5/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84035541/1920-05-28/ed-1/seq-5/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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Pramident snd iditor Sy, Vice\Preatient and PubMaher vertisin Hepresentative vo & Conklin er 8. 5:31“ - . New York ‘ pulevard - - Chicigo Boulevard ~ -~ Detroit thi - - @ year -~ -_- By Mail. Jefferson, St. Lawrence and 99 Lewis Counties. ¥ age n '% « ~ + - $110 s % % -- 0.89 » @: all communications to The +. Company. 126-13% arcade afartown, N. Kowaus \ No. 130 e No. 119 'be Times is- on sale in at cCarthy: Bros.' News it; Washington St., near N. Y. tation 6 Times is on sale in Utica a Wolfe's News Stand, 203 tment \York City -The Times is om Naw ng City at Hotaling's d; Br wig. near 43d St. pf Times Building. > reap 6 ive The yp ted bo will ~> | sut in the coming tampsign. | .The CT ay. I way of feitling it now is to fight it Repiiblicans fget confident that the | amertenh not' favor the president's unyielding stand Ttegard- Ang. the freaty. . They are willing to take. an 'outapoleen position on that point and abide the result. . It is confidently believed that the American people will express them- gelves and in no . mistakable way. Unless their feeling in the matter is very seriously misconstrued they will elect a president and a congress definitely committed to a program which contemplates ending the war speedily, with a League of Nations irobably, but not a League of Na: tions that will stand as a super-gov- ernment. They feel strongly upon the polnt of mixing up In ropean affairs to the exclusion of those vital matters that need settlement at home. They feel strongly also in the matter of entering any alliance which calls for our soldiers to fight the battles of Europe. NEW YORK AT CHICAGO. There are mdlcalloxrs that the New York state delegation will not be able to stand as a unit at Chicago in spite of all efforts of certain leadera to make a binding combination | of delegates. The latest political gossip is that Judgp Nathan L. Miller, one of the delegates at large, bas broken away and said that he will cast his vote for Hoover. Another rumor is that Senator James W. Wadsworth has said that be wil} support Gen- eral Wood from the outsét, Dr. Nicholas Murray | Butler, candidate out previous training in the profes- ston and was able to make a success of it The White House sheep, 46 in number, have been sheared It is not revealed whether they were washed in the Potoma® or by the processes of the White House hose. | The simple announcement v once to build up the paper, He field] a remarkable ' faculty of drawing ! around 'him efficient men. He -was a \wood judge of human nature. The Knfokerbocker Preas went forward rapidly under his administration, He was himself deeply interested in politics at that time, not as one who sought public office but as an indi- vidual who wanted to sée independ- ent action on the part of the elec- torate and responsive and represent ative positions on the part of off- cials. He made of the, Knickerbocker Press an institution of independent views but distinctly Republican. It supported Governor Charles E. Hughes vigorously 'and was an advo- cate of direct primaries, It stood by Sulzer during his troubles with Murphy and the Tammany machine, and while it did not uphold Sulzer in his acts it took the position that bludgeon methods were being em- ployed to meet the ends, of aspiring politicians. Judge Arnold ran a imilitent news- paper It still bears the strong im- press which he gave it. He provides an example of one who entered newspaper work in middle life, with- 1 THE WHITE HOUSE SHEEP. of the 20f FRIDAY AFTERNOORN, 6 MAY | 28, 492000 a » gym several thousand mflem * f... 0 Bite sews » Armen{a. : 35> \Penrose hires ten rooms mt: Ohj cago,\ headline reads. . A bad\ cake room profitecring. [Looking Backward The Times' wc Diaz still has the ; distinction pf being the only Mex presidenit.-_who.l. oxo 12. died in bed. Oop CU mee (0 9 May 28, 1895. \ M Augsbury of Antwerp, has be- gun the erection of a new grist mill in place of the one recently burned. > An Adams Centre dealer aver tises for 2.500 dozen eggs and offers 18 cents in trade, The Amerigan Express company began running a refrigerator car from this section to New York yes- 'terday, for the shipment of dressed The pipe of peace falls shattfii'éq, on the White House hard wood floor. % The Armenian mandate Is being treated as if it was an Armenian mig: Miss Fawn Lippincutt has a new, soul-destroyin' waist. --Abe Martin. ° > Hooverneed not be ashamed oA the advertising he is receiving. butter, cheese and eggs. Last year the Memorial day ob- gervances in this vicinity were ren- dered unpleasant by mud and rain and chilly air. The signs are that reverseconditions will prevail to- Morrow. » hingston Whig; The playing of the national anthem by the Garland Clty band df Watertown, when it got to the harbor yesterday, with an American excursion, was a sign of friendship appreciatéd by those who heard the music, and a contradiction to an articlefloating written in words of fire against the of the flag of the American nation on the queen's birthday Ir Edward S. Lansing, a former resident of this city, died at his home in Burlington, N. J., this morn- ing, at the age of 68 years. A J} Virkler of Carthage bought on the Watertown boardBaturday, 15 low» of cheese, about 1,000 boxes, Messenger boys are certainly tak- ing a great many Liberties. We no sooner get Dick Arnstein than Bergdoll escapes. . £0 YEARS AG Some of a Watertown of Another Day. \ Major \Thomas A. Cummings, a the uuther of the following, was a fornfewont resident of Evans Mills. He to Monlana in the early days, shortly after the Ulvil war. and setted at Fort Benton }4e has been a prominent figure In the political and business lfre of Mentana for the past half cent ury I read recently the writeup regard- veals, dressed lambs apd poultry, is said to have.frankly said to New York state delegates that he expects news dispatches is that President Wilson ordered the wool removed from the two score and six of them reporting the fact to “fict- their suppart to the finish, and this Wimes is a memmher of the Audit! has been another factor | that - is - working to make any unit combing» |, tion possible. The delegates should be left free to' express the wishes of those Re- UTLA¥ROX - aria publican voters who sent them, ab- ‘mfdirffimmfuw solutely untied by anything that par- 'a Glenerssriee.... 15,044 | takes of the unit rule. 'The Chicago f for republication of inpatches magi? at}: til: ‘3 Seergredited. in this paper Abe:lecal nawa published hare. & X4a x f of the rank and file of the and it was done. e What !s to be done with the wool? The White House kept the sheep to assist in conservation of sources. to clip the grass of the vast surrounding the White House sheep would do it. At the samo time our ore Instead of employing mon lawn the , h they - would - be - increasin the (ifi convention is supposed to be a ropre- quantity of wool in the 05mm rh sit vee vec 10961 [nentative gathering. Nothing should M: Now the President should take the ! ‘k‘o 'i'6$a§00‘;“|; 4 ¥ be done m,d°pfly° it of if; ‘gcn‘c; next stop and ask. Mrs. Wils to Lo. - 20% [ 4 ~ © Asrasce cauge« » e+ $0,081 tion, which is to express card the wool and apin it. TMerein is the process by which we are los w aba sa 10 . Codedon; wurilahar of thd f t .a . 1 h mem Nang by me party as to z “115°“; m)“; c; ing money today. She might start taas IWI‘ twill eron: QQHKGNWS year puy th [&A nationwido movement to restore t_ werk the above | Nothing is ever sure in polit! will bo remembered that wo \all elected Hughes in Junc, 1916, and the Democrats conceded his olecyon. The position of the magnet-tho party at that time was pitiable. But it was quite a diferent matter in No- | \fvember, 1910. The Republican party the spinning wheel prominence. 1t is certain that there world be m decline in the 'price of woolen cloth forthwith if the womon bf the country were to do a fair abare of the labor of spinning. uals havo loft entirely too much to to its former Tho'Ameritan people as individ ing the \Haddock and La Mountain trip into the Canadian Wilderness.\ 'This brought to mind that I was thit day in Watertown: and was standing close to the \Atlantic\ the start was'thus made for this par- ticular journey. If | recall the mat- ter correctly at this late date the event was pulled off in a vacant lot facing on Stone atreet, somewhere in close proximity to where The Times plant is now located. There was .a large gathering of the people from all parts of the country in Watertown that day, I think the R. W. and Potsdam R. R., as It was designated at that tima, ran exchrsfon trains to and from Watertown for the,occasion. 1 was standing close in by the balloon when Haddock took his seat beside LaMountain, and tho start was then pado The novelty of a balloon ascen- mion drew m large concourse of the country prople into town. The only simliar large gathering was when the celebrated and well advertised race between Ton Collins' Carthge Stag and Joho Champlain's mare High- land Aald was attompted over the Black Rivor Trotting Park. This of when the ropes were unloosed and and also took on season contracts, the offering of 13 factories or about 900 boxes, at prices b to 64 cents. May 28, 1910 Eighteen local employes - of the Prudential Insurance Co., together with four ouf-of town agents, were guests of the company at a dinner in the Woodry@{ today, presided over by JOdhn, M. Flummerfelt, the head of this district. The luscious strawberry has brok- On all records this season thus far abd will be on the market for some time to come. They appeared in Wa., tertown about three weeks earlier than usual, and has been here in abundance. QLong before Easter the ranging from - John Burroughs Nature. Notes CAN YOU ANSWER THESE QUES- TIONS? 4. Do loons carry their eggs under their wings? iI. Do squirrels play tag? Ili. How do bees spend the win- ter? Answers in tomorrow's nature notes, ANSWERS To PREVIOUS QUES- TIONS: I. What makes a female sparrow refuse the advances of a male? If the female refuses the male, it is hot because he does not All her eye or arouse her admiration, but because the mating instinct is not yet ripe. Among nearly all our birds the males fairly thrust themselves upon the females, and carry them by storm. 'This may be scen almost any spring day in the squabbles of the English sparrows along the street. 11. is the frult of the - sumac at- tractive? . The fruit of the comes the nearest to being a cheat of anything I know of in nature-a collection of seeds covered with a flannel - cont with just a perceptible acid taste, and all highly colored. Unless the seed itself is digested, what is there to tempt the bird to devour it, or to reward it for so doing? IIl. Do the male or female animals assume leadership? ° The male animal, as compared with the female, is usually the more aggressive and domineering, except among birds of prey, where the re- verse is true. Roosevelt says that a band of antelops, as of elk and desr, is ordinarily led by an old doe, but that when danger threatens, a buck may spring to the leadership. (Rights reserved by Houghton Mif- Entries Revesl How He and His Friends Plarined the Circy; Bill-posting Job... e \a September 6, 186-brite and fair to- day and cool. it feals like autum, 1 tell you i dont like to have the sumer igo. one weak from ner munday school begins. | halt to think of it. we will have to do thg'old xamples about A grd B and bow many squair feet there is in 4 ackers 2 roods and 28 rods and New Hamshire is bound- ed on the north by Maine on the east by Long Island Sound on the south by Rode land and Conettiout and on the weat by New York, and the capk tal of Tennysee is Tallyhassy and the capital of New York is Oswego and things we lerned last year. . sum- times i feal like saying to old Fran- cis, who sed it ain't, but i know if 1 did he wood Tam time out of me. well i have got one moar week. 1 hope i wont be kep in enmy tore. i cant spair a single minit. went to church today. the quire coodent sing becaus sumthing | was rong with the organ. only the squeel keys wood go and they went as loud as a steam whistle. the base keys woodent make a - single yip. - old Chipper Berley clim into the organ | after chirch was over and found that sumbuddy bad stuffed a old pair of overhals and a old hat all spattered with paint into the big pipe. Chipper told Beany he done it and Beany , Chafiteirsjffifémiwflfhegfi s of Plupy, a Boy: of the ©60 far - 34 -% 440 a y- By JUDGE HENRY A. SHUTE. In May\ Good Housekeeping. Beany will get his dollar. ; much fairer than that can i? this afternoon we went uP barn ow the me and Pert ang Beany and talkedover where we arg going to poast up the bills next Weng. day nite tomorrow,. it.rained so thy; Powt dident dass to bring over the bills. they are in his shop ail roled up in arole as Wig as my lex anq tide tite. so wa looked at o;; list in the fand we are going to PUL the tury of the cheater on decon Aspinwalls house. he is the bigest cheater we know and evrybody says Bo. the stork we are going to put on Mrs. Clarisser Dorsons fromt gon Powt says he heard his mother say that the Dorsons xpéot &A baby prety soon. so we all agreed that wood he the place to put it, we all got jawing about where wa shood put the picture of the elefan; Beany thought i111 d augt to go on Horris Cobbs froht door Peyt thougt it had augt to go on old mister Gechels store and i thougt it had augt to go on Fatty Fogs house. Horry Cobb is the fattest man in town bu; he aint tall. old mister fGechel |g feerful tall, almost tep f6@t | ges but he ain verry big and Fatty Rog is lots taller than Hor®s and 3 times as big round as old mister Geche}, so we decided to put the elefant on Fatty Fogs house and.the sgiraft on Gechels house. cant bo he sed he didont hoap to die an ' cross his throte and then Chipper he the berrying ground galt rite under held up the overhals and the hat and l where It says we are all jassing they both had ! M. Watson rote ON away. you know the hieene: digs the hieemer we are going to put on i fin Company.) he waulked Beany out by the ear. Beany told me honest he dident do it. he sed he pumped jest as hard As he cood beraus he dident want to let the wind go out Chipper sed the reeson he pumped so hard was becaus gnew that all the wind wood go into the squee! keys and sound aw ful FOR A \HOUN' DOG,\ $350. Ozark Owner {Meant firlco as a Joks, but Oil Man Paid. Bt Louis Post Dispatch . Osceola, Mo -The price of Ozark dogs, knowa the world over as houn' dogs, made famoui by former S peak: er Champ Clack, 18 going up \Jack\ Berryhill of this county put 'the peak on present day prices for 'houn's when he got $350 from an Oklahoma man for the dog Berry he needed the money he has bougt sumthing at old BH Morrils gewelry store I knew what It is two and who it is for but Beany dont*know i know. + Beany feels prety bad over it becaus i them and so Beany has lost his g0b people and devours them and Beany this time forever so Chipper sed and. says that will go well with thr sine, pobat wils a good one for Beany |i bet that cireus man will say we are pret 'ty smart fellers. ! the how Hng munkey we are going 'to put on the Methydist pasonage, s he the reverent Jos@ir Higgins has Lot {white whiskers on his throte jes! like the howling munkeys and 'i ber hg can brow! as loud sundays., so hat is the rite place for UMA pleture ~ na. 'er gnow befoar how mutch beter it gis to Have things did rite '- we are going to put the pitire of Beany will feal prety cheap ithe tapk on my uncle Gffimans noure hill owng a hundred dogs, a $3000 'dog house, a rice track. baseball first berries appegred, and retailed |park, an airplane and other amuse if he has to give it back to old Bill | Pew: thougt It had aug! to by ;ut on POPULATION MO longo | * )’t‘a > l: oie Wi this time means a t 'loud (1o those who. hare! italy takes orer |max lead before the people this year, Nothing should be done . | to seopardize that posithin. ._~ date indicaté thit-there is m slight at- -tranglt of aur Amerlcap oleilfsation (the increases in the population of are more marked in the Kast t Jédier| than Jn the West.\ It Jeads.to the \in Thot! boncluslod that the cqurse of empire tesourcedall that hus bean proceeding wostward hx. Tove for 100 Fram most | bean arréated. ot etegation it: probably ency ok the part of some of the {Bait, nearer the markets. They have someons else to do. Tho porsons to whom it has bean telft bave forefd the prices far boyond tho reasonsblo levels In many inatances. Uptil wo get back to doing things for our atives wo will not be on @rm founda: tons of thrift. By this is not meant Hint. the spinniny whes! should be returned to every American home. That would bo carrying it too far. But there should be more independ: ence on thoe part of cach American family. That independenco, bo it through a garden pilot, a fow hens. a cow, or any one of m scora of othar things, would restore food prices to something akin to normal levels again. & s YES EKASTWARD The cenaus figures &» given out to amd morp has at last The Industrial development in the Kast has bsen Imrgely responsible for this condition. Tho Pimes 'bas for some time past ma tend- The high cost of.living has hit the collego student} & smashing blow and In turn that blow has been com- western farmers. to locate in the felt that with the training they have COLLEGKS AND THE HiJGan Cost. t recaived is the Weat in matters of welling, organisation and cooperative farm development they could make faore money in the East where the. markets are nemrer at hand and W a) *e . . Feardes, Gradually th tlow are disappearing, and Noes ire being taken by thore } ig tried to: serva notice of - wratk Ol tNe people “fly ~ Talzed. op. declares Hea nomination. That !s it will enhance ition 'before the convedtion, olikelthood that he will ho With bis strength as &'. primaries there is hoilkelihood that be rable factor In the canvention Hots not déxtroy his position thy out the threat of a boil. such condition he would legited to dbscurity as he (& \be for the paychology of the eguwtes would not fndicate that nd the knee to him because y did otherwike he would des prices are usually higher. It is pos- alblé that tho census Agures showing | thase saurterit invreases aro affected to a certain extent by this drift back toward the Atlantic seaboard, tha re turning fatmors taking the pimces of thouse who havo ono to the towns. It Jn .Certain that thero were no aensall number of western overseas soldiers who became enamored of the East as they saw It for the first time and decided to settle here. This nay bs rexponsible in a measure for some of the Increases. 'The greatest factor of all is prob- ably that which has to do with the intensive development of industries in the East during the past! five years. That development has gone forward more rapidly than any de velopment luring any other Ave-year or even ten-year pertod of the coun try's history The West is a great food supply house for America. There is no ques* tion but that workers in the trans Mississippi country have been leav- ing that district for big®or centres of municated on to the institutions in which they are seeking an educa tort. The boarding bouso, the fra: ternity house and the restaurant are having a bard time to keep prices down withis the reach Of many atud- ents. 'The result is thst in some of the collages the trustees are com fronted by a serfous problem. Some boards are consigering the endow: ment of m comm where students can get nourishing food at reason: able prices and the endowment will absorb Any losses. _ The high costs of food have caused many boarding houses to increase their rates to a point where the students cannot afford to pay the rates. Therefore thay go browsing around in restaurants. Boy fashion, they live on a couple of fried-cskes, a cup of coffee and a piece of pig The result.Js they are beginning to show the effects of under nourish ment. Iz the Instance of the fra ternity houses the apportioned costs | bave also fnoreased to a point where | many boys are unable to stand the- presaure They aro sesing it through this year but they are at a loams to know what to do when the fall term opens - ~ & The universities appreciate the population just as the farm workers have been leaving the farms of the 'fore they are taking up the matter JP To THE PEOPLE. Asaue is now up to the people. other course has been tried. Wilson vetoes the peace reaolu- is. -He6 writes a message in which s Eatt for the cities. THE LATE LYNN J. ARNOLD. Judge Lynn J Arnold, who died suddenly at his home in Coopers- town last night, was a strong, re- sourceful, manta-m! man. During the past fow months his health had not \been of the best, but prior to that time he was an outstanding figure in New York state journalism. For nearly ten years he was the edi- jtor of the Albany Knickerbocker Press. He retired from that position about ten months ago.\ During the period. of his connection with that paper he built It up to be one of the most influential journais in the state. fudge Arngld was asliawyer by pro- and a succesafui one. He went priglnally in about 1910 into the offices the Rhickerbocker Frean to look térthé.property for a client. Ho de- ined deop interest in newepp- € action of the sen- jcates the position seriqusneas of the situation There of maintaining the commons regard leas of the returns The trustees in some Instances feel that it ls far better to run the commons At & ton- siderable loss and take the money out of the university funds, than to tolerate a condition of Hvifig which drives the students bargain bunting for food. The boys of comparatively small means are hard hit., they prac- tice every economy even to depriv- ing themselves of the necessities, and the investigation in soni; col- leges has shown that their physical condition is far from what it should be. * \I've smoked a pipe for 70 years,\ says that Kentucky uncle who is 130 years old. Pretty try keeping three or four going? noice ap Jo started «in -at % he will And it in Mexico, which is 'to course was one of the biggost fakes fever put over upon people of Jeffer- son county, who turned out en masse stag was a fallure from start to fin- tsh, «ghero was no trot in him and the plo left the grounds perfectly 'The day following and for weeks and tmonths afterwards admit that ho was presont ou this great occasion. ' I was In Watertown tho evening when there was m grind \blowout\ fh homor of both Vaddock snd La Movatain, aftor their retaurm from the sojourn in tho Canadian wilderness after subsisting for four days on a plece of porferind and one frog that thoy caught while rafting down the streazm that finally let thom into thoe Ottawa river, to Ottawa There was groat oftitemont over their wherembouts until Information Tho might in Watertown war one of groat and unbsard-of Joy over their mafo arrival - About everyone that evening on Public Square had a good aired Jig on Of courms Haddock lent to the occasion all the red light and blue Higcht that was nocessary to carry the matter before the Amer. to witness this novelty of a stag be- ing entered in a trolling race. The ' came that thoy bad reached Ottawa ; at 60 cents per quart - Today they are selling for 12 cents j Vice President James Schoolcraft Shprman of Utica was in town this morning conferring with the projec- tors of the Northern New York Trust Co. Monday, Memorial day, will be ap propriately observed In this The several cemotories will be visit ef\by socletios and by many fndivid- uais and they will decorate the graves Each Memortal day finds & larger number of graves to decorate In a fow, however, thore may sleep An theso silent litle cities those who [have nd near relatives to place flow- Ore upon thoir graves. If so, let their t friends or acquaintances re member them. Mane should be neg lected. All were dear to some one you could not find &a soul who would |OLce upon a tnie. and in their pass- | tmg should bo kindly remombered at helm: on Decoration Day Ike | Mrs. Cbarlos Thomas of Clare mont, N H. and daughter, Mrs | Frank Babrock of Boston, Mass. are guests of Mra. Henry A Hardy. Franklin street. ' COMPERS AND ALLEN 'To DEBATE TONBHT » WILL ARGUE MERITS OF RE. CENTLY ENACTED KANSAS iN. DUSTRIAL COURT Law. New York May 28 -Samuel Gom pera, president of tho American Fed eration of Labor and Goxemnor | Henry J Alten of Kanaas will de it: te hare tonight on the merits of | | Ican public at that tims. | Thera ' the recontly enacted Kansas - indus wasn't as much going on every damn-la! court law _ No official deciston to work the people up to the limit will bo made as to the winner Judge as at the preqgnt period. i Asia: B. Parker of this city wilt pre- | side. ° \What | Don't Like About My Hus: The demand for seats has far ex- band. | egeded the capacity of the hall The Philadelphia Public Ledger ' allotment has been evenly divided His flash of tempter whon some between the employer and labor thing annoys him. - groups. Many men prominent in the Hie caim superrority when some <aation's affaire have been invited to thing annoys me - Occupy seets on the platform Him anorirag Mr. Gompers won, the toss for Hig untidiness pening the debate. Each aporker His insistence upon niy tidiness will ba allowed 90 minutes to present His everlasting talk his arguments. l ee ron... ! wev to REDUCE Pritts \chicken\ in the house. Hla borror if I shoy anv-spunk His willingness to allow ime to face 7 'sHAVE8 WILL BE 156 CENTS anp HAIRCUTS 35; UNION OR. GANIZER ANNOUNCES. Io | | the burglar His assun®ption of all the brave aftor t be dariger ls past His neceptance of everything but responsibility 1 His constant looking for an exeuse ' to stay out @il night l His perfect judgment a~ as New York, May Prices of w EDDED p . Shaves and baireuts in New York Otherwise. we imke the liberty of, Will soon be cut to 15 apd 35 cents, assuming the fellow i; all right | respectively. - according to - Leon loanuod 4 » cmucr na eucage. . © | onne or the to Philadelphia Pyblic Ledger Delegates will not feed to co thirs rates will be made in new barber 0 which, h id today. ty during the convention, but thev il shops Nl iny. will be away all his money before he strong by this | timea, isn't it, Uncle? Bid you ever| rick Well, de're right here, Nate. me be in danger of going broke if they need many - eyeopeners Beliboy a end bootleggers have laid in a aupply of liquor, but it is said they'll charge $40 a quart, or about $2 for \three fingers.\ d Callimag a Jay a \Jay.\ Hartford Courant: The Indiana State authorities have feaued a bulletin cautioning boy a with guns to be careful not to shoot rob- ins or bite Jays The robin part will tneet general approval, but the jay is nothing but a crow In good clothes and, if he had a chance, would eat up all the young robing. Ready, Ogdensburg Nows: Ngthan Strauss, the mult¥milHon- aire says that he is going to \ glve dfes and asserts that it is a sin to die 818 a Day at Chicago. Telegraphic advices from Chicago Jf Mr. Wileon is looking for troupje RNC _$18 a_day as the lowest price Tot a Toom Kf A econdfate \commer H cial\ hotel for convention week, opened by the barbers' union or in- dividual union members Barbérs in the new places, he aid. will receive union wage reala of | ment appurtenances, so when the Oklahoma man decided be wanted one of the dogs and asked Berryhill !to set a price, the Missourian de cided ho would have a Attle fun with the man from the oil countr) « Not nepding the money and not carlifg to part with the dog he set the price at $350, regarding it as pro- htbitife. But the Oklahoma man took praps she wont gve it back to Beany. , Tkey Blums house only Tkey nint got then Berny will be in a scraip en- jenny house and his slrop is not on ny way if she wont give it back lenny street. Ikey has a old plug Beany wont never forgive her i hoap horse and colects bones and ras and she wont it will be tuf off Beany. irop. he has the longest noge L ever #00 ® b e 6 o* see it goes way Uown ove his Boptember 8, 186- They is a clreus comin to town nex Friday. it was Roing to be in Portsmouth but there was another. got the circus grounds forst and so they are coming to Exeter me aind Pewf and Beany him up, wiring that he had deposited the money in hn Oklahoma bank. subject to .Berryhill's draft, and de manding thar the dog be erited and shippod immediately He got the! dog. ROO§$EVELT CLVB POLL gnaws Gaoneral wood (vien Majority ! Over All Other Candidates. I 'Boston Transcript. Robert M Washburn, vice pres dent of the Roosevelt Club, today 4 announced the latest figures in the poll being taken of members ma to 'their preference for the Republican I presidential nomination. The count of the returng will be compieted some lUme nest week The fNigurs 'given out today are Leonard Wood ssl k. 620 316 Hiram Johnson . 14 Calvin Coolidge b9 Herbert Hoover 63 All others 26 Total =...... . 2ou.. . §28 1 &n Law of Supply and Demand Rules «Washington Poa! 'I: is not likely there wall be any depression in btestneas, much leas a panic of the old fashioned type, when prices atart downward and wages | fotlow,' remarked Herbert F Dwyer. | of New York, at the Washington . \Dean Johnson, of the New York. university, has some sound view on this phase of the economical situs tton, which he declares is not a 'apasmodic movement. but a genuine indication that the time of ree kloss spending is approaching the end. A selling movement has begun in place: of buying and extravagant consump tlon which has prevailed for the last few years When there 4s a big de- mand for stocks, there is always y bull market, and when holders of Iaecurmes dump their goods on the market there is the inevitable de 'cline The same is true of the neces rittes of life In other words, the old law of supply and demand still cap- trols, notwithstanding aptue of our century expert@ have In- sisted that it has nothing to do with price , \'There are good reasens why prices are bound to continue down- ward In the first place, most of the} world is on a paper money basts, as! Deam Johnsom points out In the «United States we bave to extend! | eredit to the limt despite our huge; importation of gold in the last three; or four years Recently owe have b n t brought in more gold tham ever A}; he belteved she could make the trip | thoroughly unaffected. ly. says Tit-Bits, he hates gush ready the banks have begun to 00m, tract their credits and the fret that' the banks ate behind the movernent| to lower prices is the beat assurance that the downward course will con- are foing to Ret a gob possting bills mouth i dont seo how he rin eat my uncle Gilman has got the net longest nose his node is A& zu04 deal biger than Tkoym but H aint «o long but uncle Gilman is lueky he has got a house to put the picture on he can blow his nose so It sounds jest F Wke a cornet not so good as Bryce Briggam can play the cornmo but pretty good **i bet he wil be that he beat Tkey and Tkev « I1 be mad, but nobody can have evrything in this wirld. the bill porstier was in town today with a red and blue and gold 'cart with 2 calico horses and put up the big bilis he only had ? big ones and dident have enaoy others and cant get them, untfl Wensday nite and he wanta mo and Pest and Beany to put the prture of the boar constricted them up in the nite so that when the we are going to put on the fron\ gmt preeple get up in the morning they pof old decon Ebeneaser no can s therm the ferat thing. the goea to all the chirch supers and eats way hapened to get us is becaus mour\ than eny man there. one tine Beany's fsther and Powts father is Folsom tho resterant man painters and paper hangera and so 'v hitch makes clam chowder wanted Catherine Back: World, Rec borhood an By EI t pum the edgo c a - the \Copley Tra we.l L reek section v+rp Just this aide Lawrence count n her pleasant herine Backus, With her resi * ; the two are ma e 16,0 t they went to them and they woodent {to sae how mutch old Eben rood cat be«t to produc stay up all nite to do it for a dollar and he invited him in sod made a +o ngry world Re m perce and na tiket and so we sot hoal wash botler full of chos der ame. acquainted the zob sa eant tell engyone jeat Charlie sed he put in a peck of lats v \'~! most deligh what we have got to do but It jis and 2 gnlorfs of milk and a lot ef pe ro of an hour's bully * tatoe@ add onpions and he invited old co' way from the = ® e) e 6 oe decon \Preiigres in and he e and et c- inty Hne foto TR Sept 9 186 today and cold land @t and et. (GQharlie begun to «et e-'mg was ber sto for feer he wood bust bmeby lho‘hfi stoped enting becaus hg condent equinoxlous atorm. tbat usually hold eroy moar he had et all bui comes en the 22th i hoap it wont'iabout 4 quarts Charlie dident «leep rane Woensday nite we cant porkt'enny that nite he wurrid so abou; the up bills in a rane storm and if Go |decon so he got up erly the nei doant post up thom bills we dont get . morning and come down town « hea no dollar and no ticket and what will he went hy Ebens house he looked up as time i(ell you it ragea and blows Aunt Barth says may be it is . almost hope it will rane Beany do then* Beanvy is in a tite place. if he can! get that dollar he has got to get that present back from Lizzie Tole if «he wont«give it back then Beany mar have tn so to jair and he wont never forgive her if she haa to gise it Back she will be mad with Beany férever and ever | no : dent gether. it will ba two tuf on Beany what ever Beginiy has did to me | like him and i ho&p it wont rane and that TWINS BORN ON aA TRAIN Mother, aon Way to Brother's Funer e_ al, Refused to Halt Trip. Cleveland Plain-Dealer: Erie, Pa-Aftor giving birth to twins on a New York Central pas 'Benger train, eastbound. outside of Erie, Mra J 1. Franey of Nashua, N H. refused to heed the advice of a physician to leave the train and go to an Erie hoapital for care Mre - Franey sdid her- brother. is aimost equal. {to see if thefe was enny crape et A reath on the door thero °o be gnes be hadent dide but ho gessed he was prety sick w oll u hat do you think when he got to his res {erent there stood old Eben ai milo for him and he told Charlie that if he dident want the rest of that chowder he wood take | no Chartte he give it to him gird tir sars he must be jest like a boar constric ter « when the strength of tho.two parties Lodge and Underwood are a much better team for this purpose than lodge and Hitchcock,- a fact that shows in the business record of the senate. ngo Dres Makes a Difference When a body meats a body In &a finer dress Keeps a body feeling shodd3. As we must confess, wounded in France with the #4 divis ;Ften a body, feeflnj shoddy. fon. died in a Boston hospital. and , that she would continue the trip to Nashua to attend the fumeral \even if it means my death \ Dt, Mark C- Halpin, Jersey City. who was a passenger on the train. aitended Mrs. Franey The woman told the physician her husband died in St. Joseph, Mo . sew eral months ago without any serious trouble =--». I The Underwsod-Lodge Team. Brooklyn Eagle: Ordinary business in the senate, DHE 4 tinue, but, continue in such a way when it does not involve politics, 'g?-n?ng“spflz;b;yah $2933“ch 22:11; that there will be no panic wallllsnmes much more smoothly since wee Tipping will not be barr~pd prices are bound to fall, and last of, Sebstor Underwood of Alabama has | Thirty-five cents will be the price ' Ml WIll be wages and Aalaries and $99“ the Democratic foor leader. also for a massage, shampoo, singe ; reats his is not only because Mr. Under of manicure, 4 Th * - wood has had long experience im leg e Socialist Ticket. LETTERS FROM THE PEOPL E ts Education and Beltigerency. To The Times: . We often read of late that by tin- cating the people of Mexico the war spirit would be eliminated, But we have two examples before us where education has failed to do this Name- ly, Germany and the Watertown High school It seems that the time has come to revive the old-fashioned 'country sthool, where Christian principles afta high idegls of citizenship were ingulcated in the mind of the young, and where the children of the for 1 | | islative routine, having served as his <The Revjew party leader in the House of Repre- The Debs ticket should have the | sentatives, but for the additionat and «support of none but those who be-! more important reason that he gets Neve that our Constitution Is a fail | along amicably with Senator Lodge nre in Its most fundamental featdres,| While Senator Hitchcock of Nebras: 'and that the abolition of private| ka was acting as Democratic leader , property- progressive - and rapid. during the Treaty fight, the routine even if not immediate and complete! business of the senate was striking -is the proper basis on which tolcontinual ags, bufld a new form of governmept to| Lodge and Hijtchock dig not se'ex;l 'lake its place. The man whof dochto be able to hit it off together with not believe this. aind yet taiks of - m#@h success, even when the treat Ing the Socialist ticket as a % mlwaa pft out of the account. To ex}t tost,\ Js thoughtlessly playing wilh legislative business requires a i very dafgerous kind of fire. Tof workakle undersisnding between the give the Socialist full Hberty (o stat \ eaders' of the opposing parties in- his program - and - support it bysvélvlng a process of give and fake argnment is one thing; to lend him [fgequent cooperation and numerous; eigner were _ easily .and ; chesply.. support, by toting bis fioket as atFrentlemen's i talism- to become gn‘od Atoericans. mere rebuke to somebody Gz. is that manner mfizmzfg‘izlmggyboég JH. Clinstman, Lenka anotheg. _ {keep up with its routine, particularly Buys a nifty gown And outshines the other girttes That sh6 meets down town - From the Loulsyllle Journal. Short Stories. The premier of South Africa Gen- The doctor sald [ eral Smuts, is a hard worker and Consequent \Let me see,\ said a high and mighty young offfcer who sat next 10 him at a reeeption in London shortly after the Boer war, haven't we- ah- -met somewhere?\ \Yes.\ replied the general. \Thought so,\ remarked the offi \ adding with a bored air, \One meets so many people! Loteme see, where did we meat?\ \In South Africs,\ retorted general curtly. \You surrendered {0 me during the war.'\-Exchanse. \Before we were married.\ sald the young wife, \you always enga a taxi when you took me anywher® Now you think the street car is 80% enough for me,\ \No my darling,\ was the carefill reply, \I don't think the street car {* good enough for you; it's because FIE so proud of you, In a taki you wou! be seen by nobody, while I can 5110\ you off in a street car.\-Led!6® Home Journal. mtl The Years Wildest Prophs! One of these days a rabid ReP can newspaper is- going to sD good word for Josephus Danicl the Washington monument will « t. ublk &nd do the stma—mtmiui‘hgym Aze>Her & ald, * f when potatoes i+ r bushel, sugar w + n':« per pound an ne to be neighbor * their grain wit +~'ure to pass a <ni« she told me a + irusting that the n that morning ~perited thergby Good seed batr - « year and Mrs < The Times that t « to of Theresa sell with the mp «eed for her fs & the trip to The n.s good fortunos tc mpanion and gue Ir«@ _ Naturally en as a point of sen in the hagvest & ne by. as well as ) rare I cemember as v ' yesterday.\ sai the days when © inada when the ; ith the sickle Ev »» reemed to be the work, too = days of the han ~ adles with the atr 'er with the sbaj thought we had perfection when { rk with a tool M tghborly times as we dropped int «ch other for a fr i~ always the sip maybe someth renger. just for c 'Do I remembef and binder? - Well \v. what a commof cur township and hb 220 t 1 RS eset 2, Bt wa $t Nr.\