{ title: 'Watertown Daily Times. volume 2 (Watertown, N.Y.) 1894-current, September 08, 1922, Page 4, Image 4', 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/sn84035541/1922-09-08/ed-1/seq-4/png/', label: 'image/png', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84035541/1922-09-08/ed-1/seq-4.pdf', label: 'application/pdf', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84035541/1922-09-08/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.xml', label: 'application/xml', meta: '', }, { link: '/lccn/sn84035541/1922-09-08/ed-1/seq-4/ocr.txt', label: 'text/plain', meta: '', }, ] }
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ofle who has 'been neu the. bqslnasiffthut 1s burprisinig intérects of the and fundati appearing; | . . 0. !. mentally aympsth@lfic with them; His Ho is, submitting -teday to the la trouble will come in him stempt to gain the support of. bott. Hig rail» toad program strengthoned him with tha railrord men | thengssives and the Indian 3mm of civilization. and -likewise to the law of evolution. Invariably it is the rule that the dominant rice survive. In this instance it is the white race it made him their candidate, but at the} that survives, The Indian has never a, time that program alienated mbers of other People, and. ilroid events ~ have not} Life is probably as dear to him now d «hy government control [ tor that contror| at controh \.. JEWISH LEADERSHIP._ : \THe prominence and leadership of e Jaws in American affairs is especial \! [y. emphasised by a recent contest %) conducted 'by the Jewish Tribune of lived a full and enjoyable life since ho roamed the plains and forests. as it is to any other being, and yet '] he was made for a different etylliza- [tion, fff in poorly with society as it now about him, and seems entire- .[1y willing that his race as such dis- appear. 4 FREE TRADE AND clocks. Every time the tariff comes in for 'detern a walloping at the hands of © bitter yxégzrzufzzngizg’iws\ hf; ts: critices-and It is the most popular United Stites. Louis D. Brandeis, | PUUCHSK bag in our national reform supremo court fustice, was) is brought to the laccorded first place. The list ° fol.] ®ttontilon of the public some | such \Louis D. imam; Loulm New Haven; Conn., Times-Leader the Nathan Straus, Oscar R. Straus, OtD°\ day: Samuel Untermyer, Stephen §. Wise, Julies: Rosenwald, a. 119 }Iullan W, Mack, Feliz M. Wairburs, “Ignaz!“ P. gmmwégmgn A nmunications to The ”satirilfilfl Arcade ”P. R L3 David - Belasco, I~ Following the Arst twelve there came several other names, indicat Ing something of the Jawish opfmfon of the leaderstilp of otherm: Charles PJgincion, Samuie! Gomp: jors and Simort Wolk (tefJ: Waiter) Ge |Damrosch sod -Rabbl Judith L, a.} ; Prof, Albert / A. & The Jmph'fllmndmflmqlg? labor. Ab- fewisohn hd Jridge Ollo A. Roxal: aky. (tifd);-Ba¥rnard. , Simon Flexner, Morris, HiHiquit, Dn Felix Adler, .Ofto H.-Katen, Loult -M. Baruch,. Dr,]. Waigés'which appear princely when Jewel opinion to those whose 'At? CRBo Imag. _ Bolaesco, the Wi tig b - having] ight for the NB. Kendrick Cremocrat,|nim récently romde this statement: ection Campaigm. _ - 16 ~atrof In Wyoning j and Moudell !s work. The - pooiplel dividends when agriculture, the basis here Hon! oumatiy-wide|of prosperity, pays no dividends.\ ~ Moandall : aa % boime.;, Timey 'to t six. }i{! mols | 4 ended it. He \his inmpresized ¢: thelr both Democrats and Republ¥cans In i / the senate that ho li of a high type Ml, battle is 'Being waked up and 'down the IIttle state with a conider- able degree of, intensity, Thee popu- \ YJation of the statalisalf is mot much more than a. consressionil dixrict, in fact the state is Hated Population of 146,986 wh only ore, representative in contress. People of the (state seen to Jneprité tho view thal the. m {United States senate woull not be improved by substituting Frank w. Mondel{, Hepublcan, for Fohn E. Mondalil had e in the bouse. Especially e when be becatnes ma- en. < But he has failed ma leader and har _|Genionstrated that he is pot of the jiype that should be elevated to the H we would bring that body ghest levels of statesman- 8t.dintinus ndfcated 1th pis chanc & ars this tru be It jority tead bg the majority faitfeiged Wiliam THE DISAPPEARING The Indian problem, at ore time is solving iiseif. The on is rapidly Gecteas- ing. The census bureau has recent- ly made public a séries of figures which show that the Indian popula- Hon decreased from 2 242,059 In 1921, a loss of 22.124. The bureau of Indianaffairs makes ts to|public some fgures which gtve the yYeRrsinumber of Indians in [States as 436,387, with *PpAF: | s0- perplexing, Indian populati Hic mm in 85,881 in 110 a stordy in- fs during the last Indlah Burau 'cam-| classifies asIndians thoe who prove *e descent from Indians. TD®/biitread's Agures include large i%\ ¥n|bers who by reason of their @ census Bbureat: sets down -_ The Indilan cantot adjubt b&mself he white-rm's-civithratiin= ~f8s lred outdoors tor cenvturies. qumbers, continued strong until he 1 Yas confined. to a> reservation and,) Mark Twain is about the only Amer- t the white risafi's | se as part of his life. iloals: developed «and it ay many thousands of his} Yes an Inmctive 'the 100th anniversary of his birth. ; not appear. © It was probably a clever item as this which appeared in the It is dull times at the New Haven Clock shop. The reason why may not he generally known, but it is a very simple reason Whig}; all who think can under 4. stan to 9 German clocks are sold in this country for less than the raw ma- terial costs in this country, - New Haven made clocks cannot be sold in competition with clocks made in Germany for the reason that labor costs are much lower in rmany, The protective tariff is the oniy aid that can be offered those who gro the yictima of cheap , foreign a 'r / The New Haven Clock shop pays *compared with what labor is paid. in Germany. This thing cannot continue in- definitely and America still be \the [greatest market in the world.\ Our buying power will bae exhausted. There is material aplenty for thought on the part of the free trader when they contemplate this situation. The Democrats may refer to the \bung ling tariff\ the Republicans bave [made, but & protective tariff is the one safe policy for Americs. Any substantial argument is pot against the protective tariff it- self,, but on the 'point of how it is made, ais & political tariff in congress Or as a aclentific tariff by a tariff aj commission, to be approved by con H 1 THE FARMER anD six PER cENT Dr. Davis Starr Jordan of Califon - |\I:cannot seq why railway stock holders ara entitled to six per cent Both the railway stockholders and the owners .of farm'® gre entitled to dividinds, ; 'The Fake (Hat comes when one does not piy does not mean that the other should be periallzed. One should not be based on 'the othar. The should be permitted to, earn | an . amoun Wufl'falefua‘éa “was to-Borrow money: and: pay' interest on it to keap the romd up to a point .of efMclency. . The stockholder who puts his monsy In the original propo- sitton is entitled to a fair return on his investment and that return should not be bised on the return which goes to some other owner of security or to some other industry. There is no reason why, under proper adjustment. both the rail- roads and agriculture should not yleld a fair and adequate reiurn. There has peen too much fooling with the railroads and too little re- gard shown for agriculture. The footing with the railroads and - the failure to recognize their demands continued until they ware ail but prostrated. 'The disregard of agr(- chiture's demands has gone on in about the same way until the indus- try ftself has arisen vehemently to demand recognition tn congress and dlsewhore. The farmer is entitled to 6 per cont and so is the railroad stock- boider and if each is given the recognition to which ft is entitled as [a constructive factor in cur sconomic afatra at least that sum will be forthcoming. 'Then not only will the two particular lines be benefited, but the benefits will be extended far into other fields. & a ‘L—fi—fi * MEMOIRS Here AND IN ENG LAND, - There is a distinct differance be. tween the English and American view regarding autoblographies. 'The English view is that they should be held back until all the principals are dead. - Lord Balfour adheres to this .opinfon when he refuses to consider now a contract to write his memoirs. Lord Churchill and Premfer Lioyd George are (dissenting to\ a degree when they agres to write their me- moire, but their works will not be cumplets autoblographies. They will Tavor of the publication: \C btographies promptly, © Wiieh figures mentioned are stil] - goos: fer toward atraighted history . while :t figures can correct mist to ~- ~Ewropbéim Debt ~ TTC . J. 'r +. ~.A'V,l ~» » Cape Vincent Eagle 2d . \a Mgihgfiinlniu : ending,\ ma? fig: right heve im Cape Vincent too ske any beginning at . paany do not m why not get it from the ghnelfi at the state . : - ' _ Mr. Vam.Allen's Candidacy. ** rbuckle says th tas of his beaith has rmused. hing tf abandon 'his proposed trip to : th Orfent. Here's hoping you &6t well enough to travel soon, Fatty, --* /$ laskt.. Democrat: ~ fu’rhere is much very favorable talk. in regard to the candidacy of W. B. Van Allen, in the senatorial contest, Mr. \Van Alleniakes well wherever e goes among the people, He has iaced himself in t eople who appreciate what -a con- kcientious representative he will be. He has won his way up 'in his pro- fession by hard and sarnégst effort and stands amorg pf Carthage.. We sometimes wonder x p whip salesmen of the fair of yemster: year turned to when the bumped 'em off the fair grounds, | ; W Anyway, the Turks bave been so|! busy with the Greeks recently that they have left the Armenians atone. the best citizens Boonville Herald: The coal dealers are telling us that spite of the five months' strike, hey can't see any reason . why the price should go higher, was any good reason why the pres ent price was reached, R The high cost of coal is a result of business methods. Coal would be 50 per cent cheaper to the if the miners worked in- dustriously and intelligently 48 bours a week; if the coml were loaded Af rectly on cars and drawn away from the mifes; if coal trains were move; '|as regularly and as expeditiously as is possible insteed of being side [tracked and shunted about; if con- aumers would give their orders |i the spring and thus permit regular |and constant delivery all through the mens School having begun it is miece sary for boyhood 'to wash behind {ts immer nre compre: Even the old custom of bankid the house may be revived. . HENRY FORD, Believes in the Miflennium 80 Hard] He Almost Prover It. Topek-n. Capit, In Collier's Magazine Henry Ford sums up his philosophy, and it is dif ficult to pick flaws in it, umless dismissed outright with the abje that it is \agin' human nature.' R Evidently Detroit's first citizen be: Heves in the millennium. He talks about the possibility of abolishing poverty in America. T to condemn anybo ago as being t attention. If the second w ime is any measure enry Ford is & pract question is wheth hand knows what '{grafted, and if the producers and dealers combined-not to make extra profits--but to save every possible cent in transportation and - delivery. Shanty Days. St Joseph, Missouri, Gazette: Have you noticed that city boys no longer build shanties? Of course, a ali few shanties tremblo here. and there the metropolitan winds. sbanty-buildiag. an ancient institu- tion of boyhood. is on the wans. headed for extinction. It im part of the jail existence in lad is being walled. If what they were missing. reatoring peace in the famil er job than setting the periodical crisis In Europe. , Many-a grownup fnin would not delightlal memoriés of Iurge bag of gotd. naber one. and the thit . pyisated you and the sang whan you contemplated the Anished master- was old Hnoleum, tips from tin cans hat £3 enough, unpractical to meclt ching. the rank of, t_ man ol bis of i!, however, ical man. Th er his millennis his practical hand] ~ A fair analysis of Henry Ford's suc- cess will have to bring out tha ves the Lhour day 10 or 12 Bour and he adopts paring It & mud He believes in Bringing prices down \to the low limit,\ and he started pri did following which the city the boys knew would be a hard- better than the a mllennfalist, $/ shanty days for a Pmbablyryou reme Tfic Old Home Fown. By Géorge T. Dorech in the Ball- A few miles frown a minor tribu tary of the Fatho wf Wiators lies the Homg Town, lovely and serene. is in the midst of as rollimg country- side, winobe every rook and rill, bush amd cormBeld. fends abd an mir of pdenty to the ou all? of thm courmmunity, - Ard over sohdar-a pert C “5me itratght gm , It aucce@ded mot many yeark ago, reflacts the quaint Erabits of the real dents of The *Powa nearpr, It grown dusk & church spire is 0.1ch a striped \Night? Polo. We A chwracteristlc wag of tho tail an undérsianding of the eye., is my cobrato's ellin® answer Quickening ouf parcs, wa bike cn plece. The roofn tar paper or fat maited apart in a borfire. \Th ber came from everywhe sites, torn from ® bac Therp was all kinds df aroind loose in those &' town planing willing to donafa. \seconds.\ 'Those days are gone. It probably would take $10 L enough scrap fumber to put up a of one email room. Along with the shortage of lomber b the city real erlate problem-the back _ yards-which of's shaaty im- afr sons imitative: torest and constructed their own play-dwallings, out of saplings and small togs this way they laamed the principles of cabin construction Later, in the days whan a equare meal stil] could be bought for a quarter, the lads bullt shanties out cidentally develop instinct The | the shanty is more than sentimental. It is the extinction of a pastime for deavaloping tnstimet im youth. . Telling It to Them. (Setmtor Lenroct in the U. M. Manate.) \I tell you that you ars not alive this country if you appreciate the cry for action upon the port of congress. that all the unrest in this count day is due to a féaling that here we dilly-daily. Hare we make objections, here we protest. here we delay, hera 'we [ilibuster and paver stand on this floor and depounca profiteering, condemn it, unable to find language strong enough to con- demn it, and then sit with folded arms and say, 'What of it? Tha prevanis us fram acting. unconstitutional. There is fo Femedy. Let it go on. Let it go on' -simple talk, talk. \You say T criticliad the president and criticised the congress as much as the president. Than 1 say to you, tlcise us both on so they will have before anybody peak of the bust- pression. There is oaly ome ft in his theory, which is that arkers have got to become fn: mum - production,\ least gets cofsld- ed of Henry Ford, but quarters than labor, that he has'Ais Organitation standardited ind ed up to the point where srtevry mad. io keep in the whole p Dpleces of raw work his head a}; cight hgun s may be, he ; ir fa: Pyatt hey it e there may. be A strike tomor. th the Ford plant therm norer bar been a strike in th® Ford plant up to today. Neither ars his men s of workmen. Hs them as of all classes in- d physical cripples. o for men who are no legs. mea with- out arms, men with tubsrculoeis. men who havo \served tima\ without intelli the 12-year-old satisfied with the sary under existing condit! The industrial Ford sounds ide practical, but be kee . as if ho believed in ti. M Then the Giris Had Cher Say. The Continent: The Presbyterian - Witness. Can- fin® - Presbyterian witnesses to the truth of Elght young French Canadian _- Habitant's Holiday imam: 3m??? Where One Stands W ith One F006! in the New erable 'production. It is complain this complafat lumber Iying cays - And th standing crew at th mill usvaily wera proccss World and Othig (From a Species Correspondent of the London Times.) I rams great might fin the little made Frimch-Cimnadiin vEllage. | Out on the Et. Lamwnre®s the Flickerigng lights of the @usbse Doit faded into the dusk. the flelds a dog was lurtously to tell the tmie of fulsg to fol w bord up for the stage, trom behind the curtail down Into the orchestra. painted; a ye red sash are atep ard not block rocass of comverting stee! into a flirvar must off and at the end of llow shirt and a hope: abrimkagza of only partly. concealed Ronerwhete in makes the a on uo olestinnte cow ss The:mast of Ths Hetle <hug-claus of-. the ber mills was grow- slower, fainter and beccut coat that is work' | Red-sash fs. chat Lading tenor 1 of gesture th of the might entry bs conduce * the mares of a IHiing march: verture comes 'there is «a moment's tensa sile ard then the curtain goes applause from the back of Play is a little open $ sprigs n turns. With a wealth {sto the ing mower and work were slowly villago tgsall all the world was at play. and the whole of tho little population seemed to be drift ing towards the church Rall \Lever du rideau a 4 heaures,\ said the handbifis, bur 5 nochances, and soon af- began to fH. all settlers- a superior clas cluding mental an Ho has work to d blind, men with of oid lumber, in- Ing their building It is Monday. \The Town awakes from the qwaletuode that pre dontinglsdg the Shbbemth. T wide Ets portair at 6 d'giock. Im drif#s a loma custom Dick, the Zanitor, who bas been of tha G, plods pain fully up tha cellar mstopa wrong-Be fails to mefer to the time be urfurled the Stars imd Striper habitants . atte trials of a Tricles®s peasant who drew- ery and mistook gance beyond that of . and he is fairly well The bablants-the an ico they give, were in their best broaécioth: flalt of an Emheritmnce that beither time mor oceans could tmkeo . tent the chie touch of and & chiform acart-worn at a care Agle-to the French- Carre the selgnetar and his Arid enuch touching of cEps part caf thos® nearest to him us of necks om the part the back of the ball The seigneur is lord of the masenor frara. He is the symbot mee utablished in st for 39. the winnin sash plays tha pamsant; tle brunsite with a swe his adored; Berthold. revenu ricke d played by & tail, man who would m Scarpia in La Tox at soprano * philosophy of Henry alistic | rather than ps on rubbing it a sHken ankle 'Amerigua\ 4 saturnine yourk ake ca. As for mug place is taken by MrK -sash on tha piano, who guida trio through the finala with vig orous shakings of tha head. Sixty siz turns out to be $9 after all-Of~ rather Berthold, \returning rich fro Americs.\ sees to it that it is tht nort best thing, folly cariasz i to the unrest in CanmdSan grits. The week pasue about the sams a al) ret ' Heavy, horse drawn firm vehicles: roll imito town,. some to &iicharge thasir cargo at mill creamery or store; others to serve worthy iImhibltani: with fresh pluck: ed products of aoll arnd tofl. Diver sion is afforded by am basstsall game and a special attricktion at the Ma. sonic Open Hoon, Then comes Saturday night' The local bird is schiéuled to give a squire at 3, and long hosts encircling t€ with teams of sirme substar the following taiking of matrimony, agreed that \fia to flirt with, b and recther more, of in ancemt rest &a new country. in $662 his forefath- the lind he holds; over the Modern land laws and Medem Rave aitered the thie saignour and the custom of agas cb Cansdm. and the pays his tthe to gives of the per tradition demands better grace than o the government sveat are inf ppers\ were al right they would want that know about practical lng-tbat could tell batween a beefsteak chop and were more practiced - ia effective use of brooms than in Jaze dancing. Have profound | decision and the curtails amid thunders of ap The Habitants' Hymn © There is an interval, - The ind# [atigable Red-sazh comes out to con luct the antr.acte. Then he bobf in agaio, and fit: minutes fater it rises on \Lam There are tears behind r now,. and these thite Fronch Canadian villagers throw themselves into the story of the old, sculptor who, in love with his ward himself. is yet unselfish enough to give her in marrflage to his yoURF friend Leon, in a way that the Gub trys would not have scorned to af*> es the happy endiogs snatching off his wig jumps down to his beloved orchestr®s once again, and a moment later thi cure, the seigneur, the children it the gallery, the habitants, the villag# shopkeepers, and ail are singing \O Canada! Terre da nos aleux\ wi 3 ail the heartfelt fervor of a national Most significant of all, th6: evening comes to an end with t Save the King,\ fustily sung by all The words of the one* are a prayS® for the protection of rights and falth¢ ords of the other ate a sit- cere avowal of loyally to the rule which fnspres that protection. _ Outside once more, and the hapD¥ ors vere manta of lle and death tha ? the quart 6f th) selmeuric. the difference and a mutton chlorides, ph in t can t, there w cow3d or wor relations betwesan the But cles hard ii FYan French Cintia hin and sonal mervie tht with a grat dai be nys bh dunt tita at Qusabec. Power of the Prieg® Ft is early ®. and the orches- ¥ hen thers is a concart Is the before 1 the the square are In every descriptlin, . Everything is hutEe! A crowd of te popcorn wagon ert _ its propristor's digniSed profession ZEnto & gime of ._ An anmuzmcement i; be from the bandstand-wa can catch a faw calebration\-\shan-tattia militia and Red - Men bahind the cy ing come to this they told some of the u hat they thought Wh sirls replied: willing to run beans to make a real homa for & man. But she doesn't intend to do G for the accommodation of a cigarat- puffer. God rive us men and - wa'll do our part.\ bat Ins of wark plowed in th in which the much impaire sng the swe; bees discarde children mround t areupon - the [th threatens to conv 'The girl of today is & broom | and ie people will cri election day, becau a chance next November, find out that they have bins. that they bara no c fand are asked to axercise ego as American ci 'find out, we tra in <uning up. great cutbirst of applause, and a wehitehair ed min in the loog trlack of a walks up the ight read left. -Cun of the csopher and f starace is the all omparab neys, and tha tiens. You will will all find out, that will register than and there protest against the conditions ave been allowed to go on with- out any remedy being suggested or any sotution adopted,\ HERE ARE MORE HEROES . Old Bcout Rey Moulton Presents List of Striking Candidates, ia New York Evening Mail: We see by the of Engraving and up some naw in it Cervar, M Wilted Enthusiasm, The garden which I made with -neglacted mot, d it ouf, you sea, wasn't near so hot -Washington Star. There'll be a hot time in the Od alate smiling Town that night? Jt is Monsieur l'Abbe parish, and guide, phil ried to covery man, ansong the simple A great power is him- n that wields by of Parliament whose zoned on the tricolored anf around the hall to ceemive men who have county in the house, lon is the power be- he haDitant #s a afm. : th outpourings Is now a muc Whon frst I lai \As you comes tihe com- The weather mand of Liettenant Ianclination. \As you ara'\ com of General Practical As it is-The 'To the people hare ch posts at the square long since have been replaced by hi@eous Walley Riley'ss in business; Romoe Atorn's a whoto Bill Paris has been Aniigpolis arsd is an Bam's float- women and child eer coneznod salt. dineerily excr abdrit 13 gra eas the command greater even tha the memba; name: mere bla shleldg that h tell of the su tEprettrited the In vhat direct Ing I ve has changed; An Optimiat, atged. The bitch How doth the Hittle busy bes Improve the passing hours p the sweets of iife § all the sours. -Boston Transoript M 'The Big Slump, tw5__ grams | In gathering u papers the Bureay Ptinting is getting postage stamps and the stamps will in stances be changed, Washi Franklin will acl; but dt d The acid chas ture 'with the sale grocerynming graduated from officer on ona of write only of the war period.. Los Angales Times: Americans beliavo that an auto. biography may readily be printed whet the mctor is at the height of his fame? Roosevelt published his memoirs in 1913, when be was stin on the strige, and It was a dozen «zo that La¥Fotietta printed his own autoblography, which was more attractive then than now perhaps. Acan who bad g preference for the British view. He wrote his auto biography and left Instructions that It be withheld from publication untii How serious he was about this does sone professional reaking with one eye on and the other on the a@e not reflected in tris mind. 1 Frencts Canmdians hig ideal preservatlon of hi« a the recogrition of glon aand his speach ree ome of the very few error: of 1 thai morsument of the donstitutiore. the Durhash report, was the supposition olmenst in the population vould sr-adualty becormg absorbed In the masa. . Sighiyfive years basse! since thea rprort was drafted, ind the French Canadians st31 stand Apart-stond spart no * of sympathy, assertion of their natton nations! Indepersdence. growing tess. Tha Fren crotEen of the ing fortresses; studying journalism at Ma B memory -it will fever Evan its nme which, when n the preime«e of mew as- inverlably brings forth a ?\ / wilt never stem stranga to us. . Tomorrgw the Honé Town Will be & mayday—the famtmemed, one and only little groups draw together and di- The saigneur's motof car purts up the main street fig i away into the -ountry towards th9; big chateau. On the veranda of th#-. vooden hotel a fiddler strikes uf is old French Canadian jig that 6. scam to owé. its aficestry to 5°}:f Scottish soldier of fortune asekifk! the bubble reputation in the service;, of the Fleur-de-Lis, 'The tune chané, |. es to the lilt of a voysger's sonEk~- The | halfhumorous, s'rains wander across the. belt {fig pines and are lost in the night aver the starlit St. Lewrence. Fartber to the west Hes the m world. remorseless in its éfficienc crude in the sunlight of the prairies,. George will stay on the But other heroes ored. It has not which will be picke stamps, but we su late, that the foll tricts be immortai $20 gold piece to buy the folks in Americar] bat has hap. turnr$ proviso (about 156 per the ody is re of Re sweat), a nickel cigar would mildly r pened to the German . W JUDGE FINES Ht8 son _ BUT LATTER Appears Father Imposes $5 Fine Who is Tardy, gton, Sept. 8. -Roman Jur. d out yesterday when police court bailiff, duty until 1:30 p. Hardison, bis fath- will also be hon- been stated just d out for the few #gest, ere it is too owing popular pa- ized on these.whin- tlghtr-he vant rae. bi re course, It fa n accosnpaties } rehéves pots frotf the blood not tho expia some or healt as ima exercise is du tion of oxygen up ox consium fous <waste m sweating is a incréased com *is przroneoas t is fectrying | o Dr. Beeman of the gum. Uncle Hen Ford. Old Charlie Isaacson, the musick. halt-plaintfy6» tice was Glenn Hardis did not report f m. Judge Robert er, summoned him to the plain his tardiness, tifled that he had ace Ca Bostoh Harald: Caution cin Be cearried to «x- tremes. Too much of Willlam Jernisa Bryim. Willian, (Puss My Landlord. Inventor Crystal Radio Sets. Tity Einstein. Hon. Jos Fordnéy, of the tariff. * M yfoot) Johnson. Ft world pre- walked up to a pollinge oar and the voting lat t in rostllity, The bailiff tes- ompanied some tour. His father ther French Canadas we with one foot #1 that new world, d Nor ark th They stopped hid4 . of | advertislihg. _ Anyway. [fined him rork.:} Harper's is tiow prinling so becasise 6f Tang, printing some of the Balliff Har § sn c un 0 [P F. Thee ar - many | apgiments in|Judgy pri re ch Canadians One of therm a \Say 1 don't know It“ “to v9.1} 1 olhfwhs on in}? The ot dor't> know how; to, sftiser, I Jcmow sall of * $5 for contempt of bis:absence without leave, | Hardison anppounced be would - comncil and. Prom: Might As Wel! Get Credit For It, awe newly a third of Canpda Soringheld Republican: «» latign fre OetFec it4 our debts.\ is the alo- outnumbest the British by 16 Thetis no thou tics In thee littler 0 tight.: & qulst, ery old w@rid, a, worl tions and grakt 7 iThe two worlds vy 10 .._ l one. Yét ohce t tht of tice or poti- wh Here to tigtare, . olvieusty \ gan among t from as weil fang: be collected. dll. you sot m Hardfson's devision, |-\ __ _