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MUTT AND JEFF—Jeff Is Dishing Out Knowledge These Evenings. —By Bud Fisher
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FRENCH AFRAID
GERMANS PLAN
ANOTHER WAR
PARIS, June 3. —Possibility of an
other European war in the hear fu
ture was forecast today by the
French government and the press
regarding the part Germany may
plav in the situation in Poland.
Editorial comment showed deep
concern at the possible fate now con
fronting Poland.
The Swiss correspondent of L’ln
transigeant declared in a dispatch
today that several members of the
German government met in Switzer
land last week and discussed the pos
sibility of German participation on
the Polish front. Experts he de
clared, had pointed out to the meet
ing that Germany immediately could
put 700,000 men in the field against
France and 300,000 against Poland.
The plan was temporarily abandoned,
he said, owing to the uncertainty ex
pressed bv the German leaders that
the other powers would remain neu
tral.
France’s Interst in Poland is due
to the support she has given to the
organization of the new state. Henry
Bidou, French military critic, sums
up the situation with a statement
that the question of the position
Germany will take in the campaign
iiow pending between the Poles and
the Soviet reds is one which is wor
rying Poland greatly because she
fears an attack from the rear while
fighting on the east at Warsaw.
Germany, separated from Russia
bv Poland, is negotiating with the
smaller northern states of Eettonia
and Lithuania for the purpose or
securing a foothold to serve as a
bridge into Russia. Germany is
known-to have offered to pay dam
ages to Lettonia .-’for the ravages of
the. notorious Baltikum troops which
carried out the coup of March 13.
The plebiscites firmly established
by England in the Dantzig provinces
is giving grave concern, especially
with Silesia. With its re
lations with Czecho-Slovakia very
tense, this latter country has mani
fested its desire to reach an under
standing with the Soviet govern
ment.
These conditions have brought
about the complete encircling of
Poland by enemies—Germans, Rus
sian s and Czecho-Slovaks.
Infuriated Bull Gores
Woman: Nearly Kills Her
FORT MAEISON, lowa. —Attack-
ed by a mad bull and gored and
trampled by the infuriated beast,
Mrs. Charles Fruehling, residing on
a farm near Denmark, was found
lying in a field adjoining the farm
house, near death.
She was milking when the bull
charged on her 'from the opposite
side of the field. animal had
broken the rope which held him.
After throwing the woman from the
milking stool, the bull prodded his
horns into the woman’s back and
trampled on her. He was chased
from the field by farm hands, who
heard her cries for help.
Mrs. Fyuehling was rushed to the
St. Joseph hospital at Keokuk, where
her condition is regarded as serious.
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(L-rJ 0
New Questions
1— How large was the horse origi
nally, and how many toes did it have?
2 What is a soft shell crab?
3 When was the first audience
granted to representatives of foreign
powers by an Emperor of China?
4 What is the origin of the winged
disk so generally in Egyptian art?
5 What is the average salary of
country school teachers.
6 What is Father’s day and how
is it observed?
7 —What is a pocket veto?
8— What river in China is called
China’s Sorrow?
9 What is meant by a party whip?
10— Where are the largest salt
mines in the world?
Questions Answered
Q. What is a curule chair?
A. This Tvas a chair of state,
equivalent to a throne, in use among
the early Romans. The chair was
usually ornamented with ivory or
gold, had curved legs, but no back,
and could be folded as a ’a camp
stool is folded. It was used by <cu
rule magistrates, dictators, consuls,
praetor, and curule aediles on for
mal occasions. The right to sit in
the presence of others was one of
the precious privileges of certain
officers.
Q. How is the word derby pro
nounced?
A. In America the word is pro
nounced as spelled, while in Eng
land the usual pronunciation is dar
by. This is the most important an
nual horse race of England, found
ed in 1870 b ythe 12th Earl of
Derby, and run at Epsom, Surrey,
in the spring, generally on the Wed
nesday before Whitsuntide.
Q. How many women’s Greek let
ter fraternities are there in the
United States?
A. There are about seventeen fra
ternities with 395 chapters, and a
total membership of 48,176 women.
Q. What is meant by S. A. E.
horse power rating?
A. S. A. E. is standard automobile
Man Carries Heavy Book
In Journey Around World
"America is the best country in the
world,’’ declares Joseph F. Mikulec.
Joseph ought to know. He’s walk
ed entirely around the land portions
of the globe twice, visiting twenty
six countries. Since 1901 he has been
tramping the world and doesn’t ex
pect to call his journey ended until
December 31, 1921.
Clad in blue overalls, a several
day browt hos pale whiskers curling
like a mantle over his weather-beaten
features, Joseph visited Chicago a
few days ago. On his back he car
ried his most precious treasure —a
thirty-pound book in which are the
signatures of President Wilson, Mr.
Roosevelt, the king of England, the
former czar of Russia and notables
from many other lands.
"I left Croatia, the county in which
I was born, in 1901,” says Mikulec,
"and I’ve been walking ever since.
When I first reached America I was
so delighted with the country that I
became a citizen. It’s the best coun
try in the world. When I end my
travels next year I expect to write a
book about it.”
Asked what his most remarkable
adventure was, Mikulec told of an
experience in New Zealand.
"To-Mika, an old Maori chief, ask
ed me to marry one of his daugh
ters. I was the first white man that
he had seen and he offered 3,000
cows if I would wed the girl. But
not wishing to take up life in the
jungles as a savage, I refused.”
Blowing Soap Bubbles
Offense in Orphanage
CIJICAGO, March 26.—Blowing
soap bubbles is an offense in the
Illinois State Home for Soldiers’
Orphans, where 338 children of war
veterans are housed.
Miss Annie Hinrichsen, secretary
of the department of public welfare,
found two small boys kneeling on a
crack for punishtment, on a visit to
the home.
“What did you do?” she asked.
“Blew soap bubbles.”
Miss Hinrichsen reported to her
chief, Charles H. Thor, that the home
had only three toys; that the play
room for sick children was a cement
“cell” in the basefnent, devoid of all
furniture; that children suffering
from contagious diseases slept in the
same beds w’ith those who were well,
three to a bed, and that sick children,
including five-year-old twins, were
found scrubbing the cement floors.
Tobaacco Gold Fills Banks
Early marketing and high prices of
tobacco crops last year was suggest
ed by Louisville bankers as the prin
cipal reason for the $10,000,000 in
crease here in national bank deposits
between November 17 and December
31 of last year, as announced from
Washington by the comptroller of
the currency.
Banking circles here have also no
ticed an increase in balances of in
terior banks of Kentucky with their
Louisville correspondents.
Part of the large increase, which
ranks Louisville as sixth in the coun
try along with New Orleans, is also
attributed to the natural increase in
deposits during the close of the cal
endar year.
Blackleg Vaccine .
Distributed Free
• Vaccine for immunizing cattle
against blackleg is still in great de
mand. A report of the bureau of an
imal Industry, United States depart
ment of agriculture, shows that
3,339,815 doses were distributed free
to stock owners during the last fiscal
year. The vaccine sent out by the
bureau is in the powdered form.
engineers’ rating, which is the uni
form standard used for calculating
the horse power of automobiles.
Q. Is there more than one re
ligion among the Chinese?
A. There are, five religions in China,
with many followers—Confucian,
Buddist, Taoist, Mohammedan and
Christian.
Q. What caused Ralph Waldo
Emerson to resign his pastorate in
Boston.
A. He ' resigned because he was
unwilling to administer the Lord’s
supper in the form that was fol
lowed by the Unitarian church, to
which he belonged. According to
his belief, the-communion was pure
ly spiritual, and he refused to par
take of the bread and wine.
Q. Who is the - youngest woman
college president in, this country?
A. Miss Helen Taft, daughter of
President Taft, who is acting presi
dent of Bryn Mawr college.
Q. Are funds placed in a federal
reserve bank absolutely safe frdm
loss?
A. Federal reserve banks do not
deal with individual depositors, but
with member banks only. Any mem
ber bank of the federal reserv-' sys
tem is a reasonably safe place to de
posit money, but the government
does not guarantee any bank against
failure.
Q. A says that a tall brick chim
ney sways at the top, while B says
that it does not. Which is right?
A. Chimneys do sway to a certain
extent, an allowance for swaying be
ing made in construction,
Q- Is color blindness curable?
A. This condition is not curable,
ancrsometimes exists in eyes that are
otherwise normal. It is found in
3 or 4 per cent of men and less than
1 per cent of women. It is particu
larly important that railway and ma
rine employes do not have this de
fect, since the safety of the travel
ing public depends in a large meas
ure upon the accuracy with which
red and green signals are observed.
Paralytic Recovers Use
Os Legs After 15 Years
William H. Blackman, president of
the Blackman Floral company, of
Evansville, Ind., walked four blocks
the other day using his legs for the
first time in fifteen years. Mr.
Blackman is eighty-three years old
and was believed to be an incurable
paralytic. While his neighbors and
friends speak of his recovery as a
"miracle,” .the aged man says "it was
simply faith.”
Twice a day for the last fifteen
years Mr. Blackman had been lifted
in his buggy and had driven to his
greenhouse or to his store in Evans
ville. A runway for his wheel chair
had been built from his house to
the driveway. His five sons and
daughters, sixteen grandchildren and
two great-grandchildren had all be
lieved him a permanent cripple.
Wiiile suffering with a bad cold,
Mr. Blackman decided to call in his
family physician. The physician told
him that he seemed to have strength
in his legs and that he ought to try
to use them. At this suggestion Mr.
Blackman surprised the physician by
walking around the room. Afterward
he left the house unaided and walked
around the block.
"I have tried to be a good Chris
tian all my life, believing that a
good, clean life, a strong faith in
religion, will cure all things, make
men strong and lengthen their lives,”
said Mr. Blackman.
Many of Mr. Blackman’s neighbors
have called at his home to congratu
late him on his good fortune.
"A miracle? I cannot speak of
that,” says the aged man, "but if one
has faith in his
And as he spoke, the aged man’s
lips moved, as if in prayer.—lndian
apolis News.
Man’s Mouth Is Bird Trap
BLOUNT CORNERS, N. Y., March
25. —Mrs. Martha Joslin says she is
through trying to keep a canary. Mrs.
Joslin states that if her husband
would keep his mouth shut when he
takes his after-dinner nap she could
keep a bird, but that he won’t do it
and that she has bought her last
canary.
A few weeks ago Mrs. Joslin
bought a young canary. She brought
it home and plAced it in a cage. Ac
cording to Mrs. Joslin she opened
the bird’s cage to feed her pet and
before she could close the door the
bird 'flew out.
Joslin was asleep in a chair in the
kitchen. The bird flew to him, cir
cled over his head several times and
flew into his wide-open mouth. Mr.
Joslin brought his jaws together and
killed the bird.
Mrs. Joslin expresses the opinion
that her husband’s gold tooth at
tracted the bird. Mrs. Joslin says
She has lost six canaries within four
months by the same means and that
she Is through trying to keep a bird.
Mr. Joslin says he is Innocent of
bird slaughter and would not have
killed the bird for $lO if he had
known it was In his mouth.
Man Falls, Lands on Girl
TRENa March 26.—Acting as
a human cushion, Miss Helen Kugler,
a pretty, young state house stenog
rapher, probably saved the life of
Augustus Miller, a window cleaner,
when the latter, while at work on a
second story window of an office
building in West State street, fell
and landed on the young woman as
she was passing. Miss Kugler, with
breath almost knocked out of her,
fell Into the street and Miller land
ed on his feet. «
The girl, except for being badly
shaken, was unharmed and was able
to go to the state house and finish
her work. Miller’s left foot was
sprained and he went to a hospital
1 for treatment.
Criticise Light Penalty in Grain Act;
Imposing of Fines by the Government
Letters from the grain trade have
again been addressed to the bureau
of markets, United States depart
ment of agriculture, complaining that
no punishment other than publica
tion of findings is meted out to vio
lators of section 5 of the United
States grain standards act. This sec
tion provides:
“That no person, except as per
mitted in section 4, shall represent
that any grain shipped or delivered
for shipment in interstate or for
eign commerce is of a grade fixed
in the official grain standards oth
er than as shown by a certificate
therefor issued in compliance with
this act. . . . Whenever, after op
portunity for hearing is given to the
owner or shipper of the grain in
volved, and to the inspector thereof
if the same has been inspected, it
is determined by the secretary that
any quantity of grain has been in
correctly certified to conform to a
specified grade, or has been sold, of
fered for sale, or consigned for sale
under any name, description, or des
ignation which is false or mislead
ing, he may publish his findings.”
“What good is accomplished in
finding violators guilty, if nothing
further is done?’’ ask the complain
ants.
The penalty prescribed in the grain
standards act for violations of sec
tion 5 is merely the publication of
the finding of the secretary of agri
culture. No provision is made for
Springtime Greens and Posies Lure
Cow to Campus; Breaks Up Rehearsal
At the police station in River For
est—a few miles north of Chicago
on the lake—nature is wondeiful,
and on this calm and dreamy after
noon was so asserting itself. Cnief
F. W. Laatz, doffing dignity for
shirt sleeves comfort, was minister
ing to the alimentary weal of his
pet guinea pigs. Viola Lorenzen,
only woman desk sergeant in the
United States, was petting the Bel
gian hare that the station spaniel
had just mistaken for Sergeant Lo
renzen’s maltese cat.
The telephone bell rang. The ser
geant dropped the hare, seized the
receiver, and heard:
"The chief’s cow’s out. She’s caus
ing a panic.”
“Where?” asked the sergeant, al
ways notably composed in crises.
Just a Smattering of Clew
“On the campus—oh, please
hur—”
That was all. The connection
ceased abruptly.
Before the chief arrives at the
scene it should be explained that
the girls of Rosary college were
rehearsing for their annual masque
of the seasons. Garlanded in dande
lions, daisies, violets and othei 1 flow
ers that bloom in the spring time,
they were skipping daintily about
the greensward when the chief’s
cow—a Herefore —obtruded.
She began lunching on the gar
lands. The girls screamed. Some of
the braver cried "Shoo,” it is al-
Convicts Couldn’t Stand
Storm, Returned to Prison
Eight hours in the open, with only
prison clothes' to protect them from
the severest rain and sleet storm of
the season proved too much tor
Heinrich Sink, fifty years old, and
Michael Bahls, thirty-five years old,
who were enforced residents of the
prison farm at Wingdale, Conn., re
cently. The couple were marched
into Sing Sing prison a few days
ago, where they will continue their
residence for another seven months,
the unserved part of their sentences
and another period as a penalty for
taking “French leave.”
Sink and Bahis were transferred
to Wingdale because of their good
behavior. In fact, they and the
other eighteen prisoners at the farm
from which Sing Sing gets its gar
den truck, were considered so very
good that Major Lewis A. Lewes,
warden, reduced the number of
guards. Finally opportunity pre
sented itself and Sink and Bahls
made off for other parts.
They didn’t remain away very
long, however. The weather proved
too much for the sfrlped couple and
they marched into the office of the
constable at Yalesvllle, Conn., eight
miles from the farm. The famished
and almost frozen pair asked the
hospitality of the peace officer’s tire
side and a cup of coffee if he had
some to spare. While Sink and
Bahis partook of the food the con
stable got in touch with Superintend
ent Kiernan, of the prison farm, and
he hurried to Yalesville in an auto
mobile.
“Fool Hens” Mistake
Hot Cinders for Corn
COOKPORT, R. L, March 24.—Vet
erinary J. A. Toddler was called to
the M. C. Bevley hennery to treat
fifty white Leghorn hens. When the
doctor arrived an examination reveal
ed that the bills of the hens were
badly burned.
Mr. Bevley said the hens first at
tracted his attention when they were
running around the yard with their
mouths Open. He caught a hen and
found her bill was burned and later
summoned the veterinary. Mr. Bev
ley says he was at a loss to under
stand what burned the bills of his
hens until he saw a hen pick up a
glowing cinder in the yard and
quickly drop it. He then solved the
mystery.
The hen yard is located five yards
from the railroad tracks. A freight
locomotive standing near threw a
shower of red hot cinders into the
yard. As fast as the sparks fell
the hens rushed for them and picked
them up. Bevley says the "fool hens”
thought the cinders were corn.
The veterinary believes he will
be able to save at least a half of
the hens; the others will have to
be killed.
criminal prosecution for violations of
this section; the department of agri
culture, therefore, cannot take action
beyond the publication of findings.
Violators of other sections of the
grain standards act carry a penalty
of a fine not exceeding SI,OOO, cr
imprisonment not exceeding one year,
or both. Violations of section 4 are
in the class punishable by fine or
imprisonment. This section requires
that persons Shipping or delivering
for shipment, in interstate or foreign
commerce, grain for which standards
have been established and which is
sold by grade, shall have the grain
inspected and graded by a licensed
inspector.
It is felt that in some cases the
publication of findings by the de
partment of agriculture, and the
bringing of these findings to the
attention of the grain trade, serve
as a greater penalty to violators of
section 5 than a criminal prosecu
tion under a provision carrying a fine
or imprisonment, especially in cases
where only a nominal fine may be
imposed. This theory 5, is not uni
versally agreed to, as evidenced by
expressions from grain dealers fa
voring more drastic action in caSes
of flagrant violations of section 5
which involve fraud deception. Un
der the present provisions of the
grain standards act, however, it Is
not possible for the department td
take action beyond the publication of
findings.
leged. She was loping after a couple
of dancers whose costumes had not
been denuded when the chief ap
peared in his speedy black car.
"Soo, Lucy! Soo, Lucy!” he cried
coaxingly, maneuvering his auto
alongside her. She stopped. The
chief extracted a sturdy rope from
his tool kit, tied it about her neck,
and attached the other end to the
rear axle of the car. Lucy wagged
her tail contentedly.
liucy Decides to Sit Down
Then he cranked the buzz wagon,
leaped in, coaxed the accelerator,
and was off—for a few feet only.
Lucy had sat down. She was chew
ing the of her dandelion cud.
The chief wiped his brow, stopped
the engine, and got out.
He cut a switch from a campus
maple. He flicked Lucy lightly on
the withers. She arose. Another flick.
She walked in front of the car.
The chief transferred the rope from
the rear to the front axle. He
shortened it just sufficiently for
Lucy’s rear feet to clear the car.
Then, without starting the engine,
he climbed aboard, flicked Lucy
snappily, and commanded:
“Hi, boss! Hi!”
For the first time she seemed to
feel the thrill of life along her keel.
She moved majestically forward. The
buzz wagon followed. Their progress
was slow but sure. From the campus
to the station is three miles. They
started at noon and got there at 6
—six hours flat.
Swallows 1,290 Pieces
Os Metal, Still Lives
BALTIMORE, Md.—A remarkable
story of a woman swallowing great
quantities of sorts of metallic
articles and surviving was told by
Dr. J. Clement Clark, superintendent
of Springfield hospital, at Sykes
ville, Md. The case was a patient
in the hospital who would frequent
ly pull pins from the nurse’s aprons
and swallow them. She ate well and
never complained of pain. Later she
began to run a little temperature,
and refused to eat. Finally a hard
mass was found in/her stomach, and
owing to her known habit of seiz
ing different objects and attempting
to swallow them, the nature of the
mass was suspected.
She was sent to University hospi
tal, in Baltimore, and operated on.
with the result of finding 1,290 for
eign bodies massed together in her
stomach, consisting of 1,059 straight
pins, 45 safety pins, 129 hairpins,
9 pieces of bone hairpins, 36 pieces
of wire, 6 buttons, 1 iron screw
staple, 1 Iron hook, 1 wire nail, 1
paper clamp, garter buckle and a
breastpin.
She made an uneventful recovery
and was returned to Springfield hos
pital. where she has gained .twelve
and one-half pounds in weight, suf
fering in no apparent way from her
unusual experience.
Liquor Washed Ashore in a
Storm, Population Drunk
LONDON.—Virtually the entire
male population of the village of La
grana, near Ferrol, Spain, was in a
state of "helpless Intoxication” for
three days recently, the fishing in
dustry and all other work being at
a complete standstill, according to
a Madrid dispatch.
"Owing to the stormy weather,” it
says, “a number of cases of spirits
laden on Incoming vessels had been
washed overboard. The casks were
picked up by fishermen, small trades
men and mechanics, who, after sell
ing part of the wreckage, assembled
In a building and consumed dozens
of bottles of brandy, rum and other
spirits. There are 540 patients, rang
ing from sixteen to seventy years of
age, in the hospital.
Police Justice Resigns;
Dry Rule Caused Decision
MINEOLA, N. Y.—Police Justice
George A. Little announced that he
he had resigned because prohibition
prevented him "from making a liv
ing.” Since the ban went effect
last month his revenues from the of
fice dwindled more than 50 per cent,
the justice stated, while there had
been not a single case of intoxica
tion and only a few minor assault
cases to be tried.
THUKSDAT, JUNE 3, 1920.
BLOOD DEVITALIZED
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I /I I F v • I
Wk I
iiHiirW
BIWmB
F’
—when “delicious and re-
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The Coca-Cola Company
ATLANTA. GA.
222
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