Newspaper Page Text
12E
French Army Blends
Poet and Ploughboy
Into a Happy Family
Shaggy Poilu M.:y Bt 40l ist and Trim
Officer a Darling of Quartier Latin Cases,
R Sg S
Bvery grade of intelligence, every
type of interest, every soclal view
point 1s represented in the rank and
file of the French army. The shaggy
poily, in faded blue tunic and plough
boy boots, who sits on the cracker
box opposite, may be a famous artist
with a score of successes in the Salon
to his credit. The trim young ser
geant who sits next to you may be a
rising poet and darling of the cases of
the Quartier Latin; while the burly,
grizzled major on your left may be a
lecturer at the Sorbonne or an emi
uent authority on international law.
Nor is this a mere fancy sketch. In
one single headquarters mess, whose
I was in a little country Inn in
Vosges, one academic or sclentific
after another was mentioned, un
‘l asked permission to make formal
count, and we found no fewer than
five college professors, one academi
ciin, a former Deputy of the French
fifllmem. and a well-known essay
ist and critie.
Rank and File Well Read.
~Bven the rank and silo of the French
army are for the most part surpris
ingly well read and well informed on
mont of the subjects of the day. And
they can weave the most beautiful
418 animated and eloquent evening’s
yonversation out of a mere handful of
wodest facts, which would scarce
" provided material for a dozen
nsive grunts between phlegmat
‘and unimaginative Anglo-Saxons.
«The French camps have exccllent
m theaters and moving plcture
, and companies of famous act
mnd actresses and vaudeville stars
Nunteer their services to travel up
and down the lines to bring pleasure
and relaxation into the llves of those
swho have glven themselves for the
nce of their country, »
i {lar organizations and arrange
ments exist along both the English
and Italian fronts, and one of my
most picturesque memories s an
opg;dulr theatrical performance I at
wen in a beautiful little bowl
among the hills just at the foot of the
Carso, where a company of actresses
and actors from Milan presented, with
t and vigor, two charming littie
¢ fes before almost half a division
of n soldiers, more than 4,000
“ Audience Keenly Critical.
_ The hufe. delighted audience of
‘Bersaglier!, In their sweeping docks’
fiqnu; of Infantry and artillerymen,
‘thelr shimmer and gray, and of Al
inl, In their green Tyrolese hats and
i ' tails, was most appreciative,
i nly critical as well,
%9'» musical hall favorite had omit
one of the sauciest ¥erses of her
m& out of deference to the dignity
% e generals of the headquarters
who filled the front rows with
their stars and ribbons. The soldlers
noticed the omission at once, and
_when she came back for her encore
Ahey shouted loudly: “Sing the other
;yerse, signorita!l Never mind the
®enerals; they won't care, and the
r isn't here!"”
% only other disturbance of good
order was when an impudent Aus
‘trian airplane came zooming over the
Carso and tried to break up the show
bombs instead of the classic cab
and eggs; but a couple of Ital
machines promptly shot up and
] him away before he could get
‘near enough to do any damage.
© The reading room, letter writing
w light restaurant accommodations
' the Itallan soldiers are provided
by wooden halls known as Casa del
Boldati (the House of the Soldler).
Thesa are equipped and generously
‘supported by the larger Italian cities
==Milan, Turin, Bologna, Florence-—
‘and are graiefully appreciated by the
soldiers.
+ . Cheerful and Uncomplaining.
Lu when it comes to entertain
and arcusement, the Italian sol-
Adler can ‘ake care of himself even
better than his French comrade. He
18 ‘& wonderfully cheerful, happy,
‘plucky, uncomplaining chap, the best
of good cumpany to himself and
m;!y one else about him. I don't
‘mind corfesripg I fell completely in
loye with him In my month on tho
JXsongo, and formed a very high
opinion of his Intelligence, endurance
and’ soldlerly qualities, which I am
‘Tons of Dead Fish
ht in Ice Jam
. Caught in i
© JWINONA, MINN., Feb. 16—Hundreds
©f tons of dead fish are concealed be
th the ice of gnnda and small lakes
3 s district. raYped by the reced
waters, they thrived until the cold
her came, surfacing the ponds and
68 and suffocating the sigh.
74 ite Winona, in Wisconsin, the
s ked waters are said to be filled
3 dead fish. By chopplnf holes in
jce the effect of the cold on fish
has been revealed.
‘A plea Is being made for a modifica
| of the game laws that will per
fishermen to seine these waters in
r to save what fish still are alive.
v more will perish unless imme
actlon is taken.
@ fish In landlocked waters nows,
tened with annihilation are unus®
3 hrl‘e. They ;m\'e hfl;n in excel
feeding grounds and have grown
g l,v.Qq 'fiwy represent all \'m‘*oth\s.
X permission to seine is granted, thou
-8 of such fish will reach the mar
*7Y e ————————
Man Who Shot Wis
Man Who Shot Wife
‘Asph din 81
Aasphyxiated in Sleep
Y9OS ANGELES, Feb. 16.—Arthur B.
“Loomis, who ive vears ago shot and
Mounded his wife on a crowded street
of Venice, in the Oxford Hotel, at Po
smona, was asphyxiated while resting
JAleparatory to attending a family re
.,u;poh at the home of Rert Barnes.
o Mr. Lomis, who was 33 years old, and
mflatulon agent for the Southern
¢ at Tucson, Ariz., had registered
Mmethe hotel earlier in the day and
@ to his room to rest. The clerk,
8 king at his door later and re
ing no rea}'»(msn, climbed to the
yransom and immediately, forced the
5 on discovering Mr, Loomis’ condi
on. - A gas fire burning had evidently
“devitalized the alr to such as extent as
to .cause his death. !
<.« BURIED IN COAL—UNHURT.
«.BT. GEORGE, 8. L., Feb. 16—Michael
2 Y. a laborer, was buried beneath
_Beveral tml,hol coal for six homrs and
ged unhurt. When examined and
‘et a hospital his one commment
” e lost quite a bit of slee lately.
%mcmmmoumfl" 4
T vt n
proud to feel has been justified, even
after Yis temporary disaster, by his
splendid tenacity and determination
on che Plave, the Benta and Monte
Grappa,
He is content with the simplest
and plainest of foods, bread, cheecse,
meat stew, onlons, red wine, hard
work all day and a hard couch at
night, if he can only have a couple
of hours in the sunset and the twi
light to stretch himself and chat and
joke, to strum upon his mandolin, to
sing to its plaintive strains or dance
to its lively ones.
His pluck and cheerfulness when
wounded or suffering are simply be
yond praise. 1 have heard men, shot
through the chest, or abdomen, or
with both legs shattered, joke and
laugh with their bearers as they were
being lifted out of the ambulance to
be carried to the operating table,
Goes Willingly to Death,
' No army on the western front could
’ahow finér examples of heroism and
‘devotlon. I saw the slopes of the
Carso, where in the early months of
‘the war, when they were almost des
‘titute of heavy artillery, one volun
teer party after another had rushed
right up to the barbed wire entangle
ments of the Austrian intrenchments
carrying tubes of high explosives,
which they hurled into the wire by
hand, well knowing that none would
return unwounded, and few alive, un
til a breach was cleared through
which the columns behind could pour
over their bodies and flood the
trenches,
No other army had as splendid a
record and display of patient, tire
less work actually accomplished; of
superb automobile roads, carried to
the very tops of the mountains; of
bridges bullt, tunnels bored or moun
tains plerced—or their whole tops
blown off by mines—to say nothing of
heavy guns dragged up above the
snow line or mounted on giddy peaks
where there was scarce footing for a
chamolis, #end wonderful cable aerial
rajlways swinging like spiders’ webs
from crag to crag or from the brink
of a precipice to the valley below.
Really, they were such a busy and
injustrious community that they
struck me as having less leisure for
mere ontertainment and edueational
activities than almost any army that
I visited To wsmolke and chat and
lounge in the soft evening air seemed
to be enjoyment enough for them
Former United States
Senator Mason, Pioneer
n Pure Food and Drugs Legislation, Father of Rural F ree Delivery System
| Says Nuxated [ron
Increased His Power and Endurance
so Much, That He Feels It Oug’:t
to Be Made Known to Every Nerv
ous, Run-Down, Anaemic Man,
Woman and Child.
Opinions of Dr. Ferdinand King, New
York Physician and Meaical Author; Dr.
James Francis Sullivan, formerly Phy
sician of Bellevue Hospital (Outdoor
Dept.) New York and the Westchester
County Hospital; Former Health Com
missioner Wm. R. Kerr, of the City of
Chicago and others.
What Senator Mason Says
Chicago, Il
Gentlemen:
I have often said I would never recommend medi
cine of any kind. I belleve that the doctor's place.
However, safter the hardest political campalgn of my
lite, without a chance for a vacation, I had been start
ing to court every morning with that horrible tired
feeling one can not describe. I was advised to try
Nuxated Iron. As a ploneer in the pure food and
drug legislation, I was at firat loath to try an adver
tised remedy, but after advising with my medical
friends, I gave it a test. The results have been so
beneficial in my own case, ] made up my mind to let
my friends know about it, and ‘you are at liberty to
publish this statement if you so desire. lam now 65
vears of axy and I feel that a remedy which will
bulld up the strength and lrcrease the power of en
durance of one at my age, should be known to the
world. Yours very truly,
Senator Mason's statement In’regard
to Nuxated Iron was shown to severa!
physiclans who ‘were requested to give
their gpinions theroon.
Dr. Ferdinand King, a New York Phy
siclan and Medical Author, sald: '
heartily indorse Senator Mason's state
ment in ragard to Nuxated Iron. Thero
can be no Vigorous men without iron.
Pallor means anemia. Anemia means
iron deficlency. The skin of anemic man
and women is pale; the flesh flabby; the
muscles lack tone; the braln fags. and
the memory fails, and often they be
come weak, mnervous, despondent and
melancholy.
Dr. James Francis Sullivan, formerly
Physician of Bellevue Hoapital (Out
door Dept.) New York, and the West
chester Ceunty Hospital, satd, “‘Sena
tor Mason is to be commended on hand
ing out this statement on Nuxated iron
for pubiic print, * Thers are thousandas
of men and women who nced A strength
and blood builder but do not know waat
to take. In my cwn opinlon thera s
nothing better than organic iron—Nux
ated Iron——for enriching the bl»31 und
helping to increase the strength and en
durance of men and women who )urn
up too rapidly thelr nervous enerv in
the strenuous strain of the great busi
ness competition of the day
Former Hecalth Commissioner Wm. R.
Kerr, of the City of Chicago, says: ‘I
save taken Nuxated Iron myself and
xperienced its he«l(b-slvlng and
rtron{th-bufldlng effect, and in the in
erest of the public welfara I feel {t my
R R Py
.. N Nuxsted Iron, which was used by Senator Mason with mch' surprising results, and which is
y and recommended above t.muclm. s not & secret remady, but one which is well known
%‘ m" ‘hglnl;ll:atho lmmnMo iron M\mm. ..:‘ul l:d -‘:g uc.l;ruu!‘m and does nu;
h.'ém m nor . The ntee 1
entirely wmcymlu 1 m:—‘fivu%’%@m,&m Klfimg}n&‘
Phamesa sod all geod drusiisle — Adverieces .
HHEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN
Admits He's Socialist
0f Most Radical Kind
~ (By Internstional News Service.)
WRIGHTSTOWN, N. J., Feb. 16—
Camp Dix, here, has atechnical de
perter, hoid-out, ultra-Soclalist and
passlve defiar of the whole national
army. The conglomeration is personi
fled In one quiet little man, Rudolph J.‘
Vrelna, who has persistently refused to
obey any and all orders. ‘
Although he has just been saved from
facing one firing squad and may go
before another, he declined to sign his
declaration card or prepare for physi
cal examination,
“I'm not poslnr as a martyr,” he re
plied to a questioner. “I'm not tryln{
to get myself Into the limelight, but
am a Socialist of the most radical kind
~an Internationalist—and I do not be- |
lieve in warring on my brother, No
matter what nm{ occur, I am uhllledl
to disobey all military orders.”
f
’ WW
Less than a generation ago, we
were riding In horse cars; streets
were gas-lighted; water was lug
ged from wells. |
] Now automoblles, electric lights,
i clty water, make the age that knew
’ not these conveniences seem re
mote.
‘ Everything, today, tends toward
i‘ ; less drudgery, more lelsure, for all.
\
J fl__ No longer are time and labor
’[ //// saving devices only for men in thelr
Al business of making a living, but
,'j/l' ) for women In thelr business of
//// f making a home.
el 80, the electric vacuum cleamer
) % has replaced the old-fashioned
/ i /‘ _,/ broom and the modern home Is.now
i "\" put in order by the Torrington
///;‘,’,,‘; %« Electric Cleaner.
%’J’[ /fl:‘ Write for descriptive folder or
I(V i//’ let un demonstrate this machine at
\ky /,Lfif / the store.
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duty t> make known the results of its
use. I am well past my threescore years,
and want 1o say that I believe my own
great physical activity is iargely due to
day to my personal use of Nuxated Iron.
From my own experience with Nuxated
Iron I feel it is such a valuable remedy
that it ought to be used in every hos
pital and prescribed by every physician
in this country.’
Dr. E/ Sauer. a Boston physiclan who
has studied abroad in great European
Medical institutions, said: "Senntqr
Mason is right. As I have said a hun
dred times over, I regard organic iron
as the greatest of all strength builders.’
Iron is absolutely necessary to enable
{our blood (> change your food into liv
ng tissue._ Without i{t, no matter how
much or w.}u: you eat, your food merely
passes throu"h you without doing you
ln{ food ou don't get the strength
out of it, and as a consequence i’ou be
come wealk., pale and sickly looking.
Just llke a plant trying to grow in a
soll deficient in fron."
Dr. Schuyler C. chc“ml. Visiting Sur
g’on of St. Elizabeth's Hospital, New
rk City, said. ‘T have never before
glven out any medical Information or
advice for publication, as I ordinarily do
not belleve in i{t. But in the case of
Nuxated Jron I feel I would be remiss
in my dutv rot to mention it. 1 have
taken it myself and given it to my pa
tients with most aurpr(slnfi resyults. And
those wi> wish quiskly ta Incroase thelr
strength, j.ower and endurance will sing
it a moar remarkable and wonderfully
effective remedy.’
— A Newspaper for People Who Think
Four Alaskan Boats !
SEWARD, ALASKA, Feb. 16.-—Four
steamships on the Alaska run have been
wrecked in as many weeks—the Al-Kl,
Manhattan, Mariposa and Spokane, |
Five months 0o a bomb was discov
ered In the h:)tl of the City of S!rat-'
tle, another Alaska steamship, while |
she was anchored at Ketchikana, |
The compnsses of 4 number of steam. |
ers have recently been at variance, un- |
accountable breaks in machinery have
been frequent, steering gear has be
come faulty without apparent reason,
and many other unusual happenings
aboard Alaska steamships lately have
provoked the suspicion that there is
method In these various accidents,
As tending to confirm the fear that
enemies are at work, a number of em
ployees of Alaska steamships have been |
arrested, but officials have given out
no information for publication touch
ln:dnn the charges for which they were
made.
From. the Congressional Direotory
published by the United States Gov
ernment—" Wm. }. Mason, Senator
from Illincis, was clacted to the 50th
Congress in 1887, to the bslst Con
gress in 1891--defeated for the 52d
Congress 1892--Elected Senator to
the 66th Congress 1897 to 1903." |
Sepator Muason Is now Congress
man from the State of Illinois. |
Senator Mason's championship of
Pure Food and Drugs legislation,
his fight for the rural frae -IPXl\'cr.\"
system, and his strong advoeacy of
all bills favoring labor and the righte
of the masses as Against trusts and
‘combines make him g national figure
at Washington and endea~ed him to
the hearts of the working man and
the great masses of people through
out the United States. Senator Ma
son has the distinction of btmg one
of the really big men of the nation.
His strong endorsement of Nuxated
Iron must convineé any intelligent
thinking leader that i’ must be 2
preparation of very great merit and
one which the Senator feels is bound
to be of great valua to the masses
of Foople evefi'whem. otherwise he
could not afford to lend his name to
it, especallly afie‘ his strong advo
&nocny of pure food i*.nd drugs legisla-
BTR e veR R
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o S o % . PRI, eok g T
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SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 17, 1918
$4-%—Special Monday Sale—* 4
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Extraordinary Davanctte Bargain
An attractive sofa which converts into a comfortable, Sanitary |
bed for two people—instantly. The “Queen” is sold exclusively by ;
us and is one of the best Davenettes to be had, regardless of |
[ price—Finished in Dull Mahogany, Fumed and Golden Oak— ’
i Upholstered in Brown or Black Guaranteed “Muleskin.”
| .
. $2.50 Cash— $49-50 —~sl.oo a Week |
¢ |
Rhodes~Wood
FURNITURE -~ X COMPANY' '
COMPLETE HOUSEFURNISHERS
WaITEHALLRAND A lICHELL STS.
Baby Cabs
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SI.OO a Week
For/your choice. Big,
new shipment just re
ceived: Carriages, carts
and sulkies. Get one
for baby now. Wheel
him in the sunshine
Some extra good values
for this week.
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Doll Carts
Monday Only Sale |
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MRS B i
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oot e
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I L z
L 1 g
e E ‘ pt !
\ 2 £
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Please the Little Miss i
f
With this attractive, substan- |
tial, rubber-tired, folding-hood
Doll Cart. Ask any little miss
it she would not like to have !
one. She will enjoy it now- 1
outdoors. A regular $4.00 !
value—offered Monday, only {
$1 98 |
S 1
' BUY .
NOW ~ pPAY
EAIER ™