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THE WASHINGTON HERALD T. ? RAI WARD. PUBLISHED EVERT MORNTNO BT .The Washington Herald Company ??5-4*7-4*0. Kleveath Street _ Pbooe Main 3**> L N. BOX... a r.. brtajct . PORSE IG ? RKPTIESBUITATIVKS. ' THE BECKWTTH BPsXHAJ, AOHNCT , New York. World euildinr._CTiloe*;o T-rlouns BuIWIbb;: St. t?ujs. Poet-Dispatch Building; Detroit. Tord BulldlBg: Kansas City. Mo., Bryant Pruning. ____^^ SUBSCRIPTION RATES BT CARRIER: Deity sad Sunday. 4? cents per month: M-l? per year._ SUBSCRIPTION RATES BT MAIL.: Daily aad Sunday. (0 Cent? per SOOBth; J? 50 per year. Dally only S? easts per month; lt.?* per year. _^____ Entered" st the post office st Washington. D. C as second elese meli matter._^__^^ Standardization of Food Law?. Food manufacturers, as well as various organizations and in djmdtials interested in helping to solve the high cost of living problems, are expressing great interest in the food bill introduce*] by Senator Calder. ? It provides -that "No law of any Stale, city or municipality re lating to the adulteration or misbranding of foods, drags or. medi cines, or regulating the branding? thereof shall apply to or interfere with the sale of any foods, drugs or medicine in package form which have been transported in interstate commette and thereby hare become subject to the provisions of the (Federal) food and drugs act of June 30, 1006, and which are not adulterated or mis branded within the meaning of the Federal statute " Advocates of the bul claim that it would do more toward bring mg about a uniformity of food laws than any other measure. A uniformity of food regulations so that the manufacturer of products which are to be shipped interstate would be able to standardize his product and its labels and be freed from the expense ?aad troublesome necessity of preparing different labels and different kinds of packages for different States, has been advocated for some time by manufacturers r.nd organizations which have studied the food situation. A survey of the food laws of the various States shows that while all food shipped interstate must conform to the Federal food laws that they are also subject to other laws passed by the different States, many of which are contradictory in effect. After a manufacturer has carefully prepared his product to con form to every regulation of the Federal laws and carefully drawn his label to conform to them he often finds that his product cannot be sold in some States until he has made changes in his packages or labels. In some cases he has to make different labels for one State than he does for another. *> It is also pointed out that the great majority of the law suits which have been fought through the State courts and eventually settled by the United States Supreme Court are directly traceable to the difficulties which manufacturers have experienced in trying to make their products and their labels and packages conform to the Federal laws and the widely varying State laws. This has added much to the cost of the articles. The necessity for increased production of food is held by econo mists to be the most important factor in the solution 01 prevailing high costs, and manufacturers insist that the variation in State laws is an obstacle to increased production and the lowering of prices. They say that in as much as practically every article of food is ?object to interstate commerce and therefore subject to Federal regu lations that they should be made subject only to the Federal statutes. There is no reason to doubt anything that Joseph W, Folk says about the Egyptian situation, but how can we maintain our pose of for school children. Now who'll put a smile into the speller and ?olrmn piety if we persist in exposing one another's national sins? High co*t of living has made salary less popular than wages. Ralph Waldo Emerson No American has had more influence upon the thought of Amer ica than Ralph Waldo F.merson. l.merson is particularly rich in simple, strong epigram, and here are a few taken from the mass of his writing: Knvy is ignorance. Genius works in sport. Nature is upheld by antagonism. Insist on yourself; never imitate. 1 Thought makes everything fit for use. Ml healthy things are sweet-tempered. No object really interests us bnt men. The best fruit of travel is conversation. ?? your work and you shall reinforce yourself. We acquire strength from the forces we overcome. There is properly no history; it is all biography. "? Whene\cr wc arc sincerely pleased wc are nourished In every work of genius we recognize our own rejected thoughts. Kvery spirit makes its house, and wc make a shrewd guess from the house to the inhabitant. The best part of health is at fine disposition?it is more essential than talent, even in works of talent. Mankind divides itself into two classes?benefactors and malefac tors; the second is vast, the first a handful. Any complaint about the way the two great political parties are balline thines up is an indictment of the people who have Kttle enough sense to stand for it. The proposed tenants' union can be depended on not to walk out or demand a raise. The Why of It Until we recently happened on the information we have met no one who appeared to know why the overseas cap was the sort of a thing it was. To look at that peaked bit of flannel, that apparently gives no protection from sun or weather; a thing, with such shape as it has apparently in the wrong place; an elusive, slipping thing, without form and void, one would imagine that a madman designed it. And yet. when you know the real use of the cap, you discover that it is the only sort of a rig that would answer the purpose. Primarily this cap was meant to wear under the tin hat; the helmet It was a sort of pad, especially thick fore and aft, to but tress the skull from the shock the helmet suffered when shrapnel or direct blows pounded it. Seen in the proper perspective the overseas cap is a most sensible bit of gear, and admirably suited to its real purpose. That seems?, to be the chief difference between modern uniforms and those of a few years ago. Until this war soldiers' gear was ornate; tailored fancies, with the dress parade idea carried info the 6eW outfit. Gradually we have been getting assay from that We started 'way back wbea the Boers picked off tto Tjiglish officers because of their gold lace 'and bright swords aad fancy uniforme. Gradually we disguised the fighting men, toned down their uniforms to match the dust and the dead grass and the far horizon. We abolish the scarlets and the bright blues and the dark colors, just as before we abolished the bearskin shakos, the rows of brass buttons, and the ?tfitig insignia of rank. The navy uniforms have suffered slight change, and the gob is ragged abotrt as the jack tar with Perry was. Bat the uniform of the field forces of the navy, the Marines, has been changed to the khaki. ?* Not ad the camouflage was on the big guns and the transports i>y any means. / ? It may be .that the voters in Luxemburg like their duchess. Or it may be that they read ' the papers and observe how democracy is makjatg a mess of things NEW YORK CITY By 0. oHvklrmRE New To?*, Oet- ^-Christopher street is down near the ferry boat landing and meet ef the folk make their living along the riverfront. It is a city of Its own and the language is the patois of the docks. The men are great physical hunts, raw boned and square shouldered, and many of them have been around the Horn on windjammers and felt the Impact of the belaying pin. There Is a kindly gruff oaAernoerl? among the men and a grunting re spectfulness toward their women. mm, of whom never saw uptown New York or the Woolwbrth Building, not so far away. The stevedore wants his woman to stay home and about her only amusement is the movie. Christopher street has evolved the most neighborly movie In the world perhaps. There la a tiny, shabby tittle movie place in the heart of one of the tenement blocks. The manager la a genhu. Suddenly the progress of the slapstick comedy reel la interrupt ed. The farce Is broken by a petan of starle white. And aerosa this shtn ! lag blank appear these words. In '? hasty scrawl: ! "atra. Sol Smith The Iceman la at your bouse." 1 A tired woman rises from her aeat I and hurries up the aisle and out to bei flat to receive the lee. Again there will be a message with a picture I to Illustrate It. A baby's head and ! t he cryptic words. ? "Mrs. r,yvlneki?Outside." It means that Baby LyrlnsU is un ! manageable. Nobody pays any atten , tion to the interruption.?. Even the I other night the following message did ; nothing but sttr a alight ripple of ap ; pianse: M j "Rrick stengard?You have lust been | made the proud father of a son. (?? ? home.** Brick, who was laughing heartily at a fat man getting a custard pie in the eye. sobered down ! and lumbered out. And one teams ' from the ambient chatter that Brick la ; already the father of nine. The doortaker greets him with "An ! other, eh. Brick." as he goes out. and Brick has the same bashful smile or . happiness that a proud papa ha.? for ' the first time. There Is a man In our town whose ? business it Is to measure several mll ! lion blades of grass. No blade may ? be more than two Inches long. Hla | name is Henry Fabian, and he is the \ veteran groundkeeper at the Polo ? (?round*, home of the Hew York : manta and Yankees Fabian ha.? been building baseball diamonds and mind ing them for the past t-wunty years? alnce he quit being a professional baseball player. It Is his business to see that the grass never shall be toe long to Impede speed afoot or the | speed of a batted bell. Perhaps you ' did not know It. but it is true that a fraction of an Inch In the length of the grass oould decide an issue, may I be, upon which the whole nation , nanga breathless. But It is so. The suggestion to Import Chinese labor during the present industrial re i adjustment has not met with any I favor here. Statisticians report that as a consequence of national prohibition more than : oon.ooo working men are planning to leave for Burope as soon as the/ ean go. Thia will temporarily cause a big shortage in labor and sev eral big employers of labor In New York urged that Chinese be brought here for a limited period?but indgin, from the protests sent to the news papers the Idea will not be carried out. A_promlnent New York lawyer has told a patron of a bighotel that the cover chart? is Illegal and that be , will not have to pay It. The patron happened to be a newspaperman who j resented the Injustice and refused to : pay the gouge. The hotel has sent him | bills and threatened suit and the | patron Invites the suit?but the hotel evidently knows that it has no just claim. Dairy Chrtimistic Thou?ht A strong sentiment Is developing ha favor of a November recess for Congress.?New York Morning Tele graph. . How Does He Do It? ????????? ??ays he drink? no liquor. A number of p-?ri-?ons have been won* tierinsr what -?? th?- matter with that rhap ? Philadelphia Innnirer. Poor Old "Ludy.** l.uden.lorff ?ays he "saw the war I coming." He also felt the cyclone ! when it struck? I^ouisville Courler ' Journal. Blowing It In The longshoremen wanted 11 an ?hour for overtime, but If thejeget , Jl an honr for regular time they will be too busy after houra to work overtime.?New York Morning LIMELIGHT By EDMUND VAJVCK C'OOKB. 1 The resolute lireman who dared the blaze . And saved the child on the seventh floor. Right well he deserved our bursts of praise. And who should merit them more? But For a score of years hla good wife strove And fought the Are of the kitchen stove! Three times each day she has saved her brood By the wholesome grace of wefl-eook ed food. ? Yet Across her bosom. I dare aver. You'll find no medallions hung on her. The clear-headed mayor faced the mob. The mob which threatened and cried and cursed. And hurrah for the man who does hts job Through all of Its best and worst! But The mayor's man has a swart-hued face And I.? counted one of a menial race. And year after year he suffers the slight Of constricted caste and an outraged right. For A man may be martyred of staves and spears. Or be martyred by inches all his years. The half-hack, pride of the side-line hosts, ? In the last half-breath of a desperate day. He carried the bell behind the posts. And they tell of it still today; While His gnarled, old father devoured the news Of his boy's success, as he cobbled shoes. And the mist In hia eyes subdued the , Are Of a mean, hard life of suppressed de-, sire. Well, -service for service and game for fame. Which ef the two deserves acclaim * (Copyright, ISIS, N. E. A.) "SCHOOL DAYS" By DWIG ';^>> Signs in Belgium Of Quick Recovery ' frw Um Christian Science Monitor ) Brussels, Belgium?War and op pression are forgotten, and the wave of pleasure which broke over vic torious Belgium still submergea the country. Paper money abounds, the aters and picture houses are over crowded, but the quality of both plays and films leaves much to be desired. At the present moment the reasoning or the Belgian? seems to be as follows: "It ia useless to think lof buying clothing, etc., whicn Is ex tremely costly;' we earn barely sufficient to keep us In food: let us ? then devote whatever is left to pleas 1 ures." The "SCeep Badrons," soap I profiteers, so-called because they [ have enriched themselvs by manu facturing soap out of comestible fat : or butter, now mingle with the BSWly I clothed demobilized soldiers. This i love of pleasure which seems to push | in*1 crowds toward ball? and cafes I lid*, noi r* aped the BStlCS ot the few i American soldiers snd civilians who i have visited Belgium lately. Importile Prost OSBBBSaW. ? New fortunes are in the miking and ; it would seem as if the whole nation i waa converging toward materialism. I If industry' Is reawakening slowly, this I is not the case with commerce, which ! has been resumed wlih great activity. ? Importation is particularly Important in rubber and oils, directed toward [ Germany, whilst chalk, stone, and ce ment lake the road to devastated Prance. Imports from Ameroca is the month of May reached a total of 21. I3?,7M francs, imports of wheat and lard alone amounting to s.flei.wu francs. It la interesting to note that Imports from (?ermany are gradually increasing, in ?pile of the barrier op posed by the obligatory license which has to be obtainesl in every case. Liberty of exchange 18 the (raiding: motive In the economic policy of the Belgian government. Sentiment is ex cluded from business. The chi"f ob ject Is. In the, first place, to reduce the cost of living by the play of competi tion, and to allow free entrance to German goods rather than to favor monopoly and a rise of prices. But in spite of thai. Belgian national indus try remains well protected by a cen tral committee of Industry, which of ficial organizations consult when necessary. Commercial retailers supply them selves, in other countries, with goods which they sell in Belgium at some 50 per cent profit. Orman goods are often cleverly disguised under Kngli.-'h marks, and it is just these underhand methods which de termine many Belgian merchants to obtain goods directly from Germany, fernlag Rlectlsa. . The union sacr?e spirit which glvea Belgium a trl-party govern ment, seems to have borne excellent fruit. The elections which will take place in November on the basi? of universel suffrage pure and simple are awaited with Impatience. It is absolutely Impossible for the mo ment to make any prognostications. The nation is just awakening from a long and hideous nightmare. The popular consultation which is soon to take place will surprise cltixens at the very re-awakening of their national conscience. They will nat urally be offered ready-made opin ion?, but in Belgium changes are occasionally so unexpected that noth ing can be counted on. excepting^ the good, sound common sense of the lending clarses. The church is striving to retain the power it ex ercised during the war. Cardinal Mercier Is the leader of the move ment, and Is at present engaged in disavowing young "flamlngent" vi cars who wish to replace the Brab an?onne In schools with the "Flem ish Lion." the Flemish national an them. The Uberai Party is especially re cruited amongst the heads of large in dustries, small merchants and clerks. It finds itself between the anvil of Conservatives and Clericals snd the Socialist hammer! The last-named party, by the accession of its chief leaders to the rank of ministers, has assumed an official appearance which has already provoked many revolts. A schism has occurred in the Maison du Peuple. The violence which the paper of the iAbor Party used for merly to reveal, is today the apanage of a group of young men imbued with decidedly Bolshevist doctrines. But discipline has prevailed until now, as can be seen by the speeches made at the recent meeting st Rotterdam. Rapid Reorganisation. The strikes of Industrial workers' are settled. Miners and glaas blowers arc all at work again, but a general strike has been voted by the railwaymenrand postofflce and telegraph agents, who demand that their salaries be raised so that they can face the difficulties of the vie ?here. A LINE 0" CHEER EACH DAY 0* THE YEAR. By John Kea-driek Bangs. (iiopjntht, I?".?, br *Im MeClunt New?-????? "^-mdieate.i THE PB ICE. If all men have their price, aa aome do say. That I may hold to mine 111 ever pray ' And If so be of Self I shall let go. 'Twill be not for some paltry thing, and low. Some bit <f dross, or lure to pompous power, But that for Ixive aome dark and f*roubl*-il hour For those enmeshed In grievous sor row I Hay beautify. ???? NATURE WONDERFUL We!l. let'i? nee how the Kolflst i* slicing along about now who lopped off for the tlrst time last spring. He ?av^5^a-x** ^v. ought to be digging around the course in forty-eight swat* hi* count, or sev enty-four if George Washington weie running the adding machine. lie should know every clump and hoi? In the rough by this time, and if he? a consistent player he may hook cut of it in time to get an introdu? tion to the fairway by the end of the season. He doesn't know enough about golf yet to get mad. and thinks every time he hits the ball, "that's golf" He only specialixes on one elub and use* ?h-p others for prospecting in the weeds. His idea of a, pleasing seo1"*? is the" number of? ball* he found dur ing a round. Or The Roar? Secretary Redfteld's resignation caused scarcely a ripple, but can't you imagine the ripple of applause that Burieson would elicit"?Phila delphia Inquirer. Wen. Who Did? "What's the matter with mar riage?" asks a magazine. H'm. Who said there waa anything the matter with It??Philadelphia Inquirer. Alcoholic Extraction. The grateful news has been spread that It's eaay to extract a "kirk" .from extracts.?N>w Tork Morning Telegraph. Radium Discoverer to Teach. Warsaw.?Mme. Curie. French physicist, who, with her husband, ivas the discoverer of radium, has been elected professor of radiology at Warsaw University. OPHELIA'S SLATE. CARDS. For ??(/ GOUIF Such Is Life As It Is Seen ByO. B. JOYFUL * Some fans wouldn't call this much of a game. Too one-sided to be real ? 1> interesting. The Cool of Living team gessa to have it all over the mi? < nor league aggregation they are play ing. All star team, the Cost of U\ ings. While the Pa and Ma team p!a> s very amateurishly. I'll say . they're minor leaguers! t Time is umpiring. First Inning: Pa K'-is on first by getting a raise in pay. Ma lines out a home run b> rentins the upstairs front room to the achool teacher for tt a week. Two rum?, two hits, no errors. Cost of Living team hope to >' pitching risht from fhe start. You'd think they alt were Babe Ruths ? ht way Ussy wallop the ball. Grocer leads off with a Une double into the outfield. and steals third when he weighs hi* thumb along with the round steak Ma sends Johnny for. Shoe Dealer get* a base hit. and landlord knocks the cover off the ball for a home run. Beefy player on the Cost of Living I team sots gets a run or more. 14 [ runs. 20 hits. 12 errors (all charged to I Pa and Ma). i Second inning: : Pa and Ma get all rattled, miylnc : a flivver, and going away for a vaca ! tion. while the Cost of I-Jv-ng piles ; up 27 runs. I Third inning: ! Pa strikes out three times, but M . i scores once when she wears her la*t ' summer*? dress Instead of buying a ? new one. 1 run. 1 hit. no errors i Cost of laving raps Pa for srvrv ? home runs and scores eleven time* off Ma's delivery. Pa almost tost.es ' the game away with a hum error when he swaps a Liberty Bond for a scrap of oil stock paper. Fourth Inning: ! Pa makes a nice hit by raisin? hunch of vegetables, in his garden, 1 and Ms makes another when she puts 'era away in cans for ?sinter. Two ? runs, two hits, no error. ! Cost of iving tired out running : round the eases, and a new pitch'r ! by name Federal Prosecution poos ! Into the box for the Pa and Ma team [This combination holds the Profiteers down to sixteen runs. Th#? real Man is now pitching for the Profiteers, and Winter Clothes is calchine atthouki : between you and me. Pa and Ma are ! catching it worse?tifi for Johnny's school suit, and IS for his shoes! i Sixteen runs, twenty-one hits. ? Fifth Inning: Pa and Ma had a pinch hitter, but 1 she moved out of the BBtstafrs front I room, leaving the team t-"? a week to ! the bed. unless they can rent the I room pretty quick. ?o runs, no hits. I This Is the "lucky seventh" for the t Profiteers. What they ajo to the hall makes Ty Cobb look like an infant ! everybody gets a hit and the Coal ! Man gets half a doren. Forty-two | runs, lot hits. ? ? fFor further details of game consult I later editions, especially the Blue edi 1 tlon Pa get? out every Saturday nictit I when he figures out how much farther j he's behind then than he was.) The score:: ! Innings. 1 2 3 4 ? ? ; Cost of Living. 14 27 is 1? C .. Pa snd Ma. 2 ? 1 2 0 .. The Line-up: ;COST OF LIVINGS: | Rent. lb. Coal Man. 2b. , Gas Co . Sh. Clothing, as. Grocer, cf. Butcher. If. Shoes, rf." Debts, c. - Bills, p. PA AND MA: Pa. p. lb. 2b. an. Ms. cf. If. rf. Roomer, 3b. _ Savings Account, c. Scorer: ?. ? Joyful (If you cani. We never had any Idea that we were such great traveller. Here we havent paid out a cent In railroad fare for over a year, never gotten farther out of this city then the end of the street ear line, and yet. our mathematical friend informs us that we have travel ed I.OOitnno.eoft miles In the last twelve months' ?o've you. Kverybody In these | T'nited States of A. has don? that much apeedln?. while some globe-trot ters like W Wilson have done even better. This la how you did your traveling: By merely going with the earth around on Its axis In one year we went t.ana.tm mites. At the same time we were trav eling em.Om.Oftn miles around the sun. But that wasn't enough going to suit this speed demon we cell earth. It carried us into new and untried regions of space 4"".(???,?00 miles in the one year. 1 And Vet some people spend perfectly good money doing still more traveling. 'Round the ToWn ????Et Be TattB Bertele? This Tear. "Solid oak cannot be mortised Into slippery eira." saya fi G? D. FRY, longtime gatherer and writer of news. In a note to me. "Bat." he adds "amateur carpenter? ar? ignorant of the fact." Then he saya be has looked into the tarrff situation from every angle and makes this prediction "The Republican majority |n the Congres? can do absolutely nothing concerning tarla* revision, no mat ter whether that majority be latfge ot small. The criticism of Senator Penroee for having aald that tariff revision cannot even be attempted until 1920.' la a criticism based upoa insufficient practical knowledge of the origin, development and fruition of national legislation: and that is as careful of an avoidance of the use of the word Ignorance* as caa be made by one who is kindly dis posed. The existing revenue lawa were framed, primarily. In ythe White House and the Treasury De partment They ware developed, paragraph after paragraph. In the House of Represen tat tve? and* in the Senate by the harmonious eoncuBeni action of the legislative and execu tive branches of the Federal govern ment. "Without the concurrent action of the executive branch of the Federal government It would be an utter waste of time, effort and hope for the legislative branch of the Fed eral government (that la. of course, the Congress) to devote one single minute or fractloa of a m?nate evetg to the framing of a revenue bfil." TWICE-ROBBED IS THE! MAN WHO TRIES TO CHEAT GOD. By ?a>e REV. rntiRi.K? ?TKI ?.?. There'? only one deatr-b-ed r?-pent anre recor?1-*-?l in the Bible One?so that no man may deepair. Only one?ao thai no man may preaume. True de?th-bed repentaJ*roea are very rare, anyway?most of them are hj sincere. % They ane usually the reeit?t of fear and coward ioe. If? a mere; that th?ere> a gra rriou? God who is ready to forgiTe the rileet sinner who truly repenti-? and no man can m-and-t eo far from <iod that he may not return. But it isn't a ?wruare deal cither to <?od or to humanity as* a whole for a man to deliberately plan to count on a "death bed" repentance to es cape the penaJtiea of the hereafter whatever they may be. And it's a pretty dangeroua ria* to run. for there are all kinds of chance? that a man may not he in a state of mftid tn "repenr" when his laat hour arrive*. He may become midderely tmcon scioaa. or hla mind may he-oorne weakened by long i)Trv**s.? And. what la itili more likely to happen, he may be ao hardened in heart that he will be aJtotethex in different a* to what bfcnny*c of him after death. The favct ip. thia in the normal state of "unheliex inn" men when th?*? hour of death -a at han?*.. At 1?*?? this waj? mv exp?rience a* a ???*?t\ for ten year* during which I Mad to be ?af aer-ire to many dvltic men and wnffifn. The pain thev've arunVred. or the stupor which often cornee during the ?art few da/* of their Uve?, or the i gene???? (aaaavaV'? with life fra?-*h a. they've Irred H durine their aaaaaaat* theae, and many other rati*ea? pro duoe a *t a te <-? mtnd In wh-ch they apparently rar?? very little wfaat he r-omes of them whern they die. It's an abnormal .etate?and "t'e fool l*h tn wail for auch an hour tn which le maki'* one's plan* for a journey through e?? rmty. It is ftairer. more reaaonable and ?aurver to think aeriouaK about the *-nfire matter of the futur*? Tif?*? when ppf'v mind i-? aTert to all the fa-*t*t involved. No man win e*r-?r decide a mor* Important -rne-stion than thi?. and ? is th-*-**ofore worthe?* ?of th* bei?. thoueh? that on** ran glee It. It is common1 y assumed by thoTich* le-s people that after the plra5'n-e* CALOTABS ARE BEST FOR COLDS ANDJRUENZA Doctor? Now rVrawrilr? Calotab??. The Purified CaloeeJ Tablet? That Are Najueak*?, Safe and Sure. ??????? are warning the publie that simple eolds an? mild cases of influ enza often lead to pneumonia and olher serious complications. They say that every ?old should receive imme diate attention and that the first step In the treatment is to make sure that the liver is active. For this purnn-e falotahs. the perfected, nausea le** calomel tablets ?re the surest. Ix-st and most agreeable laxative. One Calotab at ned time with a swallow of water?that's all. no sait.-, no nausea, and no upsetting: of the digestion and appetite. Next mnmlnc your cold haa vanished, your liver Is active, your system la puntled and re freshed fine with a hearty appetite tor breakfast Bat what you please?no dancer. For your protection. Catotabs are sold only In original sealed packages. Price thirty-five cents. All druKgist? recommend and iruamntee Calotahs and are authorised tn refund the price if vou are not delighted with rhenv? Adv. MAINA11062 ????? I SOV \. i-N >*&,?.??: - ^-y -y.-? PRINTING RUSH WORK A SPECIALTY SMALL AND LARGE JOBS HAYWORTH Co?po*ibeB sad Trad? Work G ' P-rt tteee? Valsa U FRED ?. WAI-KER. the Comment" man on tae Trades O 1st. points out the prosperity of C bia Typographical Union. Its hership, he says, has nsms US_ mark, and most of tae typos are re ceiving S cents an soar for thetr sei ri use at tas Government G??????? Ornee. He figures the yearly lasasss of tne union from dues sad se ob at SJ&.W? snd says the preside? ? sad sec retan were each pre?estad ?nth a purse of RS? last August. Tats ts prosperity with a cap "P." WMh the ass Recently the Housewives' Lee*-?* of Northeast Washing-toe tendered s vote of ?hars'" to tenstor 1* HEISLER BALL of Delaware, -fof his splendid servios to hassaaityf In cosnertios with the ?easts la? veatlgatios of the high cost of Ire- 4 lag in this city. Row. I is ta- ? formed. Branch 41. Mothers of America, st s recent meeting siso tendered the Delaware Senator ? vote of thanks for the same ssssr | Ice to the people. Is ?nniissisa?} 1 the purpose of the vets. Mrs. [AMELIA C. MORRIS said Seaato I Ball has earned "the heartfelt grati tude or ail American mothers sad wives because of his determini! opposition to s form of polite lar ceny commonly knows as ?proaleer :ng. " It also was recited that "the principal eufferera from the perni cious practice of overcharging for the necessities of life are the chil dren of the aatios?it? citi??? of of youth have been there's nothing! left to enjoy, the? is the time to *%iake one's nasce wtth Odd." Rut there's sn almost ineaoreht? law that when one's rnrnd has been closed to spiritasi things for forte or aftr years it is next to tnipn? hi? for it to 1 enei re new truth?It re ourers almost a miracle 10 chance one a way of thinking. t And any man who delfberetelr en. < cage? tn a lire-'ong plot to cheat God nut of life-Ion; eervioe isn't like'? <J to be bi s frame of romd et the end - of theoe years to calmly change all his processes of Itvtns snd lovtne - he'll cling to the idols of hht youth forever. And h?'? wrong wh-n he tahas It for granted that there are no Joy? in religion?there are no deeper, full?* . Joy? anywhere than thoer which ?ee based upon spiritual truth Po that the man who ha* bean dls , honest with God snd with htmseV ! Is twice robbed?once when he :? robbed of the richest Joy? of ass present life, and again when he is robbed of the Jo/? ?? the hereafter Traction Head and Former Judge Are Strikebreakers Mlddletown. ? T_ Or' 12 -Form?? tudre H. R Royce acted as tnolormar I and W M Gould, general manage- ?f ! the Walkill Transit Co.. as ???"??*tt?? i on the electric line between thta ctr? 1 and Gosben todav as a rewul? of s strike of the company's rrr.r> es No other cars wre operated Ireland Gels Brew Pubi n.?Steamers ere brirign^ from Am-ri^a to Ireland s' - ? thousand ton? of barley for Bv?w-| 1 Inp To Help M.. J.Ke?w Rod Amori?ar. / -""?? ?^Soiiday Excursion Including War Tax NEW YORK The f?rrtrt Mftmpoli* SUNDAYS Oct. 26; Nov. 23; Dec 14 BPBCtAL? THKOTGII TRAIS Divert to IV??? ?1? 71? Ave. sed SZd M. I.?i Wartung"" ^ im?. Vitfiur?' I2SS ?. M : um? renna. Sta. I? tee heart of Ne? Tore City 7* A a. RV umili? W???? BB* ta? S.? G M. * g4-Th? rwht 1* r>?"rwd ?? tu?? ta? . ?le et Urart? le tbr rapseuy <* ?euir I' went avallala* E Ticte?? ?? ??le fceaiwelaa Pv*. ?; day Dreeedl?? d???? ?? rtfin*? Pennsylv. nia R.R. ? . 72 Roand Trip in. ludi.? star Tasi TOH i.fU:AT Hagerstown Fair October 14 to 1' I Kai ???!?? Tirarte will e? ?beve date? for all trai??! se?d ?ha? O cashes XS. TUR ?io DAT ThurwUy, October 16 ?p ? ? ?? THAI!? Leave? taie? stalles :? ?. M. Ilot ?ralag. Ir?"?? H?tent??? aies P. M. Bdtl-aore ft OU? Raiboai