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THE ARIZONA' REPUBLICAN", SUNDAY M ORJNff, NOVEMBER 25, 1917 PAGE FIVE niinmiM irvriniun i HI fib U b PREVEMTJflPANESE Republican A. P. Leased Wire PITTSBURG, . oY. 24 Wess. th.e Internal disorders of Russia are sub dued and, the co-operation of the Rus sian troops is guaranteed, 'the entenH, ' T,wfrl .neCd "P'ct little assistance from their Japanese ally on the eastern front. declared' A.' Kasahm a' member or the Japanese imperial railway com- mission in an address. Here. ..... -i. "MHlln f Japanese troops to Kustifa Is a serious question confront ing the allies," Wr Kasama. "It would be of little value to send assistance- to Russia as lone as the people are quarreling unions themselves. Un til the co-operation of the Russian , troops ran be secured, in my opinion. 'jHpan will not Bend any men to their assistance. But if that co-operation can be guaranteed, Japan will send all the, men that Is necessary, not. only to ,the eastern front, but to the western front also." SMALL STATIONS TO BE ABANDONED republican A. P. Leased Wire! WASHINGTON. Nov. 24. Tn the In terest of war-time efficiency and econ omy, railroads were authorized by the Interstate commerce commission to abandon certain small way station ser vice on spur lines and minor facilities for handling less than carload lots of jieignc wnnout obtaining special p" mission of the commission. The commission also dismissed the Investigation of railroad embargoes started several years aso. Embargo regulations now are handled by a spe cial car service bureau of the commis sion in co-eperation with the railroads. THINKS IIEXL YET PROVE A .WINNER St.; -V wjm nr. - ? & ILOA'TllE F AT CAMP (Kansas City Star) M.MP Fi:.NSTO., Kas.,-An entire ; r ty is being built for the accommoda ; tlon, amusement and benefit of the I boys of the Kighty-ninth revision sta . tinned at Funston. known as the "'Zone of Camp Activities and Amusements" Hundreds of thousands of dollars are . being expended, and when the last I building is finished and doing business nn January 1, something will have been eceomplished here that never before has been done in the history of America. The zone will be filled with all kinds rr amusement places, restaurants, tores, shops, banks, and everything else that goes to make tip a business ection of a big city, a citv of forty We Want Miss Edith Clifford to wire us her address at our expense, she has a lister living in Phoenix, who we believe will tee this adv. and notify her lister to wire us. C A. UPTON Globe,; Ariz. Byron Houck. Byron Houck, who had a tryout with the Athletics a -while back and failed to stick in the big show is go ing to work for the St. Louis Browns next summer. Byron believes he will stay in the American league for keeps this time and those who saw the class he showed with Portland in the Pacific coast league last sea son are inclined to agree with him. Carpenter and Builder Plane and Estimates Free Job work, repairing, remodeling old buildings, screen porches, screen doors and windows. Roof repairing, tore fronts, show windows, coun ters, (helving! and store fixtures. Country work jiolieited. Will buy old buildings to wreck. R. M0RRI3 46 W. Washington; Phono 2514 iiiuuaanu. innaonants, where every citizen is a man of voting age. Here tne men can gather during the even ings ana on Haturdavs and Sunrlav. and during their off periods and amuse themselves, do their shopping, visit or Just kill time. An average of U per cent of the gross receipts of the zone will be divided among the various mess 1U1I us. ine buildings are arranged in four mucus, constructed on the exposition type of architecture, with a mission feeling. A boulevard will pass in front ui me zone, ana 4U-root streets will di vide the blocks. The east end will be uccupjeo oy a public library, the Y. M. C. A. auditorium, the Knights of Co- lumoua auditorium, the civic theater una a swimming pool. All the business buildings will be grouped on the west niq oi me zone. Two bank buildings, each to cost ap proximately $20,000, are being erected vne, Known as the Army Bank of v-amp r unston, is a branch of the Na tional Reserve Bank of Kansas Citv The other, the Bank of Funston, is a ui inr central national Hank at Junction City. The second floor of both bilding will be equipped as liv ing quarters for the employees. Both buildings will be completed within a week. At present the banks are housed In temporary structures. Three theaters are going up, a vaudeville theater, a theater to plav only stock and a movie theater. Each uuuuuig win nave a main Iloor and a balcony with a aeating capacity of i.,suv persons. A billiard and pool hall, the largest one in the state of Kansas, will open about the end of next week. It will contain ninety billiard and pool tables. The barber shop that Is going up will contain fifty chairs, and be all white enameled on the Inside. The Arcade building will be a dis tinctive feature in itself. It will cover one entire block and will contain forty small stores all of which have already been contracted for. There will be op ticians, delicatessen stores, confection ery stores, soda fountains, athletic goods, a manufacturer of candy, the di vision exchange stores, kodaks and ko dak supplies, a wholesale ieweler. a roaster', where chickens pork, veal and beef are barbecued right in the window, and sold in the back, and many other kinds of stores. The cigar store will contain a humidor sixteen by sixteen oy nrty reet big, large enough to keep 1 million cigars moist at one time. . Restaurants will be dotted all through the zone. There will be one where nothing but. hot waffles are sold; another where nothing but fish and oysters will be served; another will handle nothing but chile, and another first class restaurant that will handle most anything an up-to-date restau rant has on its bill of fare. Negoti ations are now going on to build an SO-room hotel for the accommodation of civilian visitors. ilaj. Gen. Leonard Wood, command ing the division, is trying to get the consent of the war department to al low the employment, of women in the zone. At present no women are al lowed in camp. But General Wood be lieves that the wives and mothers of many of the men here would be glad to come here and work, if for no other reason than to be near their relatives. and this class of woman labor would FAT MAN GETS HIS; AN OBJECT OF PITY (Minneapolis Journal) This section of the newspaper has stood up for the fat man when hands and voices have been raised against him and will continue so to do. Some times it is not so much his fault as it is that of his ancestry. The only fat men who are opposed are those who refuse to take such measures of reduction as the simple and proper device of chasing them selves for a few blocks before break fast or taking the column doctor's pre scription of somersaults. The fat man who does these things should soon come down somewhere towards "nor mal." There will be exceptions. The fat man is usually a good citi zen, but now and then you meet a fat man who is a bad man. One of them is in jail at Sleubcriville, U.t and the '.ther prieofen) Co not love hin. any mure. twenty of lliue convicts hnd an es cape from the .h-i'fcrson j.unty jail ;Ul dried out, an 1 as the fat pii'onei was Jcl'y and jooultr before the attemut was made, he was allowed to lead the procession, v Never again ! S. fl. Strahan was the fat man, and he Is still in jail. He is spoken of in the dispatches as 'corpulent." The prison guards happened to look up at the prison wall and, to their surprise, they saw- two fat legs waving around from a big hole in the wall. The sound of smothered profanity accompanied the exrclse. The guards rushed in and collared a fat man who was wedged in the hole and who had in his hands a useless rope made of blankets with which he had proposed letting himself down to the United States when once through the hole. Fortu nately for the discipline of the prison, Strahan couldn't quite worm his bay window through the large opening ini the wall. Nineteen tother disappointed prison ers voiced their lack of love for a fat man. The next time in that jail, the hu man umbrella gets the first chance at any breach In the wall and the others follow In the order of their, weight in the community of prisoners. When Colonel Roosevelt was having a fine time as president of the lTnited States his pernicious activity around the war office developed a lot of fat cavalry officers who had forgotten that there might ever again be a war and who had devoted themselves to the pleasures of , the table, letting the X'nited States get along as It might in a defenseless condition so- far as their efforts at keeping fit went. The president never did a thing hut devote his energy to getting these boys upon the upper decks of horses again. It was a crime against fat hu manity. These fat officers had grown more accustomed to the swivel chair than to the saddle, and the suffering they went through ijfl carrying out the orders of the president is only com parable to the sufferings of fat men in Flanders today if there are such. The censorship happily conceals from us the misadventures of the fat men there. Your human hoe handle can stand much and come out fit and hungry. He does not know what it Is to be sad dle sore and mad at the world, Pres ident Roosevelt actually, made these fat cavalry officers take 100-mile rides across. country, now and then jumping fences where the horses would stand for It without becoming ' -legged In their backs. The practice .. Uhered up a lot of swivel chair warmers like sausages placed over a hot fire, and they came out of the ordeal with opin ions of the president that were not fit for publication. The thin soldier may smile at the fat man on horseback, for he has little conception of the utter misery en dured both by man and beast. For tunately for the corpulent officers, the cavalry branch has fallen Into consid erable disuse in this war. ; o L W. W. MEETS NOT republican A. P. Leased WlreJ fiEXVER, Nov. 2J.A mass meeting of Industrial Workers of the World summoned by poster to meet at Fred erick, Colo., a coal mining town near Denver, failed to materialize tonight. Government agents from Denver and county officers from Greeley went to Frederick prepared to act if the meet ing developed anti-War tendencies but returned to their homes empty handed, as no one could be found who knew anything of the proposed assemblage. EN ROUTE TO ENGLAND tRepubllcan A. P. Leased Wire CHRISTIANIA, Nov. 24. Dr. David Soskic, confidential secretary to A. F. Kerenaky, the deposed Russian prem ier, passed through Christiania today on his way to Kngland. He carried a message ffom Kerensky, who, he de clared, is safe and preparine dan for future activities. be much more acceptable than any other. The war department has the matter now under consideration. The zone is the fwt one of its kind ever Dunt in an American army camp, and the buildings are being put up in ucn a manner tnat they will be per nianent. Our New Telephone Numbers- 422 BUSINESS OFFICE 4433 EDITORIAL AND NEWS DEPARTMENT 1881 WANT AD DEPARTMENT Umtml Values MONDAY See Our W indoivs Womens' Winter Coats, worth $37.50, on Sale at $29.95 An opportunity sueh'as seldom presents itself for these are smartly taslnoned coats of velours, broadcloth, bur ela, pom porn and Bolivia. -The full loose styles, belted and hi all waisted effects. ' and some are semi-belted. Then there are the trench coats with large pockets, lar?e ; collars and deep cuffs. Decidedly new and popular. And so many have large fur collars and cuffs. Be here Monday. HerearetheMostBeautifulSuits 'm&d v Miles up 10 &30.UU, at S? $25.00 "Isn't it really a joy to make a selection from such a woncler ' fully satisfying assortment!" will be the enthusiastic re ' marks to be heard here. A concentration of quality that is tempered with value to : the interest of women who appre.-iate the advantage of par- ticipatmg in a sale of garments so high in the ranks of fashion. Modes of the new French serge, broadcloth, whipcord, poplins, tricotine and cheviots 11 ""e colors and tones Uat have never been more charming-more acceptable. The belted coats with semi-empire backs and flare below waist line Tight fitting plain tailored models. ' -New ripple short coat types, semi-belted effects with panel back; some man-tailored types with bindings of silk braid and slot seams. Manv are fur-trimmed The best choice, of course, will be in the early part of Monday. I 1 1 I WW I &, IT Si. i 1 W'm- Just Fifteen Dozen Blouses of Crepe de Chine, $3.00 values at $1.98 Plain and semi-tailored styles in flesh, white and maize. Many of them are richly em broidered. A wonderful bargain. And the Blouses of Georgette, Wash Satin fcnd Crepe De Chine We're Selling at $4.05 Blouses that if bought at their regular prices would sell as high as $9.95. Isn't such a saving worth while? And to choose from such a variety of models. Colore are maize, gold, white, pink, taupe, Belgian blue. Many hand-embroidered, others with filet lace trimming. The Loveliest Blouses of Georgette and Crepe de Chine' at $3.50 -Some of them have the new' high collar. . ?! Colors are -flesh, white, pink', as well as striped blouses in light and dark color combina tions. ! News from Korricks' Glove Section Novelty Wash Chamois Gloves Here at $2.50 I One clasp, pique stitching. (White with contrasting stitching; also f natural chamois color. ; Main Floor See These New Kid Gloves at $2.00 , A very fine quality; two-clasp. White, black and tan, self and . con 1 trasting stitching. New Cape Gloves for Street Wear, $2.00 One clasp, pique seams, self-stitching. Colors are tan, ivory and grey. ' Main Floor Plan your Dressmaking and be here Monday in our Dress Goods Department 44-inch French Serges Per Yard, $2.00 A quality we can recommend to be abso lutely satisfactory. Color are plum, burgundy, blues, brown, green and black. 40-inch Silk and Wool Poplins, per yard, $1.49 Very pretty material for atreet and party dresses. , Every new 'shade represented in the col lection. Have You Seen the New Kermi Plush? The richest out this season for trimming, stoles or collars, . , .. . 50 inches wide in black, polar bear, amber and mole, per yd., J.50 to $18.50. " ' ' 36-inch Storm Serge Extraordinary at 75c . A special purchase of storm nerge that's -: why it's offered at such a price. A splendid line c ." colors to select from 50-inch Velfur Coating, Special at Per Yd., $3.75 A very stylish material for coats. Colors are grey, rose, copen, blue, white and maize. ' Millinery at $10.00 attract many Women to Korricks' Monday morning -Because as a matter of fact this particular millinery should sell at considerably more than ten dollars. , -The range of styles is wide. The colors are those most in vogue for winter wear, and there are models becoming to every age and type. " -Will you share in the savings! Here are hat s trimmed in fancy novelties, gold and silver ornaments, ostrich trimming, pom poms. , . ARIZONA REPUBLICAN Second Floor 1 ! y - ' ---'- ... - . -- - .-;sssiiWr ; - v- - - - . . ... . .... .. .. - ' -- -; ' . " ....