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FOUR AS INDEPENDENT NEWSPAPER horning Jfournal Fubllrhed fcjr th JOURNAL PUBLISHINQ CO. D. A, MACPHERSON....Binlne Manager It. U FOX Editor Wctrn Rt-prerntatlv C. J. ANDERSON, Varquttte Bldf., CIiIcmo, DL Rsitrn Keprcnentatln RALPH R. MUIXIOAK . But 4d,1 gtrwt, New Turk Entered ricond-clau matter at tha poatoffica oz Afbnquerqua. N. M.t under Act of Contrrm or Mann I, 1879. Liver cUoUaUod than any ottr paper in New Mexico. th only papar la New Mexico lanuad evsrj day In tha year. TKKM8 uISUiSsCRIpfldN Dally, by carrier or by mall, ana month. .Ttc Tearly, in aavanca..;..... ;.60 NOTICES TO UBSCRIBBK Subacrlbera to tha Journal when wr'.mg to bare their paper chanced to a new ad dren mutt be aure to Rive the old addreaa. The Morning Journal haa a higher circu lation rating than (a accorded to any other paper In New Mexico." Tha American Nawipaper Directory. O O MEMBER OF THB ASSOCIATED PRESS r Tbe Aaaoclated Prea la erclnelvety entitled to tha uaa (or republication of all newa credited to It or not Jlther wlao aredlted In tM paper and atao the local newa publlahcd herein. THK JOURNAL taken and prists sixty i.oura and thirty minutes of ex clusively Associated Frees leaaed wire service each No other news paper publlahed In New Mexico takes more than twenty-four hours of As sociated Press service during a week. MONDAY . . .NOVEMBER 18, 1918 FACTS ATiOVT "FLU," There are a few facts we should understand about the "flu." From I)r. Evans of Chicago, we get the fol lowing facts: 1. The flu is likely to become vio lent again in January, February and March particularly In February and March unless the utmost precautions are taken to combat it. . 2. Judged by results in Chicago about one in every two hundred die of flu, if the whele number of canes is considered, of the severe cases about four out of of every hundred die. H. When pneumonia develops the r'tfth rate is a Knit twenty five out of every hundred onses. , 4. According to Dr. Evans It has not been fully demonstrated that vac cine is a preventive of flu, but he is of the opinion that it would be wise to be vaccinated for prevention. 6. He is positive that serum treat ment where pneumonia has set in of-i fers the best chance of recovery from that disease, and he quotes approv ingly the claim of Lyster that vaccin ation against pneumonia is a preven tive for eight months. This will give protection during the winter and spring months when pneumonia is at its worst. Here are the three things Dr. Evans insists should be observed carefully Avoid getting wet; avoid getting chilled; avoid becoming overly tired. Also, he says, get nil the fresh air and sunshine possible. Although they were perfectly will ing that seven million Belgians should starve to death, we of. America must continue to observe food regulations until the hungry Germans are fed. For our own self-respect we cannot af ford to treat tho Germans as they have treated other people. A VOICE FROM TEXAS. A preacher living in New Mexico cancelled his subscription to the Journal because it supported the re publican ticket in the recent cam paign. The preacher was born in Texas, therefore, he Is a democrat, just as a man born In Turkey is a Mohammedan. His reason is the same as that of the man who went to mill with wheat Jn one end of the sack and a rock to balance it in the other. The man with the sack learned better, but the Texas democrat never, does, or rarely. ' The fact tnat his father was a democrat Is enough. Also It is enough for the Turk that his father was a worshiper of the prophet. Texas is a great state, though not a very progressive one considering its resources. The same is true of the solidly democratic states of South Carolina, Mississippi, AlaBama and Arkansas. The people of those states know practically nothing of political conditions in this country. Not one In a thousand of the voters of ay one of those states could give an intelli gent reason for voting the democratic ticket. With ithe people of the solid south party affiliation Is a matter of birth, not of reason. Few of them ever read an article purporting to give reasons for the existence of the republican party the party with a majority of the votes of the nation and with fully seventy five percent of the nation's Intelligence and with eighty percent of the nation's wealth. .Being born in Texas, why should this preacher bother his brain about reasons for voting some other way , than with the democratic party. In the Roswell News or the Jtoswcll Record he can find all tho democratic doctrines required, Just as the Mo hammedan caliph who burned the greatlibary at Alexandria saw ne reason why any one should read books that agreed with the Koran," and it was wrong to read books that con tradicted it. , - If men born In Texas would once get an idea that many things have occurred in the ' world - since the days of Sam Houston; that the reason for Calhoun's advocacy of free trade passed with the liberation of the negro Klaves, that, if .their, fathers were alive lliey might now vote the republican ticket, there would be some hope for this preacher born in Texas. Other wise there is the example of the rich man, the camel and the eye of a needle. " As It is, the man from Texas who form a large percentage of the popu lation of New Mexico's eastern fringe of counties, are quite satisfied to carry their wheat to mill (politically speak ing) in one end of the sack with a rock in the other, because "that was the way dad went to mill." ' In the solid south and the Pecos valley, tho enly political fight is be- tween democrats at the primaries. A nomination is equivalent to an elec tion, therefore, there is little interest taken in the real elections for sena tors, congressmen, governors and the like. These men of the New Mexico east ern border (except at election time they are splendid citizens) would like to see the whole state of New Mexico converted into a second Texas, whew there would be no political contests except for nominations. Such conditions would be the worst possible thing that could occur to this state. Also it would be bad for the democratic party. Our next duty is to attend to the Bolsheviks of Itussia, with special ref erence to those two statesmen Len in and Trotsky who sold out the Rus sian people and are now busily en gaged in murdering: all of the Slavs who know how to read and write. THAT Ci HUMAN APPEAL. The engines and cars demanded by the allies in their terms of armistice were merely those taken by the Ger mans from the "Belgians and the 'French., The engines and cars are needed for carrying1 food to the strick en districts which are now being freed from German rule. It was for the retention of these Belgian engines and cars that the German women sent a message to the wifo of President Wilson. By this time there is a well defined propa ganda in the United States for miti gation of the armistice terms. We are being told that if we insist upon ermany restoring all that was looted from Belgium and France it will likely cause renewal of the war bv the enraged German people. Also Germany Is renewing her propaganda in America. On March 4, 1919, the spotlight will be turned off of James Hamilton Lew is' pink whiskers, unless the president should have designated .him as one of the commissioners to the peace con ference. THE AMERICAN PEACE MISSION. It Is now stated that Secretary of State Lansing, Col. E. M. House, Justice Brandels and Elihu Root will bo sent to the peace conference. For tho naming of the secretary of state on the commission there is tho reason of precedent. For sending Root there Is the best of al! reasons; his recognized ability. , House is to bo sent because he is the confidential friend of the president, and Brandeiu goes because he is recognized as a pretty close approach to what consti tutes a socialist of the saner" type. It is believed that -ho will have great in fluence in satisfying the demands of the socialists of Germany, Italy and Russia, t say nothing of the mem bers of that organization in the United States. Germany says she has had enough. The soft-hearted ones are pleading that when a man cries quits', he should be let up and the handshake of friendship extended'. That ' may be true in ordinary cases, but this is dif ferent. The Tin iLlzzle airplane, to cost about five hundred dollars after the war, is not likely to appeal powerfully to fat men. Featherweights can 'use it to their hearts' content. Those ' alleged Americun3 who bought German bonds early in the unpleasantness may have some time elapse before they collect anything on their coupons. No German Christmas toys will be sold In the United States this year. They would be smeared with baby blood, which oceans waters could not wash off. , According to Dr. Evans, of Chicago, we may expect the recurrence of the "flu" ifor about four years, the worst months for it being February and March. Speaking of things we would rather see advertised otherwise, a Seattle firm advertises that "Our rrlattresses are toft and deep, yet full of life." A nowspaper' correspondent says the British captured all sorts of Turks except even one who had ever been acquainted with a Turkish bath. Probably when thepeace confer ence meets we shall learn what Pres ident Wilson meant by the term "freedom of the seas." An officer at Tacoma has ruled that auto accidents must ' stop. That is right. The legislature should! pass r law against them. 1 ' r Mr. Hoover is calling for more war gardens In 1919. We'must feed the world for several years -to come. ' ,. If the "fin" will let'us alone,' we should have a considerable Thanks giving day this year. i The lor peflo thatsUhk' IheXusltanla also sunk the kaiser, , , The Jarr Family mccarpeuv. Copyright, 1918, by The Press Publishing Co. (New York Evening World). Here's a letter from Clara 'Mud rldge-Smith, she's in -Washington," said Mrs. Jarr. "She's having the grandest time, the capital is full of officers, you know, army officers and naval officers" "And what are her wild raves say ing?" asked Mr. Jarr. Mrs. Jarr paused and presented the hair pin with which she had opened her friend's letter she presented it right at Mr. Jarr, both points for ward. "Now, just for talking like that I'm not going to read you what she says," she remarked firmly. "But she says they dance, but no one can serve even a claret punch, except in a pri vate home, io orneers. There s a lucky girl woman, I should say, for she's only a year younger than I am yet when a woman has no children to grow up around her like weeds she can keep up her youth" .-, "Would you like to go to Washing ton, too?" asked Mr. Jarr. "We need not take the children. And then you can be reported in the army and navy society news as one of the smart matrons of the younger set entertain ing with grape juice punch all the; Handsome young ouicers: "That sounds very nice to hear you say it," said Mrs. Jarr. "But what could I do with the children? Send them to your uncle Henry in the country? The last time your uncle Henrv was here he almost sobbed when he told me how he regretted not having any children, especially In the summer time, when the children "had such happy times working'- in the canneries all day long. "Well, you could send the children to uncle Henry's and we could give explicit orders that they were not to join the ranks of child war labor," suggested Mr. Jarr. "I wouldn't trust the old wretch!" said Mrs. Jarr. "His idea of teaching children chemistry is to have them put Paris green solution on the potato vines :to kill the bugs, and then ad vise the children not to drink the stuff, because Paris green is very dear this year." "But speaking of Paris green re minds me that French Horizon Blue is all the rage nt the races. The Duchess de Cagiac is in Washington, and I read a description of her mili tary tailored walking suit of French Horizon Blue. She was one of the Snorker girls of Bellaire, O. They visited us when I was a girl and their father didn't have a cent; but now 1 suppose if I were to write her that we i Whale Meat Newest Delicacy Perhaps we will have whale meat salad, or a whale steak before long. A Canadian whaling company has been canning whale meat for a num bo rof months In British Columbia. In a letter to the Commercial Intelligence Branch of the Canadian Department of Trade and Commerce the company says: "Owing to the demand for whale meat for food we have erected a can nery where wo expect to pack 30,000 to 50,000 cases of whale meat this season. We have erected three cold storage plants to handle frozen whale meat. We also own and operate two freight steamers, one of which has a cold storage capacity of 500 tons. The species of whales taken on this coast yield three to twelve tons of prime meat, arid only the prime meat is used by us at the present time for cannlg or freezing for food. At our BARBARITIES OF THE GERMANS. CVV. Coumbe. in Leslie's. I was taken to Passchendael, to an old ruined church. vThere I soon ap nearert before a German doctor. I had a hig bandage round my head and frnm it h.lood was dripping freely. I had been gassed and was soaked in blood down to my waist an alto gether pitable sight. Too weak to sit up I was held in a chair by two or derlies." The doctor looked at me. "Englandcr," he hissed. "No, sir," I answered,- not realizing he spoke in hate. "Canadian." "Englander," he repeated savagelj and spat behind him as he spoke, "all Englanders, all swine." And he made a motion of shooting me in the chest. "Yes, Englander," I repeated, real izing that he hated us lock, stock and barrel. ' , , ' f "Take him out, the English pig, I'll not touch him." And they took me out and back into the body of the church, where I lay without attention for 30 hours a touch of kultur once again.' .... . ' Then I was taken to Roulers to a Belgian convent hospital, where a German doctor, who afterward justi fied the sinking of the Lusitania, un doubtedly saved my life by removing bone fragments from my Drain, irag ments which were causing almost in cessant "oerebral vomiting. ., There I fell in with gentle Belgian sisters and some faithful civilians' wno remained with them. I heard increu ihi tales of German barbarities dur ing the reign: of terror the previous October. . . Sixtv-nine' civilians, selected by German spy in their midst in peace times, had been shot in cold blood. The spy had since been made military commander oi me iown. in a nearbv village some ill advised Belgian women had fired on German soldiers passing tnrougn. a aruimc. German major had ordered the three women found in the house to be taken ti, market nlace. stripped and ttirned over to the will Of equally drunken soldiers. He said grimly that he would make women the world over fear to shed tne Diooa or sacreu un Man annarman. Afterward the village was given over to loot, fire and the sword. That again was kuhut. IAST HOURS OF "DER TAG." Ambassador Jutes Jusserand. We are -in one of the grandest per A f th bistorv of the world. ' we - i.,v,a nnvAr in he seen again, not Big,..-'? - . only scene of horror, but scenes or snlenaor. io iuvv muni i American contribution is one of which you and yur dependants may well be proud forever. In the dust and smoke of the fight the skies are sometimes beclouded, and we do not know the hour. But we reel tnai we are mov ing toward the evening of "Der Tag" j ihnt evening will see the doom of those criminals who, even at this late hour, still methodically ravage, defile and destroy parts of France which they have to aoanaon. HOUSE LAUGH IN LITERATURE From "Ureatnean," ry ttcnui m. ueu. She laughed delightedly. There was a peculiarly happy quality about her laugh. Most people smiled involun tarily when they heard it. though Hilly compared it to the neigh of a cheery colt. v aiKuquerque Moraing SournaV Mondays November 18,1918. might come and visit her In Washing ton and bring the children, Belle Snorker she was named after Bell aire, where she was born would ignore my letter. "Yet she gets along splendidly with the duke. She allows him so much money a month and they never bother each other. And they say in the so ciety, papers that the Duchess of Cagiac has the grand manner, even if she has got stout. "She gives it out that she has In dian blood: in her veins. But the Snorkers were very commonplace people. So, how she ever got a grand manner, unless she bought it With her clothes. I don't see." ' "She got the 'belle air' in Bellaire. That's plain to be seen," remarked Mr. Jarr. "But it is very strange how people forget you when they get more pros perous than you are," Mrs. Jarr went on. "But if you get more prosperous than some other people, they never forget you. only this very day" "Yet Clara Mudridge-Smith doesn't forget us," interrupted Mr. Jarr, ere his good lady would bewail visitation from old acquaintances that should be forgot. "She writes to you." "She writes to me because she wants me to do ,her a favor," said Mrs. Jarr quickly, "She wants me to see about tho dresses that were 1o be finished before she left for Washington. Very sweet of her, clown at the capital, flirting with army and navy officers and writing to me to go out and fight her dressmaker for her." ' "Then you won't do it?" asked Mr. Jarr. "It all depends," was the reply. "I'll call up the dressmaker on the phone, and if she's cross I'll know Clara Mudrldge-Smith didn't pay her bill, and I won't go near. But if every thing is all right I'll go see her.; I may get Clara's dressmaker to make a dress for me at a reasonable rate, If I do that. Gertrude, get mo the scissors." Gertrude, the light-running domes tic, couldn't find the scissors, so Mr. Jarr said it didn't matter, and used the ever ready hairpin again. "I'm cutting out this picture of the hat th6 Duchess wears in the picture of distinguished people on the war re view grand stand," said Mrs. Jarr, as she mutilated the magazine she had brought to the front room with her. "It will drive Clara wild when I send It to her; she hasn't one like it, und she isn't getting her picture In the papers for the war work she's doing, like the Duchess is, either!"- plants the meat is handjed In a sani tary manner, and to this end we have gone to considerable expense. Owing Ito the whale being . hot-blocdcd mammal, many o ftho whales brought into our stations are unfit forfood, as they are sometimes captured at great distances from the stations, and whales that have been killed over twenty-four hours are not used for this purpose. Samples of our canned product are only now being sent out to prospective buyers, and we have not at present made any large sales in this country or the United States, although we have shipped 1,000 cases to Samoa and FIJI. For the frozen product, however, we already have orders for over 1,000 tons, the hulk of which is being shipped1 to Boston Our whaling season opens about April 1 and ends about Oct. 13. Up lo the present we have put up about 18,000 eases of meat at our cannery." PA WAS LOCATED. Detroit News. The young lawyer was defending a man accused of burglary and the woman whose house had been en tered was under examination. "Madam," asked he "what time of night was it when you saw the pris oner in your room?" , "Close to 2 o'clock In the morning," came the reply. "Was there a light in the room?" "No." The lawyer frowned impressively and shot a sido glance at the jury, as he fairly thundered: "Then, please, madam, explain how it was you could see the prisoner and yet not see your husband ?" "My husband," was it he quiet an swer, "was at the club.' INVEST IN W. S. S. AND GET YOUR NAME ON PERSHING'S LIST GPRCIAI. COftRSSPONOINCC TO MORNINS JOUftNAl East Las Vegas, N. M., Nov. 17. Millions of Americans propose to unite during Thanksgiving week in a practical Thanksgiving tribute to General Pershing and his two mil lion American . soldiers in France. Thanksgiving week will be known throughout the nation as Pershing Tribute Week, and during that time the name of every person who buys a War Saving Stamp will be sent to General Pershing as a Christmas greeting to the boys over there. In announcing this campaign, Hallett Reynolds, director of War Savings for New ' Mejcico, is urging every county War Savings chairman and worker and all citizens to unite In this effort. It is felt that It is the most practical form of tribute that the American nation can pay to Pershlng'and his men, and that they will appreciate it more than any other. It will be the final indication that Americans are willing to back their appreciation with their dollars at a time when the government needs money more, than at any time In its hiBtorj'. There will be no time for the organization of extensive cam paigns by committee workers, but It Is believed that every New Mexican will he ready to constitute himself a committee of one and to see that his name goes on the list with millions of other Americans that will be sent to Pershing and his men. .. ' Kew- Mexico is still $9,900,000.00 Bhort on its War Saving quota. It Is the only war" effort W which tho state has failed to go ovr the top. It is hoped that the Pershing Tribute Week may go far in making up the difference. ,, Porsliins Neofts 'Riders. Camp Cody, N. Mi. tfov.' Since the cavalry has been playing an im portant part in ;'the war on the western front, remount men are much in demand in France. Thirty-five men from the remount station were sent from here "to France by the com manding offioer. Included .' among these were Prttate Fay. Ward, a fa mouB bronco rWor and roper; Private Zalowedsk, a neavywelctU boxer and Private Red Bear, a fulUblo&aea In dian rider and horse breaker. . . PRISON MATES RUSSIA L Many Arrests Made on Flimsy Pretexts by Bolsheviki; Prisoners Are Huddled To gether in One Small Room. (SV MOHNINS JOURNAL BPCCIA- LKASBO WIHtl London, Nov. 17. Meetings of some of the British residents of Moscow In the Bolshevik prisons in that oly, where they were kept for six weeks after having been arrested by the red guards upon flimsy pretexts, are viv , idly portrayed by liuy Heringer, a Reuter correspondent at Moscow who was set free early this month and has reached HapBraiida, Sweden Beringer, in his report frorn.Hapn randa, says he was ajrrested while in the home, of the British chaplain ad joining the British consulate in Mos cow, and together with the chaplain and, several other English men and women, was marched on foot two miles through tho streets to the Lu byanka house of detention. "I was separated from my compan ions and was led to a room in which were some thirty prisoners, mostly ci vilians, including a few women," writes Mr. Beringer. "I spent five days and nights in this room in which there was Just sufficient space for the in mates to sleep on the floor. There was no bed of any kind, fo food we had a piece of black bread and a. few dips with a wooden spoon into a bowl of the thinnest possible cabbage soup containing some herring heads. Eight of us had to share the contents of this one bowl. Many people who were without provisions from - the outside wera literally in a state of starva tion. Like the Russian prisoners we were treated ns .helots and were addressed insultingly in the second person sin gular by low brutes among the red iruards. . Late one night when some of the other nrlsoners were singing, sudden lv there was a deathlike hush. I looked up and saw a red guard officer and soldiers standing at the opening to the ante-room in which the prison guards were stationed. A list of twelve names of civilians and soldiers was read out. No one. doubted what this meant. It was the list of those set down for immediate execution. Alt the condemned men arose without delay and shook hands with their neighbors, Nn one showed the slightest fear, i "The Iron folding doors between the big room and the ante-room were then closed. This was done only when prisoners were taken away for execu tion. The doors remained closed for a few minutes and then were reopened and the names of two other soldiers who had previously been overlooked were called out. These also rose wun out a tremor and the folding doors were shut a second and last time. The condemned prisoners were either shot in the basements of the prison with their backs to the firing party or they were taken out to the suburbs tn mo tor lcrries and there told to get out and get away. Then volleys were poured into them while they were walkinir or running away. The bodies aro sometimes recoverable , by rela tives on payment of heavy bribes." ' Later Beringer was transferred to Butyrkv jail at the other end of the city, which contained some 3,000 pris oners. In the cell ho occupied there was a Russian ex-judge a few sol diers and some members of the mid dle and working classes. The vermin were as bad as at Lubyanka and sani tary conditions worse, -mere was nu possibility of taking a r.atn nut Berin ger was allowed a half hour exercise dully In the yard. , There he and some others receded assistance from Maj. Allen Warden of the American Red Cross wno, ne writes, ''literally Blaved on behalf of the prisoners." "The cenditions of our internment were so vilely sordid that it is no won der that the minds of some of the more refined prisoners became un hinged," Beringer writes. "The Bolshevik leaders show no mercy. In their newspapers they hold up Marat as the ideal friend of the people.. They urge that his example should be followed and preach the ex termination of the entire middle class." GRANDSTAND LUMBER USED TO CONSTRUCT " A GRAIN WAREHOUSE tSPCCtAL OOSRCSPONOBNCB TO MOMfUNS JOURNALl East Las Vegas', N, M Nov. 17. The' grandstand and other buildings at Galiinas Park, five miles north of Las Vegas, one of the most famous amusement places in the southwest, are being torn down and the lumber will ' be used to erect a grain ware house at Levy. lOalllnas park was bujlt when the Montezuma hotel at the Hot Springs was in operation and the- electric line' was in operation be tween here and the Galiinas canyon. It! was located , in- a, beautiful spot, with the foothills to one Bide, the mountains in the rear, a view of the beautiful mesa country to the Iront and to the other side a glimpse of the Galiinas valley and of Las Vegas. The park had one of the fastest tracks in the west and was equipped with driveways and paths through some beautiful woods and on the shores of artificial lakes. It was badly damag ed several years' ago when a flood in the Galiinas washed out many of the drives and carried off some of the smaller buildings. Later Cowboys Park, much nearer town, was built. The Levy farmers sent a delegation here to tear down the buildings. In the party were Albert Zimmerman, H. Sneva, William Myers and B. M. Harrison. 1 . (Entire Regiment Insured : . Camp Cody, N; M., Nov. 17. One regiment in training "here boasts of having every man in the regiment in sured in the government war risk in surance. The insurance -averages I91U1.53 to the man. . , 5 ' FTTA OF COLD: IIAP'THE RRIP. This has beeri such a trying year for sickness that mnnv will he uleased to read how Lewis Newman, 606 North man st., Charleston, w. v., wa re stored to health. He writes: "I. was down sick and nothing would do me any good. I was full of cold. Had the (trip until I got two 60c bottles of Foley's Honey and Tar. It Is the best remedy for grip and colds I ever used." Good for grip, coughs, croup, whooping cough and common eolds. Sold evety where, .;;,, CRUE TREATMENT ENEMY- WARSHIPS TO BE HIRED TO ALLIES TODAY Surface Vessels Must Leave . German Ports Nov, 18; Submarines to Be .Turned ' Over Nov, 25, SV MOSN1NO JOUAMAL SMCtAl LEASED KIM) London, Nov. 17. The meeting of the German naval delegates with the British ' naval , representatives took place on Friday afternoon off Rosyth, on the coast of Scotland, The Ger man representatives consist of three delegates from the sailors and sol diers council and four delegates from the people's council, including Rear Admiral von Meurer. . The surface warships which are to be surrendered have to be "ready to leave German ports seven days aft er the signing of the armistice." That is to say on Monday, November 18. The submarines which . are to be surrendered must "be prepared to leave German ports immediately on the receipt of a wireless order to sail to the port of -surrender," and are to be handed over "with full comple ment in a port specified by the allies and the United States within fourteen days after the signing of the armis tice. "That, is Monday, November 25. ' . . All the submarines are to be surren dered and' of the surface warships ten battleships, six battle cruisers, eight light cruisers and fifty destroyers of the most modern type are to be giv en up. . The ten battleships which it would be natural to select are the Kronprinz Wllhelm and Bayern, both new dread naughts completed since 1916; the Markgraf, Konig and Grosser Kur furst, of the Konig dreadnaught class completed in 1914 and 1915; and the ICaiser, Kalserln, frinz Regent Luit pold, Konig Albert nnd Friedrich Der GrOBse, all dreadnaughts of the Kai ser class completed in 1912 and 1913. Has But Five Cruisers. Five battle cruisers, The Der flingre, Hindenburg, Scydlit, Moltke, and von Der Tann, are apparently all that Germany has. The armistice terms stipulate for the surrender of six. Eight of the most . recent 'light cruisers are the Brummer, Bremen, Karlsruhe, Pillau, Frankfort, Nuern berg, Koel nand Dresden. . ' It is only if neutral ports are not available that the German warships are to be brought for surrender to allied ports. But there Is reason to believe that since the armistice was signed the neutral powers have mado it clear that their ports are not like ly to be available for the irksome pur pose and there is no doubt that the surrendered German warships will be brought Into allied ports. Surface warships which are left to Germany will be concentrated in one or more of the German ports. They will be paid off and completely dis armed and will be under the supervi sion of, a commission of surveillance appointed for the purpose 'of the as sociated powers. Regarding the German submarines which fled before the revolutionaries and took refuge in Swedish waters there Is no doubt they will have to be surrendered. '.''. Regarding the Black Sea arrange ments 'are now being made for the surrender of all ships in German hands. It seems now to be practical ly certain they will be surrendered without trouble. 1 A 000 PEH CENT "IIAISR." Current Opinion. Did you ever hire a boy of 20 at $20 a week and in less than five months raise him voluntarily to 6,000 a year? That Is the experience of a motorcar manufacturer had recently with a man of 59, who, by the way, was mighty glad to fmd the $20 a week Job. Of course, a. "find" like that is un usual, but the manager of the Em ployers', association of Chicago, de clares it to be indicative ,of the ma terial that can be found among the men of more than 45 years old. This man ,had been a bookkeeper all his life, but through circumstances became sidetracked and finally out of work. ' Ydlf CAN WORK 'MIRACLES. Ralph Waldo-Emerson. " He who knows that power is in the soul, that he is weak only because he has ldoked for good out of him and elsewhere and so prceivlng, throws himself unhesitatingly on his thoughts, Instantly rights himself, stands erect, commands his limbs, works miracles. aor.n Phone' 283 t I I II f I- ,. . r. : Win UW ava jur Mt ai a n, 11 ID AVESWIFE From Suffering by Getting Her Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Pittsburgh, Pa. '"For many months I was not able to do my work owing to a weakness which caused backache and headaches. A friend called m y attention to one of your newspaper advertisements and immediately my husband bought three bottle of Lydia E. Pinkbam'a V egetable Com pound for me. After taking two bottles I felt fine and my troubles caused by that weak ness are a thing of the past. All women who suffer as I did should try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound." Mrs. Jas. Rohkberg, 620 Knapp St; N. S., Pittsburgh, Pa. Women who suffer from any form of weakness, as indicated by displacements, inflammation, ulceration, irregularities, backache, headaches, nervousness or "the blues," should accept Mrs. Rohr berg's suggestion and give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a thorough trial. For over forty years it has been correcting such ailments. If you have mysterious complications write for advice to Lydia E. i'jnUham Medicine Co.. Lvnn. Mass. . Some Music Lover. . ,- Camp Cody, N. M Nov. 17. An officer in Camp Cody loves music so well he is willing to take a lowerrank In oifler to become band leader. First " Lieutenant Walter H. Regan has of- lfered to become a second lieutenant if Kiveu u utiiiu iu unect. xie nas oeen promised the next one organized. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets Get at the Cause and Remove It Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets, tha substi tute for calomel, act gently on the bowels and positively do the work. People afflicted with bad breath find quick relief . through Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets. V Tha pleasant, sugar coated tablets are taken for bad breath by all who know them. Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets act pentlv but firmly on the bowels and liver, stimulating' them to natural action. clearing the blood and gently purifying the entire system. They do that which dangcrci'.3 calomel does without any of the bad after effects. All the benefits of nasty, sickening, griping cathartics are derived from Dr. Edwards' Olive' Tablets without griping, pain or any disagreeable effects. Dr. F. M. Edwards discovered the formula after seventeen years of prac tice among patients afflicted with bowel. and liver complaint; with the attendant bad breath. ' Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets are purely a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color. Take one or two every night for a week and note the effect. 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. . Rub Musterole on Forehead v " , and Temples ; A'headache remedy without the dan gers of "headache medicine." Relieves headache and that miserable feeling from colds or congestion. And it acts at once I Musterole is a dean, white ointment, uiaue wiui on oi mustara. .Better than a mustard plaster and does not blister. Used only externally, and in no way can it affect stomach and heart, as some in ternal medicines do. ; .Excellent for sore throat, bronchitis,; croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, con gestion, pleurisy, rheumatism,- lumbago, all pains and aches of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia), . 30c and 60c jars; hospital size $250 ' McCALL IIUSBA S mm ! WINTER FASHIONS If you do not ex amine the won-j derful display of designs of WhW ter coat3, suits, frnrlra waiafa - -Vvv skirts, . lingerie, Yji r I everything, - in ' tact, connected, with the dainty feminine ward- robe, you will miss a fashion display unequal- , ed elsewhere. , McCALL ' PATTERNS ; for; November ' Now "On Sale v 313-315. West Central ;