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' 0 8 TULSA DAILY WORLD, SUNDAY, JUNE 2, 191b. v .('- ' 1 If I r 1 '-i-Tir POPES ALWAYS HAVE ACTED AS MEDIATORS AteHo I Rtarted Procrdne In 400; Generally Havo Vnlted Others Against Turku, From ths earliest time of papacy, popea, a the religious heads of the Catholic cburch, have considered It their tasfc to Intercede as mediators In temporal disputes, observes a )i in torian. Following are a few in stances: Aa early aa 400, when Alarlc I, de clared ha would withdraw from Rome only on condition that (he fto mana ahould arrange a peace favora ble to him, St. Innoeent I, went with an embassy of the Unman to Km peror Honerlua, at Uiverinn, to try, If possible, to muke pence with hlin and the Clothe, but failed In hi endeavors to bring about prurn. More successful wae tlreitnry I., Who played the atime part on the no raslon of the Invasion nf Duly by the Lombarda. Owlnir to his friendship with the Iombanllan nn"'n, Tlieu dullnda, he actually meillateil a fa vorable peace. When northern Italy was devastated by Attlla the vonera ble bishop of Home, l-o I. the tltut of the great popes by a perosnnl en counter with the king of the ilwns, prevented him from marching- upon Home. He went In 452 to upper uly and met Attlla at Mlnclo, In the vi cinity of Mantua, obtaining from him the promlae that he would withdraw from Italy and negotiate peace with the emperor. This pope also suc ceeded In obtaining another fiivnr for the Inhabitants of Homo. When In 461 the city was captured by the Vandals under fjeneserln, the soourge of Ood," Ieo's Intercession obtained a promise that the city ahould not be Injured and the lives of the Inhabitants should be spared. Another pope, Benedict XII., who from 1J84 to 1142 occupied the holy sea, was aa unsuccessful as a media tor as the present supreme pontiff. At that time Charles IV. of Krance had died without leaving an heir, and yheti his cousin, 1'hlllp VI., put the crown on his head hla right tovlo so was contested by Fdward II. of Kng land , Benedict XI., who wanted to mediate, ws not listened to. and there ensued hostilities lasting, with some interruptions, for a hundred rears. The popes mediated successfully between Chrlstlun oppononts In cases where It was Important to unite them In the common cause of Christianity against Turkey. v a Pope Oregory (1171-1 J7). for the kot a cruaade against the Turks, worked lndefatlgahly upon a recon ciliation of the princess In Italy and Germany, and Paul HI. (1634-1549), nearly three centuries later, tried to ' prevent a war between Hpaln and Prance. Clement IX. aided Venice against ths-Turks by mediating the peace between iuls XIV. and Hpaln, etc Hava tou noticed that Rmoky Joe Wood who has been playing the eutfteld for the Cleveland Indians la still managing to get his hits with a nlsaslns frequency, and that a ma jority of them go for extr buses? Take a tip from us: Woodle may never be a winning pitcher again but he'a a long ways from the end of hla rope as a major league ball player. A Custom 0 mf The Jordan Sport Marine is the first completely equipped motor car ever offered as a stock model by a manufacturer. It is a custom made car at a stock car price. The new Continental motor, in troduced by Jordan, eliminates vibration, accentuates speed, in creases power and affords a mar velous degree of economy. The aluminum body is fifty pounds lighter free from rumbles MITCHELL MOTOR SALES CO. It. M. (iltOTROr, I'rcs JACK A1.I1I.IUSON, 17 East Seventh Street. JORDAN MOTOR CAR COMPANY, CLEVELAND, OHIO T Duplex Truck j uuptex linn - iiiti'i (ilini trues, lonili'il with u 1 (I.OUU -pounil oil pump, met ii four-wheel (hive, t rufk of "Another Make" stin k In oily loiun up to the hubs recently In section 0, Carter county, okln. The luUer whs ImKleil ! with S.000 pounilM of casing. In the picture above Lurry ( Implex i Wh.tr ton of the Htapii-tnn Motor company, Is seen nltliiching a chain from the , truck of "Another Make" to the Ijuplcx, JuM hefore he pulled the former out. The Duplex merely Iwi-kfl up and the truck of "Another Muke" was a third of the way out before Its own power wu;j applied. i Letters of Lemuel Bean (Ily UOV Mnt'l.TdN.) Rumen Imii h In New Voik. Hear Kolks In New Voik people live In nei'l.hitrlio"dn iind In coin Inunllles. The difference is lhat It Is B little more expensve to live n a community. That Is to say, you don't i-nnie as near getting your Is a little more cxpcnxlwi to live In a community ns you o when you live In a neighborhood. Hut nelghhur honds are aild-faehloned and so lai ella and I moved Into a community. We ore twenty-eight minutes from the tli-nat Uark Way and we have all the usual little community I riMt 1 1 u - lions like community rhurelies, danc ing classes , whooping coiigh, rliihs, movements and cosmic urges. I hey call It u communliy because one company owns all the buildings. The object Is to muke all the tenjuits love one another, and they Reneitrlly do--like wildcats. Jn a community the people all mingle together and give the disease epidemics a chance and the book agents ns well. When one woman buys a book every other woman buys one. When otin of the children tins scarlatina, nil the others have It. There Is nothing selfish about com munity tenants. TUey share and share alike. They are all Interested In the same thing lit the same time. Kven rent day gives them a common Interest. The first thing you do when you move Into a community Is to Join everything In sight, front reading classes to rheumatism, and, after you have done that, you begin signing sugscrlptlon papers. There is a col lector at the door every eight min utes. r'nr the first few days you answer the uuaser, and then, wnen you get in. I to community ways, ymi let her buss until the battery runs out. A Delightful Sameness. The Ladles Thursday club Is one of the thriving .Institutions In our community. It meets first In one apartment and then In another. The apartments are all Just alike and so are the meetings. The object of the organization, as nearly as we can find out, Is to hold a meeting every Week. The Thursday club held' an Im pnrtnnt meeting the other day. One of the women had braved the subur ban subway and the scalpers and had attended a theatrical performance in the city. The play had to do with pyscho-analysls, an entirely new JORDAN Sport Marine Made Car and rust. Two optional finishes JiriarclifT green and Liberty blue. Upholstered in special hand buffed genuine leather. Kim wind sport clock. Tonneau light. Em panelled in Honduras mahogany. The Sport Marine hangs low. Five wire wheels and five Silver town cord tires, Troy sport wind shield, tailored top, bumper, mo tometcr, Macbeth green visor lenses, curtains that open with the doors ull standard equipment. JJ!. . - tmnumn i to the Rescue l" Ihc modern thinking world and the women's clubs. It Ih an Indefinable something, as I get It- an IriMlitlous something which controls thi' liiner being of ihoae who are Hiitfieleiitly Intellectual to func tion on its plane. The woman came home from the show full of psycho analysis. Hho didn't know whut it was. lier husband claimed It was nothing but (imposition, which she Indlgatitly denied. Anyhow, Hhe was Just bubbling over with It. We dis cussed It thoroughly at the commun ity penny-ante club that evening; but while wo tried to deride It, we knew down In our hearts that we were In for un epidemic of psycho-analysis. I, nolla Has Queer look. Kvery day since the meeting of the Thursday club when hte women told Die m shout pnycho-analysls, Luell.i, my wife, has had a queer look. Hhe doesn't seem to keep her mind on our small, yet Important, Yiousnhold af fairs. For a woek she hasn't said a sarcastic thing about food. Hhe has been that way .before. I remember when the, Itablndranuth Tagore epi demic was running around and get ting nowhere In particular, l.nella bad the worst case of It In our block. Hhe Just seems to sit around with her pores open and expose hcrxuif Hut, strange as it may seem, she never caught the IMIJyaundayltls wnen u was running its Course, and I give her credit for that, (me morning before I left home, I.uella, who had been eating a p"V i ho-analytlcal brnakfust with her spoon polscd between her mouth and her plate for ten minutes at a time, and gazing at the picture of the watermelon and bunch of grapes on our dining room wall, suddenly s ild: "fo you know, I believe I'm psychic I am beginning to practice-psycho-analysis, I had been feeling queer for a day or two and now I; discerned the rea son. Hhe had been practicing on me. "What Is it?" I asked softly, so us to humor her. "1 don't know, exactly," she said, "hut we wilt know more about It when Mrs. Robinson gets the book over In the city. ' I am only a student, hut I am beginning to muster it in the lower and simpler degrees." "Don't you think it Is. .dangerous to monkey with until you know bow to handle It?" I asked nervously, laiclln Itrgln to Anly "I an. beginning to unttlyzo ifii Stock Car Price Nalusmgr. riiono "MS ct!rT'n!!iiyiW!!Hi,ii :iw'a .iVp;T'wrw - umii'nJU.MMUl&ulM linn . 1 '' inlU thought emotions.'' she replied. "Just sort of taking them apart to see what makes them sick," I sug gested, Jucularly. !. "lib, It s no joke. It's a very vital force," fi,(. said. "I can see that," I apologized, "l'sy ho-analysls Ignores sub stances.,' she said. "It bores right through solid bone." And she gave rue a pointed look, after which I ran for my train. I met Home 0f the boys at the sta tion "Do you know, I feel queer," aald Harding. "My wife has been look ing a bole through me. There Is something uncanny going on In my old brain pan My wife has got the pf-ycbo-analysls ' "Mine, too," said Bellalre. "She looked straight at me this morning , and naked me where I was last night anil l torn nor the truth. Can you bent that " "Wait till they get the book," said I Harding. "They are only amateurs 1 now." j n the station platform were nine i other men of our community. Kach ' was gazing far away across the Long fslund prairie. They were not con- ersing ns usual. "Iild you hear about Peters?" asked one of them, drawing near me. placing his hand over his mouth arid gazing apprehensively over his shoulder "No. What shout J'eters?" I asked. On the Wagon Now. "Tin went tin the water wagon yes terday. He ain't right. When a sin cere drinker like Vetera goes on the wagon, something's up " My Informant tapped his own head with his forefinger. "Pscho-anajysls, by marriage," he whispered. On the way to the station the next !' 1 t"7 .-, M. JS.IA "4 A -5 1 f.'. ,'v! r. 4J M i ,nr 7 T t , r Just Sold morning. I met Hellalre. lit looked frightened. l)o you know what I did yester day?" he asked. "I went and bought a 1 3.000 car. I said I would never buy one. I don't understand It at all." "Wag It the one your wife wanted you to buy last fall " I asked. "Hy George, the very one," he panted. "Well, by ." Those women have got their book," said Harding at the station. "By the way, I won't be able to play penny-ante this evening. I have got to take my wife Into town." It llczlns to Work. "That goes double," said Perkins. "I can't be there, either. I have got to take my wife to a show." "You've been Psvcholo analyzed." I "Never mind, you'll get It, too," growled Harding. "Not on ybur life." I said. Which goes to show that many a man speaks too hastily That evening at dinner I.uella said: "I have had the most peculiar sensa tion all day. I believe something pleasant is going to happen." "Maybe the kaiser is going to have the shingles." I suggested. l uclla Is Next. "Oh, no,' she suld. "1 seem to feel thHt something nice In going to hup pen to us. I feel that somebody is going to send us a player piano." "About when do you think they will send It?" "Tomorrow about 2 o'clock t0 be exact. I feel that It will bo the very sort of a player piano I have always wanted." I looked I.uella snuurely In the eye. "Have you been over to the city to day?" I asked. "I have," she said, without a FRICK-REID 1 Tea Truck Stake Body t Ton FEDERAL Bus Body 1 1-2 Too Truck Spedsl Body Ratcliff-Sanders Co. Automobile Department - E. 313 East Second Street Distributors for the FEDERAL Motor Track 'ir8!wnw.'M",W1 quiver. "Iid you call at the piano house?" I aaked. "I did." "Then you know to a certainty that the player piano will be here at I o'clock tomorrow." "Yes, 1. am oulte psychic about such things now." 'I believe it." I said. 'The piano company railed me up this afternoon and asked about the first payment." So, there really Isn't anything new about psycho-analysis, after all. It's the same old gag. Hoping you are the same, I re main, yours, ijhM. DID HE COUNT ITS TEETH? Justice of Peace Solves Problem by Brilliant Idea. A controversy over the ownership of a bantam hen has been giving residents of Petersburg consider able amusement. A few days ago a stranger entered a poultry house there and, seeing a bantam lien, wild he thought It was one which had been stolen from him a few nights before. He loft, and soon re turned with Thomas Whitney, town marshal, who had a search warrant and replevin for the hen. The paper was read to Rollln Hmlth, the poul try company's agent. When the hen saw Smith it ran to him, and he picked It up. Although Brnlth In sisted the hen was his pet, the stranger declared It had been stolen from him. Smith threatened suit for the hen, and told the marshal to guard It carefully until the day of the trial. The hen whs kept In the office of George Tucker, Justice of the peace, MOTOR TRUCKS The selection of your motor haulage equip ment is worth all the thought you can give it. Firms which have used Federal Trucks before ' and find that' they need more trucks buy more Federals. There is a Federal Truck to suit every busi ness, no matter how large or how small. If you are having haulage problems, let us go over them with you. B. CAYA. Manager until the trial was held. Ha was puzzled over the disposition of the case, until a happy thought struck him. He asked the two man how old the hen was. The stranger said hla was a year old, Smith said his was 2 years old. The Justice of the peace then called George Reeves and Fred Finney, experienced poul try men, who made affidavit that the hen was 2 years old. Tucker then decided that the hen belonged to Smith. Willys-Overland Co. II as Bowling League So great Is the Interest In bowlT Ing among the employes of the Willya-OVerland company that the 04 five-men teams which compose the bowling organization cannot ar range schedule to allow each team to play the other and decide the championship for the plant. The club la In charge of Overland men a'rd they have private alleys of the moat modern type installed at the factory. There are eight of these alleys. The pin setters are supplied by the Overland company. At the annual banquet given recently $4,000 In prizes was distributed., This money was ra'sed by the men through sale of advertising space In their annual program, from entrance fees and from money received from a charge fur games. The balance in the treas ury which was left after the award ing of prUea was contributed to the Toledo war chest fund. Charles Krantzenberger, a mem ber of the league, holds the distinc tion of having a perfect score of three hundred points. to SUPPLY CO. Phone 4338 Company,' Detroit, '.'lii.i.milM pii.i Standardized Tires in Export Trade The plan to standardize tires, in accordance with the request of th economy board of the Council of National Defense, for the purpose of simplifying and standardizing pneu matte automobile tire and rim sizes, after formal approval by the direc tors of National Automobile Cham ber of Commerce, was considered as It affected exports at meeting In the National Automobile Chambei of Commerce offices of the tire men and the export committee of the chamber, of which J. Walter Drake Is chairman. The export committee expresses appreciation of the advantages of standardization In tire sizes and ap proved the adoption of the plan aa to exports, subject to a guarantee on the part of tire manufacturers that stocks of the new tires will be carried and available in ull coun tries. To attain that end, the export committee will get from the prin cipal automobile manufacturers an estimate of the. number of machines likely to be sold in the different foreign countries during the year be ginning July 1, and. the tire manu facturers are to prepare a statement of foreiun branches and dealers where the new standards will be carried In stock. These lists will be compared and the tire manufac turers agreed that they will increase, their foreign stocks In places where they are carried as may be necessary to Insure a supply to car users, and also endeavor to keep up renewals of old sizes for cars now In use In foreign countries. 4.m 1 to 5 Tons "Of ft' 9 ""XYrJ 1 r1 Mich. lrJ ii....v sniSMSHiwilsiewsi '.'- IT