Newspaper Page Text
TULSA DAILY WORLD, MONDAY, OCTOBER1 4, 1920. I'n))1lhel I .err Moinlnit tn IihIIiik Hunitny BY TUB WORLD PUBLISHING CO. SllTf'rx lll"tti Tillp il"fll r Mcinil-i't iUlt'f Snr:Miitfn" in- ai'It ni'iiKvO uV ''nVOT.Af ftW MtiMUKIlM nr TIIK ASSnclATIll) I'lllWM Tli' Am HIM ITm In rrliil-l rntltl'! to lli! t! for kih.MIi of nil news iltiitrh tmlUnl In It or not oil..rwi imlllM In thin ll'r ami lo lh Inenl nei tMlili4htl Iff. in . f TfT , T" f - " BlIIICllll'HON HATH, IIY MXlt. IN ADVANOHl liMI.Y AND HI NI1AY. 1W OKLAHOMA I.IITHIDR Of OKLAHOMA fins Tf ....lldl) (inn yn.r .19 00 hli month . . Thru Monthn On Month .. . . . . t no .... . HU month I'tr Month I to .11 1IAU.Y ONLY ,,..( 60 on Ymr . .... a. to HI month .... I II i'er Month Hl'.tPAY ONLY ... .12 Tt Onn Ymr ,, , ... I. Is (In msnth On Ymr .... till tnonlhii ... 7htf Month On Alonth ... ..It M . . I.M . . .Ill finn Yar Hl Month rr Month .l 00 0 .11 .11 ivr Motilh HY CAIIIUKIl IN OUTHIDH fllWHH IMII.Y ANl Wt'NIlAV . Vrr Wttk I .1 I'er Mnnlli In Ailvnn.a " nim Yr :.'! JIY (JAItlUlill IN Tfl.H. MA.NII NI'IHNIIM AND HKII I'Oltlf. DAILY ANU Hl.'NOAY fr vvnk I .10 l'r Month. In Ailvnr , 7 I'll Tmi In Ailn. 11(100 riniNt. noiiii T i i t i r"Ht At. I. I A I. f I T V ',1'AHTM HNTM " ! A I' I'. It" Daily Biblical Quotuton ; The Lord Ih nigh unto nil them that mil Upon liltu, to alt Unit cull upon him In truth. Uvia. 1-tfi : IK. Ho bow hlri gracious ear, (i Wti novcr plead In vain; Tvt wo intint wall till lio nppcar, .And pruy anil pray nKiiln. Unto then. O Lord, tin 1 lift un my soul. L'Tiitt. 26:1. Pretty nearly everybody has hold u conven tion or a reunion thin full excepting llm auto mobile thluvcs, rtiul Jerry Hand Intliuiitcii thoy nrq preparing for agrun'd get-together meeting. TUUSA WANTS IIAHIMNO. Thnso having 'In cllnrgo tho Oklahoma tour of Senator Harding nra standing very much In their own light If they do not arrungo ft Tulsa appearance for lllin. Tho splendid reception, given Governor Cox wan to u vury considerable extent tho outward expression of grutlludo for the' 6iurtcy shown Tulsa. 1 Tho citizenship of thn city, however, not, only deslrcn tho opportunity to ehow n similar regard for thq ropulillcnn nomlnoo, but 'fcclH Hint It nlioulil bo accorded thnt prlvllt'RC. It l pointed nut that no logical rrnnou hiut been offered to explain why tho republican nomtneo tins nut boon pormltted to deliver nn nddroiw hero. Ho comes to tho ntato with ampin tltuii for, the Tulita appearance. If tho Oklahoma City meat InR Li, to bo at iilght then tli3 candldato could vory ennlly give Tuli a forenoon appearance, as did Col, Hoosovclt In 1013 when covcrlnc t)ia Btato, In a ntuto Bo largo nn Oklnliomii It In not poselblc to Necurv ndcquntti rrnultn from h slnKle Hpeech; and It Itf reiinlrliiR too' great nn outlay of (lino and money on tho part of tho yotcrri In tnnko Jt necemmry for thu brent imijorlly to trnvnl'iutlf ncrom tho state In order to hear tho candidate. Tho' World doen not know, whether or not thoro In tho u!lhtent posHlblllty of Henator Hard ing bclne Mfcurcd for Tulna, but It docit know that If Oioro In n Ronulno dcNlro to HCcuro from lil.i vlnlt the greatest poiolblo benefit for Ilia re publican ciiuho n Tulsa appcaranco. In Impera tively necessary. rrudonco alono requires thnt tho Cox mooting lioro bo nnmvrrcd by a larger nnd moro rnthus larttla Harding meeting. Tulsa t.tnnil ready tu do her part in this an nil other renpcc(s; so doos oaateru Oklahoma. A few hundred voters tuny go from enstorn Oklaiionu to( hear the candi date at Oklahoma City. Twenty-flvo thousand would hear him In Tulsa. Tho World In thin mutter trprukri no less for Tulsa than tho republicans of eastern Okln homo. Let u good reason bo offered for not per mitting Harding tu appear In Tulsa or glvo him a Tulsa date. .f ! IHtAKI" DAY IN TULSA Thla is Wrnko Day. It Is altogether fitting that norvlces comtnemorutittg thn "bringing In" lot tho first oil well t-hould bo hold In Tulsa. Tulsa has cotno to bn tho petroleum capital of tho world. Via stale a fact and not a flguro of mpcoch. Westward thq star of petroleum empire lias taken Its course until it hovers over a clly jmuny hundreds of mllcx distant from tho sccno of that first daring endeavor which mnrked tho ("Birth of tho world'u greatest Industry. What Druko'8 dreams were, ns ho Improvised ;iiia drilling rig to boro Into the bowels of tho earth In search of "rock oil" wo cannot know. Hut whatover they were, however wild they may have, been, they fell far short, wo may very well liollove, of tho actual consequences which fol lowed mvlftly on tho hceUi of his wonderful 'nclilevcmcnt. 1 Ho doubtlerti had faith lu tho possibilities of (tho thing ho was doing: It was beyond him to loron glimpse tho fa t that ho was ushering In nn industry that w i'd ch.tngo tho vory fnco of (civilization; on wbuh would depend, within n 'few decndeti, comnieroc, indtmtry, agriculture foad oven war Itnilf. Hut for Drake there would be today no Inter inn! combustion engine. To get tho full Import lof that ntatemcnt you must tlilnk. lo you know that thq petroleum Industry only began to enter JLi truo domain with tho Invention of thu In ternal combustion onglnti; that but tor this In 'Vantlon potrolourn would today bo vcry much of a Eldq lino 7 That Is true. Drake, tho dreamer, whoso sanity was bus poctod by sonio of hlu fellows, drilled In Uie first of! well; but ho UktwUo discovered Plthole, sis teruvllle, Oil Clly, Lima, Hoblnson, Indepen donee, Uartlesvllle, Tulsa. Klcctr.i, Rplndletop, Hnaldton, Hunger, Caspar and overy other oil pool and oil town that hun been or will be ills. covered. lilm Tiitun n.ua ...i.t. , . ...m... uiiu v in upprupnaie Indeed lh.it services lift hnld hero In conimnuin ml Ion of llio miii n mill event which gnvo thin city It crowning glory, tho world ltd grratist brmlo Industry. ' UHVH II ITI.I TIM" SALVATION AU.MV. In giving lis unstinted mid uii(iiallflcd up provul to tho movement which begins today In securo funilM for tho election of a Halvntlon Army resctio and iimlernlly home, The World Is entirely dnliMwtent. The opposition of this pnpor to llm "drive" Is well known. It was iinn of tho very first publlelty nxenls to rnlso Its volco In determined opposition to that custom which sprang up during the war nnd loni) ago outlived Its unefulneiw),. If, Indeed,. It over had a porlod of actual tiiofulni'iti. Hut there are tuovemontn which should com mand tho support of the public. This Halvntlon Army movement Is one of them. It Is it Tulsa Institution and those familiar with tho local sit uation Insist thnt (hero Is it genuine field hero for nuelt nn Inntltutlon. Tho men who havo taken churgo of tho affair nro Ttilm men, giving their time for a good rntisc. It them be nccordnd a warm nnd fruitful welcome. If part of 'VMlrh'o business men can afford to glvn their tlmo In solicitation certainly llm othor part should bo willing to respond to the rcfiuosU for fund. Let's build Jli'o rescue and maternity homo. mil cox's iirri(!ijiT uolh Wo havo censed to feel censorious townrd.i Mr. Cox. it la possible, to sympathlm with hint, for truth to tell ho In filling, or attempting to fill, a most difficult role. Tho popular verdict was mado up nnd rcadv to deliver before tho two conventlotiH woro held In dune. Tho task fell to Mr. Cox tn .reopen thn ensn and change that veidlct. Whether ho tins conducted his caifo In tho Vest possible man ner Is a matter of Judgment after ull thu facts' uru understood, Of course, wo 'do not think ho Iiiia; wo think ho mado nn Irrotrlovublo mis take nnd nn altogether iinnccemary mistake when ho deliberately took Wllsonlsm on his back In that most amazing irtateinent, "What ho promised I will, If elected, tu the full' extent of my abllllyVlollver." Yet ho hud Wllnonlsrn on his hands whether ho took It on his back or not. Tho administra tion had seen to thnt In tho platform It gave him, In addition, tho logic of thu situation, precedent, everything In politico, required that ho defend his parly. His pnrty and its' Imme diate record being Indefensible, Mr. Cox kiw that his only chunco wan lu creating a diversion. Hcnco thn churgoji of campaign finance cor ruption; henco tho old play on progressive vs. reactionary: hence thq platitudes, mcunlnglcxs anil contrary to tho fuels, concerning tho effi cacy of the leuguo to bring about universal and lasting pence; henco tho appeal to projudlce; hence everything and anything but a courageous dliiounslon of thu Issues and un able defense of seven and a halt years ot tho worst mal administration o.' thu government In Us history. It Is easy to assert that thu democratic nom lnoo has accomplished nothing by thntactlcu ho choso. What could ho 'havo accomplished by different tactics1? Tho uttorney for a cllo.nl notoriously without character Inevitably seeks tn osall thu character of tho plaintiff. That sort of defenso Is as old ns thn eternal hills. Whether It Is creditable or not Is a different mutter. There Is always thn conifclousness that It probably will avail nothing. Hut It Is tho only defeimo and therotoro must ho employed. Unfortunately for Mr. Cox hq has very largely forfeited thu good opinion of tho country. Ho Is suspected. Wn mean by that this his hoifvMy and sincerity, morn than his ability, are undor suspicion. Tor ho appears to bo seeking authority through misrepresentation and eva sion. The liquor question Is a direct point In Usun. Mr, Cox was tho carcfully'tiurtured candldato of tho liquor Intermits. Up to tho point of nomi nation there wiih no concealment of tho fact. It was1 rather advertised. Hut after thn nomi nation u miioko hereon was thrown out. Mr. Cox himself hocuiitu enigmatic In Tils statements with reference to thu prohibition Issue. A gen uine effort was mado by his creators to maku htm appear as a rigid prohibitionist in those sections where prohibition Is popular. Yet tho facts are a matter of easily ascer tained record. Mr. Oeorgo T. Carroll, president ot the liquor Interests, writing members of his association under date ot July 'i'i, mys among other thlngH: The nomination of (lovernnr Cox of Ohio for the presidency by tho democrats Is a big victory for our Interests aitd It can bo attributed to n great degree to the activity of our trade organisation her In New Jer sey and throughout tho naon. Oovornnr Cox Is a pronounced wet nnd he can bn relied on to approve an amendment to thn Volstead act as suggowtcd above. It la now up to our trade organ Int lions to stand squaVoly behind Cox uiiil Itoosevelt. This Is ' going to bo tho greatest political fight in tho 1 history of tho United States. in a second letter Mr. Carroll urges cam paign contributions" so that wo may know at once Just what our resourced are." In view of this iinquoMloned record, and In view of tho fact that the liquor Interests gave permlsuion to Mr. Cox to campaign "dry" In dry territory without offending them, Isn't the democratic candidate's role one to excite pity? Wo think It Is, Not many genuine men would havo undertaken It under any conditions. X- Barometer of Public Opinion An lniproslon of WIUou. Editor World. A super-self rntlmatu and equal selfishness, aro conspicuous' shortcomlugi of Mr. Wilson, Close up or from afar, self looms largo in tho picture tho president has painted ot himself ho Is pre-eminently and exclusively firm 'everywhere and always In his ttuto-portralturo. Ho fell out with and fired two of his three secretaries of state, llrynn, a world way showor In the eudlees direction of altlulsUo progesslvlsm, and Lansing, an old political school man. Hoth had too much i'lt espect to permit him to mako of them mere puppets of hlu administration, ,tnd they went. In Judgment and execution from beginning to end- ho was the cabinet, congress nnd nil llm peoplo. All of their parts rtd function. In thn government he iiinalgmnnted Into his own self. nccrorlltfil authority. He thuswlse wrecked hit party and nil but brought tho country to thn brink of ruin. No highly did he regsrd the prowess of his personality, thnt he In a forthwith sort of way projected 111 prfNence Into the midst of tin) congress, whenever he saw fit to bespeak thnt tneek .and lowly amenably -n good deal nfter thn mien .mil trimmer, we Imagine, that were peculiar t" him with bis school hoys III the class rootd, Washington. Jefferson, Lincoln mid tho rest of hlu predecessors went Inapt Indeed, com pared tn himlf, in the fins and complex nrt of human gin Turnout LIlHe i,wit to hint what they mild or did. They nil needed mid hroded the comnitiiilon as guldi' and guard. He did neither, lie wns n fire with the dmil of gov ernment b self determination, not of the gov erned, but of himself. Quite a substitution think you7 Mow does It square with the since nnd nplrlt of thn limes'' He made ballast of his cabinet, roiigresM, people, chart and compass, and east th rn overboard Hi mounted the bridge of the ship of state, and hailed her full tltt, hoaiWon, by the Intuition of his Idealism only. , He felt linrn to command, and never to (ibnsel Ho stood glnnt-llke, thinking nnd acting alone in th wonderful altitude of him self, making American policy at, homo nnd abroad along the Hum of new and unheard of patterns, With one foot on the senate nttd tho other on the hums-, he looked down from his towering self ebivfilloli upon them, while his hvrculr.tu figure i'Iipvh thn sky line of n wonder Hlrlcktn world. Whether It wero wise or expodlent. w re neither hero nor thern It was spei'taclil.ir ard foe him enough. The war diverted' the popular inltul from tho sinister nlgnlflcauce of li all The cabinet became but n name Of not anything Tho people sent him n congress, brand new ami freirfi, from themselves, which enacted 12 40 wheat' raising the president 40 cents. He know and did better than they with his inflnlHy Winn little veto. He .struck thn price dntfu to il and (ben gavo It an ncrobntlo holn ttt 12 20. The wnr prlco of wheat must bn regulated, else the farmers might profiteer. Hut thn prlco ot sugar -Oh' you sweet sugarspread Its shiny wlngii and flew upward, us doth tho sparks, without limit. Tho Mignr folks were too patriotic to profiteer tho farmers wero long on cash and shoit on conscience, In the executive cMlmntlon.1 .nessers. nprecKies and Havemeyer, with wht miiglo did you savor tho sugar Industry that It beenmn so seductive to tho ptesldentlal favor? Neptoslm wim transfigured from Its' stain of guilt to thn snowy whltrnesa 0f nngeltc! virtue, when ho chose his prospective son-in-law for federal treasurer, ,iind when tho rela tionship was conmiuimated, ho nevertheless kept the honor and emolument of this high office In tho family selfish, wo say, and shifty, loo, Tho war ovor, thn preliminaries of pearo were such that of all-the millions of men, young and old, In the sense and nrlenco of statecraft, none bit hlmiMlf could ho fnd who wns equal In honoV to the trust, or In (ihlllty to tho task Selecting only those of his exclusive liking, he left his white house homo, and sailed nway Ivlth his sntcllltcM, No iajesty, oriental or else where, ever traveled In greater nnd moro ex pensive I'tnto. No ruler -was more, regal In the assumption of power, or In thn freedom and Independence of its exercise, than was tho presl. dent of tho United States. In and about every thing ha acted with an amazing autocracy In tho name of democracy. Ho signed us up to sink and mix ourselves In the ferment of Hiiro penn distension nnd wnr, and to sponsor with our sons and sinews, a peaco ns wide ns the world. His mistake ivnn very great. - Ho su perseded, without tho tremor of an eyelash, the domei'ilc ond foreign policy of this country, ns fixed by the constitution and forecast bv Wash ington. A J32,fi00 laundry bill was a- trifle com pared to the cost of social fetew with which ho Advertised abroad tho plain, sweet and simple American taste and traditions. Ills two trips and Intermediate sojourn, hobnobbing with Im perial majesties, cost uh unnecessary multi millions. Who cares for expenses' when they lire out nothing? Certainly not the president. Hearts nnd homes wero riven and rendered ilesolnto with grief over war's bereavements, and he coincidental! loaded himself with mag nificent presents from royal hands. In viola tion of fundamental law,- and camo homo nn he wont. Is ho selfish unto tho Inst farthing? Think of tho billions spent on tho wnr. Strike out blllluns for Inevitable waste, nnd then stand aghast at tho nvalanchlun squander. Awo trloken amidst the mountain of democratic prodigality, nnd bent low nenth ponderous taxes, Just listen to tho reverberating hollow echo of tho Cox cry for economy In administra tion of tho government. What nn Insolent morkory It is, blending ns tt does In tho wniiu breath with hl prnlmi of tho president nnd Wll sonlsmiJhcn glvo ear to his commendation of democracy as personified by tho president, for Its progrontvlsm, and his cuitstla condcnmiia tlon of the republicans1 for their conservatism. Tho thought will conto, as naturally as light from tho sun that tho democrats have prog ressed entirely too fnst and far In tho extra vagant expenditure of the public monies, but for which tho country would bo billions of dollars better off and that what It needs Just now moet of nil In a return to tho saving grace and business llkn management of tho republi can party. Wilson's greatest Joke and Jonah to his parly Is his self-ordalned league of na tions bin last and least onn was his contribu tion of f 0 0 to Its campaign fund, lly prefer ment of his party ho wl havo had honors und perquisites abovo compare, and $400,000 in salary. Wo repent, his gift to Its campaign Is a ghastly Joins Had ho beon a tltho as con servative with thn war fundi of tho people as he Is with his own, the democratic candidate for his succession woulCMiot havo been, as ho In, kii utterly shorn to tho storm ot popular disapprobation, which, according to tho polltl eal weather man, Is booked to break on Cox, November 2. KHANKLlN I'. SMITH. Hapulpa, Sept. 2. a kaV and A HOOK (Copyright, 1020, Kdgnr A. Ouest.) Old llrown wiih onn who used to say.: "Much like a book Is every day A book you wnut to read clear through And find Just what Its peoplo do; The story starts and caows doubt, Hut you must know how it turns out; The hero gels In trouble, and Appears to lose his sweetheart's hand. Hut In the closing pages, you rind happlnesn and murrlage, too." t like his notions. Kvory ,y I start a story Just that way. And us 1 stand before nty door, I wonder Just what Is In store What Joy or sadness shall bo mlno Hefore I rcath thu closing, line? What new adventure slmll 1 make? Wb.1t different road bo mlno to t.ko? I.tut though tho writing may be bad, 1 trust the ending will bo glad. Now here's x new book Just begun This morning with tho rising sun! Hero wnlt perhaps adventures bold, A thrilling tale that must bn told, Someone perhaps muy rise to f.imo And I may proudly speak his name, Across the current of my Itf o May blow the changing winds of strlfo, And I may clearer come to see Thu answer to Ufa's mystery. i With interest tho tale Is filled; Men dream nnd toll nnd plan nnd build, And ever with the human race Homo wondrous change Is taking place. I want to live this glad day through To know what friends of mlno shall do, To learn, where now I iftand In doubt, Just how tho problem will work out To read this book ot Joys and woes, And know tho story to ltd closo, GRAND AND (Coxtrrllhti 19201 tolm Hull, III Well known prolftlonal man Jaltr, hat taken a manilatm ovr Mttopotamim and htr immn$a oil and olhtr rtiourctt. Thm Afja pofariun ar fitting dttptrattly. Spiho Ilogan war caught rod-liandtd latt night whilo mandating a hout on tho boulevard. Ho had mandated two bagt of til iter and m bo of Jewel: lie one eerved threo year for petit mandating. A lone train mandator tueeett fully held up the Wonderland Limited jutt outtide of Kantae City latt night. Forty thoutand dollar were mandated from the exprett eafo and two molten ger were futally mandated? The Promoter's Wife By JANE PHELPS CHAITHK VII. It may require moro to make one man or woman feel Joy or pain than It does another, but tho Joy or pain they feel Is about tho same. So It I wero happy in niy,cngngnmetjt, I was probably no happier than ' others havo been, yet It seemed to mo that no pun ever huil been bo happy as I, In those busy, summer months pre ceding my marriage. , I sewed lndefatlgubly. Of neces sity thero was no elatiorato trousseau, but what I had was good ot thn klird, and as every stitch was put In wttji a thought of love, I am Biire no brldo over hud u moro satisfactory trous. senu. How kind nnd faithful mother Was. She pinched and saved In every way. that 1 might, not go to my hus band unprovided for. Father, too I never knew until long afterward- Insisted that his old overcoat was Noll's aunt and undo had breakfast. leather mado all sorts of fun bo causo wo called It "breakfast." It was 12 o'clock. "I had to wait until this hour for my breakfast I'd get a divorce," ho told mother. I suspect he said It moro to cheer her up thnn for any other reason. Mother couldn't hide her feelings ns well as he could, and her .eyes had been full of tears nil tho morning. I didn't really feel I was Nell's wife, however, until wo wero along on tho train, spee'dlng away from all I knew and loved. Then I Just laid my head on his shoulder nnd cried a little. Not because, I was not happy: I guess It was because I was happier than I ever had been, and because I felt a bit of sndnessN along with my linpplncss becuuso of father and mother. Hut Nell was ,gond enough to last through another to mo so senMbly winter so that I might havo another dres", although ho had fully Intended to buy a new one. Women und money women nnd money' Had 1 realized how they wero to bo my undoing how my very Ufa wns to revolve nbout them I should visit us.' that I told mo of tho flat-hunting; but ho made a very fuco over It, so I sort of Imagined ho had called It "fun" to cheer ma up. Hut ho had had his raise. Wherl ho told the firm hnvo been willing to bo clothed In married, they sackcloth and considered myself for of 125 as a wedding present. tunnte If only I might havo held tho lovo of my husband. Tho weeks flew by. On the 18th of September. Nell came. Wo wero mnvrled tho following day lu tho little church where I had been bap tized, and whero I had taken my first communion. Thn wholo village at tended my wedding. No church In vitations wero necessary. Hut after ward, nt tho house, only tho minis ter, two of tnv most Intimate girl friends nnd Mr and, Mrs Carter I felt awfully rich and Important. How wo wero to spend such n Bum, seemed to bo a vorv prodigious ques tion. Wo should bo really quite In fluential members of society, with all that at our disposal. When I said something of this to Nell, ho only laughed and replied, "Now York Isn't Huntington, dar ling. Money doesn't go very far In thn big town." I laughett at him when he talked that way. 1 knrw mother never hud had u tltho of that to llvo on. yet wo had always been comfortable. When I said so to Nell ho told mo: "You peoplo pay no rent; they burn gaH and koroscn lumps. Thoy havo no car fares to pay. Why, dear, ono-could llvo better tn Huntington on J50 a month than In New York on three times that sum," Hut ho also told mo. that tho firm who em ployed htm woro very kind to him, that the, head of trto firm wns an old friend of his father's and that was tho way ho happened to bo with them. "Thoy will glvo mn another advance ns soon as they think I de sorvo It." ho had said with nil tho optimism ot happy youth. I havo other schemes In my head, too I shall havo plenty of money some day." "Of course they will! If they didn't you might leavn them and go with someone efte. They wouldn't let you do that." Such a speech showed my faith In Noll, but proved nlso how IIHIq I knew ot business; and of hpw easily a- man could bo replaced un less ho wero very' much out of tho ordinary which Nell was not, at that time, although no onn could havo Inducedmo to believe that thero ever lived n more valuahlo asset to a firm than my husband, Nell Forbes. (Tomorrow A Honeymoon Spent at Atlantic City.) The Young Lady Across the Way , I A recently Invented cream whip per can bo fastened to the bottom g'f a bow) that It cannot slip oit. Until title to tho Island ot Spltz bergen was turned over to Norway thnt enltnfrv linrl nn nlnl ,lnt..ilta The yourg lady ncroas thn way tays her father regards the financial a new rnmhh.nd exenvAiln nn.i conditions ns rather unsettled and loading machine doesut' expect to Jake on any now work of 20 men investitures until after election, used. PETIT MANDATES nThCblroTrltraiM. Johnny Crapoud, th oxptri French mandator, hat tahon inandat ovor Syria, although tho Syriant ar fighting dtttrmirftdly to preterits their ' dttormination. Mr. Jam J. lit gift, a prominent rotident of thit city, warn mandated latt night at an alley near hie home. After toting hie watch and pocket book he was mandated aver the head with tho butt of a gat. . Mr. C. W. ReAthogg, who hat taken a fancy to the anceetral home of the Widow Perhine, hat occupied tho place by virtue of a eelf-impoted mandate. The widow and children will bo ol lowed to work for him and live in the cellar. Bennies' Notebook Mrs. Jandcrs camo to see ma yes tldday aftlrnoon, being a. short lady wi'h pointy fett, arid mu brawt down her new hat ifnd Mrs. Jandcrs sed, O, Izzent that perfeckly ex- quttlc, I think thata simply ador- auie, u izzeni mat just too atmiioot ly cunning for words, O thata simply me uaiiugest tiling i ever saw. Wlch my cuzzln Artie was there, and mo nnd him stirtcd to glccol and couldcnt hardly stop, ma saying Hcnny, Artie, wat aro you glggullng UDOU17 Nuthlng, I sed. 'and Artie sed We're Just glggellng. Wlch we kept on doing on account of tho longer you glggel tho harder It Is to stop, espeshllly wen thern 2 of you and after Mrs JanderH went homo ma sed, Now arcnt you boys ashamed of yourselves carrying on iiko mail and I sed. Well gosh. O. ma. Mrs Jandcrs tawked so funny how could wo help it? I wunt you to understand peoplo havo a perfct rlto to talk tho way so kind. Ho talked tncy picasc sea ma. ana I sed, well about having them I C5, gosh, ma, jven the way she twked soon was smiling. Ho fun wo should have and ma sed, Corteny, and I don't want to heer nnothcr word nbout It, Wlch me owl Artiq kopp on nwk- ins '.lint way all aftlrnoon, and Artlo stayed lor suppir nna who i wns eat ing my mash potatoes, I sed, O, theso mash potatoes aro too perfeck ly wunderflll for werds thyro simply Jest too bcwtiflll. , Thu dooso you say, sed pop looking that no was lo no hnd given him a ralso serprlzed, and Artlo sed. And O, deer theso peez, theyro simply almost too divine, and I sed, And, O, sutch moot Us Just too absllootly pcrfeck. i Heer, hecr,hoy, hay, Bed pop, cut that sort of tuwk out lmmeodllly, and I said, Well O, pop, gosh, ma sed that was tho way to tuwk, and pop sed, Lillian, did you over say that? Dont pay onny auction to him, Wlllyum, I mcerly sed It was all rlto for Mrs. Jandcrs to tuwk like tha if sho wunted, sed ma, and pop sed Its not even frr oil nlte for a parrlt up a tree to tuwk llko that and 1 don't want to heer cny moro of It. Wlch bn dldent. Abe Martin "I don't know whether I'll register October 4th or nqt. It all depends on what they're wourln." said Mlns Tawney Applo, t'day, Don't it feel giod t' commence on other things . Is said to do tho with tools formerly arior you rinally got throug fumb llt' an' mcasuV with a toastln' ear?. The Horoscope Monday, ocionnt I ,020 (Copyright, 1920, by the ct'Uf Newspaper Hyndlr, i e.; Many kindly stars guide i ,cn. nd women this day, according i a,t,to. ogy. Mercury, Uranus, Vmn and Jupiter aro ull In benefit aspect. Ncptuno Is faintly adverse. it Is a time for pushing a'l enter prises, since tho planets n,,, ,vi cn orgy, foresight and coiimec f Jr vCn. J turcs largo and small. ' Mercury gives promise. Cf lh greatest possible success f jr wi aev- ur is mrgeiy iiuvcrusuu a d s, mi to forecast tiew power fu ,ta.. und publishers'. Personal publicity she ..Id be tl. pcclally beneficial during 9 ,.. tlon of tho stars, but win an exaggeration or p.isn , i, seta, tlon will avail little, for 1'rai g. Intuition and clear undent' i J. ,B Thero Is an aspect said to b t lr ttcularly favorable to alt tl.' at.,j. tlons and aspirations ot won r. who will benefit greatly from the wcr of tho planet that rules th- mu m... scicus mind and so nuUKcns hu has been called tho sixth sense During this rulo tho mind ehiulil bo particularly keen nnd nlert, cptn to urgument und ncnsltlvo la cmo tlonnt appeal. Orators should mako the most ot this direction of tho stars, whl h teems to prcsagn supremo su, cm for mora than ono woman speaker. A reform movement led by women and nationwide In Its scope will lo somo way affect thu iir'lsti, lif0 ot tho people, tho scorn prophc j, This movement will not be nrpar ent until after election, it u tor, cast, when all political barriers will disappear and tho greatest strength of tho women of tho country tan bo mobilized. Vonua is In an aspect today that given promise ot high public office for women, but there Is also a sign read as presaging great social as well na professional achievement for young girls. Colleges will claim such great quotas of women that thero will be concern on tho part of men lest tho universities bo feminized, tho acers declare, for Jupiter and Venus aro in nn ospect which proml&is great educational ambitions. While Jupiter foreshadows intel lectual benefits thero Is an unpc, t that seems to promise sucr ss ot beauty for tho women of Amrrli a. l'ersons whoso hlrthdatc It is hae tho forecast of a succcsnful year In which money will rapid y Inc-cas. Tho young will court und all ages will bo lucky In love. Children born on this day havs tho augury of success In life. They should rlso rapidly In any vocation they ndopt and should bo fortunate In murrlage. SAILING VKSSUfvS TO STAV. Culled Hack by tho War, They Arc to Continue With Us Now, During tho early years of t)icv:?r many un old windjammer, long laid up in port, took tho sea again to the profit of her owner. Craft almost forgotten appeared In American har bors, whero of sailing snlpi tha schooner alono was a frequent slfht brigs and brlgantlnes, barques an4 nondccsrlpt rigs hard to name Any thing that would float wns at a pre mium. Often theso old-tlmera suc ceeded better In escaping the cub mnrlnes than tho Jaunty modern lin ers; the bigger game most attracted tho hunter. Stanch enough most of them were, too stancher than somo of tho rosty-sldcd tlnpots has'i ly thrown together In the sudden emergency. Steam might hao con quered, but sail hud a last gasp or two. Yea, now that tho emergency Is ended, thero aro slgnR that sail Is to enjoy a long resurrection. Tho num. ber of sailing ships remains much larger than It was before the war It has been discovered that In somo circumstances they aro moro dcslr ublo than steamships. Tho point with tho latter has been regularity and speed. Even an old tramp knocking off eight or nine knots an hour seemed prcforablo to tho fast est of Hchooncrs or barquentlnes, frc eucnt victims' of head winds or calm". The famo ot tho old clipper fhips. with records often comparablo to thoso of tho ordinary steamship of a generation ago, did not suggest the return to tho, conditions that pro duced them, ' Tho high prlco of coal and tho nuxiuajry engine, However, nro Print ing tho windjammers Into great fa vor again. They cowt less than ever to build, In comparison with steam vessels, and they can bo operate moro cheaply It Is going to ho a long time before oil supplants ceal generally, and meanwhtlo tho saillns ship, especially with an auxiliary cn glno to drlvo her along at six or seven knotii when the breezo dies down, can hold her own with tho low powered cargo steamship In tho stiff breezo tho old cllppem would do from thlrteon to fifteen knots. Tho Scandinavians In pir tlcular nro going In for sailing ships with motor onglncs, nnd this compe tition with steam Ik by no means negligible. Thero Is more than ro mnnco In tho return of sail: thero Is good business. Philadelphia In qulror. J A separate container for too k features a now glass pitcher for coll drinks. A substltuto for absorbpnt cotton has been mado In Kuropo from p. no cellulose. An Inventor has notched tho inner sides of clothes pins to Increase thr.r grip. Promoted by tho Jnnaneso navv, successful oil well drilling Is under way In Formona. Tho rims of tho rollers of new roller skates ran bn replaced with new ones when worn. Sweden Is manufacturing lubri cating oils from liquid rosin at a numbor of lumborlng plants. A sheirs attachment for slip Joint Pliers that will cut fairly heavy metal has been Invented. Bolivia Is to have Its first mill 'nr tho production of woolen nnd cotton textiles and yarns. To make a wntch servo ns n clock a stand holding It behind a magnify ing glass has been designed. . .T.j iv,. Ihev will imps ere rfiie-'i . become x subntU''tn fn- tobacco la, process Invented In Kuropo. c