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EL PASO HERALD EDITORIAL and MAGAZINE PAGE Wednesday, Sept. 10, 1919. PERSHING AND HIS WELCOME HOME; i , . . - -. t I a. I I I ft n jrnTM,l A X T THE RETURN OK A AMUKlUAiN pEK. JOHN J. PERSHING has returned from the war 3 . . it.. MMnHnfl that anv JiU 13 ICl&JCCO IW i-wj-. j Miv tv, rtt f tli A t? V. Mi. Therefore, he should not get so much applause. Doubtless Pershing feels about the same way and would so express himself. However, he did several things, big things, of his own motion. He stood oui nrmiy against 'other allied commanders in insisting that the United States of troops fighting in their own way, whereas, the allies r . . 1 1 ,1 ii..:. Aaerfcaa could ever hop to receive. So great were the masses cf people who thronged to see him, so varied the incidents that marked his home coming, so spontaneous the aediira with which he was eeted, that the simplest narrative of them becomes almost epic I W6nU have used onr troops to feed them through their The reception to Gen. Pershing naturally appeajea to own machines as replacements tor meir own mmmMus. . :. . l . .t,..r He toot a stand avainst aH European military opin ion in the matter of conducting the war. He held that trench wan are was an impossioie stalemate ana mai m , - - ... i - .a " only way 10 win it uie American way ai. in. w x- iv. i. v .... t th,r nlan rnit lOiCC UiC WO UUl UlLU U1G J u. J-" - required high courage for it meant that thousands, per- Raps HUIlUiCUS UL UlVli5iOtL5, Ul UCS iiiuat, a- oa.v.uw the endeavor. And one cf the fine things about Pershing 19 Uiai JJO AM-i a n,twu vb-u-u o. v - j - who died, whether he knew them personally or not His way was wc wuuuu way. j.i aukMutu m.m.u..v the indomitable spirit and the superior ability and endur- lL. 4 .aUi' Te-5 vi Avs wfifl Tl9 rATl considered impregnable were broken, the enemy was beaten thm fmariHaUen He came heme after 27 months' absence ia which he led to victory the largest army the United States had ever assembled. Moreover,, he had commanded, from first to last, in a way to win the admiration of his fellow countrymen. He had proved quick of decision, ac curate of judgment, inflexible in the discipline he imposed on his army and on "himself as much as on any of his officers and men, hard as steel in time of battle, but ever considerate of the men who served under him; grave and 5tera, but never arrogant, never brutal and never blatant. Gen. Pershing knew he was to be welcomed home, and undoubtedly he had somewhere abont him, when the Leviathan docked, a program of the places he was supposed ji. v ... n tfe .idflresses he was to make, what places he was to see and when and where he j Tint nnAonbtrflv. while thus informed in -advance in a ; u Terv hieh and mav carry him even higher. He has general way of what was coming, he was nearly carried off j jeen ambitious to make a name for -himself and his de- srmans were making j One of Pershing's outstanding characteristics has been (his personal ambition. Ambition plus ability has carried a ;um wtv hih and mav carrv him even hizher. He has and the tremendous fervor of their cheers. El Pasoacs;er one 0f the finest things be did in France was, in who know well the grave and rather reserved Pershing the jjonr 0f grave peril when the Germa: reiliia he must have been overcome in New York when . y, r SPIijiZ drive on Paris last year, t he stood up in his car and swung his cap about his head lnijj-ytjon to Jead an American army to victory. And so responding to the roar of the multitude. And no wonder. ne wcnt to Gen. Foch, who was then merely the com Ho ether" American has had such a welcome. President , m3caelincjlie 0f the French army, and offered himself rH7cI anvthinr that rivaled it. It was, ,11 j.:. cmnmand to be used in whatever way the inn tn not to rum. ever so sHthtly, the head of any one French commander mizht choose to meet the crisis. The The Days of Real Sport By Briggs (Copyright Neir Toiic Triboaa lae.) It is characteristic of Pershing that he has not losfc his perspective. HaS not nearly 2,000,000 of the best and bravest fighting men in the world carried out his-battle orders and exceeded his orders, achieving more than even he, with sublime faith in the ability of the American sol dier, dared hope, there would have been no thunderous, applauding welcome home for Pershing. He knows that well and has kept the thought with him from the moment pf his debarkation. , "I accept this in the name of the brave fellows who went over and served to the best of their ability, making our success possible," he said after the first greetings were over. Interviewed later and unable or unwilling to answer the questions put to him, Gen. Pershing fell back on his hobby and said: "The American doughboy is the finest soldier in the world and it didst take the Germans long to find it out. nr. v... . ijft yrnharJtr of the Tjeculiar Qualities of nc uvmuu f - J , t ... the American ngnung man, dhi jm aiw - . ... - 1 . t IT.. Amni4 -rTtAl. J ICm.H milnnnm.t w.wvw .w . j . . ;.Klr V . TwlnKff nf all h! nlane and hopes, but he thought first of the welfare of the cause for which the allies were struggling and he was willing to sacrifice himself and his men in that fight. Happily, it was not necessary to make the sacrifice. The Pershing career which Americans have watched closely has been a military career but it has been at tended by the constant cropping out of incidepts which have revealed qualities marking Pershing as a really great American. "Put Up Or Shut Up." Wilson. ANCIENT chronicles relate that king Canute of Britain A -r-ot vn" citifr nf tfi Atlantic tide by the use of sounding phrases. No doubt the long tooic counsel wim nis wise men uu ati iwim v ing the orderly course of nature. It is likely that doubt of th naffTT nf vinir Canute, it is more than .vn.nv.tt fierhnnv 'fflsn. bat ins acrressxTencss. uuua-r""1"" . . r . . . . 1 as member, f OVC iUlU UCtVUVU M a fVMA--. ' ' , tionary forces gives us every right to boast and be proud v.: r Tl.nl.ifoT 1,ta vArt civi TUT for VMM that the American soldier is the best in the world. El Pasoans who attended the 'janquet given in his honor here after his return from tie punitive expedition in Mexico will recall utterances very like those above quoted. He has never lost sight of the fact that the unit of strength of the United States army is the American private soldier and repeatedly at his headquarters at Chaument, France, he . r a 3 1.: tcc r f;f. .v.r tn ihf nmnan eaua- Trrninuctt ww 1 Hon out of their calculations, never to forget the enlisted J . - . it .1 . .1 V. - . 11 HWMKT I xaan. ne reameu teat -wemu uc lauuijr . 1 L n v:. AmVniM 9 9 rfimmartflpr tliGSA file IS SUOXL, rcifiuutjj - . ments and those quaHties of mind that we consider the CIV 1X11.4. liC .CUUJMU t,n. vw " IC UUUUUUI, WMiiUi, wuvraw jL- , a. a v nnf cttTA nf cnrjp. What TiLin. then, have ye? For, if ye cannot set forth a better plan than mine for stopping the tide, ye are bound to admit that my plan is sound and will keep the ocean to a desirable equality." Whereupon the fawners upon king Canute shouted aloud that the argument was final and unanswerable. But the tides still rise. The fat man is now suspected of having a big income or of standing in well with a food profiteer. -e a . .Air Fr-tT- tjnfl x lot of men ments and those qualities of mina mat we ceosmer nenry xoro nas auutftcu . T"", y r . - 1 rr: a .. i- nn ! - 1tnrtcd . nn their hanCS. ideal of an American soioxer ana auuu. uia v..-WJU ncvci astuu, v-r reasen his countrymen so thoroughly admire him. . o ' . v There are thoe returning from. Trance who consider ( Some of these days German anny planes are to be more than his duty in the niche he filled, which was ex-' memory of the A. i . Lillle InteTOiews ' , Suggests-A Suitable Memorial For Robert Krakauer El Paso Officials Cooperate To Enforce Labor Laws tfTHE most fitting memorial that 1 I can think of for Robert Krakauer, the on. which. I believe wonM best Dlease him." said w. G. to step into the breach mada by Wa deatn and take op the work in which T was zo deeply interested. "We all know what an Indefatiga ble worker Bob was. Be did a, mucA work as 10 other men. and he did It enthusiastically and welt. He has left unfinished hia Rotary work, his eharity work, hia hieh line canal work, his park work and the many things that occupied his mind and his time. 'We saw what a community thinks nf auch a man In the wonderful out pouring of hia friends to pay tribute o him rhen hie remains were laid away Toeaday. We saw from this hat the community appreciates sarv- VI i.. Mnnlr In one out Of BOt more than 48 of the Hi counties In Texas In which the county and city Affiei.ts eoonerate with the state labor department in enforcing the Roe, "would be for me of his friers I taslo- . wno u investigating conditions here. "A eveat dlfllcuity in settine the labor laws enforced la in getting officers to enforce labor laws on the statute books against employers, for the latter all have in fluence. I can truthfully say that we have had very hearty cooperation from both county and city officials in El Paso and I cannot say that far for about 30 other, counties In Texas, nor for some of the other large cities In the state that rank with the city of, El Paso or are larger. as what, the community wanted a nan to do Xow. if we are to appre ciate his memory and show our appre ciation, we as his friends and admirers should take up the work he was do me. Let one of his friends say T will fill the breac-L in the Charity associa tion ar.d do my best to work as hard, as enthusiastically and as willingly as Bod did:' let another friend say the same thing of the high line canal nd so on, then let these friends get nto the vork and do it. Bob is dead, but we must make his work live. We .must not let die the things he started and helped to keep alive. There is no man to step into his shoes snd do all the things Bob did, but there are enough of us left to divide up the work, assume, joint responsibilities and earn' it on, not alone as a memo ry to Boh, but because it should be done. N "That was a wonderful outpouring of friends at Bob's funeral Tneasfcy and it was became of what he has done and what be stood for. It is a tribute that we should all like, to1 have follow us to our last .resting place. The solid heart of the city was there. More men were present than I have ever seen at a funeral in El Paso, r. d wlien men stop their busiaess and ?o to a funeral It means that their hearts are there. "We have done all we coulr for alt t RnnkA to the tvomens -committee on woman in industry and child wel fare work Sfanday afternoon and I find the women of SI Paso deeply interested and cooperating nobly. In it'IS part of my plan to get the sup port or every orgazuzairon ana uiui- ice; that what Kooert jyraKauer aa ;,d, , ,iW. tn brine about the en forcement of labor laws "The exploitation of women and children in industry in Texas is bad, and no one can realize it until he nas to come in contact with it. My de partment needs all the support it can get. Here In Kl Paso some 10 oiffer ent employers have given several hundred dollars to their women em ployes who had been worked over nine nonrs a day and 4 hours a week. Only one employer has said he would fight the law." "There is an amusing feature to this -hizh cost of living' talk, at least it Is amuEinsr to me. for we for get what some wag has called the 1 i - 111M TnerenaniB vrtu hardly give a newspaper Interview on the" subjectvand tell the truth, for it would give away the' game, so .to speak, and offend customers If tow what fools ye mortals be,' "A dream brought me to Bt Paso," said a P- Crawford. "My father, Ij. it. Crawford, nearly two years ago. wrote me to umaon, tbb ""i; resided tor the past 15 years, that a Pasoans were trying to promote a compeoiv to drill for oil near Carra tillo arid he had been asked to sub scribe, as he owned S400 acres in the valley. About tie same time, I Bad i letter from my sister In St. lonte, saying that while on a visit to To peka. Kansas, spfe had her fortune told by an oW nesress, and the De gress had told her ehe bad a b rotter over the seas who was going to make bis fortune in oiL Shortly after this my brother Roy. formerly manager of the Crawford theater In this city, wrote me that he had had a dream in which on .was gushing from gush ers on land owned by my father and that 1 was very prominent in This moving picture.' ' . , "At (Torqaajr; Devonshire. England about that time, I was 4 witness of the landtag of a huge monster of the sea In front of my note!, i was one of the first on the scene and I re member the rtatere of the net which had been used to catch this 'fish; how it was ripped ib A dozen or more places, and the 'Ilsfiexmen "pointing out to me .the- sarw-ltke-flns of the fish. Teds -flak caused quite a com motion in this little watering place and the fishermen were speculating how much oil would be got from the carcass. "That Meat 1 naa a aream. 1 lev. of Kansaa City. "Just eo around quietly and get some Jeweler Into friendly, semleonfidental talk and I will wacrer he will get enthusiastic about how people, even wage working people, are buying Jewelry and .even diamonds, and not such cheap ones at that Try the furrier and he wfJl open one's eyes as to who buy expensive furs. Look at the workftig men who are wearing expensive silk shirts. The shoe dealer will tell you that the sal aried man's wife and daughters want S5 shoes and even higher priced ones, and think they are being cheated If oixereu snoes ror nan mat prioe. xne that was mortal of Bob Krakauer: 'people win complain of the prices now let his friends do the things Bob but offer cheaper grades ot goods to would have done if he had lived; the 'customers and Just see how many will things he would want u, to do in his take offense at being looked on as .-nemdry. I am ready to do my part-! 'cheap.' I have made such imru tries Bob Krakauer-s life has given me a, In my city and I found "high living' new inspiration." is no small factor In, the matter of the Rippling Rhymes , By WALT 31 AS O.N. On Being Fat rERE'S sot math sense is being fat, is wearing too much lsxd; the weary years have taught me that, for Tm as obese bard. Diseases punk I enter tain, dire ailments two or three; and, though I'm twisted up with pain, I get no sympathy. Hen lafcgh to hear a fat mas groan; and though he's feeling tough, and has an ache in every bone, they think it all a bluff. If I were this asd drawn and pale, they would not treat me thus; if I put up an anguished wail, they'd make all kinds of fuss; with Soothing words they'd quell my fears, and bid my pains depart, and shed the sympathetic tears that reach a sick man's heart. But I am fat and when I yell they all begin to laugh; and they'll be laughing till ray knell precedes my epitaph. A lean mas falls, and people sigh, and wesder if he's hurt; they bring his hat, arrange his tie, and brush from bira the dirt. There's tender feeling in the glance that every one bestows; and for a padded ambulance some sympathizer goes. A fat wan falls all is a heap, and telescopes his spine, and people stand around and weep but laughter brings the brine. The fat man goes his greasy way, with large and bulging vest, and to the whole world, every day, bis every move's a jest. Ceprright by George Matthew Adams WALT MASON. 'cost of high living,'" said Paul Ben- ! dreamed of minister having er for xmre loiu oy viu uvitov, " myself standing amidst a thousand derricks gushing;. out on and I saw this huge sea. monster and a thous and more fust like him sitting on the tops of these thousand derricks spout ing oil. uc very ae uiviunis a left for El Paso." "Mexican crops are excellent this year." said Jose Plores, of Chthuahna. "I have watche the agricultural pro gress closely for the past year and find foodstuffs plentiful In .Mexico, in Coahuila the corn crop Is heavy. In Lower California the bean crop was smaller than usual, but the acre age planted produced a good yield. Other crops are keeping pace. How ever, the heavy export tax placed on some foods by the Mexican govern ment, will prevent the farmers from marketing some of their crops while poor transportation will cause other crops to be squandered. For exam ple, the' beans raised In Lower Cali fornia are of the white variety. They grow wonderfully well there hut are not in demand in the republic Heavy export duties rob the farmer of any profit if he sends them out of bis country. As a result the huge crop will be stored Indefinitely and the farmers will want for money when they have the equivalent of untold wealth In their warehouses. More attention than usual is being paid to the storage of the products, however. and the lean winters formerly exper iences in Mexico prvojtDiy are a tnrog of the past." YoO'Lt- FCEL r- W' X AlM'T ABLE Tb BETTER AFTCft ST AMD UP J S The Terrible monow " S MIII illljb Wmgf&L IMOR.rvJ.ING VsHSN SCHOOL, S-m. SiflfiHi llgjllli BgDftND VACATTtOM Travel ett e 1 By MKSAH. I PORTO SAXTO. OFF the north shore of Maderra it. miitT atrln of island which accounts Itself famous because Chris topher Columbus once lived tnere. Porto Santo, as the mist covered isle 4. Mitjuf ronaiatB of hats and houses to the form of a town known as the V 11 ML, SCattereo Timsja uu r-' fields, a steep range of hills, and a shore line now edged with ?p!k erxga, now sinking Into a level stre'eb of sand. . Island would be altogether dull and 1 , I it , 'r . nis... CO!XaBHipC. 1 . . ... " r- often dall hut It lives In history, and sometimes travelers come over from Maderra to see the island where the discoverer once lived, and where ae is saa uj Mini, w OlS ill TV LIUC unknown land In the west. POrtO oasXO was Biacoeieu v " eldest early in the fifteenth centurr Dy n. 1 ui iujui" - - driven there during a storm. As tJie . .. L. . ,l Q.tnt. Av and he was particularly thankful to have found a safe refuge from tn wind, the navigator named tbe little Island Porto Shinto. He then returned to Portugal and spoke in such en thusiastic praise of the discovery that a colony was soon formed to take isossession or tne iana 01 itrwiaisc An.ong the colonist." was Bartho'.omeu Perestrello, an Italian sea captain, who was to be governor of tbe island. Columbus fen in love with Bartito kmeu's daughter la Lisbon. So when BOO OCVOIICQ IW iiv, vt-- bus followed, and there, ifi time, n Ye TOWNE GOSSIP I jt Realstered C E. Patent OfQca. I ' - K. C. B. 1 miaaiaal ITS A silly little ioy. WITH A little blade. JUST LIKE the propeller. OP AX aeroplane. O.V A little knob. A5D WIND a string. ALL AROUND the spool AM) PULL the string. AXD THE little propeller. SHOOTS VP In the air. AXD SAILS around. - FOR TUB longest time. .. AND GOBS Into a glide. ... AXD CIRCLES down. AXD MATBE you find It AXD MATBE you don't AXD I bought one. 7 ' , AXD TOOK It home. AXD THE very first day. I LOST six blades. mm AXD HAD to, get more. AXD IS cents. BTJTS HALF a doson. AXD WHV ever I did It I REALLT don't know. BUT I'D last so many. .VXD IT'S so very silly. THAT I was ashamed. TO GO back to the store. AXD BUI more blades. SO I teld the fellows. WITH WHOM r play. THAT TD give 10 cents. FOR EVERY blade. THEY FOUND In the grass. OR DOWN In the bushes. " AXD the whole crowd searched. AXD IT only found one. I OUT OF sixteen lost AXD THAT very night WE LOST fonr more. WHICn WAS all we had. BUT IX the morning. A XEIGHBOR'S man. OAME.IXTO our house. '."WTTH XIV O of the blades. that'iie said he'd-ttound. ' J sz XJffA bunch of weeds. V T - - TILL rri paid him a dime. FOR EACH of the blades. , AXD ALOXG about noon. HE FOUND three more.. AXD AS fast as he'd find them. FOR A dime apiece. THEY'D BE lost again. BOT THIS neighbor guy. " JTJST KEPT trailing around. DOWX IX the.bushes. AXD IX the long Krai's. JUST LOOKING for blades. ' AXD FIXDIXG them. m uxtil he'd found forty. WITHIN' THREE days. AXD rD paid him Si. AND WENT out of the business. AXD XOW I -find out THAT HE nought the) things. AT TWO for a nickel. AXD PRETEXDED to find thero! AXD SOLD them to me ... FOR A dime- apiece. , AXD WITH the J4. x HE BOUGHT a toy airplane. AXD I'VE stolen the spring. AXD HE can't make It work. I THANK you. There are 54 different designs of paper money ot various denomina tions In this country. Of ones, twos and-one thousands, there are five kinds; of fives, fifties and -one hun dreds, six kinds: of tens and twenties. Eaten kinds; of five "hundreds, four kinds; of ten thousands, two, and ot When Prize Fighter Beccfmes An Actor A Rich Story On Jack Dempsey Et Al. A LARGE twelve-sheet greeted the eye and its, huge letters trumpeted forth the announcement: A Suspicious Pair - By T. E. Powers Plwrenc Fine), Kelly, ftr pMtaS throngh thm door of t&- KftftMi anTr sity. beraa wsppr work In Topk. from then t CmcAgo. aji4 from thr tw N-w Torts eltr. wber tM found tiie pUc and woefc ae ltk tct a book revtw editor of at of tbo otty's lorrest and most laflaoatial newapspor. Ulea Mary Potter, of Xew York, pio neer woman lawyer and anffraKlst. urg the wt-nier. rot-m cf America to intr"t thm-'l''s In th whole problem of tb high cost of liinff. : The Mightiest Gladtetor of All : : Ages! . ' : Jack Dempsey and his Manager : : Jack Kearss. : : Champion of the world! Etc : The Jack Zempsey snow, was In town. "Come out and see us," said Man ager Jack K earns. "Jack wilt sur prise you. He's good! Get a high class vaudeville show and a high coss burlesque number with twelve girls. High elas stuff! We are guaranteed 1 1M a week for fifteen weeks and as ssaay store weeks as we want to takar,- - "W-whatT somebody gasped. Tesstr! Fifteen thousand a week." repeated Kearss doggedly, despite all smokers. Detainer Alii Dolled Up. After the high crass vaudeville show and the high class burlesque number with twelve girls naa passes on and off. the band struck up "The Waarlsir of the Green." the sDOtllsht flashed, and forth strode the "Might- S lest Gladiator of All Ages" In fall;! evening dress white gloves Bilk hat cane ana everyunng: . 1 Ah! What a sight my country meal The gang who saw the glow-' ertng. bronze-skinned youth topple i over the mammoth Wlllard 'naath ; Toledo's blazing sun wound never 1 know Him now. j Jack moistened his redd an ed lips.! raised his penciled eyebrows, smiled faintly, and hurriedly recited the; following: "Ladles 'n gentlemen. I hardly know what I am doing oat here, but 1 If I do as well as I did In Toledo on 1 July the fourth I will be soma little ! actor." Tbe crowd, numbering about four 1 hundred, cheered, and Jack went on: j A Bouquet for Kearna. "I now take great pleasure In In-I t reducing the man to whom I owe all J manager. Jack Kearna." Spotlight Ester, manager. Exit champion. V Kearss, old Leo MeKearney, him self, walked on confidently, attired in full evening dress latest eut peeked lapels. V waist, and 'fancy tie. He effected a well rehearsed stage presence and said: "I couldn't a done It It I didn't have the tools to work with." Then he delivered a speech on tbe nobler and manly art ot self-defense and closed by Introducing- the "mighty champion In full ring trim." Jack bounded in attired in a gym nasium suit of the brightest vermil ion. He looked like a house afire. And be went through a few rounds of' boxing In much the same style. There is nothing stagey about Jack's boxing. That fellow simply cannot hit easy! Pity his sparring partners. Dempaey Hates "Stage Stuff." "Gee! I wish Rlekard would pro mote another flcrht said Jack after It was all over. "They can't get A match too soon ror met 1 woura rather fight a hundred rounds than walk oat on that stage for one rain-ute." But manager Kearna rather likes the stage and points with pride to the fact that he staged the act and taught Dempsey how to get off his lines. -This aet ain't nothing Bke It's go ing to be. We are just starting, and ain't had no tfane to rehearse a lot of new gags I got I'm learning Jack a new one now. It gees like this: "I walk out there and say to Jack. "Why don't you set some, body to box uer and Jack, he fori back, 'I know a guy who will box you. Then I says "Who have yon got who can box met And Jack anawera, 'the nnder taker.' Oh,i I got u lot of saappy ero-flre stuff like that Walt till we jret tarted." RIple7. in Kansas City Star. Vli, TAab, Larned. mt Waat Polat M. T painter of the "Navy Girt- reeratUngl ierfoT yeeraea battaUea. and Mies SmA Stokes, ef Nw York ctrr. nave mimcto from copying plan tor br crataera te patting ta the detail on the apeclflea tkms and ebarta to be aect to the navy yards for sobmariata te defend the eouta. ! The Young Lady Across The Way TIMES ore so good inth' country that th farmers are eatm tier own chickens. Th' Bud family did'a go f th' lakes this ' stnsrser, but bought a watermelon instead. Copyright. Xatlona! Kgwapaper Serrtee. AND HE DID GjrjgRT Scott! here comes RLIOK RWH TtOTRSHOT LEFTl'tL lOOK HtM lTHrl EYE npmTKtTOHiPKOTlZE him! n 11 W I Little Chris I . iW .,t fit dA . nil"' -r I 14 Years Ago Today I I From The flerald of This DatetDUS I j m AWFDIi conditions exist Is Russia, according to reports from St Pe- atp uj sousmuoo 3ani3U -SMnqsjaj Caucasus. Hundreds of killed and wounded are lying in the streets of Shusha. C. a Titus, secretary of tbe local T. X. C A., has returned from his sum mer vacation. V. T. Combs, formerly stage mana ger of Myar opera house, will be the new manager of the opera house this year. Mr. Combs arrived this morn ing from Topeka, Kas, to succeed Roy L. Crawford, who returned to that city last week, to resume the man agement of the Topeka bouse, after a stay of a few months In BI Paso look ing after the Crawford interests here. Mrs. W. a. Culver, of 810 Wyoming street was Injured in a runaway acci dent on South Oregon street last even ing. Mrs. Culver's ankle was badly fractured as she Jumped from the buga-y. W. M. Lauarblin's father, James P. LauerMin. ilieri at his home in Peoria. Ill, this morning, after suffering from a paralytic stroke since last Octo ber. Miss Josephine Marr has returned from six weeks spent In California and at 1 ortland. Dr. Harry Bloomstein is bad. from a two montlis hunting trip through Sonora and Chihuahua, j T ITTLB Chris decides a-i he would nave a pa, and, while motker was downtown, aped about nmoae; the BtJfAbors In Tl tins all the children he could find, to come In tbe afternoon man put la an appeax-an.ee- abont tare to aalc when the party would take place. "-Right now," said Little Chrla, and Into the back yard they wmt ia niav. Soon they decided to- go to Herman's to the play and when the "tker children bc-mn arrive for "the party"' there u. A.. VttmrA (3m, My t Fiat UH - .m. M..tiAi1. ItAiaA.1 ia.eie depoalteta la aavlnsa bank. .-1 vll, mother," he explained later, saaaae faraMra mad tl.see.ee patrfow, . ,h,n eome some other school cunarea radlcat. tl ratuio ' m ...i.aTr. Herman and I " la THE young lady across the way says fair play pays best every time and she notices that the baseball player who fouls the ball never gets any where by his trickery. V A prommeat stack broker .In New York, vb diaappearad before 1A . raided by the police and the bsalneas thrown into baakraptcy, was formerly a profeeaor of psycho! osy. From LoaHo a indlcato tba futtllty ot Bolahevlatic propaaaaSa In this cwairy. From Loana-a. good party." EL PASO HERALD rSSidvfr?D roxuE raviraOT the peoVlVth. so coo? cacse SHALL LACK A rilAMMON. AMI THAT EVIL SHALL H. 1). Slater, editor and centreline owner, has directed The Herald for tl yearn . . ' .. , 9 i j.l a tiff oMtw Fltttnr'. j. x nliminn is Aianas-ex aa u. . -J" 11E51BEK ASSOCIATED fRESS. AMERICAN NEAVSPAPB PCBUSHEES ASSO CIATION AMI AUDIT UllRCAO OF C1RC13 NATION. Af -n TUB ASSOCIATED PRESS 1 cMs1t -nUtled lo tb Mf f " nftws d.spatcbes crtxUtwS to It or oat otherwi erwUtad la thta pajw and fti ta local naw paiMiaq nerem. AN INDEPKNOKNV DAlJLT NEWSPAPER Tba El Pao Herald waa hUNU&M ta March. 1M1 Tbe SI Paao Herald tnctadoa. alao. t7 abaorptloa and ucceoa. Tb Dally Nawa. Tba TBreffrapH. Tba TMtcram, Tbe Tribuoa. Tb Graphic, Tba San. Tbe Advert! r. Ttta iimigtMmaeai. rna jwim xna painn. '""u- TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Daily Her4d. Pr moatb, Tc; per year. JT.M. Wednes day and Weefc-Bnd tasues wiU ba mailed lor S3.0e per yvar. Weak-Ead edlt.on only, per year, tt.99 THIRTT-MNTH TEAR OF P0BUCAT1ON Saperlor excluii featurea asd com plete nea report by Associated preas Lraaed Wtra and Special Correpondita coverinir Arisoaa, New Mexico. Weet Texaa. M-srco wabinjrtrn. D. C, and Nt aYoreU Entered at n tba Peatoffiee la El Paau. Tcnaa. a Second Claaa Matter. -WHATEVER VOU WANT TO KNOW. Tba El Paeo Herald Information Barema at Waablagtaa farBtabea rvadera. free of ehara. with accurate aad authoritative anawara ta question ox. any and all subje-t? concern in c which information can a had from tbe anbaralleled reaoa.xea of tba vari ona federal corernmeat departmentB, the Treat Library ttt Consreaa and tbe mxoy axperta and aclentlsts in tbe roverntnent aerrtca at Waahtnston. Two --enta ta poat age for caply mort accompany eacb inquiry State clearly the loforrr-ition trant'-o and addreaa The El paao Ueraia JaXormaUen Bareau, Frederic J. Haakia CUaata Washington, . C.