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WEDNESDAY, APRIL 12, 1222 CHRIST EPISCOPAL CHURCH Holy Week Servcee: Good Friday from 12 noon to 3 p. m„ Christ Church will observe a Pas sion Service consisting of Meditations on the Seven Last Words of Christ The Meditations will be based on the thought of Jeremiah: "Is It nothing to you, all ye that pass by? Behold, and see if there can be any sorrow like unto my sorrow." During this Three Hour service there will be periods for special prayers an<l for silent prayers. Appropriate hymns will be said or sung. Worshippers may come at any time and leave at will. Easter Day service at seven sharp Sunday morning. The Holy Euchar ist will be celebrated. In honor of this festival service the Rector will wear special Eucharist vestments. The anthem introlt "Christ Our Pass over" will be rendered by the choir. "God’s High Hope tor Humanity" will be the subject of the Rector’s sermon. There will be no 11 o’clock service; the Rector will go to Powell for that hour. . Easter afternoon at Christ Church at 3:30 children’s mite box service. At this sevrice Easter gifts will be given to each member of the church school. Holy Baptism will be admin istered at Christ Church at 4 o'clock Easter afternoon. A blessed and happy Easter to all. A hearty welcome to all services. "Come and see." Rev. Royal Blaske, Rector. HAS PROOF THAT WOLF MAY BE DOMESTICATED Pueblo, Colo. —R. C. Williams of this city has the living proof that a wolf may be domesticated and develop the traits of a dog. The living proof is Saska, a full-blooded wolf. Since Saska was a full grown wolf when caught there is no way of telling her correct age. Contrary to the popular belief that a wolf cannot be domesticated, any member of the Williams family can pet Saska, at any time, which Is duly appreciated by a fierce wagging of the tall. The ordinary layman looking at Saska would declare that she was a German police dog, so close is the re semblance. However, Saska is quite different in her habits. She does not bark and is the natural enemy of sheep, whereas, the German police dog la a guardian of sheep and is ex tensively used as a shepherd. “DRINK HOT BLOOD; EAT ’EM ALIVE,” “DOC” SY’S ADVICE TO WOMEN Buffalo, N. Y.—"Be 100 per cent cannibal; eat raw meat; drink the blood of the slaughtered animal and Tlie Ebert Grocery Co. Successor to Raid’s Store I ..... , ■ - _ ■ til I ANNOUNCEMENT We will hold a formal opening at our store Sat- I urday, April 15th. Car- I nations for the Ladies I | and Cigars for the Men. I I Plenty of good coffee and wafers. I The Public is cordially invited j to attend. TheEBERTGROCERYCO. E. T. EBERT, Mgr. . " a | Easter Hillinery | i We are showing some of the prettiest ere- | ations in this Season’s | and TT A ’’T’ d STREET . . .< I 2V ± £5 | Are They Reassnable? Yes. They Are. Come and Be Convinced | I MRS. A. MULLEN | S Next to Bakery E gnaw the bones to the marrow to at tain the highest degree of physical perfection.” Such was the advice given to dele gates of the Erie County Women’s clubs here by Dr. Albert Sy, of the University of Buffalo, who spoke on food values. "Civilization has caused the average human being to become too pamper ed,” declared Dr. Sy. “We should not be so fastidious. We discard the most nutritive parts of a creature. “The same practice is true of our preparation of vegetables. Raw po tatoes, raw carrots and sugar in its natural state are included in the van nlbal diet.” It’s an ill wind that blows nobody good and every cloud has a silver lin ing. So they say, and at any rate we are indebted to wind and cloud for a delightful week’s visit from Ralph Smith, the breezy editor of the Mee teetse News. Mr. Smith, with many other Meeteetse people, was snowed in here by the recent storm. Eagle Insurance is the best and the cheapest. Would like to figure with some one who has four good driving horses with harness, for July and August. 1-36-lt TEX HOLM. Just «ts Ma Does Pa. “Ma, I know what makes the wave* angry,” ssld a little Winthrop boy as he watched the breakers pound against the sea wall. “It’s because the wind is blowing them up.”—Boston Tran script. Rival to Postage Stamp. Electric, gas, telephone and electric uilway rates stand today second only o the two-cent stamp as the cheapest >f all commodities purchasable, whether food, fuel, clothing, luxuries >r housing. Inveterate Punster. Thomas Hood, the poet, was the prince of English punsters, and found his own name a fruitful subject of bls wit. On being shown a portrait of himself very unlike the original, he declared that the artist had perpetrated a false Hood. When near his end he said he was dying out of charity to the undertaker, who wished "to uro a lively Hood.” ‘oopaiMd spn jo lUdtudoidA -ep {BOfSoi b sbm esioais aq3 Joj eqiu a qj|M jeu{RiQoo oiqujjod y aqi papjqu; peuno eq 03 uosued aqj, -nasodjnd Supaaq joj jo aagpoas a sa sjeu]ajuo3 aj juunq sqjeq jo esn juanb -ojj aqi inojj sduioo 'aaip 03 aa ojuos -qo o|jqM *od(d eqi jo uojjuaAu; aqj, •pesn 3sotn sqjeq dtp dmaq pus *mnido •oooaqoj, *Beidoed aAiJimpd jsom aqj Xq peapaaad bbm Buj>|oins *f}u|)foius jo ue39 HOUSE ms HANOEOFF POUCT •tatement by attorney gen- IRaL DAUGHERTY IS DISCUSS ED WITH UNION OFFICIALS BUND DEFENDSIESOLIJTIGN Daugherty Says Owners Take Wrong Stand In Wage Controversy; In diana Representative Declare* Workers Refused to Confer. Washington.— Following up the overture it had made toward settle ment of the bituminous coal strike the house committee on labor contin ued it* hearings on the subject Wednesday by considering briefly At torney General Daugherty’s statement outlining the administration’* “hands off” policy for the present. Representative Bland. Republican, Indiana, whose resolution to direct the president to appoint a coal Inquiry commission occasioned the labor com mittee’s Interest In the matter, read Mr. Daugherty's statement into Its record, and upon learning that Presi dent Lewis of the United Mine Work ers had left the city called to the wit ness stand John Moore, executive rep resentative of the union Ln Washing ton. Says Operators Wrong. "Mr. Daugherty o®ys after declaring that the operators were wrong in re fusing to confer with the mine work er* In an attempt at settling the strike Issue in advance, that the United Mine Workers’ officials themselves refused !n»t fall or some later time to confer with the operators for the same pnr- Dose,” Mr. Bland said. “Now. ha* there ever beee a time when the United Mine Workers have refused to open negotiations with the centra! competitive field operators for a new wage scale after April 1, In ac cord with tteelr agreement?” “No, sir,” Mr. Moore replied. “There never has been such a refusal.** Await* Reply from Nolan. The committee awaited replies to the invitations sent by Chairman Nolan on the committee's authorisation to bitu minous operators in the central com -'etitlve field to meet with the miners’ union leaders here next Monday and attempt tn reach a settlement of the nresent strike. Both operators and •dinars’ representatives were tn be '’Riled fnr further hearings Ln connec ' ‘lon wlrli the Bland resolution prnpos ng the appointment of a ’commission to Investigate the coal Industry. The invitations to operators tele graphed by Chairman Nolan aft<ir his •ommlttee z had been assured by John L. Lewis, president of the United Mine Workers of America, that he would ad vise his associates to negotiate with a “representative group” of operators in ’he central competitive field, even ’hough not all could not be Induced to deal ngnln with the union. Mr. Lewis said he had no notion what the operators would do, but that he thought the committee "had put forth a proposition worth considering.” SENATE COMMITTEE ASKS COMPLETION OF SHOALS Would Appropriate $7,500,000 To Re sume Operations on Gigantic Wilson Dam Washington—Resumption of w»yrk nn the gigantic Wilson dam at Muscle Shoals, Ala., under charge of army 'ngiaeers, was necommended by the «f»n*te agriculture committee, which voted unanimously to press an amend ment to the army supply bill provid ing an appropriation of $7,600,000 to rtnance work on the dam for one year t>pginning next July I. Committee members agreed with Chairman Norris that the action was taken solely in order to expedite com pletion of the project and we* entirely without prejudice to the offer* for op r ration, completion, pnrehase or lease of the Muscle Shoals project received by the government from Hoary Ford, the Alabama Power company and Fred erick E. Engstrum. Sterne anxiety was exhibited by the committee that the amendment might be held subject to a point of order In the senate, but Chairman Norris explained that after carefully examining the senate rules It was his opinion that a point of or | der could not be upheld. Dude Ranch Founder Die* Sheridan, Wyoz—Howard Eaton, pioneer of the west and founder of the Eaton Brother* famous “Dude Ranch” nt Wolf, Wyo., died Wednesday at « local hospital. w Many Honor Negro Educator Tu«kegee, Al a.—Transportation methods ranging from special ears to mule* were utilized to hrl*g to Tuske gee Wednesday r steady *tr*am of white people and negroes to attend ths unveiling of a statue of Rooker T. Washington, founder of the Tuskegee Inntitvte. School authorities said the gathering was the largest in the his tory of the Institute. Special cars brought .parti** , from New York, Wash- Ingtod, Chicago, AUaata sad Naw <> tea**. the wtißffd* r*UM tn avom sMPßtaabte kksff iff wfftete. WOMAN CUTS OFF HER HAND AND JUMPS FROM WINDOW New York.—-After cutting off her hand with a pair of small sewing scissors and throwing it under the bed Mrs. Etelka Graf, 38, jumped from the fifth floor window of her apartment at the Hotel Chelsea today and landed on the third floor balcony. Her two ankles and left arm were fractured and her head and face se verely Icerated but she may recover. Physicians at Bellevue hospital were surprised that Mrs. Graf could have stood the pain of amputating her own hand. It evidently had been a long, tedious, hacking operatioi and she was weak from loss of blood. If you want a schooner of beer, go to The Mint. Mirandy’s Minstrel—Home Talent — April 21. ... ,-j , Wyoming grown guaranteed nursery stock of all kinds. Fruit, shade, and ornamental trees; vinefe, rosee, and small fruit. All trees acclimated two to three years. Place order now for Spring delivery. A. L. De BOLT, 36t2 Agent. TOE PAINS HIM; SO HE CHISELS IT OFF Lorain, Ohio.—lngrown toenails had better give Frank Broughton of South Amhurst a wide berth or he’ll change their name to “souvenir.” For several days the second toe on Broughton’s left foot had pained him. Yesterday he decided to put an end to the suffering, and, being a man of few words and much action, he an nounced that he was going to cut off the offending toe. A few minutes later he exhibited the toe to his family. He hag cut it ’Off with the aid of a hammer and chis el. ICE CONTAINS FROZEN FISH Livingston, Mont.—Great chunks of ice boating down the Yellowstone river here due to the breaking up of ice in the headwaters, many of which have been cast ashore here recently, contain frozen fish by. the hundreds. It is believed that the trout were caught in the Ice jams in the upper ‘ J Taste is a matter of ihi C tobacco quality M We state it as our honest t-i! belief that the tobaccos used ' /O in Chesterfield are of finer Mil <j.iality (and hence of better 101 taste) than in any other cigarette at the price. Liggett & hlyerj Tobacco Co, { Chesterfield irc CIGARETTES 20 for 18c 10 for 9c of Turkish and Domestic tobaccos—blended Vacuum tins <r “ -I—.— ... , ... iiimiiiimiiiimiiiiiiiiiuuiNiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii The Enterprise Prints Illustrated Booklets, Folders and Circulars. See Our Samples. HiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuuiiuuiuiiiuimiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiNiiiiiiimiiuiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniimiiiiiiiißiin Yellowstone and frozen before they could escape. According to recent re ports reaching here, several ice jams broke in the upper Yellowstone, push ing many trout from the river on the banks where they were frozen. REINDEER FOR MICHIGAN ARRIVE ON NORWAY SHIP New York. —Among the passengers aboard the steamer Bergensfjord of the Norwegian-American line which arrived at the foot of 30th Street, Brooklyn, today, from Christiana, Norway, was Dr. Halstan Christensen, A norweglan dentist, who brought with MENZIES Phone* 201, 201-2, 207 BRENNEN CODY PLUMBING, HEATING and SHEET METAL WORKS Sanitary Plumbing—Reliable Heating—Guaranteed Workmanship Agent* for the Famous SUNBEAM WARM AIR FURNACE The Best and Cheapest Furnace on the Market PROTECTION THAT PROTECTS The other day we overheard a man say something like this: “The plumbers are sitting pretty, they are. They’re a clever bunch. They get laws passed so that they have to take out a license to work. This protects them, and keeps other good mechanics from doing plumbing.” Foolish man! The plumber is more than a good mechanic. He has to be or he couldn’t be a plumber. The license is not for the protection of the plumber. H is for the protection of the public. The health of a community depends upon plumbing, -for plumbing means sanitation. Therefore plumbing and plumbers are under the supervision of state and municipal boards of health. Plumbers pass examination* and are licensed for the same reason that doctor* ,and dentist* are examined and licensed. Boards of health go a step further with the plumber. Certain stand ard* must be maintained. The work of the plumber must be up to these standards. All the work done by a plumber I* subject to inspec tion. This protection protects the nation’s health. him fifty female end ten male rein deer, which the state of Michigan bought for breeding purposes. The reindeer were housed in boxes on the shelter deck of the ship. BLACKWATER CAMP TO WRESTLE POWELL CHAMP There will be a wrestling match be tween Carl Paulson of Blackwater Camp and Bill Loomis of Powell on Thursday evening, April 13th, at 8 o’clock, at PowelL There is reason to believe thia match will be worth the trip. PAGE FIVE