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Show , , . .. . ... - i - 1.1 . . - ' I ? . , ,, - .o DESERET , ' r ? . , , - '. .. ' - . . . , t , , .. . - . , . . , I , t ' t - ' ' 1 I 1 RV AL c -- 1919 . 4.. '' . - - - - '' . 1 , . . a, . Government Mails te Mtn-In Revival of Lhlen Industry, British ' of Preparing the !Mrs Were late Essential Factor, a Old in Caesar's DayCheap Labor the ":, . , - . rf Problem Solved by British College Girls. ,War . . , . .. . : 0 . of law& tiie free working BCk1.b. Made a. thread so fins that eight Seemed mil, t ' .' on's summer Skirts. Thirty-on- o demand. The ounce." Andi and the to went l' of it of miles supply Lion would make s good many regretted thlee! .witer,71 had, convinoed lls July 1.Before the skirtsyards "up to 1310 a few small-mit ., of the preaent fashion's length that suck' 20 themselves of frames ,., their but persuaded spinning cotton had And one there is, bears, k,'I'.,,, c' Grind men who industries were bettor dead. Itsvelso. ..: nearlywobe:tals. ant width! war; ' driven.by apindles of worked 14 houra .Tory day except tiono of Germanys treAs 'methods of cotton's 7", e, 1 ,' ,.. ".44:...0' hots. It wonted that the fibre- rival. after the brief "-irl 0,...1,., 4, Sunday!" made since 1914 have shown that s,1 of feverspurt. ' .. . i . weaving these Industrial deaths were nett:bee ,,,, The first power-drive- n ' 1 ! plant which bad been cultivated for ish life fanned by the war? looms were 'darted at Limehbuse in natural nor attidental, but ptannedv of textiles will I 1,000 years in Brant, itzd Mee Pots,- The' , 4 4...- t --London about a hundred years ago; and Griat Britain does not mean them countries like ,1(41 .." , t ' I tnie, which furnished sails and cord- allow cotton-strowiA.1", It is there are now over 00,000. America to view this question quite in the future to be inevitable. q11 t! s. ego for prehistoric shipbuilders in Etro, Impartially. Cotton can afford to let V. I Ireland-Leadthe British isles cannot be true that , Where - 1 't rope, and made the ropes which dearer and more durable fibres have more than & New ,1 - Ireland has five times as many selt4upporting any in household is hauled the giant stones of the Pyra- their own places in a world where York but Scotland, and as looms England of the matter of food. But just as the Into position,' clothing is almost as difficult to : eame and midi quantity the Stonehenge about uses only ..:as food. It has been said that 'tk i 1 , housekeeper will have a' few days':' raw material,- beCausethe goode.made become ti; musourn cotton is a "black mans cloth." and ' , would speedily 1:- - ;4- 4those stock of food In ease of emergency. than and finer lighter there ate . 1 as such- inevitably cheaper than linen ; 1,, f Great Britain means to havewar&AMA - , curiosity. In 1800 "very country gen.I And in the rest of the kingdom. made either certain to drive linen out of ex1st..1 I ore a linen shirt with rut., insurance against ' linen tleman this of , -What is to become down as it has margin of or is true if the only differaoonornist This ,enoe. Ths industrial. 4 P"."''... IL die militarist '' ' I fine Will , it lawn et gutnea ence between white and black labor ts ;11,1 See made from I' dustry? by the may say that this is not economio conA....; Y done before. to be revived only of turtles Na1 & Yezd1 In It00- millioneiree thought Its price; but AnioAcans know, if Eng. ;0 with equal the duct.Is League war? ot -Gime , Rehm's' do not. that Cheap labor Is - 'Cottcrn good enough. - - - . Q. point out to you that you have wasted tions to ring its final death-knel- l, often an extravarane compared with ,.) ., uses? and the war And the thousands of dollars in WO inettnine WI!! its find then peace aeroplane it , . dear labor with machin, odd story Blue-- and got nothing for it an told Roane IIIIS ery. num I 1 Ij changed of fate the 17,r71 What makes linen cloth dear? . flax under -. of , durability, to ' id high-paNot on .c...,labor the t Lord French mid that "the irar In the the 7-".;"! employed ,..,' Reviving Coemtry Life. -' favors ' conditions and showing . ita spinning and weaving, factory I Nax the of the been wott es- Beltest--wings- .t after gnus ,. of the aspect period stmilai There is another tmleogilea-mi ittgistrektlied antorran , present time, tion. For hair a century Engkind bau,------that was true, for airBritish hied as anything poleoni Ian saith the : In the cotton tra NI thread linen for demand mo on factory industries 1.A. , ! agi far 1 ji planes hid their wings covered with but the extraordinarily imitive 1 1 goes, 'When he was chairman of the pinned her faith in the .,,,,,&..11. &'.,,,,,77. extinction of ,,,. .':,,,, and kk''.-:acquiesced processes-whic- h the flat plant under. ;j Belfast linen. farmer a ,rt flax Committee for'Scotland discovered village crafts. The result baa been a r' before it enters the factory. This 1 ,77' There werö people who thought that goes had . ",...1..,:".'')--,:&,,- ' for 1.r:I,,,,i' wrote and said that he a - paper- - recently : progressive desertion of eountry There wow made clear-i- n 4 , cotton might be good enough. 1 e- some hundredweights of fiber into one ..6.''''' , L and an intensifying of that dull- ',,, a f SILII.. town, ,' be were- peseimiats who argued that now read before the Royal Society of Arta 4 which appeared ' At. . , ,a comes less of his berns In London by ; the since nese of country life which Bosse, produce of Ruesia's 4.000.006.000 ,,,,,r. 7, flax. -- It must' have been there from poverty and bard -- wet k than 4, hundred acres of Gag were bottled up in Russia chairman of the flax committee for a time, his grandfather's .44:. ..6 ,''"V from lack of interest. , We are coni and Belgium's 60.000 tons of fibre not flootland, whoa' intimate knowledge of 1 The flax committee in- fronted iA ago. , A years the Ancient history of linen manufaonow wtth an army of disabled iI even sown. cotton must be made good , 4 spected the store and bought about men who have "country tastes" but no Britain's linen mills had ture is equalled by- his literary skill For away enough. when was as put 4 it good in i fed adapting its lessons to the present tolerance of country dullness. Their almost entirely upon imported the time of Waterloo, when England 1t time. lack of fibre. Together with Ireland, she-deto import cotton free- health and their comparativethat able was again 41,, undeetrable they -Flax is grown either feribotibre (lintextile voted only a0,000 acres to flax-groit means make more expensive ly ,and the I ins in 1114. and the navy and arm, n) or for its seed (linseed); in some The demand for should live in towns: If they liveoc-infabrics languished. t Dome must have demanded linen needed by the thou. climates the double crisp may be ob. N''11 linen seems now dead past redemption the country they r sand. And in thousands, too, they tained.-the-pla- nt being gathered er because the cost of the raw material cupation sees arduous than heavy land I ; the ; were destroyed and their Belfast wings "pulled" while the stalk is still green, before 2r,e, work or factory work. but they are is five times what it, was and the seed ...ripening subsequently flax Matt be quite iitted for seasonal land work scrapped. the Russian, war.. I remember that at this time there on the straw. In other countries the . 44, available to feed Irish, mills, or are and home Industries; So .' are their . ; wag a rumor in the United Staten that seed will not ripen and the crop is ?:41 t; women folk, who from the officer's other poxsibilities? Ilere r comes in. wits to the i Great Britain bad "cornered" flax. then obtained by sowing imported Here Tommy's little girl have on seed the ground; so that She had flax when very thick j, That was not true. That country has an enormous areaIt decided against spending their whole no one also but Germany had it (and the stalks grow crowded and straight. ' ' house work or In of land suitable for ; , 4 ! ' ' 'lite, either In doing Germany waa running very sho(t) Where seed alone is required. as on of elegant leisure. has alao a large supply of latior which OLD IN ROMAN the enjoyment COLLEGIC GERI'S rtZAING ex. trbecause she had made immense et'- the 20.000 acres devoted to this crop must be cheap because the living The Englishman has always been '' : forte to revive an agricultural industry in Canada last year on behalf of the This Fibre BA. Been Tremrt,xt up to This Siege by Theme Girls Helped to Make the 93olfast laborer still re- fond or of "hobbies," but unwilling penses of the nativeluteall . 21, he that good as dead. She was turning British government. the sowing is e he I main low when Var. Mind. of making mone7 by' therr incapable the seed plenty of sun back in the beginning of the twentieth sparse flax of A esires. supply hint more prcUaL.L ' These chaster, when that city woe capital of show this operation as you may see Africa and retted, broken and soutched IThe war has made teachers' training college. century to an industry whose early and air. bout his is, if you like,- humbler -The crop taken 12 to IS weeks to young women lived nine in a tent dur- England and London a south-easter- n It with your own eyes in any stage. are still as primitive as In the in large quantities and by improved ,status. or, if you like, prouder ; time before the Pharoahs, and when grow. and when the stalk yellows it ing a very wet season. or were lodged town.the Irish hinen was appropriate It today.- The partly Imetheds, might-resto- re country provicial hie manual skill. He is not above she wee already feeling the pinch. for must be pulled by hand; if it is cut the hundreds together in a commandeered enough to tile Ruselan peasant, but as Totted and dried stalk Is rolled to Industry to prosperity. It would not or adding to his Income by his hobbies. food and the shrinkage of labor pow. weeds are cut with it and make the country house, and saw the thing Inapplicable to modern limes. as In- break the woody core and a bunch of compete with American, Egyptian , or, she succeeded in trebling and more preparation of the fibre very diffi- through. Monotonous. dian cotton 'methods aye.. ' fibre is held in the hand and beaten' Indian cotton In cheapness, but where We muet have .our lityle spare-tim- e ' than trebling her sorest of a crop cult. The pulling Machines recently work it was. , I saw yesterday a hank The next process,. "rotting" or rot- repeatedly with a tbin'wooden blade.' durability is the chief thing required. occupations back. Juot as the war hes greedy for seasonal labor for which, Invented are not yet perfected; if and of the flax they pulled at Yeovil, a ting the stalk to loosen the fibres Or the blades may be attached to a it must have its place, even exclud- ,taught the city clerk to grow . his own - ' machinery oould not be aubstituted. when they become- a practicial propos. fine silky fibre nearly as strong aa which are held together by a gummy power-drive- n potatoes, it may teach the country wheel, but the scutcher' its employment fdr luxury put; wife to weave her own to the noses of still holds the bunch of fibre agalrad ing Something of the kind had happened Mon linen will be fairly on the tray hair and graded- as the first quality. substance, is faint-Liar such as lace making, where cost poses ' after Mr. to reason Boase no a e the cotton famine of 1844, but linen tablecloths in says that there is hours air who know Belfast' It may be done becoming cheap fibre. Until that , is of httle- importance , Ireland-was is should the rival not a that the sphere of why England has been cleaned. only question of privation. happens by imniersing the stalks in a warmish But England, and above all sour-- 1 instead of embroidering flirner cotton not of national danger. In 1117 cot. the small holder who wilhcall in hie Courtrai flax, which- - brings, the Beiis fama the From highones this river. The Lys. with meantnglese patterns. Fliut. industry stage wants somethieg more than , tons rival wag not grown for hand. family and. his neighors to help to gia.n merchant II.1400 a too. ous as a battle ground. was so favor- ly scientific. Flax machinery was ishing factory industry fed by foreign like cotton. Is what the oil monks in the war' Scotland and to in in able started this before kerchiefs, tabledloths. shirt collars, pulling and the subsequent processes. the to cell "a good creature of God;!. that used process England that learned She has , Old in Roznan ,, womell's clothing. but la a munition The Britist; government flax cern. n war ttlax, was ,sent there later part of the ighteeth century. suppliee. cannot safely depend and when 'Belfast wintra" are no nation island an trol committee with its 20,000 acres of of war., After pulling. the flax. whieh has for yettinip iliuLretting.ln tanks, or and in Ireland Ireland now even longer needed for war. Britain may any necessity upon enemies orthere war flax in England last year was up been arranged ' in even.kbundies.' has more than a million flax spindles for by chemical admzturs,l or want them for peace and regret her' be that WWI of Linea Cloth. It overseas. May friends this aze-alsolved a and Britain it. on difficulty, by being peed between only damp- grass practiced, and the rest of Great , Will be no more wars, but she is not shortsightedneen if flax cultivatton Is That la how it oomos about that the against But it will not be able to 01.11 upon rollers which break the or seed Research Is 'much- needed in improv- fifth of that number. boils ' has shown the allowed to lie down a.nd die without disposal board of the mialotry of sup., the same labor gangs In peace ilms. vessels and let the seed run put Or it ing this process, for most g The old days' curi- sure tit that. Germany , the power an effort on her part. p1yti In 1$16 trYinir to find a cus- In tell It appealed to the women's may have the bons dragged of br reforms have speeded up the time at ously:combined 'conditions of barbar- will and to a Certain extent the M. GOODMAN." tomer for 81,1170.725 yards of national land 'service corps, who call- Iron comb. Theme methods were prob- the expense of quality. Mr.. to wage an economic war under inism and., high craftsmanship. bleache linen cloth, and recommends ed up 2.000 educated girls from the ably niroady antiquated when the Ro- is the next no modern ma- cloak of friendship. Many Britishwhat (Copyright by the Edwarlil Mamba-i- t us that Coh ?'Soutching"'Boasetens stage.. swine of it as being suitable tor worn olderand newer universities and the mans set up a linen 83redicale. Inc.. 1919.) under languished factory at Win ored picture& In tombs of Upper Egypt chine can beat the bandspinners who dustries (Spcial Oorreerpondence.), 4, 0 - - .! .....s: . adoonimMOMEWMPIP.MEMIaIF , ,Tmrzt , SECTION . . , ' - What This Means is Here Explained by News Special Correspondent . , NE1rS SATURDAY JULY - - . ' 1 ,,, 1.2 , , , . 11 Lord French Says War Was Won on is Belfast Wings - OMIN , ! ,''....' , EVE'NINCy , - ' , io to-b- N. ON-DO- fras-trader- s. L qlir veildemand. to-S- . : - world-shorta- II nr A; ' - - '' (' . 74,0 0 pro-'cu- r4'16 -- 1 -- I I. I ' 0 re - -- - Alla-Amig- ht - ,,-,- 40 -- -- ' s , , - ,- , ',,,4-allib; , , ....i 1, ''' - , 44' itas 0,- 1 e , 't . - - BrittelT-East-Afr- U ica g; . e' u ' . Which-AVon-th- trown--ln-Enn- - . back-breaki- 4 - her-spar- - flax-growi- slow-flowi- - Irish-grow- - dew-retti- - - hand-spinnin- ed TM - C.110P OF FALSE CZARS , - him-to- Andrei 1Droadoll, honestly believes that be .12 lobittlaa. Bo refuseit to take money; and he showed his genuinose by freeing the Bolshevik Soviet in the at THOIJBLES illiSSIA Petraaavodsk to come in and besit,martyred.- "That." wrote Drosdoff. "will smooth the path to the throne for my dear on Alexis. now in Siberia." Fear(continued Trout pure ens).- ing to make things worse, the Soviet refueed Droadotre Me was to be the third Yates razavodek jects. offer, but sent out emissaries to kill anDmitri in Rusala's pretender-ful- l him. The monarchist peasants killed nal& Likely enough the plot would the emissaries,. the usual petty have succeeded. The mere accident civil war began. .and It ,till .00ntinues of a breadiess day upset the Roman- -' Tiro false Nicholas's; appeared at efts In March. 11117; and two years same timeTh in the country east of later ht66,441r11,4y.tri: Onegi7-11-iiof theniclotieli restored them. According Nicholas II who bed its organ. the Red Oasette, persons in the resembled plot rave it away. Astapoff, the four typical tame moujik's face; both colplotters- caught with hint,--anthree lected large puma of money; and both other citizen& were tried by the lo- gave the subscribers I. O. tl.ös in the to pay back when cal tribunal, form of promises was reached. Loyal pose-an- ts dragged behind horses to the Tartar the throne were to be transferred to- the suburb outettle Kasen, and shot by more fertile land of south Russia. chineea coolie& Only when the two pretenders claahed , Shrine of Monarettism. did the moujiks conclude that a fraud The Bolsheviks at present are bard was being perpetrated. A council was at work trying to eradicate the held on an island in Lake Ortega; Cearist tradition from Olonets. This an the false.Nicholases were sumthickly-femmea thinly-people- d. moned claims. backward province northeast of Petro- first false Nicholas who, it appears. an ancient homleof superstition was a litetrograd clerk shorn of his grad. and Iradition where the. unwritten living by Bolshevik expropriators, heroin poetry of old Russia was kept gave such a minute and imposing acalive by professional minstrels until count of his deede and words in the only a generation back. It is a shrine Wilder Palace and at Taarekoe Solo of ancient religious and royalist tra- that he was believed. The 114con d was ditions. In Olonets are at present it lynched. Before death, be summoned large an unknowea.aitember ef Nicho-- . the successful false Czar; begged his Striondes lag the 'whom the commis- forgiveness. and wished him happision against ness on the throne; and the second notca They flit Jrom place to false Czar graciously forgave him, but place; and when the hese gets too refused to get his sentence commuted. hot, they hide in the forests. Many Three days later, the agents of the of them have large numbers of ad- speetal commission 'trapped the rocberents. Most &re certainly conscious cesteful false Czar, and without asking .frauds; but one, whose passport allows him to prove his claims by describ. , ' - , - military-revolutiona- s ry & , - counter-wevolutle- ' - , .0 -- " , tussles. Dances have also fig- glories of the- - Winter- - Palaoe, himself meet be not tar off Int0 the ured ex tensively in th e program of hanged-Wm-t& little railroad town of , YiIa1ma.. be- '''-entertainments arranged forthe Amer. 'Bolshevik neeopeners assert vigor- tween Moscow and Smolensk, marchiCa2111. ously. that the false Nicholases are ed two thousand fervent royalists. and '.. At the University of (Utica?. subsidized by the Allies; and they ex- demanded that they be told where! though the American soldier-studen- ts plain the multitude of- pretenders in Nicholas II was. The council of depurniversitieeTheee Yankee there total only four, a special wan, Olonets provinces by ita proximity to ties was flightened, it vowed that Boys Make Good at the Old Jiro Thounand in bacteriology has been arranged for Home. Archangel. the scene of American-Britis- Nicholas was shot in July tell; that Months' Course Now Completed and Detachment Conn them. We are also deeply indebted' operations. & Petrograd's boss, the Coultas was shot with him; and . te the British Fellowship of Medicine. the tierce the 1 This organization. which is affiliated (Special Correspondence.) Allies' Macchisivellian plan. "When was merely Poloubayarinoff, and in CEadminbbruirdgthe, niiiinsaitty. all the London hosPitals, ham pre-- -the already Csariet peasants 'of 01- - fact not even that, She was a fake; Juno tO OZIDON. July I.,--- with which enable the medi- - London University School of ECOTIOMnets and Southern Archangel rise who she really was, no ono knew. This "soldier1.000. over American men. the American contin- ice, 21 0. 74 officers and 154 against- - the SoViet government . and admission confirmed the demonstra, three the 'students" completed any clinic in London for force the Soviet commanders to dis- tors' belief that Bomalofts. dead or videerda foacilities witnessing operation& months couree of . study that . . In addition to the education k faperse their force& down will march alive, were about; and they seized Is sent to the men our n01111011: and cut up our army in some Soviet members as hostages for they bave been pursuing at BO' differ- - tittles thus afforded them, the sol- 100 ofover medical - dierLatudepts have all . been granted the imprisoned United Stately arirry-a- re viho aid Zinovieff. had to be drowned in That &opened three months al in, but tenttruiversitieethroughouttheUnit-passes by General blood. In the middle of March. the the hostages have not been released. ed Kingdom. Soon the great 'major- mends the American forces in 'Eng- - now availing themselves of this veryk commimiorre executioners Meantime the Nicholas cult spreads lity of theme their army service also land, enabling them to travel, freely important and valuable special crossedIn- sledges the lee of Lake fast; are seen every other will, be. sailing .back to the to all Perth of the United Kingdom, Upon completing their course of atudy'- These soldier students'. and, as their holidays have Permitted. in the various untversitier the Amer-- Onega: and Made a raid,in day. Most of them are merely men in loompleted.the country to the eaet4 seizing about some way resembling Nicholas, who American university men. the men have availed themselves of lean students will receive certificates zoo supposed monarchists who had are much surprised when they learn were temporarily released from the the opportunity thus given them. to for their work which will . sheltered the successive pretender& that they are csars; but some an- United States army - in France es- see its much of the country as their their advantage when they reman studies ' their the in were to continue Milted States. shot. On the way back, nounce themselves: borrow the cash pecially to enable them .Fifty time made possible. The "Student Detachment of of the rearguard of the expedition was of the credulous; and disappear. Bol- - the studies which their enlistment the the "The results experiment attacked :. and cut up by an avowedly shevik CoMmissary 1.7varoff declares ,interrupted. They have one and all have been gratifying in every way," United States army In Great Britain." Czarist fore& which carried a banner that the whole eountryside has got,!given a good account of themselves said Col. Longley yesterday, "not the as It is officially known, publishes a with the old imperial eagle. A few csannania; thousands of persons have while in this. country. and the delight- least satisfactory feature being the little week:y Journal of its own, which ful experience that they have had of splendid behavior of the men. In is called The American Soldier-Stuspi- te prisoners escaped: but 200 odd were taken it as a form of brought to Petrograd and are now and it hats atticked persons of known life at English and ScoteS universities, of the fact 'that- they were sud. dent." Edited by' Col. F. F. LongleY. ,, in lodeed the Khresti prison. Practi- republican and even Bolshivik views. and of life in Britain generallyand deny taken away from military rule. it is brightly written and packed with , arc all the an latest heti. cally "featurihr peasant& But in .other In fact. says livaroft monarchism the exceptionally favorable impres- we have not had a single courtmartial news, is proceeding a has so much the character of a nerv- ision that they have created wherever case, nor one Instance of trouble with account of the great welcome, in which parts of Soviet-Russi- a more formidable monarchist ous craze that the - government moveof 'they have gone. cannot fail- to go a thil civilian authorities. The men are about 500 students took part which ment4 behind which are influential and people's commissaries need not take it long waytoward fostering the cordial delighted with the taste that they awaited Commander A. C. Read. of educated persons well equipped with too seriously; probably it .will disapbetween the two have had of British university life, the N. C. 4, on his arrival at Pad- funds. This movement is a bigger pear as quickly and as Inexplicably as iunderstanding the Anglo-Saxo- n race and as most of them have lived with dington Station from Plymouth after menace tp Bolshevism than any It appeared- -persons are anxious private families and had almost un- - the conclusion of his Trans-Atlant- ic ' '' 50 tar.' limited week-en- d persons who Disappear It may.-1-Ithospitality extend- - flight. know Russia, and the susceptibility ' The idea of enabling the university ed to them. they have- - come closely There in also this bit of verse, brow larellist Organization. of Its illiterate population to crazes, !men in the American army to continue in contact with British solallife and icling an instance of American eon. The consptrators are members Of consider that the time is probably ripe ;their studies in Great Britain orig- been immensely pleased with their ex- - (version ' to EnglIsh speech: pre-- ; :inated with the American Y. M. C. A., periences as a whole. the former Union, of the This is a par-I- I have the Oxford Russian for the appearance of a first-clas- s atmoephere to thank people, a violently monarchist and re- tender, of the rank of the False Dmitrl! ;which took the initial step of ap- ticularly satisfactory circumetance aft For many great improvements in actionary association started during or Pugatcheff, who may attract great proaching the beads of the British it has gone a long why toward cor- ' .... i . ' , the revolution of 1905, with Czar masses of people; and even possibly !seats of learning ttnd found them one recting the somewhat unfortunate 1 thov my speech. alit Oxford that was all Bollanguage whole of Nicholas patronage, to oppose con. overthrow the system and all moet willing to place their imprension of England whtch was the swank stitutional reform& The Union of the shevism. The need is for a repreat the disposal of the almoet inevitable result of the original freely 1 But now know a Slighter cannot Russian People is identical with the sentative pretender who can play the !American soldier etudents. Early in hurried passage of the American xeach . Black Hundred which killed Icoreit of rola-o-f Csarwith dignity, not merely the history of the enterprise, however, troops through this country on their 'A In the art of yap- .level higher reformers and organized massacres of among peasants, but among educated: it was !taken over otticially- - by the way- - to: Franc All these men,. on rtrr fed wtth up the lingo that 1 had;----- ---the Jews and of liberal citizens belong. Then. If such a pretender appears, his! American army. and has since been their return home will. I am sure..The talk of every blinkine mouthy chap ing to the educated class. In Febru- elevation to the throne of his sham.' administered by Ci 5 section of the "peak in the highest terms of their 1 Whom once be knew . now almost next the ary. the Petrograd Northern Com- forefathers may phase in. 4eneral stag, the head of which is treatment here. As for the impres-- 1 drives me mad. not Col. F. F. Longley. Col. Longley, a sion which our men have made at the mune made a clean sweep of the Russia's bigarre history. It is Al soon as possible now an the men Union's founders.- On one day were more improbable than the succession West Point graduate, had been con- - arious universities which they have Cath- 1 shot the presidena DubrovinV in connection with attended, it has been of the happiest will return the of the Finnish the United States ex. engineer tilting chief agitator Polovneff, who-killerine, who began life as a .private sol New York city's water supply for 15 description . the heads of these insti- - cepting the relatively small proportion a, Duma member named Harsenstelnij dier's sweetheart, to the throne of years before United tutions having assured me that they who belong to the American army of the Peter the- Great. and proprietress of the Union's news-pip!States army after the entrance of have been especially struck with the occupation. They will rejoin their reg. JULIUS OSTMAN. I America Olga Poloubayattnott. ' From HAYDEN CHURCH... into the war. lie hes been geriousneu' as well as with the good iments Edward Marshall. the slaughter of the Union chiefs Copyright 1011.by s. . of our (Copyright, 1919.) responsible for the water supply of all behavior came a new phase of pretendership. In the direction of scholarehip. --1 the American regiments in Francs, A sham too. the men Distinhave given a first rate Poloubayarinoff and recently received the appeared west of Moscow, and collected money 13AYER CROSS" ON guished Service medal for eapecialiy account of themselves. One of them.1 "for the rentoration to the throne of Lieut. Emil F. Vacin, of Chicago, who. meritorious service. Nicholas who is hiding in Crimea." Be in eines Anril let has been working at.' The n Americari soldier-studen. The phtun Poloubayarinoff wu so en. - . Great-Britat900 Cambridge under Sir ,,f,. .I. .Thomson.! comprise roughly . . ASPIRIN GENUINE ceuraged by success that at last she r officers and 1,100 enlisted men, the one of the world'e greatest physicists.; BRIMMATIS111 extorted money from a Bolshevik corn: exact OW number being 247. They le believed to have discovered a new Prof . Joao G. Klesseues. missary by threatening to expose thd men who were detach- type of radiation which seems ilkely4' are all picked i F3 fact that he himself hadonce been Prove-othe first itroortance. Lient. Rheumatism a ed from the service, after making Mae. SpecialistExpert a paid agitator of the Union efilias.. It to Vacin, the Arnf.,...1 previous sPPlicatien to that end, in recognition, eurOrthopedics and Bloodless ' ,.. . elan People. The commissary gave of good service and exceptional char- !can army, did research work in phys- - PurgeryDctormitles of Joints and way. and paid .heri100.000 roubles of acter. AU of them have spent at'least ics a t the University of Chicrign., At Muscles Diseases. 1 want-thpublic money. When asked to account two yeers at American universlitee '7Axford, two former Rhodos s cholarsi the Doctors can not handle. for It. he 'told his whole., story, and , I diagnose no eases and treat - an -- ' . They were all permitted to choose the who are now members bt the student committeed suicide. The pretender detaehment British to desired there deunder supervision of- - Regis. vises they received recently unptereities , Poloubayarinoff wits caught- by Bed those whose curriculum rrees. Sere, W. C. Bosworth. B. A.. tered Physicians: ..-- t attendtel, , . Guards, and hanged. 1S17. Cxon. Will wanincluded the special course! they mnd,- a Master of Doctors let me show yozi what 1 Thie led to a new cearist revival, and Arta , John V. tedand hate continued to, receive Cap Ray, a Bache- - can do on some of your old deformed backed by of the Uniert. . army pay and, in addition, $t brat Arta-- . reeumatic,--gout"Baer Tab leis of Aspirtn" .to be atheir which is still going on The permit'. or."Daralytio carve - A excover to board and "In the dsy Trained in Europe general direction of Ninon,- - the under Doctor ' tion of :west Moscow province and genuine must be marked "with the penses. soldier-stirden- ts Lorenz American detached o. Though officially S ehruder. sod have also ..aalelY "Bayer Cross." eastern Smolensk is particularty buy aa from the army. all the soldier-stu- I themselves as we should listinguished Bolshevik. It has a reputation for ' unbroken Bayer Package whiCh con. dentricontinue to wear uniform., operated large sanitoriums pa", I have e xPected them to s do. everal ex. ' fanatical patriotism dating from the tains proper directions to safely re- 17:- - The mew arrived throughoutthe East; 15 ErtglancL from them having been selected le mem-of, IL., perienes , Napoleonic invasion. Being entirely lieve Headache, Toothache, .Earache, France on March 5 and otter a short here Of the eights for the-without newspapere,lt got no intelli- Neuralgia, Colds and pain. Handy tin Istine in camp at Liverpool they were Por reference and ruses;tee MI ,race, on As I, member of theHenley Cam- gible account of the iianging of Polou, boxes of 12 tablets cost but- - a few work, NO RELIEF NO PAY. to the various British uni- brhise--erewre Everywhe the en lin etores.---largbayartneff; and the storyspread that cents it drug While of their PretAttnee. These have orgahiged basitbill teams. packages . suitable loostles the hanged woman was and pee me or getting also. Aspirin is the trade mark of" cohipriee 25 hi London and the came phone me at 410 Richmood niriese OxAlexandra Feo'dorovna,, Csar Was. 10 representing Apts.. a. 516; Murtufacture of Monoaceticaci. 'number outside the metropolis There ford. Cambridge aed other at. to 12 . noon. Payer or byspecial universi- las's wife. It followed that. Nicholas deeter of Saticylicacbt appointment at ties have,had exciting and closely Anwican soldier-studen- ts eon- - . . tng-t- h s- - o - h- - ZihoVitiff."-thilsidescribc- etthaet ' On L v , . Bid-dTe- I - - ex-csare"- le cot I - mass-suggestio- n; - - 1 counter-rep- Aietkon ut ' ' - -- , . . . 1 -- - Off.Co rns t 11ft , .. .. Doesn't hurt! Litt touchy 'corns and ' calluses right off with fingers . Nunn-follow- e a er ed , . .... . 1 -- ' I - , : ,, . . . ' - , ' ; . er .Apply a few drops of ''Frrezone" upon that old . bothersome corn. Instantly that corn stops hurtillg. Then shortly you- lift it right off, ' root and all, without pain or soreness. oldier-student- ,,.. lithy ts , Deforme d? . . . , , Hard corms, soft corns, corns between the toes, and tilt-- hard skin calluses on N. bottom 01 fret lift . ... ..k.. I . .., . -- , offno sight - " . - .. - - humbug! - ,. , ' - , . co . I jng - :Awymz r; ea. , - .., .. , - 1, , s ti T a , , I . , , - el Tiny ilula tfc'Fretzons" hus 8 ,Ittit colts, , cost , ye' - .. - at Iraq stern - o a , ' er (..,, . - . ed c., .. . . ; . , h . , . . ' 0 ''' t Pt. . , ' . 4 - .., to - .. - , .. ..... , , - 1 4 1 ' |