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Show "REDS" "' "m"' '' ' "'''' OF GARY ARE RAIDED AND DISARMED """ M" . J hi 3 It i TROOPS FEDERAL ' mi ii I,, hhimjiiiiiiii tti-- i STOP AT GARY RIOTING mmj. " : "t I "iTir-r- r tin t i T ii i KioUng by the steel strikers at Gary, Ind., was sjieedily stopped by the federal troops tinder the command of Get Wnod. Some of them are here seen with machine gunsiu one of the principal streets of the town. eOv ..wzjt.v vt -- 4 epulis, revolutionary of Gary, lud. . tlngaua otlier things ctipiuivd in a ruid umde ly fwlenil troops on the til1( vi!.i MASS OF THANKSGIVING FOR BELGIUM'S juj'y "mum. x m m nvn mi,mii.y. iumi AT ARLINGTON OFFICER BURIAL OF A FRENCH CEMETERY 7T" headquarters of the DELIVERANCE TTTT , 5 ,7V - ? , JA Mil "v- - - iV 3 i tl Ik. J 1 it .v bowsaw Lieut. Henri Coquelet, a distinguished French officer who died in Washington, was burled nt Arlington cemetery with full military honors. Members of the state department and the French embassy attended. LEARNING DAD'S BUSINESS Hi'h liuiKs of thanksgiving for the deliverance of Belgium, celebrated in Boston cathedral. Cardinal Mercler, on til throne, oflicinted, and at the right are the king and queen of the Belgians and the crown prince. CRADLE OF CZECHOSLOVAK INDEPENDENCE till kJlk flogged by cossacks WAS f a ROYALTY AT NIAGARA FALLS BELGIAN ri;4!l 1: f' "."fit IJjh L j id y ih rL-Viv- -- p r IiwA i y j hJ 'ft - t:h i n! M i , , it 7 i 1 y IXrV I i vl' 1 1 I- - v" ' ' ' I 1 i n hi patriots fannhonsse near Frngue, where Ozecho-SloMination. Tlie liiid their plans for an Independent Uswho-Slovaid aspirations of these leaders have at last been realized. iiiir-'seju- if ; it i.i Cornelius A. Wood, younger son of William M. Wood, president of the American Woolen company, who has started at the bottom to learn the business and is working as wool sorter in GERMANS FIGHTING POLES IN SILESIA the storehouse of the Washington mills Corp. Benjamin Sperling of Brook- at Lawrence, where this picture was lyn, N. Y., who was arrested and taken. He gets $10 o week and has flogged by Russian Cossacks in Siberia. what is regarded as the toughest Job Thirty-fIn the place. He enlisted in the navy Sperling, who is a member of the United States infantry, with as a gob, won a commission as ensign irst Twenty-sevent- h Cnpt. L. r. Johns of the In a competitive examination and wns -- 1 United States infantry, was at discharged as a lieutenant, junior Iman, 1T0 miles from Vladivostok, oil grade. official business when both were arrested by Cossacks of General Doubtless True. forces. Both were in uniform. of ours whose books of A friend Captain Johns managed to escape and verse have been listed with the "best American 1 reported the incident to the a Jolt that American sillers" recently received commander at Spasske. some writers. have discouraged .night effect Sperling's forces were sent to Having some curiosity to see how release and they found the Cossacks latest production was being rethis them. to Sperling, resist preparing ent into a department ho ceived after being flogged, was taken to of the sales girl : and store Inquired of General headquarters "Have you Twanglyre's new book of Kalmikoff. He was later released. received and demanded poetry?" Graves General "No," the girl replied, "but we have an apology. lots of others Just as good." The Potato. We'll Bet She Did. In its native country, on the mounThey were seeing San Francisco. tains of Chile and Peru, writes Jean Henri Fabre, lu Field, Forest and They hud done Chinatown, the seals, Farm, the potato In its wild state is a couple of museums and the spaghetti lmarkable action photograph showing Germans fighting Foles at the a poor diminutive tuber about as large tunnel In Bay street. The evening station at Myslowitz, upper Silesia. as a hazelnut Man takes the worth- found them In Peacock alley watching less wild stock into his garden, plants the Frangipani parade. Finally one of It In rich soil, tends It, waters it ; and them had an Inspiration. She turned Mystery Solved. Capitalit Reflection. d behold, bom year to year the potato to her companion. "Jlec eyes were red, and she expleUj-e- 1 thrives Bore and more, gaining In size pronoun "I" and the Inter "Do you like art?" she queried. )etin "O" are better written without and that she had been to a wedding. finally nutritive properties, "Oh, law, yes. Whenever I hit a big In and Ulns a apltal. Let "U" be added and always cry more at a wedding than I tuber as a la?g farinaceous ity - with an artery In it I always so much more un- becomes signifies that the writer lias no do at a funeral-- ifs oIn." fiwt. tw your at at all. Boston certain." Boston Trauscript. nun ; Tiie king and queen of Belgium saw all there was to see at Niagara Fulls, und for the purpose they donned oilskins, as shown In the photograph. k WWW-WWW- rn!r FEAT AVIATOR'S REMARKABLE FRENCH : fit 1 1''' II H 'A ' jj, Kha-hornvs- k, ""'d 1 Transcript. t'V ,) An Interesting photograph of Aviator Mnlcon passing under the bridge of at Nice, France. The plane has n width of nine meters, while the arch of the bridge Is only a little over 14, and the plane was going at a speed ot 63 miles per hour. Var, Foundation of True Beauty. The truest beauty arises from a noble character. A soul which Is radiant with love and truth lights even the homeliest face Into beauty which Is not translem, but which grows ever deeper and more abiding as the years pass on. Fish Live In loe. During several months of each year some of the great rivers of Siberia are frozen solid to the bottom, but the fishes imprisoned in the Ice maintain their vitality and resume their active life vfhaa Uw ley jneUi In Uie spring |