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The Deming Headlight du lieu suivant : Deming, New Mexico • 1

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Deming, New Mexico
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THE DEMING HEADLIGHT Oicial Paper of U. S. Land Off Notices, Luna County, and the City GRAND JURYMEN Hughes, MAKE REPORTS Forty-four True Bills and Seven No Bills Reported at Present Term of Court. COUNTY OFFICES ALL GOOD committees Find All Departments Conducted in Orderly Manner Records Well Kept. The grand jury finished its work last Friday and made its report to R.

Ryan, who is holding Raymonere this week. Fortyfour true bills were returned by the grand jury and seven no bills. The cases investigated cover, the period since April, 1917, the present term of court, and it speaks well for the general condition of the county and is a remarkable compliment to all of the officers charged with maintaining law and order here that the number of cases to be handled in the course of a year was so small. What makes it all the more noteworthy is the fact that both in Deming and at Columbus there are large numbers of soldiers stationed who might be expected to cause a certain amount of trouble, but they have maintained a standard of conduct in both places that speaks very highly for their morale and law-abiding spirit and that reflects great credit on the officers who are in charge of them. District Attorney J.

S. Vaught and Sheriff W. C. Simpson were both highly commended by the grand jury for the assistance they gave the members in their investigations and for way in which they have looked after the, affairs of the county during the past year. The different committees turned in their reports to Albert Field, the foreman of the grand jury, on Friday, and E.

they F. were Milliken, they, discharreede, and Clem Watkins, the committee that investigated the sheriff's office, reported that they found everything in good order, the records well kept, and that more had been transacted by the sheriff's office. during the past year than in any other previous year. Sheriff Simpson has met all the onerous conditions in an admirable manner. One hundred and twenty-five cases have been turned by the sheriff to the federal officers and many of those accused of different crimes have been persuaded to plead guilty to informations and are 10W serving sentences, thus saving Che county a great deal of expense for the conduct of trials in these cases.

The conditions at the jail are as could be expected and the prisoners state they are satisfied with the treatment accorded them, Chris Raithel and C. M. Franklin examined the county assessor's office and reported that they found the office well kept and the work well done. Mrs. Alice Smith, county superintendent of schools, was complimented by the committee, consisting of Sam Watkins, Chas.

Faulkner and L. C. Osborn, that examined her office, for the neat and orderly manner in which her, books committee and records composed were of kept. Arthur J. Evans, W.

L. Sinclair and C. J. Scott could find no criticisms to pass on the conduct of the office of the county clerk and gave Charles R. Hughes a clean bill of health.

Everything at the county hospital was found to be in perfect order by L. O. Tucker and J. W. Blair, who strongly commended this new institution to the people of Luna county.

is It can be- made self-supporting if the taxpayers will stand behind the county commissioners and the county health officers, as the charges made for treatment there are reasonable. The committee advised that the water supply should be improved and made more sanitary and that the well be covered. Mrs. Godden, in charge of the county hospital, was highly complimented by the committee for the work she is doing. Emmett Connolly, Wade Herren, and T.

J. Clark, investigated the conditions at the local schools and found them, in the main, satisfactory. The Lowell school needs some changes in the sanitary arrangements and there are two rooms at the grade school that are not connected with fire escapes, and these conditions should be remedied, said the committee, before the next term of school. There is no toilet at the school at Cook's Peak, and it was urged that every school in the county be provided with sanitary drinking fountains. The books of the county treasurer were found to be in perfect condition by G.

N. Petty, Vidal Tarrazon, and E. F. Moran. GIVE A PIE SOCIAL Methodist Episcopal church (Spanish) services morning and afternoon, with preaching by the pastor.

Sunday school at 10 a. m. The ladies of the church will give a pie social on Monday evening, next, to which the public is invited. DR. MARION BROWNING, Pastor.

BLACKHAM WILL COME BACK H. F. Blackham, the automobile expert who formerly lived here and ran the Borderland garage, has returned to Deming and will make his home here. He will again engage in his business and is certain to receive a large amount of trade from those people in Deming who are acquainted with his ability as a mechanic. What Is In the Pot? Deming, Luna County, New R.

Hagar' Proclamation. Clerk GREETINGS! To the Citizens of Deming: Friday, June 28th, 1918, is officially designated WAR SAVINGS DAY by the Secretary. of the Treasury and the Governor of this State. All loyal citizens of this community will accordingly devote the afternoon of said day after two o'clock to subscribing for War Savings Stamps, and otherwise promoting their sale in large amounts. All who are able should pledge themselves to save and invest the limit allowed by law.

R. F. HAMILTON, Mayor. WILSON TELLS MEXICAN EDITORS OF U. S.

ATTITUDE TOWARD MEXICO President Wilson, in an address last week to a party of visiting Mexican editors, said much to reassure any Mexicans or natives of Central or South American states in regard to more or less mistaken ideas they have apparently heretofore entertained respecting the Monroe doctrine. He favors, a Pan-American peace league, and was his suggestion that all agree, the United States included, that if any nation violate the political independence or territorial integrity of any, the others will all jump on her. In speaking to the editors, 1 he said in part: 4T have never received a group of men who were more welcome than you, because it has been one of my distresses during my presidency that the Mexican people did not more thoroughly understand the attitude of the United States toward Mexico. I think I can assure you that that attitude is one of sincere friendship. "The policy of my administration toward Mexico was in every point based upon the principle that the internal settlement of the Mexico was none of our "business; that we had no right to interfere with or dictate to Mexico in any particular with regard to her own affairs.

When we sent troops into Mexico, our sincere desire was nothing than to assist you to get rid of a man who was making the settlement of your affairs for the time being impossible. We had no desire to use for any other purpose and I was in hopes that by assisting in that way and thereupon immediately withdrawI might give substantial truth of assurance that I had given your government through President Carranza. "Some time ago I proposed a sort of Pan-American agreement. I had perceived that one of the difficulties of our past relationships with Latin- America was this: The famous Mondoctrine was adopted without your consent and without the consent any of the Central American or South American states. said: 'We are going to be your big brother whether you want us to be or not.

"We did not ask whether it was agreeable to you that we should be big brother. We said we were going to Now, that is all very well as far as protecting you from aggression from the other side of the water was concerned, but there was nothing in it that protected you from aggression from us, and I have repeatedly seen an uneasy feeling on the part resentatives of the states of Central and South America that our self-appointed protection might be for our own benefit and our own interests and not for the interests of our neighbors. So I have said: Let us have a common guarantee that all of us will sign a declaration of political independence and territorial integrity. Let us agree that if any of us, the United States included, violates the political independence or territorial integrity of any of the others, all the others will jump on her. "Peace can only come by trust.

If you can once get a situation trust then you have got situation of permanent peace. Therefore, everyone of us owes it as a patriotic duty to his own country to plant the seeds of trust and confidence instead of the seeds of suspicion and variety of The Times of London compares the president's speech with the statement of Herr von Payer, the German vicechancellor, and says: "No contrast could be stronger. The president talks of liberty, justice and law. The vice-chancellor looks forward to a world in which the unified armies of Germany and AustriaHungary will still impose their orders on a submissive Europe." SOL CARRAGIEN BOOKS "OVER THE TOP" FOR THE CODY THEATRE "Sergeant Arthur Guy Empey is one of the finest natural actors to come under my personal supervision," is the emphatic statement of Albert E. Smith, president of the Vitagraph Company of America, whose film production of Empey's famous war story, "Over the Top," starring the soldierauthor in the very role he enacted for eighteen months in the trenches will be presented on the screen at the Cody theatre, beginning at noon today.

Sergeant Empey, who became famous as a fighter, lecturer and author, served for eighteen months in the first line trenches as machine gunner and bomber, and was honorably discharged after receiving seven wounds "going over the top" in raids against the Hun. His book, "Over the Top," has been read by some three million people, and it is estimated that through it and his lectures he has recruited thousands of men, sold $1,011,000 worth of Liberty Bonds, raised $50,000 for "smoke" funds, and now, through the he is carrying the spirit of Vitagraph, production of "Over the patriotisen and the gospel of action "When we millionaded Sergeant Empey to appear in the picture production of his story, which was adapted for the screen by Robert Gordon Anderson, his friend and manager," says Mr. Smith, "I knew he possessed dramatic ability, having heard his stirring lectures from the platform, but I was not prepared to find him so utterly lacking in what I might call 'camera Before rehearsing the first scenes, I asked Sergeant Empey to describe the action as he thought it should be depicted. Instead of replying verbally, he went through his part without direction. Later, under the direction of Wi'frid North, he played his part with the same spontaneity and realism that he did while I was conferring with him over the I had expected simply to introduce to the public a great personality in his own great story, but now, after viewing the completed production time and again, I feel I am introducing a splendid actor as well." When Mr.

Smith's statement was repeated to Empey, the young fighter of many accomplishments only laughed and replied: 4T don't know what acting is. When I was before the camera, I forgot the director, the camera and the studio. As nearly all the scenes of the p'ay are actual episodes I have experienced, the thing was easy for me. I simply live them over again- Mexico, Friday, June 14, MORE VOLUMES FOR LIBRARY Thirty-five Hundred Books Now on Shelves- -Additions Are Being Made Regularly. A path of culture opens at the door of the little mission style building at Pine and Copper, Deming.

It stretches far out on the grassy prairie, for the Deming Pub'ic Library is a Luna county institution, free to all within its confines, designed not only to instruct sometimes, but to please and entertain, and at all times, to break the monotony and loneliness of life in a sparsely settled desert country. The library is three years old and full of books, 3,500 volumes being stored there. There is no library fund except the dues of the association, that will soon arrange a meeting for renewing membership. The library is open on Wednesday and Saturday afternoons from 2 to 5 p. absolutely free to readers who observe these hours, and all books may be taken out by residents of Luna county on the regulation library cards with the same freedom, except those in the loan collection.

A charge of 10 cents a week is made for them, and when the rentals have accumulated enough money to pay for the books, they are placed on the shelves where they become free to all readers. Many gifts have been received from Citizens of Deming. recent gift of 500 books from the camp library comprises fiction, history and scientific works, for which Mrs. R. C.

Hoffman voices the appreciation of the twelve ladies of the board of directors. The librarian finds war books very popular now, and she plans to fill a new book case recently donated with literature devoted to this absorbing subject for the convenience of students of war conditions. is hoped to build up a collection of juvenile books, although at the present time many little visitors before the case devoted to the children, where the small folk of Deming may pass many happy, shining hours of the summer. Those who deprecate the lack of a reference library in an enterprise so new and a building so small, may yet. find something to interest them in chosen line of study from psychology to practical instruction on how to keep hens, from political economy to assaying.

The artistically inclined may read of the schools of painting, the musicians who are developing a musical taste among the children of the churches in Deming may follow Professor Elson, the suffragettes may study woman's be part benefited in government. All may and pleased. In a city by the sea, not more than a thousand miles from Deming, a magnificent library holds the lamp of learning for a free and a cultured people. It was Henry Rosenberg, multi-millionaire of Texas, who encouraged sculptor, author, all who brought the grace of art' into the lives of those among whom he was a son by adoption. Is there not opportunity here for emulation by Deming and New Mexico men of wealth A list of new books in the loan section: "Told in a French Garden," Mildred Aldrich.

"Calvary Alley," Alice Hegan Rice. Dwelling Place of Light," Winston Churchill. "A Son of the Middle Border," Hamlin Garland. "The Major," Ralph Connor. "Michael, Brother of Jerry," Jack London.

"The Tree of Heaven," May Sinclair. "The Beloved Son," Fanny Kemble Johnson. HOSPITAL NOTES The Ladies' Hospital of Deming at 520 South Copper avenue, with its attractive furnishings and pleasing surroundings, is a far cry from the one room. which the good women of the Deming of twenty years ago fitted up for the care, and treatment needed sometimes the homeless cowboys. Achsa Field, president; Mahoney, vice Mrs.

Katherine Moir, H. Congdon Brown, treasurer; Emma S. Duff, matron, and Mrs. Ella Mahoney form the present board of directors. Mrs.

Emma Duff still treasures in memory, as her earliest recollection of Deming as she first knew it the mental picture of these good Samaritans selling cakes and home-made dainties to earn the money to support the philanthropy that appealed most to their hearts. Founded in faith and hope, the work was carried on in love. The hospital grew and moved twice with the growth of Deming; first, into a house on the site of the present Baker Hotel, then into a house on Copper avenue, built for the purJudge Field, the father of Bins. Achsa, the Field, at this time board. the Now the same tenderness president governing, after seven years of ministration in the new building continues to express faith and good works and serves to call the attention of passing strangers who hear the history the hospital to those good people of the Deming of the long ago, many of them "long loved and lost awhile." Mrs.

Jessie Garner and her mother, Mrs. J. E. Wood, left Deming Sunday evening for Dodge City, Kan. Mrs.

Barrett, who has been at the Ladies' Hospital for treatment for about three weeks, is now ready to go home. A daughter was born Tuesday at the Ladies' Hospital to Mrs. Richard Bellmore, wife of a soldier at Camp Cody. Mrs. Gertrude Gardner of Lake Valley, N.

is recovering from an attack of pneumonia at the Ladies' Hospital. 1918 OPENING UP THE CAMPUS New Restaurant on North Silver Avenue Features Rustic Decorations and Summer Garden. The Campus cafe is the latest addition to the houses Deming where one can get good things eat, and it will be opened its new home on North Silver avenue next week. It is owned by a company of business men and E. Johnston has been placed in charge as manager.

Mr. Johnston has had years of experience in the catering business, in various states, and he brings to his new duties as manager of the Campus the knowledge gained in some of the largest cities of the country. In addition to the cafe and grill room, there will be a delicatessen department, where food may be obtained ready cooked, in instances, and where many dainties will be on sale at all times. It is intended to conduct the Campus on the highest class lines and to furnish the best food obtainable at popular prices. There will be a grill room disguised as a rustic bungalow and there will also be a large dining hall, and the yard in the rear of the building has been converted into a summer garden where meals will be served.

The Campus will make a special bid for the catering, for banquets and parties, will employ a chef a staff of assistants who will be competent and efficient at all times. Another attraction of the new cafe will be the music, both vocal and instrumental, which will be rendered daily, and Mr. Johnston has secured the services of several high-class artists to entertain the guests at the Campus. A grand piano has already been installed for this purpose. The lighting will all be concealed behind the rustic surroundings which are the main feature of the place, and summer garden will be lit by the soft glow of many Japanese lanterns hanging in the trees that dot the premises.

It is estimated that the Campus will be able to seat at least 150 people at one time, and it is the intention of the owners and of Mr. Johnston to make a strong bid for the widest possible patronage in Deming. The cost the Campus will run around $7,500 before the doors are thrown open to the public. Miss Annie M. Mulheron has arrived from Los Angeles, Calif.

She will be librarian of the American Library Association in the new Red Cross house at the new base hospital. MUSICAL SOLDIER THANKS KESNER lowing letter of appreciation: Office of the Divisional Disability Myron A. Kesner of the war camp community board has received the fol- Camp Cody, New Mexico June 11th, 1918. Mr. Myron Kesner, Care of The Community Club, Deming, New Mexico.

My Dear Mr. Kesner: The Community Club has given me so much pleasure that I thought it would be no more than right to express to you my appreciation in this very inadequate way. In civil lif I play the piano a good deal, both or myself and others. Naturally, 1 still like to play occasionally, and the only GOOD piano I have found, either in camp or in the public places in Deming, is in the Community Club, where I have spent many enjoyable evenings with my musical friends. Allow me to thank you and the people who have made possible this comfortable retreat for the "tired soldier," for the privilege of using the Community Club and its fine piano.

Yours respectfully, FLOYD AGRELL. Mrs. Effie Clary, Mrs. L. H.

and Mrs. Coe I. Crawford, all of Huron, S. are visiting their sons in Company 127th machine gun battalion. The Jadies will remain a week in Deming.

Crump of Tres Hermanas and the Gymkana Mining Company, accompanied by Eugene Casey, manager of the Gymkana Mining Company, and Houston Crump were in Deming yesterday. NEED 2,000 ENGINEERS Two thousand captains and engineers and first lieutenants from civil life are needed for the engineer corps. The army examining board will sit at Deming, N. and Dallas, and applicants will be notified of the proper dates. Those desiring to be captain must be between the ages of 36 and 42.

Applicants for lieutenancies must be between 32 and 36 years old. TAYLORS LOSE BABY The infant daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Thos. R.

Taylor, who was born last Friday, died on Tuesday and was buried. from the Mahoney undertaking establishment on Wednesday. The sympathy of their many friends has been extended to Mr. and Mrs. Taylor in their bereavement.

MRS. CARRAGIEN ON VACATION Mrs. James Carragien left yesterday for California, where she will spend a vacation with her relatives. When Mrs. Carragien returns to Deming she will be accompanied by her mother, Mrs.

Ella Perkins, and sister, Mrs. Trixie Whaling, who will make their homes here. CIRCUS GOES IN WAGONS The high rates on the railroads are making hard sledding for the circuses, especially for the smaller outfits, and this consideration led Fuentes Hermanos, who have been playing here for the past few days, to buy seven Winona wagons from F. C. Peterson, the local agent, in which to transport the show from one point to another along the road.

For 36 Years Demoeratie in Polities. Volame 36, Number 39 LUNA COUNTY BOYS ENLIST Many From This County Join Different Branches of Uncle Sam's Forces in Large Numbers. The following is a list of the young men from Luna county who have already entered the service of the nation in one or other of the armed branches of the service: Jose Almaraz, Ben S. Aguirre, W. L.

Ayres, Willie Bottom, Jas. P. Burtis, Raymond L. Blair, Chas. W.

Bates, Earl M. Brady, Warren S. Clark, Carl A. Coit, J. Walter Clark, Geo.

W. Chester, N. J. Crotchett, Wm. J.

Clary, Frank E. Coit, W. E. Conwell, Lacon M. Case, F.

M. LeLong, Robt. H. Emery, Lloyd K. Earp, Chas.

R. Fleming, R. L. Ferguson, "Olen Featherston, W. B.

Frazier, Wm. Gaupp, E. C. Gregory, C. F.

Gertz, C. C. Howard, Frank Hill, John Hyatt, Glen R. Haste, H. G.

Hutchinson, Henry G. Hester, Thos. E. Hull, L. A.

Hathaway, Sumner E. Jackson, Jas. L. Jackson, Leon Johnson, Amos L. Keith, Jesse Kelly, G.

C. Kornegay, E. B. Landsell, O. E.

Lindlof, Herman Lindauer, Henry L. Lane, Jackson T. Long, Thos. G. Lackland, Clyde Miller, Jackson E.

Martin, Harold A. Martin, V. Rue Marichal, Jesse M. Mitchell, Harm Nieman, W. Byrd Payne, John C.

Pappert, Jas. A. Poor, Thos. M. Phillips, Ray E.

Peek, W. C. Parkey, Leo J. Patrick, Maximiano Rascon, Julian H. Rucker, Louis Ravel, Green A.

Smith, Alvie E. Stroud, Orvile Suppiger, Geo. A. Smith, Ed Simon, Peter Thermas, R. V.

Tarwater, Lewis F. Taylor, Philip R. Upton, John B. White, Z. A.

Woods, S. J. Whatley, Edward P. White, Joseph Zulawanski. The names given above are those of the men who have joined the army, Those who are in the navy are: Thos.

Benson, W. J. Clifford, Nathan Coryell, Raymond 'S. Cornell, Boyd Cornett, Fred I. Grover, Chas.

Bryan Hubbard, Chas. Jones, W. Louis Jones, Clarence A. King, Marcos B. Lucero, Elbert K.

Laird, Fred Lawrence, Jackson E. Martin, John G. Martin, Byron E. Morgan, Harry Merritt, W. Leonard Orr, Jas.

0. Rominger, Leo Paul Steele, John Wm. Tong, Godfrey C. Trowbridge, H. P.

Vowels. There are a large number of other lads from Deming who have joined the navy, but as they enlisted at some other point than Deming they are not credited to Luna county. the last batch of men who were sent to the army are the names of M. G. Coffer, Manuel N.

Flores, Park Grismore, S. M. Luck, John E. Lake, Louis B. Mills, 0.

0. Osborn, John H. Stiles, W. W. Sharp, A.

L. Taylor, E. J. Wasnidge, W. S.

Ward, E. H. Leupold, S. R. Crenshaw, 0.

M. Chancey, J. Y. Rogers, L. C.

Osborn, J. T. Manning, Joe Deckert, L. C. Walker, L.

H. 'S. Kimmel, N. F. Risdon, H.

E. Dines, W. Holstein, W. L. Moore.

D. E. Fowler, Gillard, all for the army, and Floyd McCarthy for the navy. These men are now in process of being inducted into the United States forces. The list of men who registered as having attained the age of twentyone since June 5, 1917, comprises following names, several of whom are now in the navy: Richard Albert Davis, Thomas Spencer Ward, James LeRoy Philips, Laurence Richard Poll, Deming; Karl Emery Peterson, Waterloo; Enrique Rodriguez, Edwin F.

Clark, Deming; Julian M. Ford, Columbus; J. Henry, Jack Adams, Walton Holstein, Max McGinnis, Don Cecil Hazen, Deming; Ernest Wangeman, El Paso; Irwin George Taylor, Walter A. Duffy, Butler; John Taylor Steed, Deming; Ralph LeRoy Bailey, Columbus; Manuel N. Flores, Guadalupe Ortiz, Jose Tono, Benjamin Rodriguez, Ernesto Salaiz, Apolonio Taguare, Manuel Sauceda, Deming; Key Turley, Gladstone; L.

A. Beck, John Latimer Watkins, John Burgess, L. W. Evans, Vase Felipe Kestera, Deming; Oliver L. Mallen, Omaha, Louis W.

Panhurst, Jack F. Phillips, Deming; Arquijo, Columbus; Ralph Wessner, Raymond Cole, Ted Cox, Deming; Rosalio Morales, Columbus; William Frey, Deming; Graden Beal, Nutt; W. L. Moore, Bryan Develin, Alexander R. Hamilton, James Harry Kelley, Ponce Hidalgo, Kenneth Keeble, S.

Hyatt, John McDowell, Francisco G. Vivanco, Jose Espejel, Jose Moreno, John Kamvisis, Martin Dominguez, Theodore Eaton, Linford Lawrence Peterson, Rojero J. Lopez, Deming. and get some of the same thrills I did originally. Sometimes I get too realistic, as when I knocked down two of the 'German' guards, when I was supposed only to make a sort of squirming resistance.

But they told me to act natural, and that certainly was the natural procedure for any American, wasn't it?" Top" is Supporting a cast Empey of stars in "Over headed the by Lois Meredith, stage and screen favorite, and James Morrison, who has been featured in a number of film productions, including "Womanhood, the Glory of the Nation," "The Whee's of Justice," "The Alibi," and a number of state's rights features. Others who have important roles are "Mother" Mary Maurice, Julia Swayne Gordon, Arthur Donaldson, Nellie Andersor. Betty Blythe, William Calhoun, and William H. Stucky. MRS.

0. C. BERRYMAN LEAPS TO DEATH Mrs. H. L.

Berryman, the wife of Col. Otway Calvert Berryman, leaped from the eighth story window of the Brack shops in Los Angeles last Thursday and was instantly killed. Mrs. Berryman had been in poor health for some time and it is thought that she committed the rash act in a fit of despondency. The body was cruelly mangled by the fall, scarcely a bone being unbroken.

Colonel Berryman is a.most prostrated by his tragic loss. The deceased lady was well nown in Deming, where she had resided with her husband for several years and where she made many friends ter. Colonel Berryman is her winsome disposition and Mrs. R. C.

Hoffman, his first wife having been her cousin, and Mrs. Hoffman has also been greatly shocked by the awful tragedy. All who knew Mrs. Berryman during her residence in Deming have extended the deepest sympathy to Colenel Berryman in his loss. REDUCED FARES FOR SOLDIERS Soldiers on furlough may now travel at a reduced rate.

The El Paso Southwestern railroad sells tickets at one-third of the one-way regular rate and round-trip tickets at two-thirds of the usual rate. Sailors on furlough traveling at their own expense will be given the benefit of the same reduction when they are in uniform. Dr. G. H.

Young, deputy state veterinarian, was in Rodeo on Wednesday on official business. THE KAISER AT THE CODY Since he has hit his stride at the Cody theatre, Sol Carragien is going after the big attractions for the moving picture patrons of Deming, and his latest bid for approval is the picture that has been standing them up in every place where it has been shown since its release a few weeks ago. "The Kaiser, the Beast of Berlin," is the picture, and it will be shown at the Cody on Saturday and Sunday, June 22 and 23. In this masterpiece, which has been booked for Deming at an extreme high figure, the daily life of the kaiser is shown in minute detail and it reveals many things not generally known about the man who is responsible for plunging the world into the welter of blood in which it is at present. The influences that have turned the kaiser into the kind of a brute he is today are portrayed in a graphic manner, and it makes one feel glad that he is an American citizen and has the privilege of living in a decent country when he sees the conditions that prevail in the Hun empire.

Forrest Fielder. the son of Attorney James S. Fleider, is home from the University of Washington and Lee, at Lexington, to spend his summer vacation. Forrest has been making high grades in all of his law studies and enjoys the work..

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