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The Chanute Daily Tribune from Chanute, Kansas • Page 2

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Chanute, Kansas
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2
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THE CHAN DTE DAILY TRIBUNE PAGE TWO OCTOBER 28, HIM mr if ft? 0r 1 THE YSER WAS A lm a. SHINE Uj rrn RIVER OF DEATH IN EVERY l' Li Li cOo I i LA is 1 f.I-'RMAX TIIR1AV I.IVI' twtv CJlix? Daily ufrilnmr AXD Tim BY THE TiunuNE publishixc. company (Incorporated) Entered at the postoffice at Chanute, as gecond class mail matter. SUBSCRIPTION ItATFS. Dy carrier in Chanute: Ono Week 10c Ono Month 35c Issued every evening except Sunday.

to ouToiinu.Rs. AJllUir BTack STk Stove Polish i 4 is ft ft 1 1 oe cry out; cut be osed to liLit dnf liijui.l mil ptu-t tyre Q-i'- t't wast--; 1.0 oit tjrti.rx. VuU gKt your diuih; worth. lid All to One Xiuht They Struggled atid Hand and Thousands Were Thrown Into th Water to Die. SIXt; A SO; OF Sing a song of Europe, Highly civilized, Four and twenty nations, Wholly hypnotized.

When the battles open The bullets start to sing. Isn't that a silly way To act for any king? The kings are in the background Issuing commands. The queens are in the parlor. Per etiquette's demands. -The bankers in the counting house Are busy multiplying, -The common people at the front Are doing all the dying.

Life. MEN DYING UNNOTICED IN FIGHT ALONG YSER Silk Stove PqIIsIi not only mnsl K-own but it fr'we a hriSi'i-nt bi.i. I' Litre at c.i'Mut he v. it any othr lihu-k Move l.Un ti- not Tuh lat lour imo i l-'iiif paii.ih-o it bves you work junl tnouvy. Don't lont't yo-a London.

Oct. L'S. The correspondent of the Daily Mail in Northern France, telegraphing under date of Sunday night, regarding the Tills is the cleanest, most complete assortment of Silks wc have ever known to he p'accd on sale for the price. This is your opportunity to select Silks for street and afternoon wear, or for Christmas gifts. These Silks are all rirh, new and beautiful in the most fashionable colors and color combinations.

Silk loving Chanute will thoroughly appreciate these bargains. Price per yard I'siuius uu me 1 ser river, says tixcimioxi: no. 12. mere were 2...00 German bodie MIAIIU'IJ ASSOCIATri) rilKSS. in tut- 1 t-t-r tauai uus morning alter er REPUBLICAN TICKET.

IX Till: DIM, I I TURF. From Victor Hugo's Presidential Address at Peace Congress, 1S4'J: A day. will come when you, France you. Russia you. Italy you, Fngland you, Germany all of you nations of th continent shall, without losing" your distinctive qualities and your glorious individ-iality.

Mend in a higher unity and fcnn a iropeaa fraternity, even as Hrittany. riurgundy. Lorraine. Alsace, all the French province --s. have blended into France.

A day will come when war shall seem as absurd and impossible between Paris and London, between Petersburg and Herlin. as between Ileum and Amiens, between Uoston and Philadelphia. A day will crime when bullets and bombs shall be replaced by ballots by the universal suffrage of the people, by the? facred arbitrament of a great sovereign senate, which shall be to Europe what the Parliament is to England, what the Diet is to Germany, what the Legislative assembly is to France. A day will come when a cannon ball shall be exhibited in our museums as an instrument of torture is now, and men shall marvel that Mich things could be, A day will come when shall be seen those two immense groups the United States of America and the United of Rarope, in face of each other, extending hand to hand over the ocean. exchanging their products, their commerce, their industry, their arts, their genius clearing the earth, colonizing deserts' and ameliorating creation, under the eye of the Creator.

Hint itm L-f fare to drk for lllM-kiilk. I ie Btose yoo ever ti-J vor.ruuutf refund jour cioticy. Elaclc SIllc Store Polish WorLs. Sterling. Illinois.

Black Silk Air Dry'" Iron Enamel t'n rn, n.l uto-rrJ tir" Crevcuta ri.t.i.,'. it. Va Black Silk Metal Pol-Ish jr nlvorwure, i.irkt l.tm-varff or It uurks fiunvkly, canity anil leaves l.nji.1- It Im rn for use on aJtoinutji.ea. novrnnr IJeut. CoviTnnr sv- rotary of State the fighting in the nlht.

Many of them were drowned and others were bayonetted. The very water itself was bloody, while Dixmude's streets were strewn thick with the dead. "These facts alone give some idea of the savagtness of the fighting, the desperation of the German attacks and the stubbornness of the allies' resistance. Arthur Capper Y. Morgan J.

T. Ilotkiri IZ. IwvI.h Marl Akers id t. Oreat Destruction of Life in Northwest DescrilxNl by Passenger Armored Train. I Rtn to Auditor State Treasurer Attorney eiemral S.

Suj t. of M. V. I. lies 89 Cents 1 Supt.

of Insurant-State Printer J. Wii--. V. It. Smith Walker.

IX H. Uoanl of Irritation Dyer. Ceo. IZ. Ward tTnlted StatfM Senator Curtis was a hell from dark almost every point of was opposed by man, a few hundred yards more often in (lose "The night to dawn.

At the line man sometimes at distance, but grips. Face P. Cam 1. bell -D. IN -l The Mammoth Racked C'otijrrix.

Srd I)lt. I'hllip Itepresenta tlve. -jsth County Clerk County Phono 228 H. L. FREEMAN SON W.

H. Crai 11 kjj W. I. Wright MuffeiiH W. Crant H.

A. Trail to face men even died bv drowning each wre stled and -ter of D.eds County Attorney I'rcliafe Judge m. k' S. 'IS, TE 1 TL jF )W T4 I JT-" 1 1 TP i mu 'iVVWi A dog owned, by J. W.

Sugg, a ttamster of lola, has cost the owner's friends $1,000 in litigations in an attempt to evade the payment of the it dog tax. Sugg kept his dog chained, ami claimed that the city ordinance referred to unchained dogs. If'1 also listed the dog as personal property, and believed that he was exempt from taxation by the city. The supreme court now lias the case under consideration. other in the Germans had through that canal's waters.

The had onlers te get night, eost what it Shf rlfT IT. II. Carw Coroner Dr.Halph A. T.ic':t Supt. of i Whit- Surveyor W.

IT. Clerk of District Court J. C. TTrtn -v County Com. lt Mist.

I.imbx-v-r For Great Bargains. 1 good 4-room houe and large cistern, pioexl 50 ft. lot 1 good 4-room house and 10()-ft. of rich ground, rec road paid for 1 7-room house on S. Lvergrecn, jrood terms I 1 0-acre tract, unimproved, adjoining Chanute might.

"An officer of theirs, who was captured, said that the delay of more than a week in crossing this waterway had incensed the autocratic military mind in Germany. It must be crossed tonight if it costs thousands of men; that, in effect, was the order given and the German soldiers, all credit to them, did their best: "Probably five thousand of them 5500 600 1.500 1 .000 IlppuMicnn City Ticket. Justice of the Peace (Two to be elected.) M. (IHOOMK. v.

k. Constable (Two to be elected.) F. II. LARK IN. II.

I. RANDALL. For London. Oct. 2S.

The correspon-tlent of the Daily News wh6 has been in an armored train to the banks of Yser gives a good description cf the battle in the Northwest. Ho says: "The battle rages along the Yser with frightful destruction of life. Air engines, sea engines and land engine. death-sweep this desolate country vertically, horizontally and transversely. Through it the little frail human engines crawl and dig.

walk and run. skirmishing, charging and blundering in little indi-idaul party fights, tired and puzzled, ordered here and there, sleeping where they can, never washing and dying unnoticed. A friend may Pnd himself firing on a friendly force and few are to blame. Now a bridge blown 111 by on' side is repaired by the other; it Is again blown up by the first or left as a deatli trap until the enemy is actually crossing "Actions hy armored trains, some of them the most reckless adventures, are attempted daily. Each day accumulates an unwritten record of individual daring feats, accepted as part of the daily work.

Pay by day pur men puh out on these dangerous explorations, attacked by shell fire, in danger of cross fire, elynamite and ambuscades bringing a priceless support to the threatened lines. As" the armored train approaches the river under shell fire the ear cracks with the constant thunder of guns aboard. It is amazing to see the angle at which the guns can be swung. or any good bargains in city or farm property Sunday the engineer on the north bound Katy passeng reported that the track four miles south of town was on fire and had been burning since Saturday night, says the, Mor-an Herald. The section foreman was informed and with the crew-went down to the track.

The ties for the rrngth of five rails were found to be on fire and a good many a 4. XV IT 1 1 OCR XEIGIIF.ORS. 4. 4 us. 582 Pho ne WHAT CAPPRR STANDS FOR.

BIDEAU TYE 'ties entirely burned out. In two seen in the water em the next day gave grim testimony to this. "About three thousand German hours more the track would have been weakened enough to have ditched a train." infantrymen got into Dixuiude. lield it for a tine-, but with lire and rifie fire the phu i- v. died, through aiil tlirouglt.

i IM'V shell rid- The nun must le' trained fur the new ork Mm of Germany's I.i a r- and pottery, smi as is i-upplb-d to the mere primitive i(iiin r. of the world, is. the of trade exhibit Ion shows, I.ap arid j-audy. Hut this trade js nevertheless extnsie and profitable and one hitherto t-ed by all couiilri- ept Germany. II.

rf. turned ibis after noon from a trip to Jupllu. YOU'RE BILIOUS AMD COSTIVE! CASCARETS gave tneir lives last night. I hey could not give more, yet they failed, but not because the Germans did not literally obey their orders. They crossed the waterway all right, as they were bid, but once through they could not make good.

They were mowed down with rifie shot, torn into human fragments by shells and bayonetted back, yard by yard, over their own ib-ad into the waters of the. canal. Into the very gray of the morning this bloody work went on so fiercely that there was hardly a trench or bridge guard in the whole line that did not imagine that he had been singled out for special atta k. "It is believed that some five thousand Germans crossed the Yser. but hardly one of them got back.

Thos-o to the north and northeast of Dix-mude. probably two thousand, were met by a fine rally of the Belgian infantry and of the cavalry, who had tethered their horses, and were driven by main force to the river, canal and into it. There-must have been frantic scenes arid the bodies Many motor cars from all parts of the ouiity carried sightseers to Manolio Meadow, six miles north of Fiodonia, Sunday afternoon, says the Citizen. P. P.

Pelt made his tirst trials with his Curtis bi-plane on 'that day and scores of people watched the handling- of the machine. Mr. Pelt will not attempt any more flights until he has become more accustomed to handling th" machine, but anticipates an air trinl iri the near future. "And overhead the airmen busy venturing through fog" puifs of exploding shells to get are and one Germans dashed out of the crumbling hcrMses only to he slain by a gale shrapnel and shot in ih- streets. "When Sunday morning broke the1 dead and wounded were verywhere.

Dixmudfe a enitery, but in the woods not far away the Germans still lingered. They held tlie position under a desperate' lire and eventually were reinforced." 'Citiolav CITKOLA.V I It A Pest thing for constipation, sour stomach, lazy liver and sluggish bowrls. Stop. a sitk headache ul-ia(st at once. a most thorough and satisfactory Hushing no pain, no nausea.

Keeps your system cleasi swoe-t and wholesome. Ask for Citiolav The Drown pharmacy. Adv. Mrs. CoITeU, of odeslia.

says the County Citizen, was recently taken to the Hell at Rosedale for treatment, and left behind-her. a daughter by a former marriace. named Lola Chapman, 14 years of ae. was very anxious to marry a Mixier.n. named Pete Casellas, with whom she had been acquainted, two-, By reason' of the neglectetl i dependent condition of the girl, the juvenile court assumed jurisdiction over' her, and Probate.

Nattier refused to issue a license for the marriage for what was considered by hi in to be ample reasons. Vednciiav morning about ,1:30 a. with th'cj assistance of her' Mfx-ican ('liupman escaped froio: home of Rur- nisoii. vhote custody sin? had been placed, and was driven to Independence in an auto. Officers in neighboring cities were notified and about 11 a.

Wednesday, a telephone menace received from Nowata. saying both were under arr st at that place. Fnder-fheiiff Coats started immediately, secured the parties and returned to Frcdonia at Thursday morning, the runaways having been gone fifteen minutes less than twenty-four hours. The girl has been re-trrned to the custody of the ju-enile court, and Casellas lias been committed to jail to wait the action of the court. Arthur Capper believes the Hate's business should be so conducted that it will encourage Decency, Honesty, Economy.

Efficiency and Upright Citizenship. and compel the impartial, aggressive Rn-forcement of Every Law. Arthur Capper stands for: National Prohibition and National Equal; Suffrage The. enforcement of the entire 'law in Kansas against every form of liquor trallic. 't l- For Clean Manhood Clean Citizenship One standard of decency for men and women.

For the strictest, economy in. public; expenditures; for -a. reduction i it tin. number of uflice holders. 1 ami tli-i wiping ont of.

political grafters, useless boards'and bureaus, and other unnecessary Jobs whenever possible. For less technicality and speedier justice In all courts, and make justice more expeditious and less -pea sive. For More Practical Service From Public Schools that will widen the opportunities of every boy and girl in Kansas; more attention to the gre.it fundamental of all education and bread-and-butter usefulness. Here is the vote of Shawnee county at the recent primary and shows how Arthur Capper stands at home where he has lived 30 years: Arthur Capper. Republican10 George H.

Hodges. l)em 1 4 ft 2 Henry J. Allen, Prog. 1121 Here is the total vote of the entire state at the recent primary: Capper, Rep Hodges, Dem Allen. Prog.

1 2 0 DRIIJK MORE WAT EH IF KIDNEYS BOTHER A good place 10 feel the pulse of civic life is at the public drinking trough, says the Xeodesha Register. ebb and flow of animal life, as it quenches its thirst at the public fountain gives us an estimate of the wealth, population and prosperity of the community; the character, habits and occupations of its people anil the utility, pleasure and hardships of its citizens. There is no better place to study the progress of the community than at the town pump. Every village in Kansas should have a town pump and every city with waterworks should 1 ave a drinking fountain where a stream of pure running water freely dispenses Adams Ale to the thirsty populace. Pure water and plenty of it is a good community builder.

Neodesha nas tlie good drinking water and drinkin" fountains for both man and beast. for small fact of information. "Resides" us. as we crawl up, snuffing the lines like dogs on a scent, grim train loads of wounded wait soundlessly on the sidings. Further up the line: of ambulances are coming slowly back.

The bullets of machine guns begin to rattle on" our armored coats. Shells we learned to elisregard but the machine gun is the master in this war. "Now we? near the river at a flat county farm. The territory is scarred with trenches and it is impossible to say at first who is in them, incidental and separate are the fortunes of this river side battle: The are on our bank enfilading 1 the lines of the Allies' trenched. We creep up and the Germans come into sight out of the trenches, rush to the bank and are scattered and smashed.

The Allies follow with a fierce bayonet charge. "The Germans do not wait. They rush to. the bridges and are swept away by the deadliest destroyer of all the' machine gun. The bridge is hit Meat and Take Salts Itackache or'llladeler Trouble-Neutralizes Acids.

EHCLISII MINE LAMPS MADE III CERMAtJY Driii-h 11 urei. to I'lodnue an Article That Will Stand Hie Deoiihrd Tet. Siir Head. i he, Had itb, Sour Stomach, Mean' Liver and I'ou-tIs 'Indued-! lean l'p Tonight Get a lo-cent box now. Furred Tungue, Had (Ylds.

IndD stlon, Sallo.v skin and Min-rabbj Ilea laches come from a t-irpid User and dogged bowels, whidi aie" weir stomach to beconie rilled with undigested fod, which fours and ferment like in a swill barrel. That's the first step to untold misery Indigestion, loul bad breath, yellow skin. mental fears, everything that i horrible and. nauseating. A Casian tonight wili give your constipated bowel? a thorough cleansing and -t rah: ii en you (Hit by morning.

They work whib- you sleep a ln-cenr. box from ynnr druggist will keep you feeling good for piohth. Millions of and women a C.iscare. now and then to e.i their stom ir live and bowels res-'ulatc 1, siad never know a mb'Table mome Don't forg- the hiblrea their little in shies need a good, ge-nth cleansing r-. Ad V.

DULL SPLITTING, SICineptCHE Dr. Jamc3 Hcidachc Ponders relievo at once 10 cents a. package. Milton Carroll, who resides just south of Altoona is seriously ill, suffering f.om an infection of worms in his head, says the Tribune. The attending physician exterminated th worms several days ago ami Mr.

Carroll had been walking about the house and st nied to be speedily re-tovering when yesterday he began having hemorrhages and at this wrjtipe not exnected to live. requested to Mrs. C. Ruff 10:3 to go The Rebekahs are meet at the home of Thursday morning at London. Oct.

LK. The miners' safety la tup glass, on which depends the? safety and livelihood of nearly a million IIritih miners, ix exclusively a German produc-t, and Knchsh manufacturers are unable to produce a glass which will stand th" exacting test of the home oflii-e. blown up, but who can say by train runs remarks the so re- he funeral of Mrs. W. be, held in the Meth--Ilv order of Noble in a tody to F.

Rarnes. to odist church. the Not whom? Quickly back. 'A brisk correspondent, plied the officer. So the days pas3.

KILLED French Ilavo Ailidavits Fi am Soldiers of (icn. Stengcr's Rrigade. This fa't, startling to mine own-! ers and men, bas ionic to licht at a time when the newspapers and so-! cif tics for capturing German trade are asserting that only i heap and glass.w are anil pottery lrom Germany. The home office test of these lamp glasses is severe. pound weight of had is dropped from height of four feet em each Uric acid in meat excites the kidneys, they become overworked; get sluggish, ache, and feed like lumps of lead.

The urine becomes cloudy; the bladder is irritated, and you may b3 obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night. When the kidneys clog you must heli) them Hush oil" the body's urinous waste or you'll be a real sick person shortly. At first you feel a dull misery in the kidney region, you suffer from bacKuche, sick headache, dizziness, stomach gets Lour, tongue coated and you feel riteumatic twinges when the weather is bad. Eat less meat drink lots of water; also get from any pharmacist four ounces of Jad take a tablespoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kidneys will then act fine. 'Phis famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia; and has been used for generations to clean clogged kidneys and stimulate them to normal activity, also to neutralize the acids in urine, so it no longer is a source of irritation, thus ending bladder weakness.

Jad Salts is inexpensive, cannot injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which everyone should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active. Druggists here say they sell lots of Jad Salts to folks who believe in overcoming kidney trouble while it is only trouble. Adv. S. The French Washington.

Oct following Micd the embassy today is: statement: submitted. If two out of a dozen crack or chip, the others are rejected. After undergoing thi fclass is submitted to a heat trial. It b-. brought to a temperature 212 decrees Fahrenheit and dr.t; 1 into cold water.

Not only miners' glas 1 gnu go glasses and tubes for chemists have ouie from Germany in the past. It is whether Kngland is able tf) produce this clas- of goods, recording to statements of manufacturers. At the trade will not be- built up iu a shorUtlnie. New equipment required and Ton take a Dr. JamcV Headael.

Powder and in jut a r.t your head clear and all iieralgia an-1 dirttrt'sn vanidics. It'n the jiii.A-.t and eure-Mt relief for he.idac'.e, dill, throbbing, splitting or S-nd n'Mncornj to the drt; fUre and get a dirno pa-krw now. Quit ftuJTering it'a no re-e Hire you get Dr. Jam. lb a "The report appeared in the press some time ago according to which General Stenger, commanding brigade of the German army in France, had issued an order to 1m troops prescribing to them to give no quarter to any prisoners, but t'1 shoot them all and to finish the wounded.

'An cfTieial statement from via Sayvilb? was issued thereupon declaring this was an 'impudent "The atrocious order had. nevertheless, really been given and carried out. and proof of it is in the hands of the French r2vernment. Over twenty German prisoners of the One Hundred and and One Hundred and Forty-second regiments of infantry forming the Stenger brigade) are" now htld in France at Mont Prison and St. Etienne.

They have declared, tinder oath, before the magistrate, that this order was actually issued August 2S. and that, in accordance with it, all Less Than a Cent You may know a woman who has a reputation for making delicious cake, biscuits, who seems to hit it right every time. You may also know a woman, who, no matter how painstaking, can't seem to get the knack of successful baking. Both use the same butter, same eggs, same flour and sugar. What is the difference? Very likely it's all in the baking powderl Undoubtedly the woman with the knack uses Royal Baking Powder, and the unsuccessful woman uses an alum baking powder thinking it cheaper.

Yet the difference in the cost of a whole large cake is less than a cent. It is economy to use iii there will Ut uu tiiiiap- tLCQ poi Diluent. 111 French wounded found day i were at once dispatched. Officers, and notably Captain Cnrtius. personally, of the One Hundred and Twelfth regiment, superintended the execution of the order." It 1 I I (iKll.M.Ws IXVADE AXliOUA.

Portugal Dispatching to It-. IVe-t Province. Paris, Oct. 28. In a message from Lisbon, sent by way of Madrid, the correspondent of the Havas agency says; "Dispatches received here say that German troops have forcibly invaded the Portuguese province of An cola.

Wet Africa. Correct Styles for The New Dances Priced Less. No matterVhat your shoe requirements may "Preparations are being made to No Alum Absolutely Pure I immed-atclv dispatch warsnips ana r. troops irorn Portugal to Angola. rvp nCTC VOU Will U1W it 2 llliU t-r- F- of Dawrence.

a state A 0f0.rc CflVfllfT r. factory inspector, is in the city to- WUIHtU, Uliv anuio wi. w. i-st if Udi.

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About The Chanute Daily Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
58,278
Years Available:
1893-1923