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Arkansas Democrat from Little Rock, Arkansas • Page 6

Publication:
Arkansas Democrati
Location:
Little Rock, Arkansas
Issue Date:
Page:
6
Extracted Article Text (OCR)

TUESDAY EVENING THE ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT OCTOBER 28, 1919. i ARKANSAS DEMOCRAT A Pathetic Scene in the 19 th By BBIGGS I. 6 TWICE TOLD STORIES FORTY-NINTH YEAR (Copyright. New York Tribune. Inc.) of Forty Years Iff Pabllsfced Kxv-pt Ur.

MTTMG ROCK PIBI IJHI.NO COM All 1.Y-1S Mala irrMt. ELMER a. CLARKE. Publiiiher. Entered at the Postotfice at LlttU Roolfc aa Second-Claas Matt.r.

i IBSCR1PTION RATER Dally: By Carrier, par weak, per month. Itoi tor ona year, M.OO. By Mall In advance; One month. Use; three monthf, six montha, ona year, St.OQ. Member of the Associated Preaa The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication at all news dispatches oredlted to It or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published here-J, In.

AH rights ot reproduction of special dispatches herein are also reserved. Cabinet makers in St. Louis were, On thousand "absentees" from Mem phis returned to their borne. split on the strike question. Approximately half of them voted againstl The 'lay's cotton receipts by wagon striking.

They demanded a 15 perl cent increase in wages. were 323 bales. Cotton dropped one quarter of a cent and good middling was selling at 10 1-4 cents a pound. Several hundred bales cotton werel -Main 321 -AU Departments- burned at the Iron Mountain and forq One thousand and sixty dudIIi were Smith railroad crossing near Argenta. F.rnest nrominent Litltl CURBING THE CHAUFFEURS.

enrolled in the public schools in Little Bock, an increase of 815 oyer 1878. Rock newspaper, man, was named edi There has been a request made to the city council to enact tor of the Atkips "Mews. Col. Sam W. Fordyce of Hot Sorinn was in the city.

la measure to put a curb on chauffeurs and jitney drivers who loiter around the corners of Markham and Main streets and Col. B. L. Dudley, superintendent the Texas division of the Iron Moun Spotted Tall Indians were rerjorted tain, was in Little Rock. Markham and Louisiana streets.

The request has not been on the warpath in Southwest Dakota. Troops were sent to quell the insurrec The following appeared in the Dem jmade any too soon. tion. ocrat's editorial column "Business meil of Little Rock should not countenance In it be included a provision to prevent chauffeurs A police captain of Atchison. advertising schemes -worked up bi ff rom accosting every passerby, man or woman, and urging agents from other Give you: was shot and almost instantly killed by a drunken negro.

After being shot through the abdomen he pulled his own them to take a taxicab. Their persistent actions annoy passers. advertising to home papers and patrol nize people you know. You will finq that your home folks will give you mon pmoi ana shot toe negro through the heart. and often are embarrassing.

The taxicabs bear signs show-ting they are for hire and the taxicab drivers wear badges, or are ril i JoPPOflM I sf N0W UTTLS AM extra 7VJL 2 "Jr ho w.S 15L A sciekjCE- SAr USTBfU-. UA -'t that SfL Thpyue 3t -This glass UBwt eur suds e. Trained Y6S Has siavRroweri Virr I TrvimG lb APPORTION WITH SOLUTE PReCxSlotv TmC LAST R6rvANlK3 COMTENT3 OP Th. LrNiT OF SCOTCH INTO Three eaorM- PAfexa ft lor your money." 1 supposed to, indicating they are the It is our understanding that'there is an ordinance prohibit The Wishing Plane ing chauffeurs from accosting people in solicitation of business ylf that is so, it should be enforced, and if there is no such ordinance, such a provision should be included in the measure requested by Municipal Judge Hale. By Willis Winter When We had to Mton nnr Mnrv tm ACTUARIAL BUREAU LOSES J.

SMITH SPEED. tffy the kidnapers were trying to There will be a general regret at the news J. Smith Speed, manager of the Arkansas Actuarial Bureau- since its organization in 1913, has tendered his resignation, ami will leave r.the bureau so soon as his successor can be appointed. Under Mr. Speed's management a large mass of valuable information relative to fire risks in Arkansas has been collected and the general public has been instructed in fire prevention and fireproof construction and its economic necessity as never Mr.

Speed's duties have been both executive and educa- think of some way to deliver the note to Captain Brave and Ladydear, demanding $100,000 for Jac kand Jane and threatening to kill the children if the money wasn't paid. Well, many ways were proposed. One of the band suggested that the notes be sent to Captain Brave through the mail just like an ordinary letter, but this plan was discarded because the leader knew that the postoffice detectives could find out just where and when the letter was mailed and this would help the police in their hunt for the kidnapers. Another member of the band thought that one of their number could just walk into the hotel, as any other person would, and leave the note in Captain Brave's maill box, as the first note had been left. But this idea, too, was turned down because the other members decided someone probably would be watching at the hotel for the appearance of anyone who looked as if he might be a member of the kidaDping band.

It was finally decided that someone not connected with the band would have to take the note to the hotel and tional, and he has measured up to the demands of each. i During the last General Assembly, the popular resentment against increased insurance rates took shape in a movement 'against the actuarial bureau. Even the bitterest opponents of BITS OF BYPLAY By LUKE McLUKE Copyright, 1819, Washington's View of National Problems hotel. There wasn't a person on il street when he arrived there, so stood in a doorway for a few mtnufl By DAVID LAWRENCE, waiting- for someone to come along. a little while he saw a young felw walking briskly down the street towel A Special Correspondent of the Arkansas Democrat.

Copyright, 1019. Benefactors. God bless this gent! Old Silas Grum Soys he'll invent A noiseless drum. J'the bureau, however, expressed the highest regard for Mr. -Speed himself, and disavowed any desire to attack his administration of the office, which was recently endorsed by the State Insurance Department as highly efficient.

Mr. Speed has been prominent in the various business and community activities of Little Rock, and has made his influence Tfor progress felt in many lines. He will take into his new activities, whatever they may be, the energy and the ability which assure the success which the wide circle of his friends Little Rock and Arkansas will heartily wish for him. It is to be hoped that he will not be lost as a citizen of Little Rock. leave it for Captain Brave.

One of the members of the band was selected to go out that night, get as near to the hotel and stepped up to mm as came by. "Would you 'mind delivering this 1 ter at the clerk desk at the hotel Washingtonu, Oct. 28: Cool reason tne notel as he dared and then find someone who knew nothing about the kidnaping or any member of the band and ask him to deliver the note, giving your way? It will save me much til and here is $5 for your trouble," ing processes alone can save the country from an area of industrial warfare. The government is couscious of its re the kidnaper in a very pleasant vtii The young fellow looked at him do Police! Prim is so modest that she won't go out when it is raining," said Jones. "Why don't she go out when it is raining?" asked Smith.

"Because the rain might try to patter on her back," replied Jones. successful enterprises have been able to avoid difficulties and strikes. What can succeed in one case might be useful in another or at any rate can contribute the general principles of industrial justice on which a program can be based. Unhampered by group yoting or su him money for his trouble. This plan sounded so easy that no one thought there was a possible chance that anyone would be able to trace the sponsibility and will do all in its pow ly for just a minute and then, a It had decided the $5 would pay him his trouble, he said, "Certainly.

To the troubled waters by classifying all the grievances ai labor as nothing more than Bolshevism are contributing toward such a contingency as much as the radicals inside the labor ranks who selfishly want and then threaten destruction if they cannot have their will. The difficulty is that many employers of an ultra-conservative type who have fought labor for years see in the steel strike and threatened coal strike such an alienation of public sympathy as to enable them to" crush the whole movement. They are in some cases represented er to prevent, lor instance, an interruption in the fuel supply of the nation. But the government would like to see the dispute settled peacefully. To that end, any threat or challenges, any loose want me to hand it to the clerk t6 delivered to the man to whom it's note back to the band or get any trace of the children through it.

One of the kidnapers who hadn't been called udoii so far to an near the perfluous speech making, the new committee would dig into the industrial problem anew and nerhans its findings use of the word "Bolshevist" calculated to rive offense to laboring men whose dressed?" "That's all." said the kidanper. handed the letter and the money hotel or see Captain Brave or Signor Angelo, was chosen to take the note. would not in the end be altogether pleasing to the extremists in either the Americanism is Unquestioned any de Doggone Him! Some day I'll bust that grinning lout, And he will come to woe; Said I "The furnace has gone out Said-he: "Where did it go?" The Wise Fool. "Practice makes perfect," observed the Sage. i the young man and then left.

A lis labor or capital Classes. But looaeo at from the viewpoint of tie public in farther down the street the kidam nial of rights previously given labor, or any attempt to take advantage of the present situation to withdraw privil He left tne house a few minutes after the plan had beera decided upon and went to the hotel by a roundabout way so that, should anyone see him approach the hotel, the watcher wouldn't looked back to make sure that youne man was going- to the hotel. A FABLE FOR SENATORS. It begins to look as though the Senate, having voted down the Johnson amendment to the peace treaty, was getting squared off to ratify it as it was drawn at Paris under the direction of President Wilson and the other members of the Big That is what the Arkansas Democrat has predicted during i the past several months would eventually be done. But it ought -to have been done without all this jockeying about and all this "oratory, which consumed precious time that should have been devoted to the solution of some of the pressing national prob ing him well on his way.

the kidn eges which labor already has, is looked upon by the government as dangerous as saying that a coal strike would not be such a bad thing after all for labor would be crushed by such a course beyond the point of recovery. But the dis er kept on walking away from the ho "Oh, I don't know," commented the Fool. "Even the oldest doctors occa have the least idea where he had come from. interested government in eh Sura for sionally lose a patient. It must have been after midniaht the time being of the nation's Welfare The plan had worked so smoothly, was sure, that there was ataolutely danger of detection.

(Copyright, 19190 volving questions such as the ngnt ot labor to tie up public utilities as well as those resources on which the industries and the households of America depend for daily sustenance, a definite statement of what is and what is not in the public interest can be expected from such a commission. Owing to the bitter feeling which developed inside the public group it is not likely that the personnel will be the same in fact does not take such1 a view and would when the kidanper arrived at one of the streets leading to the front of the Advice, Son, for a swelled head do not fall, And ego you should spurn For, when you think you know it all, You have a lot to learn. prefer that the talk about victory and defeat for this or that class in the community be confined only to that small number of agitators who actually as her face will permit her to be. This would be a mighty pleasant Who's Who id seek the overthrow of society and over lems which have become acute while the Senate has been wast none as at present planned will asked to serve who were members of Plain. "There is one strange thing about in the present circumstances and as likely to add to rather than diminish the chances of industrial conflict in America.

Government officials do not underestimate the gravity of the situation on which the country finds itself. Not alone is a coal strike threatened, but labor is combining not merely on ac-. count of real grievances, but on account of hypothetical or imaginary grievances. Action by Congress, for instance, although still a common affair in one branch of the legislative department of the. government, has looked toward the denial of the right on the -part of the railway brotherhoods to strike.

Unquestionably public opinion could be persuaded to support the denial of the right to strike on any public utility existing institutions and not to that larger class which undoubtedly has world if men were always as soft-spoken as they are when tbey are making a touch. ing its breath and the country's patience. .1 TV 'XT woman, remarked the Urouch. some grievances but mistrusts absolute Some men are so color blind that they tne uays What is asked tne Old rogy. 'Why," replied the Grouch, "even Even yet, it is reported, there may be other dilatory tactics in the Senate, to enable Brothers Lodge, Borah and Johnson to ly the means heretofore suggested for securing justice upon those grievances.

Establishment of confidence in, public when she is as plain as she can be, will produce a handkerchief that looks as though'Hhey had used it to clean their shoes with for a month or so. she keeps a man guessing. use a few more big words and get a little more scattering tribunals that can arbitrate or adjust THOMAS L. CHADBURNE. A poor girl who is single is an old In Her Stockings.

industrial disputes is the central need of situation and the cabinet during the The man whose name is nrobil maid at 25. But a rich girl can be single at 35 and not be an old maid. A Corn Fed young woman named Gad applause from the galleries. But there seems to be no real dan ger that the treaty will be sent back to Paris without ratifica- mentioned most otten in news renJ ders. The girl who is wearing as much pow of the round table conference now Always screamed when she saw snakes der as a marshmallow thinks it Per such as the railroads, but in the ab tion.

If there were any of the proposed changes that had merit, progress at Washington, excepting fectly Terrible the way some girls of Samuel Gomoers. is Thomas the public group. Undoubtedly the testimony and experience of several of the members of the public group will be sought but an entirely new start with a new set of minds will be made. The government is still hopeful that the leaders of the miners will consent to refer the question of a strike to their membership. In the meantime, every kind of ttgncy in which labor can have confidence will be suggested to discuss and settel if possible the points in dispute.

But the conference and the methods of peace not war arc in the forefront and government officials frowned today on the publication of what they termed inflammatory stories describing speculatively the measures which the government might deem it necessary to take in the event of a coal strike. Talk of the wholesale use of federal troops as well as of enforced operation of the mines is generally disapproved in or adders, "The reason," said she, "Is as plain as can be. paint. Chadbourne, chairman of the imp ant committee of fifteen. I sence of any tribunal or organization cerain to give justice to the railway employes, the tendency of the brotherhoods is to join with laboar generally it was the "Shantung" and the "equalization of voting" amendments, but they, too, have perished, and there is nothing to do A man is such a boob about shopping They might start to climb my Jacob's that his wife knows that if she ever sent him to a department store for a Ladders.

Chadburne, who was one of tl names by President Wilson to rel but ratify. in a general defense of the abstract and concrete rights of labor. This has sheet he would come home with a present weem will formally work out the details of a plan already approved by President Wilson as announced in these dispatches last Friday, for the reconstruction of the public group of industrial -conference making of it not exactly a group representing classes as such but a commission of about 15 men sufficiently familiar with all phases of the industrial problem to map a charter or constitution for the handling of labor difficulties. The new commission will go to Washington employers and employes to obtain testimony 'and the results of their 'experiences. Secretary Jjane.

who hast h.n sent the public at Might as Well Swear Off! caused a line-up that might oherwise The musical program in the Piqua The reason a wife likes to tell other We are reminded by the Senate's action of the Russian fable of Khemniter, "The Philosopher." "A certain rich man," runs the fable, who had heard it was an advantage to have been have been avoided. Similarly, as one hieh.offiical point (Ohio) Presbyterian church last Sunday was advertised as follows women that her husband gives her $20 week to spend on herself is because ed out. the misuse of the term Bolshevist and radical is only offending many what she really gets is $2. "In the morning the choir will sing: 'Ho, Every One That and the mixed quartet will sing: 'Quit at school ft-broad, sent his son to study in foreign parts. The conservatives in tne labor ranks upon Every time a woman receives a tele n.nx.

Viot wnom tne country is absolutely depend' whom the country gram she holds it in her band for a as hardly contributing to aw mirftifaa Hafnr0i-fihA anil lou Like Men! ing rebellion and Bolshevism. In this the conference, is one of the best known lawyers in New York. He was counselor ol the War Trade Board during the war, and is kritiwn lawyers as one whose sympathies lean toward wage sarners. As counsel of the Midvale Steel and Ordnance Corporation, he ad-vised the corona nv been taught all sorts of elaborate explanations' of I'he mentougnts is not means of war" tne mart oeiieves that Mr. Beers lives at 2T5 Hopp street, but of methods of peace and ad connection- the.

same suggrstSd that employers who would pour oil on mucn caii tie learned by the country by collecting data on the instances in which' There have been cases of men themselves to death. But nothing ent. Galvcstjon, Texas. like that ever happens to the man who is working for another man. Harry J.

Gilligan suggests that Kid Gleason take his White Sox up to Washington Courthouse, Ohio, where molecules of the substances are made to vibrate very rapidly, and these vibrations produce the heat we feel. THE REASON WHY FfRST COST IS LOW. BUT 0 YOU UPKEEP! he will find a sign reading: "Dr. yesterday, some consumers being forced to use sacharin and others, according to reports reaching the district attorney, being charged as much as 25 cents a pound to get portions of their small supplies. 'simplest things by a lot of academical -windbags.

He expressed '-himself only in scientific terms, so that no one understood him, 'and every one became very tired of him. "One day, while walking along a road, and gazing at the in speculating upon some problem of the universe to which "the answer had never been found (because there was none), the young man stepped over the edge of a deep ditch. His father, who chanced to be near by ran to get a rope. The son, ihowever, sitting at the bottom of the ditch, began to meditate There have been quite a number of Luzadder, Doctor of Optics. Oh.

Joy! to recognize the jlrtcs right of collective weddings of late in these parts. And a rumor of many more. We suppose From the Book of Wonders. Published and Copyrighted by the Bureau of Industrial Education, Washington, D. C.

The strike of longshoremen, it was Bargaining. Though an oppon Toil can find the Veale Meat Market in Altoona, Pa. Thomas Veale is the said, has prevented unloading of 94,856 WHAT OTHER PAPERS SAY ent of what he terms "Utopian, ian and revolutionary Socialism," I proprietor. The Lost Hog. that the -boys figure that a 100-pound wife at 4 1-2 cents on foot is a real bargain, compared with other necessities of life.

Wynne (Ark.) Progress. NOT MENTIONING NAMES! sacas ot uuoan raw sugar in the harbor and 60,000 more bags are due today. Meanwhile the two largest refineries have been closed for lack of raw Known as a radical among his capitalists. He recently declared The county records of Barren county, on the cause of hi3 fall. He concluded 'that an earthquake had "I believe that the next most pi NAVIGATION PROBLEM Kentucky, kept in Ulasgow, con material.

tain the following item Misses Alollie and Allie Smith are uis u-ujouu oi laoor, alter a subsist wage- is provided, is that of ul Taken do for legal bounty. MANY FEDERAL very busy just now quilting. The indication to the writer is that somebody On Boyd Creek, in Barren County, pression. We hear on every hand ries of the workman's ingratitude, the complaint has this much trut is going to marry soon. Oak Grove By our good neighbor, Daniel Snoody, A barrow hog with spotted body corr.

Lonoke County o(Ark.) News. Which, though once a pig, is now, I'm Why Does a Nail Get Hot When I Hammer It? When we are in the sunshine, or standing before a fire, wo feel hot! when we take snow or ice in our hands, they feel cold. The thing which produces theso sensations is called heat. When we feel heat, it is because heat is absorbed by our bodies, and when we feel cold, it Is being thrown off by them. To answer this question, we must see how heat may be produced.

If we draw a cord rapidly through our fingers, they feel hot, and if we rub a coin briskly with a cloth or our hands, it becomes warm if we take a it their protest today is against sense of helplessness. They do not told, CASES PASSED ON Jasper Haynie Monday pleaded guiltv to the charge of being a retail and wholesale liquor dealer without having paid the tax and was sentenced to 15 months in the federal nriann nt Atlanta BR0. .1. MILLER SMITH About eighteen months or two years superinduced a momentary displacement of his corporal axis, thus destroying his equilibrium, and in obedience to the law of gravity as established by Newton, precipitating him downward until he encountered an immovable obstacle namely, the bottom of the ditch. "When the father arrived with the rope, the following dialogue took place between them: 'I have brought a rope to pull you out with.

There now, hold on tight to that end, and don't let go while I "'A rope? Please inform me what a rope is before you AT SL0C0MB Henry Smith made a business trip to the city of Benton last Monday, in spite of the bad weather. We were not informed as to how he went, bow-ever, we are quite sure he did not ride a shunk over there, as that is upstream from this point. Slocomb Correspondent Benton (Ark.) Courier. MR. WOODS SNAPS AT GOVERNOR It is reported that Governor Brough spent a few days in Little Rock last week.

Rensctt (Ark.) American. HIGH COS roTTuvTxG NOTE. Down in GeoriFin factory lunch rooms, kindergai good tenements given to them, more that is done for them and WINS FAME ON THE DRUM The Park College Band gave a musical treat in chapel on last Saturday. Mr. J.

Miller Smith should be old, Marked in his right ear with a slit. And both his ears with an underbit; Appraised by men of honest dealincs and fined $100 and costs by Judge Jacob Trieber. J. F. Smith pleaded guiltv to comDlimented on the fine way in which To the enormous sum of fifteen shill ings." having liquor in his possession, upon which no tax bad been paid, and was more that is given to them, the they- feel in the power of the pi -responsible for the benefits.

Thej going to insist on exercising a voi shaping the conditions surrounding labor, which means, among other tl collective bargaining." he rendered a bass drum solo, in doing so completely drowning out the rest of the band. Parkville (Mo.) Platte H. Greenwood, J. P. W.

F. Dougan, Clerk. Yes. But VVhaddy la Mean? County Gazette. pull.

down the high cost of dresses by using flour sacks The head of the family 4 4 4 nail and hammer it on a hard substance, it becomes too warm for us to hold. In these instances heat is produced by retarding or checking the motion of a body. When we draw a cord through our fingers, it moves less easilv we retard its motion by grip (Headline in Danville (Ky.) Advocate.) FITZGERALD A rope is a thing to get people out of ditches with, when sentencea 10 serve 3l days in the Pu-laski county jail and was fined $100. A verdict of not guilty was returned in the case against John Dickerson, charged with stealing from an interstate shipment. Cases against Jrff Downey, Pete, alias Henry Thompson, and Basil Price, on charges of being retail liquor dealers without having paid the tax, were dismissed on recom Exhibits that part of his anatomy that Mr.Thrif ty Mechanic Say tne ostnen aoes in hiding its head duj-s tne tlour 12.

24. 98 and 192 pouud sacks. When the 12-pound sack is empty, the good wife washes it, cuts out the bottom, makes armholes, and lo! she has a dress for the babv. The J4-pound sack makes one for the girl in me sana. Well, Well! mendation of the district attorney.

The case against Henry Williams, charged We do not know whether he is lav they have fallen in and can't get out by 'How' is it that no mechanical device "has been constructed for that 'That would take time but you will not have to wait until then. Now then "Time? Please explain first what you mean by "JTime is something that I am not going to wasteon aTool "le 'he young lady of the family and the 196-nonnder ping it and this is what makes the heat we feel. When -we strike the nail with a hammer, the motion of the hammer is checked by the nail, and thq faster we pound with the hammer, the hotter the nail becomes. From these experiments we learn that whenever or just wealthy. But O.

I. Idle lives at Tina, Mo. with illicit distilling, was continued. The" case against Mike Coehurn. charged with illicit distilling, was set lor November d.

rancis M. Watters. (-the motion of -a-substance-is- checked. charged with wearing the uniform of Thanx! Dear Luke Your column published in our local paper hits the right spot and chases the blues. Lake Avenue, Fort Wayne, Ind.

"I Have Saved More at y-e i ht Than Some of These Get-Rich-Quick Fellows Will Have at Sixty." an ofheer of the United States army without authority, pleaded not guilty Monday afternoon. Tom Harris chart ed with being a retail liquor dealer like you. So you may stay where you are until I come "Upon which the man went off, and left his foolish son to himself." Now, would it not be a good thing if all eloquent windbags were gathered together and thrown into the ditch, to keep him company Yes, surely. Only it would take a much larger ditch than that to hold them. Gosh! Some male blonde must have got wet during the last week of the Latonia races.

Anyway, this sign was on the blackboard in the betting shed "Lost Gold headed man's umbrella. Reward at office." without having paid the special tax. pleaded not guilty and his case was set for October Bond was forfeited by Thomas Simpson, rliargetl with the same An alias capias was is or ma- roal amusing, so savs the truth teller, to go to that town and see the babies running around with red letters-en -thrir-mrcks announcing "Ed's Best. Then comes "Blue Belle." then an'l mi is labeled Wynne (Ark.) Progress. CANDOR IN COPPERAS GAP.

If the readers don't like my letters don read them, (or they don't amount to very much, as I am uneducated and haven very much sense, for when they made me they cut my mnuth so large they didn leave any space for brains, hence my ignorance.Coppn-as Gap Correspondent Benton (Ark.) Courier. HERE'S YOtR- ENTERTAINER, BOYS George W. of Stamps is here working in the John Byars shoe shop in the old hloan building. Mr. Byars savs he is a boy who can entertain, talk and please you in work without using a byword of any kind.

Bearden (Ark Leader. Opportunity is not heralded by a big brass band and shouting shysters. It cornea stealthily and its knock is gentle and sued and bond fixed at $500. Bond was forfeited by George Howard, charged or retarded, heat is generated, and the substance made hot. In explaining this method of producing heat, it was at one time thought that all bodies contained a substance which produced the heat, and that." when rubbed or hammered, this substance was thrown off.

About tho end of the ISth century, however, it wa shown by Benjamin Thompson (Count Rumford). that substance whn rubbed give -off beat. From this we learned that heat is not a substance because the quantity of any substance, present in a body, cannot be limitless. If it were a substance which produced the heat, the supply would sooner or later be exhausted, and rubbing could no longer produce heat. Heat produced by rubbing, or by ii timid.

It usually forces its presence upon those whd And Socks Coat Money. "Safety First" has been my motto, I've preached the same to brakeman Otto But he kicked a draw-bar that did not lock, And now he's minus a foot and a sock. Billy. have a SAVINGS ACCOUNT. The peace treaty is a rope to get the world out of the ditch, back on the great highway of peace.

It may not be the finest or most perfect device for getting nations Out of the ditch, but it will get them out. Yet the Senate leaders quibble and argue over it while both the Senate and the country remain in the ditch. with violating tne Harrison act. An alias capias was issued and bond fixed at $500. i The case against Noah T.

McCaun, John King and John Kijig charged with stealing a registered package containing $10,000 at Pine- Bluff, was set for November 12. Attorneys were appointed Monday for Toad Hill and Granville Perry, charged with Illicit distilling. If yon wish to sell your home, a Our Daily Special. UNION MERCANTILE TRUST CO. Common Sense Is Getting To Be As uare as rtaaium.

HOME FOR SAVERS. Luke McLuke Says. ou ir us uie oeuate is cviiixnieu, is pernaps as well Oil I as follows: If two substances are in the ditch as elsewhere. But the country wants out ch Jhei those substances are checked, but the SI GAR FAMINE ACITE. New Orleans.

Oct. 28. The sugar reached aii acute stag here Democrat classified art will assist you It may be hard to tell a woman's age. in finding a buyer. Phone Main 321.

But you can bet that she is aa youur 6-.

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About Arkansas Democrat Archive

Pages Available:
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Years Available:
1878-1923