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The Coshocton Tribune from Coshocton, Ohio • Page 6

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Coshocton, Ohio
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PAGE FOUR THE COSHOCTON TRIBUNE WHXNMDAY EVEHTNO, 10, UN. THE COSHOCTON TRIBUNE (AM) A A.N LNOEJ'ENDEV SEM Katerea second coattei at the post OWo Published each evening and Sunday morning by The JOKLN COMPAQ? National Advertising SeprsseDuative WESTERN OFFICE EASTERN OFFICZ 6 South Ave 680 Fifth New York Chicago OenOTJ Moves Bids- OetroU Member Audit Bureau ol Select Ust ol OMo DallT Papers- Ohio Dailies RATE Of SUBSCRIPTIONS IN BT CA.RHJEK Per Teal Per Week -15 MAIL 3cse Week -18 Poui Nine tl.OO Sli 63.60 One H-50 Ful) leased wire report ol the Cnlted receiv- sd dally out peaceful solutions of their troubles, would be a league in which peace-lovers could have some confidence. It Is not the kind of league we have had, to date. The old league existed to save the spoils of war for the Allied victors, and that It fell apart when the crucial test came Is neither tragic nor especially surprising A new one, concerned solely with international justice and peace, would be the sort of thing the war-sick people of the world have dreamed of. It might even be the sort of thing the people of America would be willing to support.

ssn letters from readers cannot te upon the writer's name will be omitted me editor the right to reject all communications in exoess o' 500 wor2s. or others not suiiaWe loi publication wUi nor bo rorumed unless accompanied by A THOUGHT FOR TODAY Thirty years of our Lord's life are hidden in these words of the gospel: "He was subject unto The New Internationalism farmeis' wnvs of the world are doing their best to break down the isolationist policies of nations. They're doing It thru their new organ; ization, the Associated Country Women, which just had a turnout of 7500 delegates, representing 27 nations, in Washington. These women proceed on the theory that problems of farm wives are identical the world over, that home-making is universal and that peace is indispensable to humanity. Accordingly, they are going about cementing the world friendships thru their own channels--by exchange of farm handicraft, compilation of an international cookbook, and other such projects.

This movement at least promises to get at fcho heart of world amity where it begins--in the home. In a small way, it Is starting a program that may have big results. League May Be Saved OOKING at the dark skies overseas, it Is ex- 1 ceedingly easy to say that the League of Nations has failed abjectly. Nothing could be more foolish, however, than to say that because the league has failed it must continue to fail; to assume 'that, because it Is not at present organized so as to banish war from the world, It never can be organized. We built the league in an hour of great terror.

The World was had dragged its bloody way to feat corpse, and we were uncomfortably aware that little more of It might have done for everything that we value in our civilization. So we erected the league as a fence to keep out this dreadful menace. Now the fence has broken down. If mankind has half the sense It Is suppoed to have something will be done to redesign this league so that next time it may not fail. And the best service any friend of peace can render now is to discuss ways and means of making the league effective.

A good starting point for such discussion to be found in a bulletin recently sent out by the League of Nations association in New York This group offers four major proposals. They are' That the league accept the Kellogg treaty us tfce fundamental principlo of its existence; That it call regular international confciences at which, nations which feel that they labor under unjust treaties, lack, sources of raw materials, or suffer from any other international Injustice, could get redress in a peaceful manner; That the burden of military sanctions be made a regional matter; That the league covenant be unconditionally divorced from the Treaty of Versailles. Here, at least, is a basis for discussion. It gives us the rough outlines of a league which would not be content to sit on the safety valve, but which would actively work to make the nations of tha world feel that they need not fight to get what they must have. A league whose members, pledged in advance not to go to war, functioning regularly to work Oriental Leader An Opponent of Coalition From the Emporia (Kan.) Gazette ENATOR Vandenberg in a recent radio interview seems to declare rather positively for a coalition ticket in America this year.

Evidently he would like to see a Republican nominee fo president and a Democratic nominee for vice-president. In order to catch the Liberty League Democrats who are obviously dissatisfied with Roosevelt, the coalition ticket would have to be tailed up with a conservative hard-shelled Democrat. In order to catch the liberal-minded Progressive Republicans and Independents who are dissatisfied with the bad fist President Roosevelt has made of locals which all good Americans cherish, the head of the coalition ticket would have to be a liberal progressive Republican. A fat chance a ticket would have headed by a progressive Republican like Landon or Vandenberg and flying a leaden-tail like Gov. Davey of Ohio, or ex-Gov.

Ely, or Al Smith. To float such a ticket, the platform would have to be a complete straddle, and to paddle this platform thru the election rapids, with the two kinds of antl-Rooseveltians on it. would take a cross-eyed, four-armed oarsman with eyes in the back of his neck Coalition would be a catastrophe. The Republican party is either going to be reborn as a new constructive party to function in the new era that the war and the depression have made, or it Is going to blow up from the Inside and disappear. Tills election cannot be won without getting the votes of the independent, forward-looking Republicans who voted for Roosevelt four yeais ago and were fooled.

He has failed to reduce unemployment. He lias made relief a partisan program His independent supportcts have come to their senses. They want to vote the Republican ticket, but they don't vvan, to be caught dead voting for a hybrid, a mongrel, a cross between Mercury winging ahead and Lot's wife looking back. Nix on coalition! HORIZONTAL 1, 5 New political leader in the Orient. 11 Uncloses.

13 Knot. 14 Switchboard compartment. 16 Half 17 A volume. 13 To depart by boat. 20 Turf.

21 Distinctive theory. 23 Trunk drawer 25 Musical note. 26 To jump. 28 Afresh. 30 Antitoxin.

35 To emanate. 37 Challenge. 39 Paper mulberry bark. 40 Street car. 42 Frees.

44 Constant companion. Like. 47 God of love. Answer to Previous Punle 49 Cravats. 51 Street.

52 Intoxicant. 54 Midday. 56 To abound. 58 Y-shaped gun 60 To jog. 62 To examine thoroughly.

64 Tiny particle. 66 Paradise. 63 Melody. 69 He is of Japan. 70 He is war.

VERTICAL 1 Measure. 2 Withstands. 3 Parrot 4 Wayside hotels. 6 Within. 7 Wand.

8 Poems. 5 Wen. 10 Side remarks. 12 Chair. 15 Italian com.

17 The faction is powerful in Japan 19 Opposite of sea. 22 Long spu. 24 12 months. 27 Chaste. 29 31 And.

32 Knock. 33 Javanese tree. 34 To abuse. 36 To merit. 38 To 41 Debatable.

43 To percolate. 46 Sweet tub- stance. 43 More painful. 00 Harem. 53 Speechless.

55 To bow. 57 Morning. 59 Name, fil Beverage. 63 Twice. 65 Note in scale.

67 No good Position Didn't Count HE right "honorable" J. H. Thomas, forced to resign in disgrace fiorn the Biitish cabinet, has been found guilty of betraying official secrets of the annual budget message so that, his closest friends might Insure themselves against Increased taxation. The British people are said to be happy over the ending of the scandal, because the Thomas affair has turned out to be a perfect advertisement lor English justice. For neither the political position nor wealth of Mr Thomas, a lonnei colonial secretary, Influenced the courts In the least.

Mr. Thomas might have been plain John Smith for all British tribunate cared. Thus, with justifiable pride, the British contrast the Thomas case with the Stavlsky trials in France and the Teapot Dome affair in the United States And who are we to talk back? Japanese Adroitness From the Brantford (Canada) Expositor wily Chinee Is peculiar," but a Japanese city's name has been changed to Maccles- fleld so that silk goods it pioduces can be sold in the British empire as "Made in Macclesficld," an English city well known lor Us bilk pioducU Similarly, Japanese mutches are mnde in a village renamed Sweden, so that they can be sold as "Mnde in Sweden Veterans arc about to receive their bonus, and merchants are hoping there will soon be a lot of bye-baby-bonding. "There have been only two impoitant bolls in the history of United States politics But oh, how many unimportant nuts. There, little streetcar, don't jou cry; you'll be a redtaurant by-and-by.

New York Day-by-Day NEW YORK---For many years Fannie Brioe nas seldom appeared in a stage or cinema pait without the cast including her personal jester, Roger Davis. He can inspire the comedienne to an hilarity thai often her shrieking to the seclusion of a rest room in cafe 01 cabaret. Aside noffl being in Miss Brick's shows, r.e is usually included in her evenings out. That his talent for humour is best appreciated bj hei is illustrated by his portrayal of very insignificant bits and none that provokes more than a thin audience sci lie. He is a Buster Keat-en dead-pan- looiung fellow whose comedy is often expressed by entering a room with his sidewise.

All his clowrung is of enormous exsccjera- tion. she broad sweep of burlesque of the days of Sliding Billy Watson and Snuffy the Cab Driver. Davis, a bachelor, is not only a favorite of Miss Bnce's but is generally popular with ladies of musical chorus- In the flush cays of the Zic-gield Fcihes no after-tne- plar party was considered a SUCCLSS his unsmiling help huz- zahmg aawn with a. hiccup. "By 0.

0. Mclntyre- she is without a whisper of swank in I her appearance, contact or art. She I can write of a shabby restaurant in I Soho so that one may not only catch i the skillet aromas out feel the sawdust under feet. And yet a lady to i the loi triwito born. Give Baby First Solid Foods in Small Quantities, Cooked Well and Fine 1IR I Editor Journal ol tlie American Mcd- I is as digestible as other "forms of leal Absolution, uno of iiygeiu jstaich.

Later, spaghetti or mac- The Uenltti aiom may be used. Whenever a new solid food i 2 added to baby's diet, always begin' dried bread, or toast may be given when the teeth have stalled to appeal and with a small amount--not more than a icaspoonlul. As new foods JS pQsslbie thJ baby aie added, the baby of course will chew these subscances Satl sfact0 i. take lass of the foods that it has oeen getting. THE COVERED BANDWAGON The icfmed or white ceieals are Use of new pureed gieen vege- as tables frequently is begun given first, because they arc more i Qr slxth easily digestible and less likely to by th(J miuh month may oc be laxative than tho wnole giain cereals Ceieals should be cooked with salt and water, or with milk, according to the instiuctlons accompanying the specific pioduct, cupy an impoitant place in the dice They are prepared preferably by boiling or baking.

The water in which the vege- aie cooked should not be tiiscaided, because it contains some if it is packaged. If not, the pro- thc a a salM portion for fauna is about one, Rcinember Ulac the substances part of Uic farina to six or eight, eaten lne baby maj appear parts of watei or milk. ne ments The mother Such mixtures are to a hoiud no; be vvoined if the led boil and cooked in a double boiler pigments ot the beets, or the nbeis for one or two hours. When made i some of the othei vegetables, with milk, farina will provide are usible in tne exactions Brotns frequentlj are given to the baby the sixth month. They include beei, veal, mutton, or about 30 calorics for each tablespoonful: with watei, about 20 Potato may be substituted for some of the ceieals.

Potatoes also should be well cooked and mashed In this form, tht vegetable usually chicken bioih, and to these broths bailey, rice, and vegetables may be added occasionally Bioths have the special virtue of providing minerals and extiactues useful in stimulating appetite and digestion TMAT GUARDS QUEBEC Ben Bcrnle's tonal inflections over Uv radio along i his lingual I gradations from 'a bil of tweet I tweet to "vowsah" have convinced icaction appraisers that it is so much nin a is said now. Benuc has slovsh, per- ihaps but steadilv, grown in popu- I lariiy, mostly 'hru such devices. Tiie ougnboo of radio artists cmcei is monotom of voice. As he cannot I be '-ecn. a sameness causes an in the manner of a record.

a nightly mingling with headline bigfeitics and fireciom to wide AS one Pius the glarnom of being pi attic-ally behind the senes I in Bioadway's exciting and Islve paganism But it is an nrduous task especially so for the morning I crew must, gallop out and cinsh 1 ofT thoir snceds in less than a half Not many will admit it, but the truth is that Jong je.ui servitude thc theatre i hateful. No wonder they sit in un- I smiling immobility gladly obejiri; the unwritten code not to applnuci. Edith Wharton is considered the No, 1 patncian among the literati Altho she has been self exiled in Paris for a number of years, she is eagerly welcomed by the top drawer set, not only the French capital, but in London. Berlin and. New York.

Despite personal familiarity with all the fashionables, however, I like to watch the btisk bell 'coated, barbcrcd and biaw-v bovs pop into Times Square about I Final Edition time. Calloused 1 crs, even the news ciral- ers brazenly looKing over i to sec who won (he last nt Punlico The present tense talkers who clip out a few words and leave the rcM of the sentence dangling with ,1 i know." They order a cup of coffee where celc'b-nties crnthei Lindy's, Dempseys Dinty Moore'? and such--and wait, for the pi ope; I opening to crash thc party Frequently thev duck into telephone booths. This is recumed ritual. For i Indies who pay and pay must know! William Lyor Phelps. in lus cus- summerv raiment and with his dangling umbrella continues to oe the only miir ol the diama who waiU foi a show to jell beloic ic- i it and wno appraises the jtiialto at He comes down from New Haven for i t.he c.nd arrives home time for dinner Incidentally.

I was thinking today of the death toll among critics since my time here-- JMetcalfe of Life, Renoid Wolf, Alan Nothing tickles me more than an Dale, Charles Damton. Charles elderly fussbuaget along the streets. 11 backed out of a drug store talking to a clerk and bumped into one--the only pedestrian on the block, inci- dcntallv. on Park avenue today "What you need is a prairie!" he shrieked. T1TIGH on the headland of Quc- bee.

333 feet above thc St Lavuencc, remnants of a wall that once was used to guard the olcfFiench city from a a the I i a and the i To- dav. the larger part of this citadel is that which was built in 1823 at cost of But the enclosure still holrK mcmoiie.s of Samuel dc Champlain, who founded thc city in 1608, and nf the colonists he left there only to be attacked by savages, or to die of intense cold In 1759, the citadel proved its usefulness when thc French defenders of Quebec succeeded for a time thwarting the attacks of Gen James Wolfe. But thc British rommander soon discovered a way of reaching the city i be- i and, on the Plains of Abraham, scored a decisive victory. The citadel may be seen on Canada's 12-cent i was fust issued 1930. About the ninth 01 tenth month, lne child may receive oeef juice, and.

finally, cnopped liver and chicken. Young babies also will be able to use cooked i in the diet, if it is mashed Fruits have laxative qualities and are useful for food value Banams may be given baked. 01 raw if they are ripe Remembi'i a a healthy baby cin dicest a variet', of food substances but that it cannot i it has molar teetn The mothet. thncfoie. must make cer- 'hat the food is propeilv divided or broken up if the oaby Is to be spared indigestion Thc appetite is a good guide not only to thc kind of food, but also to the ciunnlih.

in.idr with mam- babies show a I a will crow if gv.uled 10 a it tent bv then appetites, Pio-iciecl eat eno'uh food riui- HV the i A i pciioci of this kind, how- i shonld not control mo'hers in a i i then babies. Make i 1 the babv gets a good a and do not Indulge too i a its i notions and Pike Sawyer. Robert Welch and Percy Hammond Tne diamauc critic ccms to a the softest berth in newspapenng. I Best seats down front on the aisle, MCA Service. Inc NEXT.

What poet became president of Arjrentlnn? 10 Washington Letter i Continued frnm One in being, perhaps more than any other piesldent's wife, an important cog in thc administration. It been difficult for Mrs i Roosevelt to lenhze that she is "the queen." and the queen cannot down from her official role. i Among the crowned heads of 1 it is different. King Edward, when Prince of Wales, could go to his Canadian ranch, step down to the status of Lord R-en- i and become a private citizen The press and the public ac- I ceptcd him as such I But what Mrs. Roosevelt savs an individual cannot be divorced from what she says as the wife of the president.

In this country it can't be done. CASE WORKER Despite tnis embarrassment, there is no doubt that Mrs Roosevelt's restless energy is a definite asset to her husband. She is a sort of roving case worker, probing into anything which arouses her interest--or mere "ften, her sympathy-and reporting to him in detail Usually her interest is excited on behalf of the underdog. She has been the great champions of the Negroes, Puerto Ricans, southern tenant farmers and subsistence homesteaders Sometimes her energy has caused crossed-wires and confusion, as in the case of the homestead at Reidsville. W.

where Mrs. Roosevelt ordered a type of portable house, whereas a permanent structure capable of withstanding West Virginia winters was necessary Sometimes, also, she has caused political embarrassment to her husband, as in the case of the Negroes. Mrs. Roosevelt worked energetically behind the scenes for the anti- lynching bill, inviting Negro leaders to the White House to plan strategy while it was under discussion News of this was published in the south, together with faked photogiaphs showing her getting into a car with a Negro. Undoubtedly Mrs Roosevelt would not hesitate to get into a car with a Negro if the occasion arose and her hus- banr has followed a consistent policy of giving his wife no advice regarding her activities.

But un- doubtedlv tins particular incident i has hurt him in some paits of the INTELLECTUAL COMPANIONSHIP To the outsider, it is hard to understand when the president and his i have time to see each other. But a verv beautiful intellectual companionship has developed between them. The president frequently repeats in great detail to others what "the Missus' tells him, and if Mrs piomises to tell her hits- band anything, she does it, invariably that day Among outsiders she refers to i a a "mv hu bane; uses the name "FranKltn" onlj, among close Ulends And she is quite able to discuss the characteristics of the president just as objectively as if he were not her husband One point she makes is a "Franklin never can recognize caslovalty a in one his alleged friends, he al- ivays a i it to mistaken judgment" 1 Mrs Roosevelt is i a 1 about disliking the routine of offi- cute and say; a if shf hpci tn star in (he White House Jill the time she would "go erazv." Last veai she Informed the president a she had to a an a a in New York since their home on st was beins used i by their eldest son. Jpmes Roosevelt The president demurred, pointing: i out thru he had been in New York 1 only once since inauguration day I and adding- ''When I do go. if don't with Mother, there'll Joe hell to pav But Mrs Roosevelt insisted, 'explaining that she couldn't go to a hotel or club--it caused too much publicity.

So she rented a New York apartment in the name of 1 Mrs. Maiv ina Thompson Schneider, I her secretary FRANKNESS One quality that endears Mrs. i Roosevelt to those around her is I her complete frankness. It is di- 1 rect and natural. She talks freely FROM THE TRIBUNE FILES 25 Years Ago Today I JUNE 10, 1926 Rev.

W. A. Guy, pastor of the Church of Christ, delivered the baccalaureate sermon to 110 graduates of Central high school at Grace M. E. church.

Tyson, 76, Plainfield meat merchant, died at city hospital from obstruction of the bowels. Miss Sarah Craig, 4, died suddenly of a heart attack at the home of her sister, Mrs. A Miller, West Lafajette J. H. Harper, 75, died at his home 111 Bedford township of complications.

Edward Soott, 48 conductor on a Pennsylvania railroad freight I train, died suddenly of hemorrhage of the brain at his home, 512 North Eighth st. tragedy of Tacy Irene Martin, who was slain by her husband, who then shot himself. Rev. J. B.

McBride of Pasadena, delivered the opening sermon at the Bethel camp meeting. The body of Frank L. Gangewer, 45, a traveling salesman, who died at city hospital was sent to his home at New York City. 10 Ago Today 15 Years Ago Today JUNE 10, 1921 A verdict of murder and suicide was letuxned by Acting Coroner G. Abbott in the double shooting WARSAW Bj VIKS CAKL'iON FOSXEH No 161-F 3.

I items and classified ads loi The Tribune may be left 01 telephoned to Mrs. foster in Warsaw or may he left at Martin's 'Irug btore CLAPKS ENTERTAIN Mr and Mrs. Thomas Clark, Wal- hondmg Route 1, entertained with a dinner at their home Sunday. Guesr-s included Mr and Mrs. Ralph Stemm and Mrs.

G. W. Rush of Zanesville, Mr. and Mis. Earl Clark, Miss Frances Mikesell and Mr.

and Clark Additional afternoon I guests weie Mr and Mrs Charles Clark. EPAVORTH LEAGUE MEETS Approximately 40 persons were 1 present, at the June meeting of the Blooming Grov Epworth League, held at the of Rev. and Mrs. Ira J. Cooper, Warsaw.

An interesting program was given and re- freshmen f-s were DIDINGER REUNION The seventh annual reunion of the Didmger fanulj will be held Sunday at the home of Mi. and Mrs. Frank Shannon, Warsaw Route 3. ATTEND COMMENCEMENT Mr and Mrs Alva Culhson and Ncmian Culhson attended the commencement exercises at Ohioumver- i in her press conference? and the 1 newswomen attend are in protecting her. In fact, they come more as prostrate worshipers than probing news-gatherers, and any of their number who 1 persists in asking embarrassing questions is almost ostracized.

To the uninitiated. Mrs Roosevelt 6 frankness is so forthright that one almost, gets the impression is worn for the occasion. But it Is not For instance, after attending a dance at Buck Hill Falls Pa staged bv the Resettlement Administration, Mrs. asked how she enjoved the dance. i And she replied, a little wistfully: "Noboay invited me On another occasion she was telling how two men hailed her and a friend, as they walked thru New about sundown.

Afterwards, iscmc one asked her "Weren't you frightened 9 I "Frightened?" Mrs. Roosevelt plied. "No, I was flattered." Abe Laird, who nad been a member of the city police force for several years, tendered his resignation to Mayor Casangham. A reward of $100 was offered for the return of James Hogan, who had been missing from his home for several days. An extensive search by a party of citizens had proved unsuccessful.

Commencement exercises held for 24 seniors of Coshocton high school. Orations were given by Mary Almack, Russell Raymer and Flora Green. Seventy-five eighth grade pupils were promoted to high schoo, it was announced by supt. c. E.

Bryant. i sity, Athens, Monday. Miss Mabel Cullison was one of the graduating class, receiving hei degree education Norman Cullison also attended the baccalaureate service on Sunday. PERSONALS y- 5, Mabel Husted, Mansfield, and Donald Husted, Columbus, spent the week-end with their parents, Mr. and Mrsr H.

L. Husted. Mr and Mrs. O. R.

Edgington had as their week-end guests Mr. and Mrs. J. M. MoMeenn and Joe Kirkpatnck, Columous.

Mrs. McMeekin remained for a few davs' visit Mr. and Mrs. Charles Martin were guests at a family dinner held Sunday at the home of Mr. and Mrs Hayes Cooper, Marion Mrs Doris Porter.

Eddie and Junior Porter and Simms Braden, Pernsvilie, were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. Ray Kuhn and family Mr. and Mrrs. J.

R. Wilson and son, Billy, of Columbus, spent the week-end Mrs Wilson's ents. Mr. and Mrs. W.

Willis. Mr. and Mrs. P. D.

Foster attended the annual commencement exercises at Ohio university, Athens, Monday. Mr and Mis. Walter Taylor and daughters, Shirley Jean and Julia Ann, Miss Beulah Taylor of Newark, Miss Lulu Tavlor. Mrs. Herve Taylor, John Taylor and Nancy Jane Darkes called on Mr and Mrs.

Clarence Darkes and i a son. Greer. Sunday. Mr. and Mrs Huston had as their week-end guests D.

Bantum and daughter. Natalie. Cleveland. Mr. and Mrs.

W. H. Williams and daughter. Nancy. New Amsterdam, spent the week-end with Mrs.

Williams' mother. Emilv Darling. Rev and Mrs. John B. Cullison and Mrs Beitie Porter.

Roscoe. Sundav dinner guests of Mr. ar.o A Bickle Mr. and Mrs Guy Rodgers Margaret. Marvin and Ernest Rodgers spent Sunday with Mr and Mrs.

Arch Rodgers, Route 3. Mr. and Mrs Frank Johnston had as their guests Sunday afternoon Mr and Mrs John Johnston, Mr, and Mrs Scott Wright. Mr and Mrs Ward Nethers. Mr and Mrs.

Brice Johnston, Mrs. Roy Ogle, Misses Denora Wright, Eloise and Ethe! Mane Ramsey, Mana Johnston. Marilvn Ogle, Kenneth, and Carl Nethers and Robert nell. NEWSPAPER -IWSPAPKR!.

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About The Coshocton Tribune Archive

Pages Available:
94,135
Years Available:
1862-1945