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Lawrence Daily Journal-World from Lawrence, Kansas • Page 4

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Lawrence, Kansas
Issue Date:
Page:
4
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THE DAILY llOtmNAIrWOmJ SATURDAY, MARCH 13, 1915. A3E roua OSTEOPATHIC NOTES ffSBEsSSBKSMS NOTICE IBANK EDUCATIONAL DISCUSSIONS, NOTES AND OPINIONS, DEVOTED TO THE BETTER PUBLIC UNDERSTANDING OF THE FACTS CONCERNING OSTEOPATHY D. 1046 Vermont Street.) To the Public of Douglas County Owing to the bad condition of the roads for the past two weeks, which prevented those living in the country of taking advantage of the Reserved Seat Sale for the Great exhibition of subduing and taming of the world's most jvicious man eating stallion. Every man ranies tlij essentials of suet-ess under his liat, but the really successful man carries the substance of success in the hank. The "essentials" enables any man to make a lollar, but it takes determination to save that dollar and make it earn for you.

Success marks the difference between earning and saving. This bank offers yon every facility and convenience for saving the dollar and starting the savings habit. It also offers you assistance in other ways that yon appreciate every day. We Avant your." account and will prove it by giving your business our best care and judgment at all times. like a lamb that gambols on the greensward.

It gives it power. When the carburetor gets dyspepsia open the muffler. It gives it power. When you get to a hill and are afraid that there will be a hard drag, shut off the gas, turn the batteries oft, but open the muffler and the power will be great that the machine will fairly jump over the hill. It gives it power.

When afraid of heavy road for a hundred miles let the gas run out, cut the current, take off the chains and open up the muffler. It gives it power. You will spin along like the stars on their path. When your machine dies after a long and terribla agony, cast it to the devil, take out the muffler, open it up and let her go. It gives it power.

Lyons Republican. The Salvation Army Public meeting every night except Monday and Tuesday at 8 o'clock. Monday is reserved for a private Soldiers meeting. Order of service Sunday: Holiness meeting 11 a. rn.

Sunday school 2:30 p. m. Evening service 8 p. m. Ensign and Uoulet (Edited by Albeit Cruzan, M.

A PUBLICITY for medical news as an important factor, not only in educating the public to demand better results, but as an essential in securing that enlightened financial support s( necessary in conducting extensive 1 scientific experiments, was pronounced supremely important. Osteopathy has taken the lead in -complete '-frankness with the public, according to Dr. R. Kendrick Smith, of Boston, who addressed the national convention on the topic, "Publicity as a factor in the campaign of popular education for prevention of diseases." He said: "No longer is the public satisfied with long Latin names for diseases; they want to know why they are sick, and just what the doctor is doing to help them. Instead of the in- The Merchants National Bank Enjoy Your Sunday Evening Dinner.

Oread Cafe 1241 Oread Sunday Supper, March 14, 1915. The Oread Cafe is the only cafe in Lawrence that offers such Good Eats. THE BLACK DEVIL The great task that is to be attempted by PROF. OSCAR R. CLE A SON The world's greatest living Horse Educator -awrence, Wilson the Famous Banjo Artists, accompanied by Mr.

Christianson and his $195.00 Guitar, will furnish the music. ednesday, April MENU Cream of Chicken Soup Grape Fruit i2 10 Green Olives 05 Stuffed Olives Sour Pickles i)7 Young Radishes 05 We wish to have the Public to thoroughly understand that the Prices on this day for this Great Exhibition are as follows: Admission Seats One Dollar. Special Reserved Seats One Dollar Extra. These Seats are Specially Erected for this One Great Occasion and all holders of same are free from all Danger. For the benefit of the people of Douglas County.

The Fancy Sliced Tomatoes 10 Head Lettuce and Tomatoes Sliced Cucumbers 10 Dwarf Celery 1 Combination Salad Stuffed Tomato with Chicken Salad Stuffed Celery with Chicken Chicken Salad with Wafers German Potato Salad Wafers Salmon Salad Wafers Roast Young Chicken with Dressing- Roast Pork Ham, and Apple, Sauce Broiled Squab Chicken Cream Sauce Fried Lake Troujt i with Potato, Chips. Roast Prime Ribs of Beef Brown Gravy. French Fried Potatoes Candied Sweet Potatoes Stuffed Green Peppers French Peas Cottage Fried Potatoes Get Mow Yomur Great Reserved Seat Sale For The Greatest Exhibition of Horsemanship Ever Witnessed in the TA GOOD SERVICE" tory. It has no parallel in the annals of sociology." Such observations give encouragement to those who realize that the growth of civilization cannot be more rapid than the moral and intellectual advancement of the racial units comprising all society. "There is a limit, to every man's capability," we hear remarked.

Well perhaps. But so few reach it; there is so little Chance of many of us getting up so much speed that we have to elamp on the brakes that It is hardly worth considering. In these days of rapid changes, when the new becomes old over night when the unknown of yesterday is the leader today when opportunity is but another name for ability we are giving ourselves' needless concern to even think of limitations. The only limitations we need fear are those we place upon ourselves. Lyons.

The Christian Science Monitor observes that "It requires very little argument to show that if all the fertile land now held idle for a rise in the market was made productive there would be no high-cost-of-living problem." The opinion is filed in an editorial discussion of the single tax that almost, at least, endorses that system. To make all the fertile lands of the country immediately productive certainly would, as the Monitor says, settle the high cost of living problem until and not longer than until the increase in population caught up With the increase in production. A LITTLE WORK FOR THE HOE There are 2800 young Kansans at Lawrence who are crowded into class rooms that were crowded when the University had only 1400 students. Yet the Kansas legislature is refusing appropriations which would correct this condition. There are men in Kansas who snort a lot about "too much education," that "education makes young men on the farms dissatisfied with their work." Some of these men occasionally get elected to the legislature.

Weed them out. Wichita Eagle. LONG LINE OF DEFENSE Whether the Russians win or lose in isolated encounters they are powerfully aiding the cause of the allies by the length of the frontier which the Germans and Austrians have to defend. The British fill perhaps 30 miles of trenches, and the French 400. Servia threatens 100 miles of frontier, increased a little by Montenegro.

But from the Baltic to Buko-wina, following the irregularities of the lines, it is over 1200 miles, and the whole of this great stretch must be carefully guarded, if not actually occupied in force. To do that would require at least 0,000,000 troops on either side, and not even Russia with its huge population can keep men constantly in the trenches. Thus there are gaps and points of concentration, and more room is left for strategy of the normal sort than in the western field where neither side can be flanked. Yet so long as the Russians can avoid absolute disaster, it matters relatively little if they suffer repeated defeats. The great point is the extent to which they compel their opponents to strain their resources, and it does not appear that the recent victories of the Germans in Poland and of the Aus-trains in Bukowina are likely to release any considerable forces for use against the allies in the West.

Springfield (Mass.) Republican. OPEN THE MUFFLER! One of the practices that should be highly commended is to open the muffler of the automobile and the motorcycle. It gives it power. There is nothing so refreshing in these war times as to hear one of the dainty motorcycles turn its batteries loose for about thirty minutes before spinning out of town like the torpedo on the waves. And the practice of opening the automobile muffler in the crowded streets and especially near the hospital should never be neglected.

When a patient is down and out nothing will revive him as fast as the open muffler of an old machine thundering away. It gives it power. It has been discovered that when a machine gets weak in the knees, open the muffler and she will run along Oysters iiimiornlilo r.mn rl A i f' nf llrllT tried 11 li i II tiwi I osteopaths offer a simple, rat-: I ional explanation of the cause of dis-J ease mechanical displacement and a simple cure, mechanical replacement. 1 This idea is one that meets the pub-' lie's questions and satisfies the growing curiosity in regard to medical achievements, as is proved by the' wonderful growth of which today is legalized in every! State in this country, has more than 7,000 graduate practitioners and is winning the loyalty of millions. Os-i teopaths are prosperous," the speak-j er said, "because "they deliver the( goods' they cure disease.

The pub-j lie is learning rapidly and it supports the osteopath in his insistent ques-. I ion 'Why does not this sick man' or woman get Oyster Cocktail Ripe Olives Dill Pickles Pickled Onions Head Lettuce .05 05 .10 .10 0 .10 .15 .10 .10 .25 .15 .35 .35 .15 .10 .05 .05 .05 .05 .15 .35 .35 .20 to Order 40 75 1, 1, 75 2.25 20 15 .15 .15 .10 .15 .10 .10 .10 .10 .10 .10 .10 .10 .10 .10 .10 .20 Mint Freeze. .05 Egg Malted Milk-Bottled Milk .15 .05 SPACE EARLY Bell Phone 592 DUMB CHILLS AItt FEVER Douglasville, Tex. "Five years ago, I was caught in the rain at the wrong time," writes Miss Edna Rutherford, of Douglasville, "and from that time, was taken with dumb chills and fevers, and suffered more than I can tell. I tried everything that I thought would help, and had four different doctors, but got no relief, so I began to take Cardui.

Now I feel better than in many months." Cardui does one thing, and does it well. That's the secret of its 50 years of success. As a tonic, there is nothing in the drug-store, like it. As a remedy for women's ills, it has no equal. 'Try it.

Price $1. In the Bokovina the Russians demonstrated the sincerity of their newly-acquired temperance principles by emptying all strong liquors into the gutters. Mrs. Geo. Ott is spending the day in Xoria.

Oyster Cocktail. Fried Oysters Dozen Cream Oyster Stew Dozen Milk Oyster Stew Dozen New York Counts Raw Dozen Steaks Bricks Special Porter House Steak Special Sirloin Steak for (2) Special Sirloin Steak for (3) Special Sirloin Steak for (4) Special Sirloin Steak for (5) English Mutton Chops Broiled each Extra Cut Pork Chops Broiled each THE BANK OF THE JOURHAL WORLD BY THE WORLD COMPANY W. C. SIMONS, President TELEPHONES News Department 48 Business Department 136 TERMS Daily, one month, by carrier .40 Daily, one year, by mail 1.50 Office 722 Massachusetts Street In case you fail to receive your Journal-World by 7 p. call up.

will be glad to send you one by messenger. Be sure and get your call in before 8 p. as we let the messenger boy go home at that time. Chicago Representative, A. R.

Keator, 601 Hartford Bldg. MEMBER Associated Press. Audit Bureau of Circulations. Kansas Daily League. Gilt Edge List, Bureau of Advertising, American Newspaper Publishers' Association.

Lawrence, Kansas, March 13, 1915. If there is no such thing as colic the malignant effect of the mortal mind needs no further proof. If this community should at once awaken to the practical, not merely sentimental value of the work undertaken by the Social Service League, that organization would one week from today have ten dollars to spend where it now has one. "A chain is "not stronger than its weakest link," is a truism, an axiom. Neither can a community be stronger than its weakest social link when the strain of God's judgment law is put upon it.

"There are others," and all of us are our brothers' and sisters' keepers. Medical reviews tell of the curing of a Milwaukee banker of "spasmodic stricture of the esophagus by massage accomplished by tying cords attached to toy balloons around his neck." flreat possibilities may be in sight. The Zeppelin massage for asthma, and the aeroplane movement for have fever are on the way, jer-haps. Let every man who smokes and who also reads this issue of the Journal-World deny himself the price of a good cigar and go straightway and give that much money to the Social Service League. But don't give it until you have learned what the League is trying to do.

Yon are more likelj- to give after inquiring than vou are before. Fewer runaways of jhorses occur during recent years than during corresponding earlier periods. The fact is noted by horsemen as well as others, though it would seem at variance with the prevalence of automobiles, motorcycles and other sources of scareful noises and spectacles along the highways. The explanation is found in the increasing intelligence of horses by a process of elimination as well as natural selection. If you only got used to it Did you ever think how very convenient woud be the system of thirteen months in a year, every month and every week to begin and end on the same week day? The scheme would leave one extra day every year, which it is proposed to sandwich in between December 31 and January 1.

Each month would consist of twenty-eight days. It is urged that the plan would simplify time calculations as much as. the decimal system simplifies money calculations. Citizens prone to minimize the legitimate needs of the colored race in their almost hopeless struggle to advance in competition. with their white brethren, should recall what Andrew Carnegie, who is a philosopher as well as financier, says about the negro race in America: "The progress of the colored race in America since its emancipation fifty years ago is otn of the remarkable phenomena in his- in charge; officers' quarters, xOOA K.

phones, Bell 1303, Home 1133. Dr. G. A. liamman, Specialist Eye, Ear, Nose and Throat, Glasses fitted.

Office over Dick Bros. Drug Store. Is Still Alive This item does not refer to Col. W. R.

Nelson, but to the well known young farmer, Will R. Green, who has operated the big Clevenger farm for a number of years. A few weeks ago a young man named Will Green died at Six Comers and ever since that time.W. R. occasionally finds his friends looking at him in some alarm as if he was not playing true to his advance notices.

Mr. Green is mighty' thankful to be alive and hopes that this notice in the Journal-World will enable his friends to see him without wondering if it is a supernatural appearance. To use the words of Mark Twain, "The report of his death has been grossly Fruit salad, whipped cream and wafers, 10 cents a plate at Wiedemann 's. RUSSIAN MINISTER DEAD Fame Rests on Development of Man-1 ufacturing Industries London, March 13. Count Ser-gius Julovich Witte, Russia's first prime minister, died last night, it is said by a Petrograd dispatch to Reuters.

He was taken sick a week ago. Count Witte was regarded as in some respects one of the most re- markable men his country had produced, but. his reputation was greater abroad than at home. Throughout his career during which he accomplished much for Rus-Isia, he had many and powerful enemies, although his great ability for work never was questioned. Regardless of his work as a sta toman his chief fame in Russia rests upon his development of manufacturing industries and the placing of the monetary system upon a gold basis.

Our peach ice cream is made from the fruit. Wiedemann's. I SALVATION ARMY HELPS One Officer Has Four Sons Fighting and a Daughter on Red Cross Duty London, Mar. 13. The British Salvation Army has given ten thousand of its men to the British army.

1 These men are either at the front or in training. In addition, the Salvationists' social institutes have trained a thousand men who on presenting themselve were unfit physically and morally for military life, but are cow up to standard. One Salvationist officer has four sons with the colors and a daughter on Red Cross duty at the front. This daughter is herself a Salvationist captain. She is only one of the many Salvationists working with the hospital corps at the front.

A dozen motor ambulances are manned entirely, from drivers to attendants, with members. The first five of these ambulances were purchased out. of a fund of $12,500 raised by Salvationists in addition to the sum of nearly $20,000 for the Prince of Wales' Fund. So efficient has been the management of the Salvation ambulances that one of the men was entrusted to the command of a complete ambulance section of 31 cars belonging to the regular corps. HIRE MANY MEN 10,000 Men to be Given Employment on Railroads Chicago, 111., March 13.

Railroads operating west of Chicago will require the services of 10,000 men for construction work within a few weeks according to statements made today by managers of employment agencies. Four thousand men will be employed from Chicago while the balance will be recruited from Omaha, Denver and other western railroad centers. Preference will be given the men who were discharged last fall when the railroads entered on a campaign of retrenchment. DISCIPLINE STRICT Officers Hang Their Men for Plundering While Fighting Berlin, Mar. 13.

A more favor- KODAKS and SUPPLIES RAYMOND'S DRUG STORE 819 MASS. Desserts Banana Split Bananas and Cream Banana and Ice Cream Hershey Milk Chocolate Sundae Bitter Sweet Sundae Black Walnut Sundae Burnt Almond Sundae Pecan Nut Sundae Red Raspberry Sundae Chocolate Malted Milk Sundae Chopped Cherry Sundae Ice Cream and Fancy Cakes Chocolate Ice Cream Chocolate Sundae with Chocolate Cream. Special Cherry Pie with Whipped Cream rresli Strawberry Sundae Fresh Strawberries ami Cream Drinks World Will open a special reserved seat sale at the Round Corner Drug Store, at Lawrence, Kansas, on these dates. Monday, March 22nd. Thursday, March 25th.

Tuesday, March 23rd. Friday, March 26th. Wednesday, Mar. 24th. Saturday, March 27th.

This Special Sale will Positivelv close on Saturday Night, March 27th. THIS IS OUR SPECIAL OFFER FOR THE ABOVE DAYS ONLY Reserved Seat Tickets will be ordered sold by the Round Corner Drug Store. A Special Two Dollar Ticket FOR ONE DOLLAR. This gives you a special reserved seat on this Grand Occasion. Now we wish to impress on the minds of the Public that these terms and special reserved seat sale, Will Positively Close on Saturday March 27th.

After that date the Regular Price will be charged. We would further advise all those who wish to attend this Grand and Glorious Exhibition On Wednesday, April 7th, at Lawrence, Kansas To secure all of their Reserved Seat Tickets now and get the benefit of these special prices. Remember that this offer is positively made to you for the above dates only. The Exhibition Ground and the Mammoth Arena will be erected at 21st and Louisiana Grounds will be reserved for the standing of your Automobiles free of all charge. Grounds will be reserved to Hitch and Feed your horses free.

First Class Dining Rooms on the Grounds Mammoth Refreshment Stands. Grand Band Concert. Get on the grounds early and get your Automobiles and Teams located. Bring your lunch and hear the Great Band before the Grand Exhibition Com-mences. REMEMBER THE DAY AND DATE Wednesday Afternoon, APRIL 7th, 1:30 P.

M. Admission Seats $1, Special Reserved Seats $1 extra Lime Freeze 05 Grape Fruit Freeze Egg Chocolate 10 Coffee 05 RESERVE YOUR E. C. Bricken able view of the discipline in tbe Russian army in Galieia than prevailed during the autumn invasion of East Prussia is given by Leonhard Adelt, the war correspondent of the Berliner Tageblatt, who recently visited Neu-Sandec on the Dunajec river a short time after it had been evacuated by the Russian army. At the corner of one street he saw a hook fastened in the wall, from which, he was informed by the citizens, the Russians had hanged one of their soldiers for plundering.

There was still visible on the adjacent wall the following inscription in Russian: "The czar sent out soldiers, not pillagers, to fight for him." Adelt goes to say that the Russians maintained strict discipline in the city. As further examples of their stringency he mentions that one soldier who stole a ham was given fifty strokes with the knout; while another, who straved into the quarters of other soldiers and made undue nose there, got thirty strokes..

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About Lawrence Daily Journal-World Archive

Pages Available:
28,402
Years Available:
1911-1923