El Paso Herald (El Paso, Tex.), Ed. 1, Tuesday, October 26, 1920 Page: 6 of 14
fourteen pages : b&w illus. ; page 20 x 16 in. Digitized from 35 mm. microfilm.View a full description of this newspaper.
Extracted Text
The following text was automatically extracted from the image on this page using optical character recognition software:
Tuesday. Oct. 26.
PRESIDENT OF LEAGUE'S COUNCIL
SAYS ARTICLE X IS NOT ESSENTIAL
NO MORE significant contribatfaavto the league 01 aaaon
controvert hat been made aarfas the jment cam-
paign than that jutt given oat by the preridea t of tke eoaa-
nl of the league of nation Leon Bourgeois. He sight be
accused by tome extreme pertisaas especially by pretioeat
Wilaon ana bit moat earnest adherents of unwarranted in-
terference in the American election. Bt any man it en-
titled to have an opinion and to eipieM it
be some accepted custom of restricts such wkK
iocks the lipVof a diploMtkofficerteare.gBla
Whether the declaration of Peat J
creet or not it it certainly fflumrautrafc aa
have a considerable effect on the f
this last week of the campaign. At elect
bV council of 41 repretenUtit of the 41 members of the
Lague word can certainly not be dumped
and ffl considered remark. While not ".'
officially for the nation in the teagM or for attmbOT
of the conntiU the president
weighs his word when commentmg ttf7 vliM
vital interest to the world. The attattide of tke United
States toward the leagne i generally "J J
rterest-to the rest of tie world if sot to muck to te tke
United States.
ConaeqnenUy the folio wing dispatch is worth am ex-
ceptional amount of publicity right bow: .
Brussels Belgium Oct 25. Leon Boargeois prett-
dent of tke council of tke league of Mti taUang
to American newspaper correspondents last night
said that article X of tke covenant of tke league of
nations is not considered by European statesmen as a
vital and essential element of tke covenant
X. Bourgeois taid he bad beta raradted that
article X had canted to much emotion in the Uatted
States. He ittted that article X t M . be efegfated
without in any way modifying the effectiveness of
the league of nation.
Article X reads as follows :
The members of tke league undertake to respect and
preserve as against external aggression tke territorial in-
tegrity and existing political independence of all member
of the league fit case of any such aggression or in ease of
any threat or danger of tuch aggression tke council shall
advise upon the means by which that obligation than be
fulfilled."
Hot only does the article itaelf state that it it an bUft-
tion but president Wilson while asserting that the section
does not infringe upon the constitutional powers of tke
American congress akw assert that the moral obligation
the section imposes would be superior to any legal obliga-
tion. He virtually tayt that while tke American csagres
wo aid have tke legal right to aecUae to act is accord with
the instructions of tke council nevertheless it would be is
duty bound to do to or violate tke international code and
torfeit the respect sf the world.
President Wilton has repeatedly said that article X
is the heart of tke covenant; that tke covenant aad tke
league would be worthless without it How his view it to
be reconciled with that of the president of the council of
the league it net dear to the ordinary man.
If then it room for so complete and vital a diffeieace
of opinion ss to what tke covenant means aad -what it k
for surely there seem to be aB the more reason why tke
United States should at this time refuse te adhere to the
covenant and decline at any time to adhere te any Jjater-
mtional engagement which does not square with American
ideals and established policies.
Farmers Opposed To Japanese Settling On Valley Land;
White Sox Scandal Will Not Greatly Damage Baseball
FARMERS owning- land in irrigated
sections without exception ax
opposed to permitting: settlement
1'V Japanese" emld John Harm who
owns a tract near Et Paao. "Most of
!ie farmers are working- their own
md. They expect to make their home
1 --e permanently and are vitally in---:ed
in seeing- that ccndltlons are
Tt favorable for the permanent
sident. They are men of the typo
' informed on the Japanese sub-
rt and their opposition Is founded
results in other part of the coun-
rather than on theory of aim-
f rce hatred. They assert that the
squeezes oat all opposition sells
r once with which the American
. -mot compete until he ha a clear
!d. and than boosts prices to any
el which he himself might desire.
.ood fanners are essential to pros-
-itv and the Japanese are not good
'"mtrs. They take the maximum and
end the minimum sending; their
'auiri to Japan. El Paso should
v age Its fight against Japanese in-
asten now. Instead of waiting until
conditions have reached the stare now
fojnd in California."
"Recent scandals involving men-i-rs
of the Chicago White Sox 1
metbing to be expected at infre-
ent intervals la a game of the na-
-;aal character of baseball" said W.
W. Carpenter collector of customs
ncd a baseball fan for It years. I
" ) not believe that the life of base-
ball is endangered- It seems to mo
mat a black sheep who Is willing to
be bribed might be expected to creep
:.n once in a great while causing a
-caudal similar to that recently un-
rvered. As long as the heads of the
ABE MARTIN
QUITE a crowd gathered in front o'
th' Little Gem restarint agin f day
wait fer pk f none down. Aa' new
t's mother an" five grown daughters
thst 'er comitr oat flatfooted oae way
j- th' 'totker instead o' father aa' th'
ioy.
ropyrisht National Kewspaper Barvlc.
!
Those
By. WALT
THE price of silks and motor cart hat
fc
autkTH&
sfM '
IP?
i
I
a lik agar suit oust a xrsgnuui sou iw pnee ox many suuen onus is
ower I admit; but when I price' Apeck of spuds I straightway have a fit. I
.ould exist without a hat all trrsaatei -wtth costly lace; but I matt nars seme
jacon fat to feed my haggard face. Expensive hats have slnmped they say
:ut bacon does sot fall ana to r bath aty headpiece gray against the kitchen
valL The price hat slumped on limousines which ought to soothe ray teal;
ut when I buy a can of beans it putt me in the hole. The things we really
!o aot need are slumping you will find and here a back and there a seed the
) rices have declined; the doodad worn by gilded loon cost lest if leeas will
uy; but oh my friends the poor man's prunes are still too beastly high. Dost
hink the profiteers arc dead because tome prices shrink; still still they cinch
. on enr bread oa all we eat and drink. Until this profiteering stops the
m'i blue; we cant afford to boy the hops and raisins when we'd brew.
Mall.cw Ada- WALT MASON.
1920.
LIBERTY HALL it tke only large place of public atsemMy
in El Pato. It is the only plaee for- popular concerts
large meetings or addresses to large audieaces. The price
to the public for tke use of tke halt ought to be tatted to
the actual coot of lighting heating and taking care of the
PbIt is against pabtk pobey for tke county authorities to
try to make a profit for the county treasury out of tke halL
At to permits for tke use of the halL they should be
almost as free as these to use Cleveland tauare.
Priority of application should gorera.
Assemblies of any Idad not charging an at! mission fee
theald receive the use sf the hall free if they be open with-
out restriction to tke public .
Assemblies for which an admission fee is charged should
have the use of the hall for a nominal price sufffcieat only
to cover the actual expense incurred in excess of what tke
county would have to pay if the hall were sat being used.
Liberty hall is a valuable asset to the city but its value
may be impaired if those in charge of worthy audertaldagt
of a pabtk nature be charged excessively for Hs use.
It is to be hoped that tome day El Paso may have a
s ait Me mask hall and a rsal theater owned by tke entire
pabtk and made available te similar terms tt free or paid-
ftc entertainments.
o
A waiter in Colorado wanted by tke poBee has been iden-
tified by tke calbtaoed 'spot is kit right hand.
People sorely are getting careless with their bombs.
El Ease has a lower temperature Hoaday than Chfcagr.
Cant get ahead of El Paso anyhow yea try.
EL PASO appredatos the fact that her traveling salesmen
are not drummers la tke old tease. Setkag El Paso k
as muck the business sf representatives of tens city's whole-
sale coaceras and factories at k selling their own Hues.
Hot long age aa El Paso salesman -was making a town
fa Hew Mexico when a merchant asked him for something
kk firm did sot handle. Immediately he got the buyer in
touch with another El Paso firm that did handle tke article
wasted. That wat selling El Paso.
Care has bees taken ay employers to get the best pos-
sible traveling representatives; El Pate's talesmen are thor-
ough and dean and have no time for boose and wosnen.
Xoat'of them have whet aad cafldrea watting for them
whoa taey get home. They are worthy ambassadors of tke
community aad are welcomed by their customers at friends.
Tke prodigal sob made only one home ran but be has
it ob Sake Hatt for jmWeHf at that
If seat dfcat sua is wise ke.H btfy the monkey that
kilted tke king of Sfeeee.
There k more siiHam than crime in the world.
Revelations titter go baebmri.
..en. e nMi anvSmt tjft kSH.
ball kept elsaa. the game Itself Is sal.
1MB or oaseoaii. in sny opinion wvaw
not bo tolerated by the American peo-
ple for the game has beeeme an es-
sential part of their ife.
-The poet who wrote on the loves
of the slants only anticipatied sci
ence" said M. D. Foster. The vege
table world has been proved to have
sensations that almost aoproaeh emo-
tion and that caa be registered ts
accurately by scientific apparatus as
the sensations of 'conscious' through
a thistle when a browsing ebw nips
its crown the shock of joy with which
it feels the rain after a drouth can
be measured as precisely as we meas-
ure the shock to a man when a limb
is amputated or when he receives a
legacy. Tho physician who first
demonstrated this showed also that
copper can be tired and steel can
have tetanus. He showed that the
fatigue of a metal can be cured in th
same way that wo cure the fatigue
cf a muscle by a warm bath or mas-
saging. When a plant dies according
to the scientists sn electrical spasm
occurs; in each half of a green pea
it be as high as half a volt. Five
hundred peas In dying might elec-
trocute a man. and Sir Jagadis C
Booe. an eminent scientist once re-
marked. It is well that the cook does
not know the danger she runs; it Is
fortunate for her that the peas ars
not arranged in series.' Bono was the
inventor of the now famous eresco-
graph to measure the growth of
plants. By a combination of a mag-
netic system with a mirror which de-
flected a ray along a measured scale
he became able to note incredibly re-
sponses of the plant in Its environ-
ment. By a mechanism magnlfring
10.000 times he first recorded ths
grown ox an oral nary pianc m a sec-
'ond. He soon devised a erescograph
that magnifies uu to a 10.0.0M
times so that at Its highest power It
would show a snail traveling MO.OM.-
OOt feet an hour or 14 times fsster
than the muzxle velocity with which
a shall leaves thereadnought Queen
i Elisabeth with this apparatus Bose
can show the growth of a grass blade
is affected by. a pin prick it is
stopped entirely for perheps two
hours. He can poison a plant till It
hovers between life and death and
resuscitate it: he can measure the
sleep of plants snd can find just
when they are In the lethargy which
is most Inviting to caterpillars and
other enemies; he can ascertain their
response to wireless current."
"An airplane has tt on any other
kind of a conveyance when It comes
to pleasure." said jndge Charles s
Pollock. "I felt safer the other day
wben I took a Jaunt with R. V.
Thomas In his biplane over the city
than 1 feel In either a street car or
an automobile. El Paso is a wonder-
ful sight from the air and there Is
little danger of a collision. If I speed
too much I can fine myself and let It
go at that. I am going up again
next week. In fact I am going to
make flying one of my recreations
every chance I get"
"It was like going back home for
me to visit Mexico again" said state
senator R. M. TJudley. "I lived among
the Mexican people for many years
and there is no better race en earth.
Prices
Ji
MASOS.
reached a lower spot; but accessaries !
EL PASO
Liberty Hall.
Our Drummers.
A lot of tiisgs that look Kfee lack: may be merely divi-
des os feme body's square dsaL
-WiriiS PkOllps.
When a Mexican Is your friend he Is
your friend Ja every r aspect i lived
In Mexico wben everything was
peaceful aad quiet aad tt was good
to go back and find things the same
way again. There Is a great field
in Mexico for Americans and I be-
lieve peace has come back to stay.
1 believe the people are tired of war
from what I saw. and I don't be-
lieve it will be healthy for any ban-
dit leader to try to start trouble
again. They can settle their minor
difficulties without fighting and I
think they realise it now."
"The growth of El Paso has been
rapid." said Homer Y. Kills. I wrote
to The Herald's Washington bureau
for Information about the census of
El Paso since It was incorporated and
was surprised tat we had grown from
428 people in 18S0 to our present pop-
ulation of 77.513 (exclusive of sol-
diers) since that time. The popula-
tion figures were as follows: Pour
hundred and twenty-eight people In
is; a total of74 In 1ST: a total of
7U in MM. a falling off during that
decade: a total of lMt in ls6.
marking a big growth In th first 10
rears-after the railroads came: 15.-
tOt in 100 another good Increase for
10 years; then a jump to W.T7I In
lie and then the big jump to 77.643
IS) 192."
14 Years Ago Today I
Prom The Herald of This Date. IS64.
THE Bitulithic company today began
plowing Mesa avenue between St
Louis and San Antonio street and
the paving force will get to work on
this street as soon a St. Luls street
Is completed to Campbell street
v. F. Cornell who has been pro
prietor of a number of dallies east snd
west has acquired the controlling In-
terest in the Las Vega Optic.
James G. StcNary. who for the past
three years has been tbe editor and
manager of the Las Vegas Optic will
in a few weeks retire from active con-
nection with tho business and expects
to move with Us family to El Paso.
A. A. Graham temporary foreman
of the roundhouse at tho new South-
western shops. Is to be made foreman
of the large machine shop $hat han-
dles the locomotives as soon u a per-
manent foreman of the roundhouse
can be engaged.
R Gongden of the Soutwestern ar-
rived here this week from Alamogordo
to take charge of the blacksmith shop
at the new Southwestern shop In the
east part of the city. -
MLsa Ada V. Lass is enjoying an ex-
tended visit with relatives in Mexico
City and El Oro.
Un Krnest Holland returned from
Dallas where she has been visiting
for the past few weeks.
Mr Mary C. Hilts arrived last night
from Grand Rapid where she has
been with her daughter.
Blackburn colleste at Bloomlnarton.
II L will teach women students power
farming In addition to domestic sci
ence etc
Old Judge Rumhauser
jl s vjeu-AMvv-Aw (rsx-o 7 '-W ( TweviHe tvn our aso
1 7 ( ttlK.K TVirvrl WA" J S A TbLOMvf rAoTVfR-M-'-AwJ )
sS
HERALD EDITORIAL and MAGAZINE PAGE
1 League Of Nations
And Foreign Foltcy
leavesTrom an
overseas notebook
Br K. D. SLATER.
Hurt us the pnod covered by the Botes
hers reprinted I was in Germany with th
American Army ot OeceupaUon. Sources
of iBfonnatloa of the outside world were
neeeassrily measer.
The "Notes" make no pretence at Wins
a discussion of the leagus of nations or sf
the treaty. They may bav BO value
whatever: but if they do posssss say valaa
It Is perhaps as much by reason of th
dates they bear. anything eta. They
may bav some situlfleane as radical na
bow on mind was being mad as. oaring
the pro rre of the dlseuasioas and th
conference. In elrcmiBC nee irons
th effects of American political dtaews-
kn and the partisan aunosBBer
America.
Th "Votes" on the susjeeet ar re-
printed without ehanre or comment the
date belnr lven. Quotations from th
"Not" will be siven her day by day.
IS Nov.. Uli Our world problem
now Is not to crush the German en-
ergies but to turn them in the right
direction. By what meaner Shall It
be by contact- and diffusion of ideas?
Consider the ultimate consequences or
ostracism which Is Just nnd right and
necessary as Germany's greatest pun-
ishment but has a limit somewhere
in wisdom for the welfare of the hu-
man race. .
ti Dec. 1918 Germany has ss much
to give to the world as she ever had.
and It will be a mistake to ignore
what is worth saving In the results
of German creative etforts. It Is our
nrlvllwn to seleet and use what is
-ti aa v in? and to relect au
need be. destroy what Is bad.
1 Jan 1919 Lloyd George. Wilson .
and Clemenceau emphatically relter-1
ate that they are in complete accord j
and in the same breath express vital
differences and reservations. Clem-
enceau Is for "boundaries and alll-l
ances"; Wilson agilnst "balance of
power" snd in favor of "world group :
Clemenceau and Lloyd George for
"freedom of the seas" under British J
control etc
7 Jan- 1915 A military dictstarship
Is no worse than a civil euciaiorsniv
S Jsn.. 11 In spite of ell of
which the kaiser Is guilty. I am not in
favor of "punishing" him as an Indi-
vidual and alone. It is a big ques-
tion but here I shall resolve It dowii
to this: That the true object of all
human punishment is not revenge but
deterrent in 'its aim to prevent if
possible the recurrence of the crime;
to preserve order and to adjust com-
pensation where possible. That elsmor
for the "punishment" of the kaiser ts
based solely on revenge for it could
have no effect In deterring another so
disposed: b should be put where be
can do no more harm snd so with his
entire cabal. But death would be a
poor revenge and a poor compensa-
tion. He should be deprived of his I
property in proportion with all the
rest of Germany. There is danger of
unexpected and unfortunate reaction
If this war settlement be reduced to
the level of merely revenging a per-
sonal crime: It will savor of president
Wilson's ridiculous message to con-
gress of personar spite sgslnst one
Huerta." The present situation la un-
...nMe.hl tint to Bit' In Solemn COUft
upon the kaiser's ease would be giving
too much sanctity to his "martyrdom"
aa some would call It. The world. In-
cluding Germany will know his shame
and hold him In detestation forever.
Doe the world believe the word.
"Vengeance is mine. I will repay saith
the Lord"? I believe vengeance Is no
proper function of human law. but
only protection of human right must
be considered. There would how-
ever be one good reason for prose-
cuting" the kaiser under The Hagus
conventions etc and that would be
to "get It all In the record." Kvo.
so I should be in favor of including
more than the kaiser; perhaps all the
German people and Austrian etc
It Jan.. l!t Th Berliner Tage-
blatt publishes a warmly eulogistic
article by count' von Bernstorff about
his friend. CoL E M. House upon the
occasion ot a report of the death ot
CoL House. Bernstorff evidently re-
garded House as very friend ly dls-
""jWan. 191 I am favorable to In-
ternational contact and counsel but
unfavorable to International govern-
ment and control so far aa the United
Slates is concerned. Paraphrasing
Clemenceau. "Let us be worid-mlnded.
but let us be Americans first." There
will Inevitably be a "balance of
power" aithtn the "league of na-
tions." 2( Jan 1919 How does the secret
peace conference square with Wilson's
repeated declaration for "open en-
gagements openly arrived at"?
Feb. 1919 The chief merit of the
league of nations is the element of
council or counsel. I have strong
feeling In opposition to the United
States tying Itself as to future poli-
cies In view of the fixed limit of
the earth's land surface suitable for
the support of the human race the
territorial division and possession will
always he in flux. The map of the
world is never finished no matter
what a few geographers or statesmen
may say. Biological laws ar su-
perior to roan-made laws. Prior ap-
propriation and beneficial use in the
Interest of human progress should be
the basis the measure and the limit
ot the right of any nation or any peo-
ple to rule or administer any portion
of the earth's surface or to control
the extraction and utilisation of the
raw materials that may be therein.
An equity court I about th limit to
which a leagne of nations can go and
where is the power to enforce de-
crees? There are times when nations
and peoples the same ss individuals
hold certain Impulses and principles
above love of life Itself. And
these impulses and principles are not
always wrong even though they be
disapproved by a majority.
Feb.. 191S Opposition to the league
of nations is oloed by Heed and
Borah; thus once more "Wisdom
comes out of the west." The more I
consider the proposed league the
more I oppose it I am generally in
accord with Reed and Borah but
neither so far has "isolated the
germ." which is the attempted parti-
tion of the earth's surface and forced
guaranty of existing titles and em-
phasis upon the rights of small na-
tions instead of duties. It is Eng-
land's league not ours.
Feb 1919 I have always favored
an International council ot the strong-
eat representatives and cooperation
and contact and spread of Interna-
tional education but I object to the
United States binding its future ac-
tions. Revrall Wilson's Mobile speech
about Latin-America haw far It de
parted from sound American policy
and how dangerous its promises.
Feb 1919 After observing how lit
tie Americans and Europeans under-
stand each other how widely divergent
SCHOOL DAYS
1 - lillllllllllllnlll.iltllfllUllilllllllllltfllM
! sssS3Li?SSs i. Il illlHft'r
' - mmmtmmmmmmmmiimmmmimt fmmmmmimmmmmKmtmmmmtmmii
Patter And Chatter
By 8. K. KISBR.
Heroic Measures.
Y SHOBS have been resoled ana
Mended mueh .
My hat was bought before the
war negan
But our ran now he wholly out ot
loneh
With Fnsalen and remain a geatle-
My seeks are darned fer they have
served me longf
Mr tie wns new In l17i
Because I heM that prorMeerlnga
wrong
My collars all have edges that are
keen.
FQIR years ago nsy overrent was
new.
Bat still IPs mueh too good to
throw Birayi
The Using seems to need a pates or
twos
Onee Maek. It shows a present tinge
of gray.
SlUl it wlH serve perhaps to keep
1 me warm
And If It's out ot style I
needn't
Thank heaven
I ran be In decent
ferns.
Though slgaa of age
efothes 1 wear.
are
their lines of conduct how far apart
their points of view how differently
they feel and think how very little
they have In common I am less snd
less disposed to tie ourselves up with
other powers so as to control our na-
tional policies in future.
Feb J919 We need to define more
rationally and practically our national
aim but we do not need to declare it
formally or sign any contracts. Ws
are entering upon a most dangi
I should say a go
000.
would be: Moral force exteriorly phys-
ical force to defend our right to
peace. What w are really undertak-
ing to do bt to guarantee to under-
write the British empire.
Feb 1919 Objection is raised by
Dr. Nicholas Murray Butler to the
league of nations draft that it is
vague indefinite badW thrown to-
gether and 111 direst el. It muse be
said that this applies to most army
writing of all sort In practice con-
trary to the beautiful theories. It ap-
filieh to most laws and ordinances ot
egislatures and city council Some
of it Is deliberate. Recall Gen. X's in-
struction to me. "Don't make It too
specific" Recall an eminent ex-
member of the Texas legislature who
busied himself making laws general
and Indefinite in their terms aad re-
lieving them of specific qualities. A
to the league of nation draft. It Is
sn Indication of compromise on Im-
portant matter of hesitation in ac-
ceptance of facta aad principles of
Indecision and weakness and of dis-
position to pass th buck and of tre-
mendous rush and hast under Wil-
son's whip the' other great powers
shrewdly caluculatlng that they were
the gainers and winning by playing
Wilson's game. They an know the
United States will never devote her
fower to work Injustice but do ws
now as much about 'eosne of them?
Feb 1919 Much difference of opin-
ion Is already developing over treat-
ment that we accorded Germany.
France Is wholly bitter and merciless
desiring revenge and permanent
crippling. Th United Slates will eer-
lalnly play the softest. Germans are
afraid of the French policy but they
do not fear tho United States's policy.
Feb 1919 Under the surface ill
feeling Is dsvelopine between France
and the United States over economic
policies attitude toward Germany and
general pose of our officers and sol-
diers which the French do not like.
Feb 1919 In connection with the
character of the German people and
tne general tnseasiniiity or our own
people to sense of duty as contrasted
to sense ot
rights aad th general
Right as prlmltlv and
question of
Duty as a higher development recall
There Was a
Question About It
Copyright ItMjbr...
Hectare Newspaper Syndicate.
TVB bevght myself a Mttle dinner
paO.
And dally bring: a modest In nek to
tewst;
It seems to me my methods cannot fall
To help to hrtag the seat of Hvtag
dsvtsu
I'm Trathlag te and tram the stattea
new.
But tat has put me te a cruel
pUsrhti
The exeretae I get appears somehow.
To make it hard to curb my appe-
tite. pi glad that prohibition's here fer
I da not
even dally wtth beme
hrewi
At hsme Pve tried ts have It nneVer-
steed
That M things ran be made as
net as ais.
If lark ts with me aad the plan I've
made
Are as upset lit pay the bills I
Tve
And worry through the winter with
the aid
Of meaev that I saved tea years
that all German words relating to
Law begin with "Rectal Right I cold cream it comes rrom tne arug 1
(Gesetx means statute). Why should store in little jars and we bousekeep-
not the law of the future be more ers put it on our paws and faces
strongly Imbued than heretofore with when winter comes so we will not be
tne sense or imiy rawer loan im
Charta. Declaration of Independence.!" "Well nl get you some." offered
BH1 of Rights state constitutions etc ' Uncle WlggHy. "I was Just wondering
10 reo it is xoiiy 10 reiy on
the leans of nation or on an thing
but our own organised power.
11 Feb 1919 In the midst of the
row ai Parts between France and the
United States over treatment of Oer-
J.J!A
IB OD0 111 WnKD UUUVtlJ Wall (MB mtLK.lM-
fLawl thtirl nnlv f K iitar will hd fftnU-nt
a saea mi t - .1
XJ r Vrj . ir I J1 1 UK )uj4f Ut Ul sUUUIlt)
draft lh announced at Pari. I am
troajjly opposed to It as drafted.
tTSii-chanr annfAtitm from th
"Xote" will appear tomorrow.)
. ...
"Human Shuttlecock"
May Be Deported Again
London Baa. Oct. Joseph New-
somes an American subject eharced at
Wlllesden court wtth returning to this
country after being: deported to Amer-
ica as an undesirable was described
by the magistrate aa & tunan shut-
tlecock." Kewsome told the masstrate that
after arriving in America he went
before a board to whom he admitted
that he had well-to-do relatives in
England. He saffl they gave him a
ticket and passport for Liverpool and
Sut him aboard a ship. He told them
e was an American subject and had
only Jusi been deported from England
hut they told him to return to his
rich relatives.
ST. rH. w-e t m. Mi I an at th
markabls story and remanded him forj
inquiries to be made at tne nome of
fice.
ROMAN VILLAS BUILT B. C
UfCARTHED NEAR BERNE
Paris. France OcC 2f Archeolo-
gists hsve discovered in the wood of
Enge near Berne Switzerland two
Roman villas which appear to have
been constructed in the first century
B. C says a Geneva ipeaeage.
Further excavations are to be made
In an attempt to establish the where-
abouts of ihe IS towns and 499 vil-
lages mentioned by Julius Caesar
which it is believed existed In the
neighborhood. Traces of the former
existence of an important Roman col-
ony at this spot have already been
discovered.
By Tad
By D WIG
Bedtime Stories For The Little Ones
UK CLE WIGGILT ACT)
By HOWARD
" a RS you going to play football
A again today. Uncle Wiggilv
1 asked Nurse Jane Fuzzy Wuzxj
one morning.
"Football? No what made yon think
so 7" asked the rabbit geaxlstnan as he
put on hi tall srsk hat. ready to take
a walk out of hi hollow stamp bun-
galow. -Well the reason I thought perhaps
you wore going to play football." said
the muakrat lady housekeeper "is be-
cause I saw you kicking oae first one
hind lee aad them VJm other a you
did the day you played football with
Johnaio Buafcytali. the squirrel."
"Oh. you mean wan the sohsd hor-
nets let bb take their old neat to kick
around because Johnny lasnV tke reg-
ular foot hall " aald the hentsnr. "No.
I'm not going to play loday. Janle.
The reason I'm kick Hi out. aa you saw
me. was because I was practicing for
putting on my rubbers. It will soon
be cold weather with snow and Ice
1 and sleet and I'll have te wear mb-
1 hers. I'm just practicing that's all."
' "Tea winter will soon be here with
skating sleigh riding. sn"vnalls ana
I Christmas." said Nurse Jane. "And
: that reminds me I need soma cold
cream."
"Cold cream?" repeated the bunny
gentleman. "Don't you mean ice cream
. I or an ice cream cone
"No." replied Nurse Jane. "I mean
mwbmi.mi'iiw. a eieuiuuwni
n x cudib bui w juu iwr wucu
Igo on my dally walk and now I can.
rlh bring you some cold cream."
I "And you might bring some soft
glue also." went on Nurse Jane.
"There Is a kind ot soft glue that
Vim.Z. a."aDV. 'SL V?-.;
I v as a as eg a v-aasaasss am anuacu n.ju a
. can BtlCLC it tOaTetber VTltll tile aClQe.
1 TM 1 Vw m. -.1... or! MU 1
i viijsaj aiuv auu s-uaw s-a cwu
I promised Unci Wivcily. "But you ;
! most not pet them mixed. Nurse ;
Jse." he add ell with a ianarh. "Yoa'd t
! look funny If you put glum on your
race iateM or cola cratun.
"111 be carefuL" promised the
muakrat lady.
Away hopped Uncle Wlggily over
the fields and through the woods. The
trees had nearly ail lost their summer
leaves by this time and though the
sun shone the day was bleak and cold
for winter was close at hand.
"But I love winter" thought Uncle
"Wlggily as he hopped along. "There
are so many nice holidays Thanks-
riving. Christmas and New Tears.
Winter is real jolly I think."
It did not take the rabbit gentle-
man long to reach the drug store
where it me lied like catnip penny-
royal and sassafras.
"Some cold cream for Nurse Jane if
you please" said the bunny to the
monkey doodle gentleman who waited
on him "and also a tube of sticky
glne."
"You shall have them" the clerk
answered and soon with a package in
rac Dw- ufcle lBril7 trt.ea fr
his hollow stump bungalow. A cold.
miing wina was d lowing ana as Jtr.
Lrongears felt it stinging on his face
he said:
"I guess a little cold cream will be
good for me when I get to my hollow
stump bungalow. If it will stop Nurse
Jane's face from chapping. It wlU stop
mine also."
The rabbit gentleman was hop-skipping
along with the cold cream in one
paw and the tube of glue in the other
when all of a sudden out from under
the sassafras bush Jumped the bad old
wild cat.
"Yow! Meaouw! Scow!" howled the
wild cat. who is quite different from
your tame pussy
"Oh. I beg your partion" said Uncle
Wigglly. trying to jump to one side
for he did not want to be caught.
-Hold on there! I want you!" yowled
the wild cat. "I've been waiting here
for you' I saw yon go in the drug
tore. I guess yea bought gum drops.
Now I love gum drops and 111 take
all you have! Give them to me!"
"You are mistaken" answered Uncle
EL PASO HERALD
IHSDICATED TO THC 9ERY1CK OF THE FEOPIJB THAT NO GOOD CACHE SHALL
IUCK A CHAMPION. AND THAT LIL HAIX NOT THRIVE CNOPPOSTD.
H. B. Sister edtter and cetieUs owner
I. C. WltesrUi l aVaYoager sad t
MEMBER ASSOCIATED rUSS. AXKUCAN NEWSPAPER PVBL1SHKBS' ASSOCI-
ATION AND ACDTT BCXKAU OF ClBCt LATIOV
THE ASSOCIATED PRESS is eaehBstvly entitled to the as f:r publication of t'i -w
dlarostches credited te tt or set otherwise credited la thu paper aad vo th .
news publishes. Iftereta.
AN INDEPENDENT DAILY NEWSPAPER The El Paao Hera M wis esteblfshd 4.i
March. IHl: The El Paao Herald lsclodea. altv by bsorpt.ca a-d suh-: .
Dally Newi The TeJeftT.pl Th Telegram. The Tri5ueL. Th r.-aphlc. Th-
Toe Aatruer. to jePacpenavni. -xmm journtsi in Kfpjoa'-n rn- Baut:n
TERMS OF SUBSCRIPTION Dally Herald in Arliona. N w zy.ei. o Tfcias an I i
' Milco. per month. VI per year. le..ft. In alt nther stales per month $1 o0 r "
I Tear f IS. Wednesday and Week-End tsesea will be mailed for ti (j: 1
Southwest) pr year. Week-End editions onl7. per year. tl $S ou-tsid souta?-
I THIRTT-MNTH TEAR OF PUBLICATION Superior cxcln-lv features -i! - - -i
nn.s report by AotaKx-iate-l Prus Lea.-d Wire tnd Special Orresjportd-
I Anion Ne MmIio Wet Txa. Mericc. Washlnzton D. C. aad :8f let.
Entered at the Patofflc In XI rate. lex aa second claaa mattiz.
IPickedUpThiBusiness )
BY FRAWCUm L. GAHSIDK.
RS. GRACE JANE NOEE of C". :-
cago. was Unmarried and a very
vecna srirl waen she entered fe
employ of a milk broker.
The man who formed the business
was a noted financier and it
little more than an Idea when t!-e
girl entered his employ and this it
remained for a number of years be-
cause he wss occupied with a multi-
tude of other affairs.
He grew weary of the ngg-.r-g
work lu a little boainess in which he
saw no future and decided to aban-
don It. But his young clerk hal
grown enthusiastic of Its ultima:
success snd srgned so eloquently
that It be continued that he turne 1
It over to her. With this understand-
ing that she would assume all re.
sponslblllty for further developn-en.
He continued the business in oth-r
words but abe mnnageu tr.
She later leased the business then
I owned It. and with the enthusiasm of
ownership began Its development
Her first vear was one of repeated
I financial disasters hut she never !"'-
I faith. She steadfastly refused to di
two things get into debt or curtail
h-- plars.
fche woi out She puhed forward
through untold dispiriting experiences
and attained a success At present - i
is doinsr a business of more tn.in
million dollars' worth of mi!k-erei't
every year. She s the go-between
between the small farmer and t s
I small dealer. Charging the farmer a
mall nereent on each can. abe frua-.
antees to him all crdit transactions
with the dealer. The farmer delivers
to the rearest depot the amount of
Teitlv anerlfled In his contract ar 1
suburban trains depoel- the cans at
i certain platforms where the dealers;
1 are waiting to recene them.
Her idea wouia nave oeen vonair.
had she lacked perseverance. r
you have a good idea" Have you -courage
to back it" (CopyrlaV
lj;0 Thompson Feature Service.)
MODEKX MOTHER SOOSE.
There was a man in Washine a
and he was wise and more; he Jumoe l
into bramble bush and kept us out -
war But w hen he found what he nj l
done t-M wonders never cease
jumped into another bush and Vep:
us out of peace. Harvey'a Weekly
In Sweden women are not allow!
to work for three weeks 1 fo -motherhood
and for six weeks aft. --
ward. During this period iv r -ciiv
part-time pay from t- e
dividual or firm by wham t.ey a-i
employed.
THE COLD CRKAM.
K- GAKIS.
Tl-lwir tin nolitelv aa he could 1.
have no gum drops at alL I bough-
Nurse Jane some cold cream and
"Ha! Ice cream! Just what I want '
howled the wild cat tasking a moa--distressing
face.
"No not Ice cream cold crean-
correetsd Dncle Wiggily. "Ice cream
ts to eat but Nars Jan wants t-
cold oream to nib ou her char?!
paws and face and "
"Well she shan't have) it!" rude'-
' All of a
bit toft paw stark to
and impolitelr Interrupted the rt
cat. "I'll take that cold cream my-
self. I ffuesa ttit tws and face are
as chapped aa hers! Give me ihat co'd
cream."
I of Uncle Wi 1 j - -Tpacksie. from t
.
uu --vc.
u tr atoi
wrH-.t iiiTi't cold cream!" cried
bunny as he -saw what the bad chap
had taken. "That is
"Oh vou can't fool me yowled th -wild
cat. Wtth that he began to rub
the stuff on his face and paws bat he
had not taken more than three rubs
before all of a sudden his left paw
stuck to his nose and his right pa-v
stuck to his forehead.
Oh. wow! What is this Whs:
kind of cold cream does Nurse Ja:--
use!" snarled the wild cat. "No won-
der she is proud' She will be no-:
dreadfully stuck up if fehe uses th s
cold cream!'
-That wasn't cold cream!" laughed
Uncle Wiggily. "I told you it wasn .
but you wouldn't listen. You got ti
tube of glue by mistake and I'm glad
of It. Now your paws are fast to your
face and you are worse stuck np tha .
Nurse Jane ever was. Ha' Ha'"
TSen Uncle Wlggily ran back to t a
drug store to get more glue leaving
the wild cat all stuck up. and tl 4
bunny gentleman went home a diffe--ent
path so the bad creature did r :
bother him again that day. And wr
the glue Nurse Jane mended the cha
but she pot the nice cold cream o-
her paws and face so everything car
out all right. And If the lead peno !
doesn't forget to take Its rubber wN i
It goes out to play In the rain -n r!
the sheet of paper. 11! tell you a--about
Uncle Wlggily in the ia-es
(Copyright. 12. by McClure News-
paper Syndicate.)
NEW DRAINAGE PUMPS WILL
CLEAN UP SEVENTH STREET
Seventh Kreet. according; to ilde--man
R. C Sample present ihe Ur- --
dralnace problen- lr. this ctt. a- -1
special facilities now are being co" -pleted
to handle it The lebel ot
street Is lower than any other in t
southern part ot the c'ty and cat-'-.
most of the waier that falls la s"u .
El Paso.
The drainage units now installed
stations st Stanton snd Seventh 1
Park and Seventh streets will 1 -drainage
water from the street k
to the Franklin canaL Th. pum "
reached El Paso last week. They a--to
he operated by temporary moto--
has tttreeted The Herald fer 3 resnu
A. Msrtta to armsaf.Bg edlter.
mV sFS Ji lyZsmTsaBaBaaaaTsmV
3r .tfHF
BeMCst
Upcoming Pages
Here’s what’s next.
Search Inside
This issue can be searched. Note: Results may vary based on the legibility of text within the document.
Tools / Downloads
Get a copy of this page or view the extracted text.
Citing and Sharing
Basic information for referencing this web page. We also provide extended guidance on usage rights, references, copying or embedding.
Reference the current page of this Newspaper.
Slater, H. D. El Paso Herald (El Paso, Tex.), Ed. 1, Tuesday, October 26, 1920, newspaper, October 26, 1920; (https://texashistory.unt.edu/ark:/67531/metapth139076/m1/6/: accessed July 17, 2024), University of North Texas Libraries, The Portal to Texas History, https://texashistory.unt.edu; .