Loup City Northwestern VOI.L-.MK XXIX.LOUP CITY. NEBRASKA. THURSDAY, APRIL 13. 1911. ~ KUMBERaT" EPITOME OF A WEEK'S NEWS Mast Important Happen ings ToJd in Bnei. — ■ ■ ■■' ■ I Washington lint tor Mortis of Ttr*itia »i •kotoad tnorrtc. loo der at tb* ! e::«e r-.au* «4> t»j a vote of 21 » J* »**-caior ftitrfy of ladtaaa «a* •toad tor by tb* opyoo-jei to Mar*to ••Otar OTiorm*a. lb* nea waa'or 'SB X*-a York. voted for Shively • • • —me? Us FvMnim fc.--ud.ired la 'b* Yattai Siam Meat*- a m.-tuiioe pwmdte* tor ateotber te» --rtlcatloc at ■'to* Unset raa* Tb* reacrfutton «*elt«r of tovncttga MTarfca of CbMTarata. . M-Leas «J 1 :.*aa and • • • Tb* w» 'an of raiao tor*.elated br tb* bnaatti' ntjwri ui tbe bous* ■u adap-ec after a political 'batik . To a crea? AM y are a r»pei -ion of ' bate beea Leaded derate By ^oLsraBM* la tbe p*a* • • • At a '»*-•» of R*pefeU> aa aeeator* "tertbj If « alien as* ejected perms oteK rbaarmaa aad authorised to ram* a *a«*nec 'taat::** aed a mamw tet — * kt underrate.:• * tw rial taourseats «bai: ten n fe«-«**UtlOU (4 tbe r«BBlt ■aaa • • • Domestic bw BuGatat paaai nrrr train Xo 4 •»* boarded law nest ajtbte tbe tin It* jf r- Ln by am armed aad seeded robber, a bo bead «p tb* afcft* otematc am tb* dautc-car. four o* S** uai*er» aed a a«gro ctoaf Xo » v#-p* maitiae* d • • • Tb* Jury to tbe cm** of Mrs Etna nrl Brooks a be aba* aad tilled Mr* Mar* ftiiwf. tb* aC.ii.tty *» fcer baa bated former Jade* T * Brooks, re 'iiraed a. vordjet of angumal at Fort Aorl T«t K tbe ^routed that tb* dafndaet *» :aaaa* a Let. tb* «o* skied tb* Oetd • • • teased t by a mail of (moke aad t uk&ac readers from a Br* that roc •ernad tb* ear ae bouae at (too aori at tb* Ottos i«*a_ TBte feet tr-aeatb ♦be iBaetteioa K maa aad tec boy* •ere suSootud ar itedteertfad to tb* tiboar mla* of 'be Sma'oa • cm' ‘Jtt pt-LT a* Ttroof. 'tree uiita from •raMaa Pa • • • AS ad tb* l.dkl amrer* aad 2J1 platgeta oc. board tb* Xorth **emaa Uarf steamship Pnaant •*•* fas* aenubd to tbe aaad off Fire '•toted •*** :ranatferT*d te her *,%■*■t tot» tb* Pnax Fruden- Wffceltc •Btt bmgt* tern aafejy to Xe« lark dtp Tb* itaaofer wa* eder-ed •t’ka: toredeat aretdt-c- or imair. • • • After a-tsates ’to* mayoralty of haumtl Ka* Mr* Ela w.itoa moated om hy tt># old city cans s’ tad ’b» nrtifrau of ytrer *• brr opponent. O M Aker* • • • V«* -taufer* At-:. i«ort of rail -oaA haetaeae ud w rt« accept dft* m 'Ip* fnMB :nauruia hnxe lortk arm to- inn** 'roc Eh* island ■W* Tark • • • M*'»r tteyhonse annual report to *» FfelloOeljAJa «My coaacU >ho>i tho* ’hr rtty airrerttawat aprct Oar **« '** »**■ y«ar more money ’ho* * rrrrtroO Hornpta arrr $41 an* raprte. .rra $4:.%; $4) • • • ****** bcraarr eafdea. tk* large*! ***rcu:; harlding la Me*' Tork city. *" ***d I* • eompooy at.i<* has laid |d*M lor trants* 0»«a 'hr fsatotn atnrtarr and rre-'lty os th* she Mrodm. skyscraper* • • • Tto* MS* parttaits JodJrta! and *rhooi hc«rd fSrkab nath$ aga*r»' th* *'r*l*s.* o®‘ BortalM! •!. ket son • rwmp&rt* ut<*T te eieetfoo at MU »*ua*» jeiaeipaHy through the #f *f tto# Hoc** Catholic*, *hc woaeht wt • fall rot# la rpite of tb* • • • Jaaimr Haloiaa. a utn the foartii ta hr triad for ltor atrarr of W H Antoi# a asaas#- piuchrr of Chicago car foead c&ilty try a Jury at Ok’a haata Oty Ttrar other areran sere [nnonl; fuaad nidy of the ac dtrtadtllatflh hanerd at oar. • • • Tto# Me* Tors Catcher n! rin* -be mails to de ’raud. rZ L Tice-preside&t of the at Northern California, was dead at Readme. Cal . lying i . the graves of his two wives A i- e by his side said he had commit ed scicdde. • • • ruiir cca s. mocuia-ed with germs r 'pov diphtheria and scarlet -r i. t court a’ Si 1 u.t alleging that the cour.s of Mis t ir hni no juried, Mot: jn ;be cases Rawn ia Chicago and ii was al eg- 1 b;. the ins _ranee companies that a the policy n.arract* were made In Illinois • • • I- rsoas ar- iVud and several **• er- injure,: m a cyclone which * ru *. Shell; junty. ind Houses • le iemcllsned and the highways r’rewx wish telephone jioles trees a-- wrecked bouses and barns. • • • In tii«•'revenue district composed of eastern T-* nee see. southwest Virginia and we.'frs ( aroilna. an official re port for March shows that 71 illicit d s’ .-Tie* w»re destroied by raid er* • • • Arthur Wuld. a street-car conductor tears old. ahot and killed Miss »!m: e Wagner. t wenty-three. of St. •’loud. Minn and then killed him self at the borne cf the girl s brother in law :n Minneapolis • • • The American Implement company, noia corporation certified to t£e aei -etary of state a' Springfield lb to an increase in capital stock 'rom to SSO.Q0G.OOO • • • Former Coutuj Judge Thomas C. Martin of Waukesha. Wis. who made the run for justice of the peace cn the Sermon on the Mount" ticket «cc by a large majority. • • • Personal Andrew Carnegie has declined to -ecosne , hairinan of a proposed uni ied association of ail organisations now working for an arbitration treaty jatweeii this rountry and Great Britain He beiievea this la not the time to me eiera’e public opinion m m m Prof Raymond MacDonald Ander •on associate bead of the English de partment at Stanford university, has resigned to become bead of the Eng • a-h department at the University of mtoois • • • (' D Hiller- of Hobbs Ferry. X Y.. former assistant secretary of the • reaaury has assumed the duties of •e*Teiary to President Taft in place •t Chare-* D Norton, who retires from that poettion • • • Charles G Gates did not make his reo-nt rush across the continent Irotn IjO* Angeles to New York in a *i«eciai train to be treated by an emi :cnt physician He hurried to New Tork to eser; every Influence in his poser to oppose the divorce proceed ings his wife filed against him. it develop*. • • • Foreign Count Carl Mol'ke Danish ambas sador to the United Slates, is in Den »er to investigate the working of woman's suffrage in that state for his government. which is considering ('anting full suffrage to women • • • Real work oa the veto bill, designed to restrict the powers over legislation of the British bouse of lords was be gun with the opening of the commit tee stage in the house of commons, e • e Discussing the proposed extension of International arbitration in the Ger man reichstag Chancellor yon Beth tnann-HoUweg classed universal arbl 'ration and universal disarmament as ideals impossible of realixstipn • • • V. 8 Leeds, son of the tinplate king, has married Mrs. May Jayne. -- -- - STRUCK BT A TIN UNKNOWN MAN FATALLY HURT AT COLUMBUS. HAPPENINGS OVER I HE STATE Wtoat is Going on Hers and There That is of Interest to the Read ers Throughout Nebraska and Vicinity. Columbus.—Shortly afier 6 o'clock Saturday the Los Angeies limited east bound, struck an unknown man at the mill crossing east of the depot. He , endeavored to get on the local freight is it was puiling into the yards and iid. not notice the passenger train. ; which struck him and fractured his skull. Killed by Fall from Chair. Shubert.—The child of H. X. Hulse and wile, who live a few miles south of town, fell from its high chair, strik ing the side of its face. The accident was thought a minor one. and the child went to sleep apparently none ; the worse front the fall. During the i evening however. Mrs Hulse had oc casion to go into the room where the baby was sleeping, and found it dead. _ W2ter Works System Finished. Orleans. — Orleans' Jilii.fkiO water works system was completed last week and a mass meeting of the citizens o' Orleans was held in the city hall to celebrate its celebration and to orgar. ire a fire department. Former Legislator Dead. Hastings—Andrew J. Scott died suddenly Wednesday n g’c of hear: ; failure. He was .-.a ex-ui mber of the - e .:'<■ and for a number of years w..s ; • , t:u a: tie lig tings asylum under ex-efoveraer Holcomb. I • Ben Miller at Omaha was fined five dollars for snoring. A new I'nion Pacific line will be buii: to (ienng soon Work has commenced on the neyv t^Jera, building to be erected at lioi drege. North Platte will have a new three ~ory post office and government court house. Lancaster County Superinienden: 1 Morris is seriously ill at a Lincoln hospital. M illis Packard, a farmer near Bioontmg on. was kicked to death by a horse. The Kellenharger school house, six miies west of Merna, was totally de stroyed by fire Sunday. The Denton school has been closed for a week, on account of smaIl;>ox in the town Ernes Galloway, editor of the Nem aha Advertiser, has perfected a life tiartcership with Miss Maud Bums. Rev. J. W. Sapp officiating While peeking through a crack in a fence little ljois Lean of Elmwood was painfully injured by a playmate thrust ing the point of a stick into her eye ball. very nearly destroying the sight. A H. Morton, superintendent of the Fairruont city schools for the past year, has tendered his resignation to i tt;e board in order to accept a sim ilar position in Ashland. Henry Emerson Palmer, a prominent citizen of Omaha for the last twenty tive rears and former postmaster, died suddenly at his home Sunday morning. It is presumed that his death was caused by a stroke of apoplexy. Jacob C. March is one of the really old men of Lincoln. If he lives till July 16. he will be ninety-four years I oid. He enjoys the distinction of be ing a veteran of the Seminoie Indian war. which occurred more than three j quarters of a century ago. It is be j iieved that there are only two sur vivors of that conflict now living. Broken Bow s new lighting system , has been put into service with forma! 1 ceremonies. Fire in the business section of -Wil cox caused losses aggregating tdj.OOO. : partially covered by insurance. The I cause of the fire is unknown. T. H. Barakman. superintendent of the Tecamseh schools, had a leg broken while engaged in a wrestling match. Emil Marquardt. a farmer living near Lyons, while fighting prairie fire in a strong wind was overcome by beat and exhaustion and remained un conscious for over three hours. It is thought he will recover. Charles Xickolls and Thomas Doty of Albion narrowly escaped death when the wagon in which they were ; riding was struck by a I'nior. Pacific train smashing it into kindling and killing one of the horses. Henry Stebr of Norfolk has been in dieted by the Madison county grand jury for murder in the first degree, and his wire, Mhmfe Stefcr for sec ond degree murder in connection with the death of her S-year-old son. Kaurt. who died after'his feet froze off last January.__ A civic improvement league has been organized in Pawnee City. The purpose of the league is- for mutwal help to those who are Interested in improving the appearance of the city, and-the organization expects- to do mack toward beautifying the towm during the summer. ‘r-- u i snoot -OC-il ai sst>t «mas *; GETTING READY TO ADJOURN The senate prepared for the end by indefinitely postponing al! senate files on the general file. The Placek con gressional apportionment bill died on the sifting committee file, so there will be no redistricting of congressional districts for two year*. Tibbets of fered a resolution directed against the university extension department, and Placek offered a resolution demand ing that the governor appoint a war den of the penitentiary. !: is now too late for hills from one house to be read three times in the other bouse. The bouse was seething with excite ment over the coming test on t>:in — J. M. TALCOTT Crofton, Nebr. State Senator. Eighth District. day baseball, but to effort was made until Wednesday. sides claim victory. The Selleck beard of control bill failed in the house. Omaha Ad club wins over Douglas county delega ' tion and see bill rocomaker, ted to pass i The election of bounty misriooers ■ by districts was decisively defeated A constitutional amendment, for in ! crease of pay for legislators was acted , upon favorably. Guaranty Not Yet Ready. Although the bank guaranty law is now technically in effect, the mandate of the United States supreme court ■ having been filed in the district feder al conn this week, it will be at least a month before the law is in practical operation. This delay arises chiefly from twe ! considerations: the legislature may : change the guaranty law so that the ' orders of the state banking board would be materially affected, and it i wlH take some time for the various state banks to compute their average daily deposits for the past two years in order to find out what their guaran ty assessment amounts to. Vetoed the Bill. Governor Aldrich Monday vetoed S. F. 36. the Sunday baseball bill, in troduced by Senator Banling of Otoe | The senate later in the day passed the ! bill over the governor's veto. An at tempt is to be made in the house tc j pass the bill, notwithstanding the 1 veto. In that body it will require j sixty votes to pass the bill. As it j passed the house originally with fifty i six votes to its credit, considerable ! difficulty may be had in obtaining the ! necessary sixty votes. In the senate Twenty votes make the necessary three-fifths and the bill, when placed on its passage over the veto, received | twenty-one votes. The Red Cross society at Washing ton has disbursed almost $30,006 among the Chinese sufferers. The house of representatives rec ommended for passage the one-mill levy for eight years to cover the cost of removing the state university tc the state farm campus, and authoriz ing such removal. Carnegie Endowment Fund. Without warning. Senator Tibbete introduced^. and the senate passed, a resolution authorizing the regents op the state university to apply for par ticipation In the Carnegie retirement fund for aged professors. Oniy Ollis and Pickens voted against the resoiu. tion. A half .dozen senators spoke fervent ly in favor of the resolution. Talbott remarking that be bad voted against acceptance of the fund two years age ! and that he had always regretted his action. Banning's com miss lor plan of gov ern mem far cities of over $.009 to be adopted by cities if -they desire te work under its provisions, was placed on third reading and passed by a vote of 30 to 0. Selieck was absent on ac count of illness and Morton of Doug las and Plaoek of Saunders were ab sent. The bill is S. F. 345. Bart os made aa Ineffectual attempt to -have the bill- recommitted TWr amendment- to the title but the friends of the measure said the title was cor rect and weeded no doctoring, which wbuld remit In delay. STORM IN CONGRESS - VIRTUALLY FOUR PARTIES ARE WORKING AT ODDS. BRYAN DIVIDES DEMOCRATS Sharp Line Drawn Between Conserva tives and Progressives. With Out come in the Dark. Washington.—It daily becoming; manifest that congress is facing a Stormy session and there can bo made no forecast of the probabie leeisla | tive results The fact that both of 1 the great political parties are divided j is no longer denied and the leaders, appear to have little hope of restoring i anything more than surface harmony There are virtually four pafties each with a large representation working at odds in the present ses , sion. The republican minority of the ; bouse is divided between regulars and insurgents as was evidenced by j the vote in the speakership contest | The breach between these two fac j lions is even wider in the republic an i majority of the senate. A sharp line has been drawn be tween the conservative democrats of1 the senate, who are opposed to any anc-uipt at dictation by William Jen i nings Bryan and the progressive dem [ ocrats. including practically all of the ’ new members and several \cterans i like Senator Stone of Missouri, whe j are Bryan adherents. The house dem ; ooratic majority seems to have es | t aped a break, but the leaders feat j the party contest in the senate may j at any time spread to the other branch. The situation has interfered' with the selection of committees and j the beginning oi legislative work. Probably there never has been a i congr-ss where so much uncertainty' existed and where the uneasiness has : been so equally distributed between the tw o major political parties. Oi j course, thi- i.- due, in part, to the iact j that m the present congress the democrats are in power in the house : and the republicans are in control of the senate. Tlie rea! cause of tre anxiety :s re lieved to be due to the proximity of j the party convection- whi. b will se-I iect t«*e stand-vra bcwre*- ?<*■ and the knowledge that a slip by i either in the extraordinary session or the regular session to follow may very easily determine the result ot ‘ the next national campaign. So far as the administration pro gram is concerned there is no room for speculation. President Taft has recommended the enactment of legis lation to carry out provisions oi the Canadian leciprocitv agreement, and it is no secret he yould be glad to j have congress stop at that and defer the question of further revision until j the regular session assembles next ' winter. His reason for this is that j the tariff board will be able to report several schedules by that time. Neither is there any obscurity 1 about the program oi Si>eaker Clark. ’ Representative Underwood, chairman i of the new ways and means commit- j tee. and other democrats who are di- i reeling the jiolicy of the house. Their j plan for progressive legislation on ! several subjects with which the coun try has been familiar in the last year or so. has been given out. Guerilla Chief Is Killed. Mexicali. Mex.—Stanley Williams, the guerilla leader, who was wounded in the spectacular assault when his ; little force of Sl> men engaged the en- i tire Eighth battalion of the Mexican army, died Sunday in the improvised j hospital established by the United ] States troops at Calexico. Together with the other dead brought from the battlefield five ■ miles away, the fallen chieftain was buried in the little graveyard at Mexi cali. just behind the breastworks. Williams' death was caused by a mis sile that plowed through the head at the base of the skull, tearing away the rear portion of the brain. Teddy Don’t Want Office. Spokane. Wash.—Theodore Roose velt made bis first public declaration -egarding his possible candidacy for the presidency at a luncheon given in his honor Saturday 1» the Commerci al club. I .am no: an aspirant for aay:Uin£r because i bay a. bad -every thing.' be declare^ ‘Sv'o other man alive—I don’t know whether l"ought to use This simile IB" The presence of the chaplain, hat I ant going to take rbances—no offcer maii nltr^ has bad such a goed ran Tor tfis money.” Two Hundred Burned. Bombay. British. India.—Two hun dred .men. women and children were burned to death in a fire which de stroyed a thatched structure in which they had gathered for a festival. Turkish Troops Killing Rebels. Constantinople- — The government troop* after stun born fighting, have defeated the Arab rebels near Sanaa, in Yemen, killing more than 100. Abe ftuef a B-We Teacher. San Francisco—Abraham Ruef who, siace the incarceration in San Quen tin has adopted the tone of an «W» mist and the methods of a philan thropist. has turned himself to splitt ing his cellmates and rahtiag them to a higher plane by Instructing thorn nightly ta aha tsmto • . . - ■ - —, . TEACHER USES CHAIR ON OFFENDING PUPIl Unusual Chastisement Causes G~ea* Sensation in Illinois Town. Alton. 111.—In an effort to maintain discipline in the high school of Upper Alton. Principal I. \Y. Bush broke a chair on the head and shoulders ol Ralph Reeder after slapping him in the face for an alleged infraction ol the rules This unusual form of chas tisement caused Edward Reeder, fath er of the boy. to swear out a warrant against the principal, charging him with assault. Recently an epidemic ] of gum-chewing swept over the school and the ->ce?sant wagging of jaws in- - terfered seriously with studies. The l board instructed the principal to stop j ■-, ; W“* j | Swung It on Him a Couple of Times the gum-chewing at all hazard? Bust said Reeder, who is fourteen years old I was one of the worst offenders, and that he repeated the offense in spite i of the strict orders. Bush said he slapped the boy on the face two ot three times, and the lad resisted and put up such a strong fight that in self-defense Bush picked up a chair and “swung it on him a couple of -- ft* chair hr.V-j. MENACE OF COLLAR BUTTON Point Presses Into the Spinal Co'umr and Often Is Cause of Seri ous Trouble. Chicago—The doctor didn't say ■your asthma and bronchitis are r&used by your collar button." but after feeling under the collar at the back of the patient's neck he did say “■It’s a wonder a person who wears such a collar button can breathe at all. "I suppose for 25 years you have been wearing high, rigid collars." con tinued the doctor, “with a collar but ton half an inch long pressing heav ily against the spinal column neat where it enters the brain—where it enlarges into the medulla oblongata The tall, stiff collar, worn as tight as you wear it. ruts off a good deal of the blood supply from the head When you lean forward over youi desk it chokes the big blood vessels that supply the brain; then when you lean back it presses hard against the br.se of the brain Itself. But the col lar button, such as you wear, and as most men wear, is worse than the sellar, and together they are certainly 6 vicious combination. The medulla contains vital centers of the auto mane action of the body. The chiel of these centers is that controlling respiration. If the medulla is injured death ensues by suffocation. In rases of hanging it is the injury to this cen ter that causes death. The medulla is also the center for the vasomotoi nerves, regulating the size of the blood vessels. A heavy and contlnu Dus pressure on the spinal columr U.I Hew the Button Injures the Spins. such as is exerted by a collar button that is so long and so firmly held as a> imbed itself deeply, in the lia sues of the neck' cannot help bnt af Eect the nerves leaving the medulla causing troubles in breathing and a long line of distressing symptoms due to vasomotor nervous disturbances. "1 would not say that a shorter col lair button and a loose and soft collar could cure yonr asthma, but they cer tainty are among the remedies tndl sated. Just think of the weight of pressure that is put on that collar but ton. with heavy winter clothing, tight fitting aa to cottars of seat, coat and overcoat, forcing this small piece of metal deeper and deeper dov.-n on these nerves that control the meat ifta) functions at she body.” CONGRESS 6ETS TlfTSJIESSIGE Brief Document is Transmitted to Country’s Lawmakers. IS ALL ABOUT RECIPROCITY President Tells of Negotiations Lead ing to the Canadian Agreement, and Asks Early Action Con firming the Pact. Washington. April 5.—President Taft's message to the 62nd congress in extraordinary session was trans mitted to both branches of congress today. The message in full was as follows; i o the senate and house of fepre ten tail ves: J transmitted to the six ty-first congress on January 6th. last, the text of the reciprocity trade igreement which had been negotiated under my direction by the secretary if state with the representatives of the Dominion of Canada. This agree ment was the consummation of ear nest efforts extending over a period of nearly a year, on the part of both governments to effect a trade ar rangement which, supplementing as It did the amicable settlement of vari ous Questions of a diplomatic and po litical character that had been reached, would mutually promote rommerce and would strengthen the friendly relations now existing. The agreement in its intent and in its terms was purely economic and rontmercial. While the general sub lect was under discussion by the com missioners, I felt assured that the sentiment of the people of the United States was such that they would wel come a measure which would result !n the increase of trade on both sides sf the boundary line, would open up the reserve productive resources of Tanada to the great mass of our own ronsumers on advantageous condi tions and at the same time offer a broader outlet for the excess products )f our farms and many of our indus tries. Details regarding a negotiation sf this kind necessarily conld not be made public while the conferences were pending. However, the fgl* text bf the agreement with the accona rwnytng corresponuence and data ex - plaining both its purpose and its tcope became known to the people through the message transmitted to iongress. Approved by the People. It was immediately apparent that the ripened fruits of the careful labors of the commissioners met with wide spread approval. This approval has been strengthened by further consid eration of the terms of the agreement in all their particulars. The volume of support which has developed shows that its broadly national scope is fully appreciated and is responsive to the popular will. The house of representatives of the Sixty-first congress, after the full text of the arrangement with all the de tails in regard to the different provi sions had been before it. as they were before the American people, passed the bill confirming the agreement as negotiated and as transmitted to con gress. This measure failed of action In the senate, in my transmitting message of the 26th of January, I fully set forth the character of the agree ment and emphasized its appropriate u\ss and necessity as a response to the mutual needs of the people of the two countries, as well as Its commop ndvantages. I now lay that message xnd the reciprocal trade agreement, is integrally a pan of the present message, before the Sixty-second con gress and again invite earnest atten tion to the considerations therein ex pressed tany Action is urged. I am constrained in deference to popular sentiment and with a realiz ing sense of my duty to the gTeat masses of out people whose welfare la involved, to urge upon your considera tion early action oa this agreement la concluding the negotiations the representatives- that the, two coun tries bound themselves to use their ; ntn'-'st efforts to bring about the tar iff cL-mpes provided for in the agree ment tcf concurrent legislation at Washington and Ottawa i have feh it my duty, therefore, not td ar gwesce in reiegatlon of action until the opening of the congress in De ' cember. but to cse my constitutional prerogative and convoke the .Sixty second congress in extra session la order that there shall be no break of aontinulty in considering and acting upon this most Important subject. - *- WILLIAM H. TAFT. ' The White House, April ff; 1*1!. _|_- : - f. ••• >: Has No Excuse. "Do you expect To play golf this snmner?" "No. I'm ob tha water wagon.** T Should Be Prepared. “There's one thingbout the Atner lcan-ja;janese war if it is ever pulled off.” . "And what Is that?" ", “Hobson has given plenty of notico to the moving picture concerns.” His Conge. Restaurant Proprietor—So you were in your last place for three years. Why did ye® leave? New Chef—1 eras pardoned —Cath olic News.