xt70rx937t9n_409 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70rx937t9n/data/mets.xml https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70rx937t9n/data/46m4.dao.xml unknown 13.63 Cubic Feet 34 boxes, 2 folders, 3 items In safe - drawer 3 archival material 46m4 English University of Kentucky The physical rights to the materials in this collection are held by the University of Kentucky Special Collections Research Center.  Contact the Special Collections Research Center for information regarding rights and use of this collection. Laura Clay papers Temperance. Women -- Political activity -- Kentucky. Women's rights -- Kentucky. Women's rights -- United States -- History. Women -- Suffrage -- Kentucky. Women -- Suffrage -- United States. Newspaper clippings text Newspaper clippings 2020 https://exploreuk.uky.edu/dips/xt70rx937t9n/data/46m4/Box_32/Folder_2/Multipage18022.pdf 1919, 1922 1922 1919, 1922 section false xt70rx937t9n_409 xt70rx937t9n THE STATE JOURNAL, FRANKFURT.

KY., TUESDAY, SEPTEMBER 2, i9l9. ’

 

 

 

 

 

AN ARMY errlcnrs WARNING

Thef‘Trinee at Peace” Plan Versus
lhel.eague of Nations Plan or 14
Condemnations oi the league
oi Nations

By. Maior Noel Gaines, U. 8. Army

(From The New York Evening
Post, and The New Orleans Times-
Picayune, and his address delivered
before the University of Kentucky.)

CIIARGEz—A League of Nations is
Un-Godly, Un—American, and disas-
trous to all Nations, because his-
tory shows all have been chastized
who attempted it.

lst Condemnation: In the face of
the Bible showing that God warned
His people saying: “Thou shalt make
no covenant or league with the
heathen,” and He chastized them for
doing it Deut. 7:2 and Judges:1-3).
Who dares to-day to put our nation
. in peril by advocating that our coun-
try nevertheless defy The Almighty,
by making this League of Nation's
covenant with nations some of which
worship heathen gods? For that is
exactly what these League of Nation’s
advocates propose doing: Enter into
what they termed “A League” and
“Covenant” with nations, some of1
which are heathen.

(Addenda: The above was published
before the Paris Conference formed
their League of Nation’s Constitution.
Now that they have sent it forth, look
what an unmistakable example they
furnish of the peril of the United
States or any Christian nation joining
with heathen nations in a so-called
World Constitution. Right in the face
of our Nation’s invariable custom of
always acknowledging God in all our
great State instruments, as for in-
stance in the Declaration of Independ-
ence, the United States Constitution,
in all the States' Constitutions, in all
the proclamations of all the Presidents
and Governors, and even stamped 011
our coinage, at Paris they left the
name of God out of their World Con-
stitution in order to get the names
of those heathen nations in it. The
heathen nations would not sign it had
God’s name been on it, as that would
have 'made them acknowledge a God
they don’t believe in. God’s name
was left out to get the heathen names
in! A11 insult intensified!

Assails Political Preachers.

Our country must not be deceived
because so large a per cent of our
preachers are for this League of Na-
tions. Most preachers say they are
against a union of church and state,
but, with few exceptions (and those
few are our rare number of Godly
preachers), they practice a mixture
of church and state when, in cold-
blooded violation of the Bible (Acts 6:
1-4) they constantly dabble in civil
affairs; advocate peace by political
means rather than by the Bible’s
spiritual plan. And when they advo—
cate political prohibition through the
force of civil laws rather than Bible
Temperance through God’s powerful
spiritual laws. There is not an in-
stance in the New Testament where
those first Christian preachers either
advocated or participated a single
time in civil government. The above
quoted Scriptures show these preach-
ers wouldn't step aside to do so laud-
able a work as feed widows and or-
phans,

ministry of the Word.” Most preach-
ers to-day leave the Word of God to
dabble in civil affairs and every out-

side thing! Here is the prime cause.

for the failure of the churches every-
where!
Bible Absolutely ignored.
What would our American people
say if they should wake up some morn

ing to find that all the nation’s school:

teachers were ignoring the seventh.
multiplication table? Wouldn’t that
make our children’s education defec.
tire? I here cite seven great com-
mands of our Lord in His one Sermon
on The Mount which most of the
preachers in Christendom are ignor—
ing absolutely, viz.: Matthew 5:31-32;
5:33—37; 5:38-40; 5:43-44: 6:1-4; 6:5-13
and 6:14-15. Everybody

practice, 1101‘ require their church
members to obey these commands.
But wouldn't all such preachers com-
mence and preach all these commands
to—day if they knew they all had to
start to their graves and the judg-
ment ‘to-morrow‘? The people need not

look for wars to stop, with the ever:

heavy sacrifices in lives and taxes, so
long as so great a per cent of the
preachers wilfully disobey the Bible
by quitting “continual prayer and min-
istry of the Word" to dabble in out-
side things!

The Nation’s cry ought to
with the Preacher’s Mixture of Church
and State! Up with Preachers Preach-
ing the Gospel solely! To Hell with
the Devil Only!”

A Pitifui Example.

As a. pitiful example of preachers
quitting the Gospel to dabble in poli-
tics: One of New York's biggest
preachers, the Rev. William Pierson
Merrill, President of the Church Peace
Union in the United States, and there-
fore our Protestantism’s appointed
and recognized peace leader in the
United States, wrote me a rough let-
ter denying my claim that 'our Cou-
stltution acknowledges God. He
writes: “How can you say that we
recognize God clearly in our Federal
Constitution? VVhere'.’ It is hard to

 

 

 

because the): said. “It is not,
reason that. we should leave the Word 2 fending internationalist leader.
of Cori. to serve tables. We must give:
ourselves continually to prayer and‘

knows that;
preachers, mostly, neither preach. 1101"

see in which you are most ignorant,
in knowledge of the Bible, or of Amer-
ican and Political History.” I affection-
ately answered him by citing the last
paragraph in the Constitution right
above Washington’s signature, which
reads: “Done in the year of our Lord
one thousand seven hundred and
eighty-seven," etc., as proving that the
Constitution acknowledges Christ as
the Lord—which is fine! The pen-
alty on this big preacher, is-—-When he
quits “Continual prayer and ministry
of the Word” to dabble with the civil
Constitution, he violates the Bible;
and when he gets to the Constitution.
he publishes his pitiful ignorance of
it! And the like penalty is upon all
preachers who so offend!

2nd Condemnation: Since the begin-
ning of Christianity and the downfall
of the Roman Empire, it is fighting
against Almighty God and the Bible
to try to set up any kind of a world
government, or world organization
(such as this League of Nations) for
world peace or for any other purpose.
God prov1ded for only four world
governments of men. (Daniel 2:1-43).
The Roman Empire being the last.
He did provide for a fifth world gov-
ernment to succeed those four (Dan-
iel 2:44; 7:27 and Matt212-28l called
the Kingdom of God which he has
already set up here on earth for us
to attain world peace and justice
through (Isiah 9:6~7), but you see
that was to be the world‘s only or
“everlasting” world organization.
which was to forever replace the Ro~
man Empire and all other world gov-
ernments, or world ruling bodies. Thus
a. political world-government or any
world ruling body is now provided
against, and the World's everlasting
Kingdom of God is provided for; both
of which preclude a League of Nations
or any other world organization!

World Leaders Chastised.

3rd Condemnation: Nebuchadnezzer.
Darius, Alexander the Great, and Cae—

“ were successful in setting up their
respective world governments, be‘
cause the Bible above quoted provid-
ed for it. But the Bible having pro-
vided against a further political world
government since the downfall of the
Roman Empire, the colossal failure
and terrible chastisement of Char-
lemagne, Napoleon, Czar Nicholas,
William T. Stead and Emperor \Vil-
liam and others who have neverthe-
less sought to set up world dominion
or a League of Nations in various
forms, constitutes a monumental
warning against all would-be inter-
nationalists thus fighting against God!

41:11 Condemnation: In the face of
the Bible prohibiting a political world-
organization since the rise of Chris-
tianity, the two signed Conventions
of The Hague World Conferences in
1899 and 1907 acclaimed Czar Nich-
olas as “The August Initiator of the
International Peace Conference for
extending the empire of law for the
maintenance of general peace.” Re-
sult: The Czar’s government was
whipped by Japan, then his govern-
ment was overturned by his people,
and finally his dynasty and himself
destroyed! .

5th Condemnation: Another long of-
that
talented English journalist, William
T. Stead, was en route from England
to the United States to advocate this
same League of Nations or World
Federation idea for attaining world
peace—«the Bible to the contrary 110t-
withstanding. Result: Mr. Stead went
to his doom in mid-ocean as the
Titantic sank, on which he was sail
ing!

6th Condemnation: Still another of-
fending internationalist leader, H. La
Fontaine, Senator of: Belgium and Presi-
dent of the International Peace Bu-
reau, published in 1911 his "Existing
Elements of a Constitution of the
United States of the World” right in
the fate of the Bible prohibiting an-
other political world government since
the Roman Empire. Result: Look what
thereafter befell Belgium, either be-
cause Belgium acquiesced in his ad—
vocacy, or failed to disclaim this blas-
phemy of her official peace leader!

Why Emperor William
Fell.

71h Condemnation: “German Eln-
bassy, lVashington, D. C., October
13th, 1914. Mr. Noel Gaines. My dear
sir:~ln reply to your favor of October
10th. i beg to assure you that the Ein-
peror is not aiming to become a uni-
versal conquerer. He has never had
any such ideas. Very sincerely yours,

“J. BERNSTORFF.”

 

 

be “Down , words

i Limes

iwhich I hope it

But look now at the Kaiser's own
in his speech at the Imperial
Museum, Saalburg, Oct. 11,
“Our German Fatherland, to
will be granted,
through the harmonious co-operatiou
of princes and peoples, of its armies
land citizens, to become in the future
1 as closely united and Authoritative as
Once the Roman Empire Was. and
.jnsi. as in the old times they said
‘civis romanus sum,‘ hereafter, at
’some time in the future, they will
say, ‘I am a German citizen.’ " Here
‘was Emperor VVilliam’s unmistakable

' 1900:

i
l

aim for world dominion or domination.
right in the face of the Bible which
has prohibited it since'the Roman Em?-
pire. Result: The world well knows
from the present catastrophe. Just as
.there is not in all history a single
offending internationalist but who has

brought chastisement upon himself,
and upon his party or nation if they
acquiesced in his ungodly internation-
alism. The only internationalism pos-
sible now is spiritual internationalism
through the Kingdom of God! Remem-
ber this!

8th Condemnation: As to this League
of Nations, anything that slaps George
Washington in the face is Un-Ameri-
can. Washington declared, “’Tis our
true policy to stear clear of Perma-
nent alliances with any portion of the
foreign world. We may safely trust to
Temporary alliances for extraordinary
emergencies.” '

Washington Condemns.

Our joining this League of Nations
would certainl: as. permanent alli-
ance Witt! We. nations, absolutely
the very thing urtehingzon warned
against.

What ""*sb.-.nF-;‘
teen color. res the»:
sented today or .
our flag. "What ._._
states of “fa
sented today Sr
in the flag. To
we have gm" tr... :-

these thir-
‘for, is repre-
~. thirax-en stripes in
pi esr-nt forty-eight
stand t‘or, is repre-
3'18 for: ;.'-eight stars
loyal 4;; our colors,
or those forty-eight
stars loyal to th- thirteen stripes!
And that means :1 ay with this League
of Nations and i' ‘ cern: .1ent foreign
alliance, which inseminan and the
Colonists rigor-c. ly own.- led!

9th Concerct aiior. Before this
League of :s broached, it
would have in: (2.312;;- u'ed treason-
able for :A -:-'~.t‘:;-. . he.» advocated
transferring pa of our ' =1ited States
sovereignty into the has '3 of foreign
nations. ' is :11 ely what is
now proposed :' This .gue of Na-
tions—Which m .i.s 2n 'tain contin-
gencies that ii' votes: ' associating
foreign nation. beside v "t our Amer-
ican peo; iv e ’ 1 Abs '1ot do, thus
plainly (f. p ‘ w? their sov-
ereignty!

True-blue At
any change is .2:
a] law regard"
ereignty, then
made by gain
with laws r, ,~
ty, not by a;
ple to this
to decrease

Leagu:

an a=~

Erfhi‘

rm;-
.‘lt.

fur llfiv'I

'31 uni-:13... means if
o'e :u (w. ' fundament-
0111'
the
10“"
.i'eah'r:

our people
their sovereign-
».wa; 1mm our peo-
. of “ tuign nations

‘5 (We

53 3:; Fl

r(v_
\l-‘

Exposed.
Arlen. 5 League of
.g. .s to safeguard the
rlty of m ery country
to the league. That
> progrr‘. of the world,
id :.u..,..x;~:.s revolt by
. must oprressivc and
tyrannicale :onsiiturcd government.
For ins: . had ti". ‘e been a
League (22‘ .‘J;. ions in . with Eng-
land ant" aha-r N ns members
of it, tin-o. 1r .'-.n‘~:‘.~.111 Colonies
would have ‘ er: lac "i'LaStI'Ophe of
the whole: \1' . n ‘ = against them
to sateen; - territorial
limits 0‘ Am zit-.111 Colonies.
France mo" 3"} have; eelped us as
she did . {am-(m might never
have bet-,1.

Again,

K r,- >-

Nations ha
territorial ibis
which belongs
would blork
because is.
any people

17".!

a;

T»

it. i r .' Aorists this
l..=.s;:us _ -» :gue in 1898,.
(tuba cool"! arr-f have or.“ the "exter-
nal" helm o the 1;. E3 1‘: war against
Spain, ‘ (an. never have
been {11621

indeed it not: the "Utternai" help
of Franc».— Elli-[1:3 :1: win American in-
dcpendcucc, mti mternal” help
0‘; the l-'. n. 11 RM to -in independ~
ence for Hula, This l. ,ague of Na
tions abs-‘i'i‘eit toroiii'mts such “exter-
nal” help Cm ‘lu... ' ;.-.l-t; this League
of Nations, :1. - i".".7.-=,Jl.i or enemy of in-
depende u. ‘ ‘3‘

Beside». lama:
between. 111
Almightia (
it will pro L "in:
of all its nut-L 1. 1
nation 3:; .bcr»
(lsaiah 00:13;
be destroyer!

0 0d 3

'Er\j‘cl {1' :v:

(1:!) fut-it

T. 2,1 5?.

. the rible conflict
Longer. of Nations and
League says

rial integrity
:31. ; its heathen

Holy Writ
;. nation shall
poses to serve

, .
when ”it

.' .-.
as
r

is -'

,‘.
.l

3..:'-7'~"" ":'| CNN- @th.

11th (bimenl' r: 3-; ambership in
this League of tin-r... hooks us up
with ever; Eu: )il, with the
ever prt-m' 'r r .zraziz.iit;.'ze of millions
of our :4 « r-llions of our
money, ; =5 ‘he European
Member f\-.': : to this hemis-
phere t”. i h our affairs,
the ‘34.)5‘, nas Jefferson
warns : eclares:

“Our ental maxim
should .- 2 untangle oursel-
ves in . 3’ Jen-ope. Our sec-
ond, 1107c; Farrope to inter“
mnrlr‘flo tinerican af-
fairs."

Bill Liv: '*.\'._:..
Nipiiviifi ..‘e ‘v."-'

1’..
AVG

2.3-3.1: i».

=1.‘-.-. ‘
".1111 -. :-‘I'-.:~

this League
those two
- " '-'::.5 against. It

:;=‘- -‘ oreign dispute,
and it . .. 11.12:: cases all for-
eign tutti ' ' 3221‘. t: vote on our
America' .- ' .I lnr:.:‘--1'.rehe11sible!

'12th C21. :-,:,:.-,,.-' ..11‘.‘ a soothing
syrup to 'i; ' " - ‘.-;:->a'ica11s, these
internatinlai4v... ; l: '2; .his League
of Nations edcuos the Monroe
Doctrine i . . world.

If so, in a: 2 "donroe Doc.-
trine means H112. :- 1111': aean nation
shall meddle on ." o rican conti-
nent, if the}- . L1,} truth, then
by “extending, 11319 to the
European 'li-tii, and Aus-
tralian cut. it would mean
that each 1.x! those cv-Ltiu-rmt.s shall not
be meddlarl With. 3". tut other conti-
nents. Thr‘ wozhi kn "as their League
provides for Elli. oat ms 92' every con-
tinent dal~i::inc‘ .: 22m: attairs of all
the other cont

Indeed, the
very antiil: ::
tions, as i::- _.
one of Fresh;
for proclan. -~
was to cor.
called The .' ~._
preparing to from
ico and thc South
in our hemisphere:

' rsensed.

Monroe 1

Then thcr. ‘ ~ terfeit ad-
Iocatcs of 1'1 1; .h.,li':\'3’r‘ l «'ine whom
the people mast new an Al against:
Those who rivflam 4 that they
are for the 11: is“ -:9, but who
deliberatelv wrench only one-half of
it. by saying that their idea of it is
that it prevents EurOpe from med-
dling here in our American continents,

Hf

(-- H ,_L; 1
.mngs \‘1'1' '

.u ‘
‘m
1' u ‘53 '0‘...)

will! . 251:1.
If: [31’

to ‘~
-' sir.

{twill} :

unripe is the
t.- '-gue of Na-

! -.-e fact that

’ . rue 3 reasons
he in 1823,

of Nations
which was

ziquer Mex-
Republics

an

I": .

‘~l':r~rr-~L‘-

"and‘ say not a. word of the other half,

or other thing which the Monroe Doc-
trine prohibits. I quote both from

 

President Monroe‘s message to Con-1

gym“. “Prember 2. 1923:

“That the American continents,
the free and independent conditi
which they have assumed and mai .
tained, are henceforth not to be co ..
sidered as subjects for future colo
ization by any European powers.”

“In the wars of the European po
ers, in matters relating to themselvo
we have never taken any part, It
does it comport with our policy to .1
so. It is only when our rights are
vaded, or seriously menaced, that
resent injuries or make preparatio
for our defense.”

Thus, the Monroe Doctrin.
Europe away from here and k
away from European wars t
cern solely the Europeans.

League of Nations hooks us i
the European wars of every
tion, we have got to throw t
roe Doctrine away to join this

13th Condemnation: This L
Nations bargains to set up “
national Council of Investigat .

“An International Court,” for inve--
gating and adjudicating national qua.
rels, when the delinquent nation »*
be coerced by economic boycott or '
all the Nations going to war aged:
1 .

Hague Constitution Broken.

In the first place: The two Ha
Conferences of 1899 and 1907 pro
ed for those two very things, “In .
national Investigation,” and an “Int
national Court of Arbitration” for p
venting wars. Yet those very sig
tory powers broke their covenant a
waged the big Russian-Japanese v
and later the present colossal w
war. It can’t work, because, as (
shown, Providence has Pr
Against All International Cover.
and Provided For World Peac
Through the Plan of the PH
Peace! ._ . .

And in the second place: Vi.
those Hague Conventions did not
vide for the signatory powers wa
war against the adjudged delinqu
nations, if they had, the United St
could not have'ratified those Int
national treaties, because, under c
Constitution, war can only be decl
ed by Congress, and a present C
gress cannot by treaty bind a futu
Congress, to vote war under _'
circumstances!

Hence the Constitution Would
to be Amended to let a Lea-
Nations treaty bind us in advan
engage in future foreign wai
given circumstances, but I phop'
that if any amending is done,
American people will put a real or.
in wars by declaring that the right
declare war shall be by vote of 0)
people themselves, and not by v0
of foreign nations in this ungo
League of Nations!

lith Condemnation: Political int-
nationalism being prohibited, a
Spiritual Internationalism through t
Kingdom of God only provided "'
Nationalism is now the biggest
of government possible! The
standing divided into separate
guages, speaks for Nationalism
The Bible prohibiting a world gove
inept. restricts the nations to Nati-
alism! The abiect failure of every
tempt at International organizati
and the chastisement of all wo
leaders attempting it. proclaims or
Nationalism now possible in govei
ment!

Proposes New Motto.

If these would-be Internationalis
are not seeking self agrandisemc
and possess an honest heart’s desir
to help their home nations, then i-
thcm do the only things possibl
under God's plan, to-wit: In a Gov
ernmental way—-—Flee from fatal I
ternationalism, stick to Nationaiis
and perfect their Nationalities in Eu
cation, economic social justice, cc
servation. the right to declare war b
vote of the people themselves, and,
the promotion of friendly and ju
relations with all Nations. etc.

Measuring every policy of gover-
ment by this new motto: Equal 0'
bortunity to All, But Destructive Priv
ileges to None.

Then on the world peace questic
as it. is written that there are t'
peace plans (John 14:27l—God's pl
and the world’s plan. it is only a one
tion of What the nations must s11,“
before they make the right '5 "
One selection is God’s plan—ti.1
possible world government—the
dom of God already set up
011 earth—and Christ's stated
of becoming citizens in that King
of Peace. The other selection is
world’s way, and this League of b.
tions which is man’s proposed worl
ruling-body to be composad partly 0'
heathen nations and partly of pr
fessed Christian nations is the world“
fatal way, with all the direful conse
quences attendant thereto!

issues Warning and Challenge.

In proportion as the nations stick to
the Prince of Peace, and teach their
peoples nothing else for peace, in that
proportion will chastisement cease
wars diminish, reduction of arma
ments and taxation be made possible.
and conscription be made unnecessary

And just as the nations listen tr
fateful internationalists with th"
doomed League of Nations or Leagi
of Notions and all other worldly peac
plans, which array them against th
Prince of Peace, just so long will
tragedy continue to overtake tragedy
with every offending leader and peo
ple!

Remember that i am insisting be-
fore it is too late, that now while our
country is in the midst of unrest and
strikes everywhere, and the whole
world is in the midst of high taxes
and food famine and drouths and epi
demics, when chastisement could eas
ily throw us into another plague of
influenza with another appalling death
rate, that now is no time for the peo:
pie to allow any man or leader to be
fighting against Almighty God, 01\'
committing our government to an)‘:
policy that wars against God! Remem—l
ber this warning!

Challenge: To any person who dis-
putes the truth of the above, I respect-
fully offer a challenge to a discussion
before God and the bit of -public
opinion anywhere , in this country
either through the presg‘ .or on th
platform. And I urge all to notify m

 

who agree to stand against the Leagu
of Nations for peace, and, for. will.
Peace Plan of the The Prince of Peace.
(Frankfort, Ky. II. S. A.'\

 

 DELETE

1. r.“ .— as “1-" my; V"
"l t K' I.“ l

lfii'd.
r, 1‘

little can

RED BY CARRIED;
100 A WEEK

‘>————-————-— par-v09»

 

N UMBER 7,098.

Chances Favor Wets on Crabbe Prohibition Enforcement
Bill and Drys Appear to Be W'inners on Federal Ratifi-
cation Proposition—Inerest in Kentucky Centered on Out-

come of Wet and Dry Vote,

parent ,Winner in Maryland.

(By Associated‘Press.) '.

Jersey City, N. J ., Nov. 6.—:-Governor.-el _
Edwards announced today that he would use all lawful
methods to prevent prohibition in New Jersey. ,

“For its: enforcement by the federal government I
shall not beresponsibl'e,” he said. “I construe myelectio'n
as an indication of the feelings of .thefpeople of this state-
concerning national prohibition; They are unquahfiedly

opposed to it. Holding their

lawful methods to preserve. inviolate the sovereignty. of the

people.
‘ ‘What I sha

concurrent legislation. ’ ’

(By Associated Press.)

11 do will depend » on; subsequent
legislation. This congress has determined that one-half
of 1 per cent. alcohol makes a drink 1ntox1cat1ng. The
next congress may decide on 10 per cent. I shall ask for
the best legal advice as to the power of New Je

weather Forecast—Partly cloudy tonight; Friday cloudy,

,_.
'5'} .
-‘ . r

.

l

a .

rightly warmer, probably rain.

1' . '(V
. ' ‘2
. . I:
5 G '.
'n
' . :‘..~ v ‘

EXCLUSIVE AFTERNOON ASSOCIATED PRESS REPORT.

'1 RICHMOND, VA, THURSDAY, NOVEMBER 6, 1919.

 

Circulation Yesterday

r res
as, ..
No Incomplete Extras Included.

Delivered by Carrier, 10 Cents a Week. Single Copy, 2 Cents.

 

 

NEW PRESCRIPTION
FOR KEEPING YOUNG

(By Associated Press.)

London. Nov. 6.—Dr. Josiah Old-
field, known internationally as a
physicianand a writer, has pub-
lished a prescription for keeping
old age at bay.

According to him, it is not a
question of an operation, but .a
daily diet, which includes dande-
lion leaves, fowl’s e’ggs, grapes,
lettuce, cow‘s milk, ,water cross,
honey and salads (uncooked).

“Old age”~he says, “is largely
caused by deposit in the blood
vessels and cells of the body of
waste matter. So by adopting a
part fruition diet a man, how-

. ever old, may become young again,
because every cell in the. body
will be replaced by new young
cells.” >

Dr. Oldfield- considers that a
normal person rightly fed should
live from .00 to 105 years of age.

0F .
1;.“

Still in Doubt—Ritchie Ap-

ect Edward I.

 

 

 

 

mandate I shall use all the

rsey in

'happy over the elections in Massachu-g

- By DAVID LAWRENCE.
(Copyright, 1919, The. News Leader.)
lVashington, Nov. 6.+Eirerybody isr

debts. New Jersey, Iicntiicky and Alitl‘yfil
land, everybody, including President.
Wilson. But for the most part it isn’t
the usual happiness over party tri-
umph, because unmistakably the 'White
House was more joyful over the victory
in Massachusetts of Governor Coolidge,
Republican, than it was over the re—
markable conversion of a Republican.
plurality of 58,000 in New Jerscyinto
a Democratic victory of at least 10,000.
Thepresident himself sent a message
of congratulation to the' Republican
governor describing his re-‘election as
a victory for law and order.-- ,

Party exult‘ation gave way entirely
to a sense of abiding satisfactiomthat
in the one election—Massachusetts—-
where law and order was the big issue,

i

lllltl’llllltt it not

New Jersey, where the
candidate was outspckculy on the wet
side, considerable assistdncc was de- —-
rived from the. president’s veto of. .
ythc ' prohibition . enforccinent-ebillpwliile

—_

Defeat Administered to Lawlessness in Massachusetts .
Teaches Lesson to Democratic Officials Who Saw Dan- 3
ger in Administration’s Attitude in Fighting Strikes.
White House Satisfied Over Success of Party in New J or-
sey, Where Republicans W ere Counting on Victory.

Democratic

21 Kentucky, where the Democrats
nearly

5,000. Telegrams received here from

Maryland and Kentucky.

Most significant, incidentally, was

_ unquestionably
There seems to be no doubt

.1.

Columbus, 0., Nov. 6.—Returns from Tuesday’s election
compiled at the secretary of state’s oflice today from fifty-five
of the eighty-eight counties indicate that the results on the
ratificationof the federal prohibition amendment and the Crabbe
prohibitidn enforcement bill will be close, with chances favoring

Status at, Marion of Young
Man Tried for Burning

 

the‘drys on the ratification and the wets on the Crabbe bill,
according to Chief Statistician J ohnson. - . .
' ’ .The same returns are said to indicate defeat of the 2.43. per
cent. beer proposal and also that to repeal the state prohibition
amendment. .

University Hall May Be In—4
_ vestigated by Board. .
When the general hospital board
meets at Williamsburg n'ext Wednes-

thc forces-of stability compelledman
overwhelming victory. The . Demo-
cratic organization had not only
scorned the \Vilson administration by
seeking to align certain hyphenate
voters on the league of nations ques-
tion, but went so far as to attack Gov-‘
crnor Coolidge for ‘ the 'method in
which heh-andled the recent police,
strike. a method that "President. Wil-_
son had publicly supported? in this
speech at Billings, Mont”, ‘ .. .
. -- So‘lmppy was the “mite/House over-

publicans in the normally Democratic
states of Maryland and Kentucky were
very comforting to the Republican
leaders who, of course, conceding that
Governor Coolidgé’s victory in Massa—
chusetts was a, victory for law and or-
der, pointed to the fact that he held
the Republicanyote nicely, which he
won a year ago, though on that occa.
~sion a Democratic senator was also
elected.-.» .-..: -'

l
I

-\ . ,...~.‘;-....:z>-"»l , .' - -
. Wets 1n the capital ivere Jubilant

Lead Shown by Returns. ,

These fifty-five counties, thirty-three g proposalwould be approved by. a small

011 this showing, also, the ratification day it. will probably'devote consider:
‘ ' ' ' ' able time to consideration ofanwun-
[neual situation the has arisen at the

the well-deserved rebuke that-had been
administered ’to "the”Dcmocratic or-.

over': the victory they won in Ken-
tucky. and New Jersey, and agreed

of which are complete, and twenty-two l margin,fit”Was(.said. , , g,
incomplete,-' give the. wets. a,‘>lead,—..pf,,_- .J.am'e_so.,;A.n White“ .managon, 19f, the.
"as-hem on ratificatiom-of the federal Ohio‘ dry'federat'ion, this morningre-
I amendment and 52,410 on the Crabbe l fused to concede that the drys had lost
bill. They also give the wcts a leadltho Crabbe act or any of the prohi—
of 99 on the two and three-quar- bition proposals Voted on Tuesday, a1:
tors proposal and 12,323 on the repeal though at his headquarters it had been
proposition. admitted earlier that the Crabbe act
The thirty-three counties still to re- lha'd been defeated. Mr. White admit-
port gave a dry majority of 33,795 for l ted that the vote was close on the
prohibition last year. and if this 21113; : Crabbe act, but that later returns were

01‘) O
.L,u

jority was maintained last Tuesday, it l showing good ,dry gains.

‘\.-.-ould indicate defeat of both the two
and. three quarters and the repeal pro.
posals by safe majorities, it was said.

I I ‘ ' gnicated .
; ‘ i Case Nolle Prosecued.
a. ' 3 'At the conclusion of the last trial

Charge of Selling Sugar in Combination With Other Com-
modities Predicated on Various Sections of Statute En-
acted at Recent Special Session of General Assembly. .

I a .-3

r

'1 ..
rt

. , . .

indictment of the PlantvLipford
l‘ompuny, Inc., trading as the Piggly
\l'iggly stores, for requiring customers
to make other purchases in order to
obtain sugar after the grand jury had
served notice that the practice must
cease, was based, according to Com-
monwealth’sAttorney Wise, on sub-
section A of section 1 of the Virginia
anti-trust law forbidding the creating
or carrying out of restrictions in trade
or business.

This, according to Mr. Wise; is am-
plified by the following language in
sections I3 and 1-1:

“In any indictment, information or
complaint for any offense named in
this act, it shall be sufficient to state
the purpose or effect of the trust, com-
bination or monopoly, and that the
accused is :1 member of, acted with
or in pursuance of it, or aided or as-
sisted in carrying out its purposes,
without giving its name or description,
or how, when or where it was created.

Sufficiency of Proof.

“In prosecutions under this act, it
shall be sufiicient to prove that a trust,
combination or monopoly, as defined
herein. r-xlsts. and that the defendant
l'uelongcd to it, and acted for or in
connection with it, without proving
that all the members belonged to it

or without proving or producing any .

article of agreement or any written
instrument on which it may have been
based, or that it was evidenced by
any written instrument at all.”

Section 7 of the act provides pen-
alty as follows: _

Any person. firm, or any officer or
director of any corporation violating
or conspiring to violate any of the

Demand La Teresa Havana Cigarr—A—dv,

 

torturous ATTORNEY
‘ nu uttu Witttl on.

L. P4~Gibson, manager of the. Ohio
Home Rule Association, at his head-
’Continued on Page Twenty-three.)

l

jvergent views as to the status

Southwestern hospital rim; the, :crimi:
naily, insane “at- Marion}? to '_ silicates?
Dabney Crcnshaw IV. was taken four
months ago following the last of three
inconclusive trials 0n the charge of
robbing and afterwards burning Sci-
ence hall at the University of Virginia
while he was a student at the univer~
sity. ,

.Willard G. Williams, state commis-
smner of hospitals, and. E. H. Hendr-
son,.superintendent of the hospital at
Mar10n,are understood to hold di-
of
young Crenshaw and as to the liberties
he should be allowed. It has beenu‘e-
ported that the youth is not strictly'
confined, and has been permitted to

drive about the countryside in an au-
tomobile.

 

,ingjibpggptnr claégéyute

ganization - inn-Massachusetts for seek-
to the laboring‘c asses-“maw and
order contrdve‘rsy that congratulatory
words for Governor Coolidge were
abundant and it was suggested'that
largcbodies of Democratic voters must
have joined the Republicans in in-
creasing Mr. Coolidge’s 1918 majority
from 17,000 to 125,000 this year.
G.‘ 0. P. Counted. On, Jersey.
As, for New Jersey, the White House

:foregone‘conclusion. Yet disinterest