South Bend News-Times, Volume 31, Number 234, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 15 August 1914 — Page 4
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nATniI.Y, AlYil'ST 15. 1911 THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES THE NBVS-TI.VU.S PRINTING COMPANY. flO West Colfax Avpniie. .South Rend. Indiana.
Entered a second class matter at Da!lj- and Sunday in ytar Ji.O'J Sunday, single copy UY M A Dilly and Sun 'ay !t advance, per year Drjly, In advnniv. per yar
If your I'.anf appears In the telephone directory you can telephone your want 'ed" to TheNews-Tlrnes office and a bill will be mailed after iti Insertion. Horn phon 1151; Bell phono 2100.
conk. lorknzrn Foreign Advertising Fifth Avenue, New York. 125 son u ri:ni, indi no ti.mi; roi: tarli: wasti:. 'omp.tr1. 1 witlr many f I k Ameri can, even those vh hav : 1 i 1 1 1 . an ' w astef ul. It has been siid that a I French peasant ouhl subsist on what1 in American worker throws into his ' garbage can. He certainly could o.i the waMc in the average American home. A little- figuring will show that now ! a good time for all Americana to study economy- and to practice it. K'irojif usually h is to import 600,ofMt.OOO bushels of wheat, .he could fat torn hut Kuropeuns are prejudiced! aira!nt It. Now in all the world there aren't eo.iH'."0i bushel of spare wheat that Kurope ran get. at any price. Thank to a bumper crop, Uncle Sam has .0.oiO,oOo bushels that he an spar if somebody will arrange to carry it across. The rest of the world's wheat surplus this ..ear probably won't amount to 1 1'.iojo.lKo) bushels. With .".ohm, 000 I'uropeans engaged in killing each other, hunger, grim arid dire, must soon press heavily on ! that war-mad continent. Humanity as well as business should prompt us to be ready with as much food n possible for Kuiope's relief. 3t is sinful as well as foolish to waste food while millions of other folks, our brethren, are famishing. The war will inevitably make food prices higher, which means that it will be wis' for each of us to begin now to frown on table frills. diyidi: Tin: iu i:iu:n. Soon our people must face a direct result of Kurope' war; one th; at every L. American will feel. The war is all so horrible, so ghastly, so unlike anything that the present generation of us have known, that it has seemed to most of us like a nightmare, from which presently mankind would awake. But the long red arm is about to reach across the blue Atlantic and thrust its bloody hand into our porkets. touching our most sensitive nerve. We hae been runiTing the federal government, in large part, on the income produced by tariffs. Politicians used to tell us that the tariff wasn't a tax. tnougn. ir it was. tne loreigner paid it. P.e that as it may. the lack of imports to ta is likely very soon to compel Uncle i'am to hunt for some other source of the biu revenue which needs in his mowing business. np i i j of i vv nai tne c.eiu it win r,e ot cause or ,
the war stoppage of imports nobody raiue to fear typhoid but for careet knows for e:-tuin and nobody can i I(.snf,sg in disposing of garbage and s;y till the lighting powers find ut ! siops.
which ones are to control the sea. I'.ut the best guesses makj- it able that the gap in revenues Sam will have to bridge will pro!)Uncle j be at . vast at the rate of $ .uiu.iumi.hoo a vear. or n tor everv one of us. It may not last long. The chances are that, as our imports from Europe dwindle, o ir imports from countries riot paralyed with war will increase. Suiah American. Japan. China will have trade chances now which thtompetition of Europe has hitheito olxt rn ted. I.ucky we ar thac the Panama canal is ready for use, uiving or.ick and inviting passage for this emergency traffic. Though this outlook offers hope, the zov eminent at Washington rai.net; bank on an uncertainty. ll must bri :ge the full gap before it is caught J in a pint h. ! How? j Pv putting the .tra burden on the' nheady overweighted shoulders of the pot.T. I Why not increase the income tax. . .'iri(1r i t in ti' Win th il fliinll -li" t l'l JMIJ tH H l IIJt l t 1 1 I eriouslv about greater tax on t lie I social values in land ; The poor are willing to carry their -hare; bu it's about time that pnv iief were made to do the same. NOT SIIIPs. The boWS of ;i BIT TK A lE. thousand ships are ; pointed toward the I'nit'al Slates. They are not ships of war. but belong lo ;he navy of pace. Tin- open polls of the west'-rn h-misphie anil the prouction of the American dag mv iti- them. TSie eountrv n rd lOiK t-rn il lf hss i .bout the means of transportation J than about tho materi-t 1 !r tranpor-; t . 1 1 1 o n . .ban a and lett ss a no; t the t Ud material market for it. markets j r.ave been closed, tern porai ilv at b a: o.t n-v cnes must, be ereate.l. Thi:an,be accomplished by the enterprise f our producers. The harvest awaits :he harvester. The information eom-s from YVahinuton that then- js as; abundam t oi" ships to carry the eput and import .fade between the I'nited States and -outh America and that many are now lying at the inlets to the Panama ; trial eaer to be the in. -I to enter tv hen the nates of the Kt at waterway ire opened today. The-e ships are owned in America and in the I'nited So at h Stales. iom of the latter sail umb-r foreign lags, others under the American Mas,
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j-bduYe at South Rend. Indiana
uy cai.uii.k. a'Jvancr, per Diily and Sunday by the week.,.12c
Daily, single copy 11a W 1 $4.00 $3.00 & woodman Representatives. Advertising Eulldinr, Chicago ana. .rc;rsT ir. iuii. but all are ready for commissions from the coastwise trade. It remains for United States, pro-(liici-rs to make that trade. The "makinV nre at hand in Rrazil, Argentina, Peru, Chill and other South American state. The consumers of these countries are cut off by the war In Europe from their usual source of supplies and are looking for new source. The opportunity in ripe, but the fruit must be ripened. .South America cannot buy unless it can Fell. It has enormous products to dispose of, but no money. Reciprocity In trade must be established. The United States must arrange to take South America's surplus and Induce youth America to take of its own. An emergency exists. The time in which this opportunity is open is limited. Prompt and vigorous action Is necessary to secure the prize which now dangles before our eyes. typhoid n;vi:u siiason. The open season for typhoid fever is approaching and health authorities "re preparing warnings and directions for the avoidance of the disease. The precautions are simple enough, but the trouble is to make people take them seriously. " flerm laden water is the chief cause of the appearance and spread of typhoid, and small summer resorts where sanitation is poor are the main but not the only source of supply. Wells in thickly populated cities are culture places for the germ and cesspools, privy vaults and the deposits of garbage and slop" in hack yards contribute to their unhealthfulness. Tiuim."iiniu fr c.ni, n o n ,i , , t i visit insanitary resorts during the summer ana it would be strange if some of them did not take typhoid germs into their systems with the water they drank. Others it would be hard to say how many daily drink the water from the shallow wells of the city which are exposed to seepage from deposits of filth. The warnings of health officers are little heeded, except in a surface way, by (leaning up . the premises and making them look neat. The people , w ho have wells continue to drink the water without taking the simple precaution of boiling it, and then won der why they should have typhoid. There Is no safety from typhoid except in absolute cleanliness, not only of surroundings but of the food and drink taken into the system, or in vaccination Blessed with an abundof uncontaminated water, ant supply as South H as s,-uth Rend is. there need be little -s au example oi puiiiii ii-iuks wnere tney w ill do the most good tne transier oi 40 missionaries irom L lima, j to the seat of war in Europe conforms . 1 1 . 1 . A. t vvnn our niea or Keen appreciation. There is nothing reprehensible in the United States trying to grab Europe's .South American trade. It is a relief expedition rather than a crusade. We are going to be hard to convince that anybody egged Kmperor William on to starting this war. Can you see anybody egging the kaiser ? The holes in the Swiss cheese are u hat is left after the government takes out revenue for the support of those l'.'O.OOo fighting men. . A new complication. The British have tired on the Japs. Now we won't have to light Great Britain when Japan attacks us. - If tailors persist in making clothes to show mens figures there is going ! to be a bigger demand for d owns. hand-me- ! These raw potatoes fotind in the pockets of dead German soldiers may have been carried to keep off rheui mat ism. Europe was hardly in position to reply to Cnc'." Sam's proffer of his good idlicts. Both hands are busy. It would bthe irony of fate for to meet his Waterloo Ja in k Johnson Europe. me comfort, no war correspondents will be kille4 in this fight. Or is it a j co in fort '. , j It woul.l be strange if we ilidn't et some cinders from the European war I cbuid. The only romance of the war is found in the phantom fights at sea. ; We are not so particular which wins as that thev make it a tlnlsh right. We Well! h-ar J. R. Eoraker was defeated. Well! In hits and runs the opposing armies in Relgium appear to be tied. Have a News-Time at your breakf. isi lanie every morning, lieonone now-
SEVEN MINUTE SERMON ON THE GOLDEN TEXT nv oun own m.uaciu.ii
U'-'Hh: The Wicket! Husbandmen. Matt. 21:33-4(1. Golden Te,J: The tone whicli the builder rejected, the ame whj made the heatl of the corner. Matt. '21:12. Itl -IlX"! ION AND TJUL'MPH or JKSUS. 1. The vribo ami Piiarisees rejected Jou.h because they were jealtus of him. Jealousy is a sin epial to robbery as, in its essence, it is robbery, for it is the desire to have the good things which are possessed oy anotner. ine husbandmen in our lesson story were jealous of the householder who owned the vineyard which they had been working, and they thought by killing the servants, whom he sent to collect the rent, that they would themseivra. possess the property. In like manner the Jews were Jealous of Jesus and thought by rejecting and killing him they would receive the honor of the people which Jesus at that time ' was receiving. They saw his matchless goodness" and envied him. They witnessed the miracles he performed ane1 were Jealous, and nought to make the people believe that his supernatural works were performed by the aid of the devil. The very virtues which the pcribeg and Pharisees saw that Jesus possessed were what stirred their hatred of him. If they had been good men they would have rejoiced at the manifestation of Christ's goodness and power, but because they were bad men, they hated him for the good qualities which they sarv ho possessed. They claimed to be holy but when contrasted with the spotless purity of Jesus, the chief rulers of the Jews saw themselves to be bad men by comparison, and this inflamed their hatred of him. '2. Men reject Jesus today lecause they love their evil thvtls. The chief of the Jews were corrupt men, for had they been Godly they would have accepted Jesus, but the outstanding reason w hy they rejected him was the fact that they were jealous, while at the root, of course, it was the same reason which causes men to reject him todav. Jesus calls upon men to forsake their sins; he pictures the cost of discipleship, telling them that unless they leave everything and take up their cross and follow him that they, cannot be his disciples. Therefore, men who engage in isinful transactions that are profitable, or indulge in habits that are pleasurable, although sinful, and will not give up their wicked ways, turn their back upon the world's Saviour. They generally admit, although illogically, that Jesus is the only foundation stone upon which a man can build a true character, and with the very admission reject the stone and build their house upon the sand and by and by their building falls down about their heads. :i. Jesus rcim In the heart of every honest man everywhere. All the good and true men who met Jesus in the days of his flesh accepted him. There is a natural affinity between all truly good men and they never injure one another, nor are they ever opposed to each other, in any serious way. All men therefore, who were in harmony with God, or who even desired such harmony, arrayed themselves under Christ's banner when I.e was upon the earth, and the same thing takes place today. In any nation a man who is true to his conscience, and lives up to the light lie has, even if he has not heard of the historic Christ, is the follower of the essential Christ. Men who reject Christ today are dishonest: they are not true to their convictions, they think, do, and say things which they know they ought not, and by the name action they reject Jesus. The moment, however, that such sinners yield themselves to do what they know they ought to do, they by the same act accept of Jesus and become his loyal followers. All truly sincere men do this even though they mavv not have any intellectual conception or their relationship to the Saviour. But the moment they are acquainted with the words of Jesus thev then realize that they love him. I. Jesus will yet reign over all mankind. The day will come when God's entire vineyard will be vented out to good husbandmen; the tim? will come when all nations will be true to Christ our Saviour; when the hearts of all men will heat loyally to God our heavenly Father. I beiieve that Jesus will yet reign to earth's remotest bounds,, and that this will be accomplished through the power of the Hoiy Spirit resting: upon his servants as they preach the gospel to the nations of the earth. It may take a long time to bring It about, and no doubt will do so. when the kingdom of this world will be captured for God and his Christ. I have no sympathy with the teaching that this dispensation of the Holy Spirit is to be a failure so that the majority of the people will not be converted. It mav be many generations, and many centuries, before Christ in his conquering march around the world subdues all his enemies and turns all his sinners into saints but P. will be done. I believe that by the present j preaching of the gospel that the world ' is to be conquered. It must be that Christ Is stronger than the devil that ne WH finally "Destroy the works of the devil", just as the scriptures state. TWENTY YEARS AGO Iteniliufers lYom the Columns of The Daily Times. The I- port e chapter visited thej younp people of the German M. E. I church and the two societies united I in ETivinp a program. j Ir. E. I. Eastman w as called to J Xcw Troy, Mich., on professional busi- . ness. j Mr. and Mrs. A. E. White and Miss Jennie Gibson of Grand Rapids are quests of Mr. and Mrs. George V. Harris. The new directory contained 11.900! names and 'Zl'J streets. The Millers, led in numbers with 114. the John-j sons next with 105. and the Smiths; third Witli 17. Ther were -J.T lodges.: ; 23 churches, six oarochial schools 11 ' public schools, four banks anil seven ; newspapers. I NOWADAYS .MOTH Kit riOOSK. Jack and Jill ran up a hill For learning the rnaxixe. And now they get two thousand, net For fifty-two straight weeks. Old Mother Hubbard she went to the cupboard And fixed herself up nice as pie. And went out to trot, which !S proper or not As you choose Huh?. .. .Well, neither Jo I.
THE MELTING POT COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.
SIX MONTHS WITH IM)I0TS AND PHILOSOPIIKKS. Tell me. Inhere is fancy breti. Or In the heart, r in the head? How legot, how nourished? Keply, reply. It U engendcrctl In the eyes With gazing fed: and fancy die-. In the cradie where it lies Let u all ring fancy's knell: I'll begin it Diiij:, tlong bell. Ding, tlong bcl!. Shakeicnrc. So that the time allotted us. if it were well employed, were abundantly enough to answer all the ends and purKes of mankind: but we squander it away In avarice, drink, sleep, luxury, ambition, fawning addresses, envy, rambling voyages. Impertinent htudies, change of council. anil the like; and when our portion Is spent w find the want of It though we Rive no heed to it In the passage; insomuch that yve have rather made our life short than found it o. Seneca. WHAT vi: CAHK FOIL We care not for the follies of the shore, The far-flung voyage on the deep; We care not in aeroplane to soar. Nor o'er macadamed road In auto-car to sweep. These charms we yield shallow view. Who strain themselves something new. Ungrudgingly we stand others pass. To se?k for pleasure's to those of to compass aside while blossoms in the mass, For well we know that solitude alone Gives us the bread of life without the stone. Beside a placid stream with rod we find The treasures of the deep and the jewels of the mind, And there, untrammeled by the beaten way. Attain the perfect solace of a perfect day. WE do not number among our acquisitions the story telling habit, though in qualified form it is something to be desired. From our experience it is something which is less acquired than cultivated from a tender plants which finds it root in the inherited quality of narrative. Hence perhaps, it should not be called a habit, but a trait. STORY tellers, however, vary In quality much as orators and mechanics do, and some are worth listening to. The man who can tit a story to a speech, or an occasion or a trend of common thought possesses a power which abler men may well envy. He touches a chord which vibrates only to the simplest touch, that of human interest.
Make Bricks Withou t Straw
Heres How To Can't You Add UY CAKOLIXK COK. Again the housekeeper is called upon to "make bricks without straw." On the first slight excuse greed has raised the price of food until it is almost an impossibility for the housewife to furnish a balanced ration a ration that will have starch, bulk and energy-making food enough for growing children and hard working menfolk and still keep within the meager allowance. Every pound of meat today in New York or Chicago and that means other cities as well costs from one to live .cents more than it did two weeks ago. And the other great staple food flour has also risen in value until home made bread is costing at least a half a cent a loaf more than it did two weeks ago. Of course, one expects that all imported articles of food will advance in price and the clever housewife has already begun to cut them off her list. Xnw, however, she must learn to
Have you a household idea which will assist common people to offset the war prices? Have you a recipe which will help us beat the higher cost of food? If you have an idea or a recipe, please send it to The News-Times. We will be glad to print it and you will be doing a real service to your neighbors in this community. EDITOR NEWS-TIMES.
make "bricks without straw." She must put all her wits to work so that her family will be well nourished, will not miss the tasty tid-bits that have prown to be almost necessities. Although the cost of home made bread has advanced a half a cent a loaf, yet it is still more nourishing, more appetizintr and less expensive than bakers' bread at the same price that it was selling a week ago. Corn meal makes fine bread, and oatmfal makes one of the most healthful and appetizing breads that can be eaten. OAT.M I'AIj BHI.AI). Three cups rolled oats, one cooklnjr spoonful of lard, rne cooking spoon1RKVII,I.K. Mrs. William Sidler passed away Tuesday afternoon at her home In Parkville at 2 ::o o'clock from cancer. Mrs. Siuler had undergone an opera tion for the disease some months ago but it brought no relief.. Mrs. Sidler was born in Parkville in 1SIJ r.nd had lived all her life here. She is survived by her husband and j two daughters. Mrs. Jay Patterson of ! Powagiac, and Miss Goldie at home. ! One son, Lloyd Sidler. also survives ' her. The funeral was held at the home in Parkville Friday morning at .::: o'clock, and from the church at 10 o'clock. Interment took place in West Park cemetery. Miss Verna Knapp of Three Rivers came Thursday to spend the week cml with her aunt. Miss Vera Davis. Claude Griggs and Rollu Yaple,
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WHILE often prostituted to based ; uses story telling is an illustrative art. It serves to "point a moral and adorn f - i t ii. - ..il v a taie. wmcn couiu not oe accomplished with a much greater expenditure of language presented in a less penetrating form. A Tragedy in a Paragraph. (Cor. Ft. Wayne Journal-Gazette). The diamond ring that was ordered and was displayed in the window of the jewelry store, was returned last week to the firm from which it was ordered. IF the press bulletins from the Belgian frontier are to be credited there must be a great scarcity of officers and men in the opposing armies. Most of them have been captured. "PRONOUNCE it Iee-aizhe," says an exchange, anxious to smooth the pathway for the puzzled reader. But how would you pronounce "Leeaizhe?" OUR umbrella seemed glad to get out, after its long confinement. Its handle ached standing for months behind the closet door and its ribs were cramped from being kept in o imposition. It enjoyed spreading itself and feeling the cool raindrops pattering on its cover. ON our desk lies a statement of the number of days spent in warfare by "civilized" nations during the past century, the number of lives lost and the cost in money. The statement is interesting from a statistical standpoint, but we are ashamed to print it ashamed that we are a part of the races of men who are so foolish and w icked. SOMETIMES we have thought' we would like to come back to this world after a century or so just to witness the progress of civilization has made, but we are getting discouraged. A one-way ticket will do us. ONE of the commandments we don't recall its numerical position should be amended to include automobiles with the oxen and asset, in the injunction against the desecration of the Sabbath. Sunday is the motor car's busy day and the Sabbath observing citizen needs an ear trumpet to hear the sermon coming to him through the din of squawking horns and coughing mufflers. REMEMBER the old song. "The potatoes they grow small, in Maumee?" It was the drouth that hit them, but The potatoes, they'll grew bigger And the cornil hang its ears. If the blessed rains continue To dissipate our fears; And the cattle in the pastures. When the grass grows green again, Will 1111 their skins with fatness AVith the coming of the rain. C. N. F.
Fight War Prices
a Suggestion ful of sugar, one level tahlespoonful of salt. Pour over these three cups of boiling water, beat all together and allow to cool. Put one cake of compressed yeast into one cup of tepid water, add one teaspoon of sugar and allow to stand 10 minutes. When oat mixture is cool add yeast, and enough white Hour to make stiff ball. Set in warm place to raise until three times the original size. Take dough, place on floured board and mix in enough flour to make stiff loaves. Put into well-greased pans. Allow to raise until double in size. Put into oven hot enough to brown a paper in three minutes. At end of five minutes lower heat in oven and bake bread slowly for one hour. This recipe makes three large loaves of bread and costs including lire IT) cents. The economical housewife will bake a tin of beans mi the lower grate of the oven which this bread Ls baking. COTLV MKAIj MUFFINS. One-fourth cup of lard, one-half cup of sugar, one egg. one and a half cups of corn meal, one and a half teaspoons of salt, four teaspoons of baking powder. Mix dry ingredients together. Add one cup of sweet milk. Beat this mixture hardand gradually beat In the lard. The longer the muffins are beaten the lighter and more delicate they will be. Bake 25 minutes in well-greased muffin pans. A few chopped dates added to these muffins before baking and a cup of coffee will suppl.v sufficient energy and strength for four hours" hard labor. This recipe will make 15 muffins, and the cost is about 15 cents. Miss Helen Carter and Miss .Mildred Weightman spent Sunday at the Huff lodge at Fisher lake. Miss Ella tofrtet spent Thursday with Mrs. William Adams. Mr. and Mrs. drover Lowther of I-eonidas spent Sunlav at Fisher's lake. Miss Vera Davis and Irene Freese were Moorepark callers Thursday. From a small boy's letter to his chum: "You know Rob Jones' neck? Well, he fell In the river up to it." Everybody's Magazine. Peter, peter, pumpkin eater. Had a wife and couldn't keep her; He took her to a cabaret And now she tangoes there all day. PORTER EMEIWOX BROWNE.
KILLED BY SENTRY Man Attempts to Pas Without An-
! swrriii Challenge. ! ! MONTREAL. Que.. Aug. 13. one I Tnan was shot dead and another wounded at fraiir st. armory tonight l y a s ntrv . The dead man was Antoin Nottar. He tried to pass the lif K
see if you don't think we beautiful home-furnishinc;
saw. There are hundreds of
cozy home-furnishing Bend before. htt--sLL--i r
I PL WlS) t
For HXjsnt or Sale many houses not wired, and few that are wired. Houses wired are much easier sold or rented than those not wired. People of today are demanding modern convenience which can not be had with a house not wired for Electric Service. What class is your house in? Our special wiring prices low cost of fixtures and the one year time we give you to pay, is an opportunity you cannot afford to miss. Call on either phone for information. Our representative will gladly call day or evening and explain proposition, prices and show you fixtures. The "Do it Electrically' age is here. "Do it now." Indiana & Michigan Electric Company 220-222 W. COLFAX AV. Home 5462. Bell 462.
rI vj -.iL o o o 0 o 0 o 0 o o o o o o o o o o o o o o
Tiger Eiprt Beer
is brewed and bottled in one of the most up-to-date breweries and bottleries in the world.
It's the horne.
South Bend Brewing Association Servants to Lovers of Gcod Beer
Both Phone
,444440440G4444444444444444444
THE LONG, HOT, WEARY DAY la sure to have a pleasant and refreshing close for those who have awaiting them at home that luxury -which only a properly appointed bath room can give. And modern Sanitary Plumbing has placed them at the disposal of rich and poor alike, for few purses nowadays are so limited as not to be able to afford what was a few years ago an almost priceless luxury'. If you desire to knowall about the up-to-date bath and for what a moderate sum they can be Installed, call up the Real Sanitary Plumbers. Thomas Williams 122 L Jefferxm. Homo 599L Dell 626.
sentry twice after being chnller.g-T. H? then drew a revolver and th sentry shot him dead. The bulbt went through him and wounded anftlPT man in the leer. The Mre.t-t were cleared by th guards with fixed bavonets.
TRY NEWS-TIMES WANT AD We're moved! and now that we have been telling you so much about our new home, we want you to come in and have the most store you ever 1 r new ideas tor never shown in South - fa o o o o o o o o o o 0 O o 5 0 O O 0 O 4 0 D 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 4 O 4
Cream
Beer for Your
A
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