Lebanon Daily Reporter, Volume 25, Number 241, Lebanon, Boone County, 10 July 1917 — Page 5

JMssinea ADVERTISING C.l3 J.e Per Word, I'ath hunt. N ailniniaoment Taken for Lou 1 ban 10c.

FOR SALE CUK SALE An auto traiier. Phone 6?8" 6-25 tf CORT;.LE At a bargain,-a ued Fori) equipped with electric light. in good repair anJ going good Price, 82M. See J. W.Vonca. w lANJ'Kl) MALE ANDFeMAXE HELP An intelligent person may earn iuu monthly corresponding lor newspaper; 40 to- 150 monthly In para time; experience unnecessary; oo canvassing; (uhjects suggested. Send for particulars. National Press Bureau, Room 1619, Buffalo, N. Y. 4-27-6-mos. UANTED Fireman at T. lif. and E. power station, 24c per hour. Vhone 720. 6-29-tf. llANTED Position on farnT by a "married man. Absolutely anber. Can furnish reference. Address J. C. Langdon, Coryduii. Ind., R. R. 5. 7--2t iUAKfEb Refined, educated woman to represent the oldest firm or its kind; North in Hummer. South in winter; good opportunity for advnnce- . ment Call or write, F. Cram, 802 East South street, Lebanon. """FOR RENT jfOR RENT 8 room Youse, bath", toilet, 2H flocks from square. Neal A Comp '4f. 6-1 tf. COR RENT--Corner room Colonial Theater building. Phil Adler or Neal & Co. 7-7-6t F61FRENTping"and fuTmshed rooms for light housekeeping. 218 East Superior. Thone 6H3. 7-9-4t ' ' TjOsT 0ST Five dollar bill" amTcheck between Wright's meat market and Oak Hil' cemetery. Return to W. H. Ross, riietery. 7-7-St. I 0ST Poeketbook. containing " ral dollars and also K of P. receipt from Noblesville lodge. Reward. Finder pltase return to Reporter office. 7-10-3t. Vacation Trips i Special low round trip fares to L&ke Erie resorts, Niagara Falls, eastern cities, Colorado and the west via CLOVER LEAF ROUTE Ask Clover Loaf agents or rrite to CHAS. E. ROSE, Asst. General Passenger Agent, Toledo. 0. DR. R. D. GARRISON DivNTfcJT Varaer State Bank BoiuPag ttuMs tsa-lM PkoM Stt-K Metzger Lumber & Coal Co. THE PHONE ORDER HOLSE Lebanon and Thorotown, Phone 15 Your Used Furniture Taken as part pay on new goods at JONES & PERKINS Phones 18 or 184 P. C. WINTERS CHIROPRACTOR Hoar: 6-11 a. n 2-6 and 7-8 p. hm.tation and spinal ni,t!i toef Rnoms 219-220-222-224. Phono 236 OWEN MORKERT Chiropractor Hoars: a. m.; 1-6 and 7-8 p. s. Consultation and Spinal Analyst free 230 Caeon-Neal Bldg. Phono 6JJ X-Rajr SpinvK V Pprtmeiit J" SICKLE GRINDING AND MOWER REPAIRS W. K. FRALEY'S SHOP Alley crossing rear Oak Drug Store

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Furnish the One Great Element Ileretofoie Lacking in the

Marvelous Military Tweant of Paris Life-Cay City Chansed PMrfe"From Four Corners of Earth.

BY C. r. BERTItU. IBs is. lniaMl jrews Ssrvwe.) PARIS, July 10. (by mail) With he arrival fn Franc of General per iling, his staff, and the first American forces, tha one great element heretofore lacking in tha marvelous military pageant which ia now an ev eryday feature of Paris life haa been supplied. Such a gathering of the soldiers oi the world has never before been witnessed in any city at any time in history. The streets of the French capi tal are now a kaleidoscope of military and naval uniforms in all shades of khaki, blue and green, flecked with badges, lapels and bands in red, blus. green and black. righting men from the four comers of the earth, speaking tongues as widely diverse as the Maori dialect and Boston English, gather beneath the blooming chestnut trees ,of the boulevards, sip cooling drinks on the cafe terraces or mingle In the human stream that flows through the central arteries of Paris, Omit the military garb of Germany and her allies and of the Scandinavian -ountries and Spain, and you can see at any hour of the day on the boule,'trds the uniforms of every army in he world that counts. In the pageant arc fighting men from : France, Cnited State. England Scotland, Ireland, Wales, India, Can la, South Africa, Australia, New aland, Newfoundland, Russia, Italy. Belgium, Portugal, Serbia, Montene7ro, Rumania, Japan, Morocco, Al giers, Dahomey, Senegal, Annam, Toniin and Madagascar. GAY CITY CHANGED. Khaki predominates in the riot of lor. In the centre of the tity ir he purlieus of the Place do J'Opers lid the Champs-Elysees it driver Sack into inennspicuousnets the horton blue of the French army; indeed t is just the predominance of khaki n all its shades over any other feaure of the normal coloring of Paris hat brings home the fact that the mee gay city of the world ha been onverted into a unique wonder city n another sense by the gathering of he fighters of the earth within her walls. The American campaign uniform, he latest shade-facet to N; added to the kaleidoscope, cornea as a splash of sunshine on an April day to the ryes that had become somewhat sur feited with British khaki, Belgian drab, French horizen blue and Italiar field-green. Let it be said that to far as we have seen it in Paris the Yankee uniform haa already begun to betray that lark of uniformity as to color hich haracWize every other army in this tar. Olive drab, the regulation col or, is worn by Ceneral Pershing's staff and their aides; but whence omea the bright canary colored garb that adorns doiens of ether Ameri can seen on the street of Pari T It ha Leen imported by some of our 1,500 ambulance men now at work in France, and who have declined to be slaves to military convention or reg ulation in matters sartorial. As a rule, the most prevalent shade of khaki worn by our ambulance hoys approximate very closely to the Hrttiih uniform, with the result that rrench people unfamiliar -with the Brititth system of hedging constantly mistake American ambulance drivers or carriers for British officers. One distinctive) tign of the Red Cross men, however, ia the French "sardine" badge worn on the collar of the tunic. It it probable that these contingent will continue to serve un der the French ntg. AMERICAN ALF.KT. American aviators of the Lafayette Kscadnlle also wear the rrench hor-ton-blue, whether officer, non-com or privates; but whatever garb they wear. American military men ran a way be tie tec led at glance by Hie practised eye. Lean, alort, athletic, quick-moving, they are not quite like any other troop not even the bronzed and battle-scarred Canadians, who since their triumph at Vim y, have been very con spiruou on the streets of Pari. Dominant at thi moment In the medley of military color are the uniform of the British metropolitan and colonial armi. And wort ptetu'1 esoue of this group are the f'lln. wh still wear their trUn b itu.t . kilts, the latter with an over-kOt khaki. Kradgesr If ' ' t ' 1 1

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mf; I W ii.lUVl I nniin officers wearing their Jap' neae-shaoed cap. At a general glance there i little t distinguish the Canadians from the British, aside from regimental marks and badge and the label "Canada" worn on the shoulder. But the British smear carries with him hia unmistaeable mark wherever he goes; a few hour after some cataclysmic battle he appear on the boulevards well groom ed and nonchalant, carrying his cane and indulging in the popular Kitchener stoop of the shoulder and kink in the left leg, a marvel of coolness and unconcern. Russians (unmistakable for their blouses), Belgians, Serb and Montenegrin fall into the same color sec tion, in that they all wear shades of khaki, whereas the Italians, Rumanians and Portuguese belong to the r'rench color group. In that their fieldgreen or bluish tinge approximate them to the horiton-hlue of the French field army. NAVAL TNIFORMS LIVFXY. The varying uniform of the cavalry of all these different armies add further diversity to the scene, while the naval uniform of the Allied naions, which an everpresent fea ture of the medley ef rotor in Paris. hrow in a pleasant note of deep blue set off with flashes of w ide gold braid. The conglomeration e( badge and lacerations is so bewildering that nen who profess to know how to smash the Hindenburg line have to confess that they have never been able 'o thread this mate successfully. Tc 'he average Frenchman the strain of nenioriting the uniforms and badgi of h own army is quite enough; the insignia of twenty other armies form a mosaic which he docs nut attempt n fnm prebend. Parir.ienne share this bewilderTient: but no matter what new troops :ome to town, their pretence is unihakeable. Threading hi ay through the bril liant international military pageant you can often see a mudstained soldier in faded blue with a battered shell helmet on his head. An amazing load it bundles and tins swing from hi -houlder or belt. In his hand he Car rie a rough-hewn stick, which helps him in hia rather weary walk; often there is several days' growth of hair on hi face. He does not make datx'ing picture, but the Parisenne knows that a a fighter he ha no superior in vhe world; and there lie her heart. WHO IS WHO BEHIND THE I SCENES IN THE WAR ARMY BY GEORGE GARVIN Colonel Gerge W. Read, atsUtsst adjutant general Born in Iowa No vember 19, 160, and appointed to the military academy from the state in 1879. In 1883 he wan commissioned a second lieutenant and asxigned to tha Sixteenth Infantry, but in a few month wa transferred to the cavalry' and ha continued in that arm of the service. WASHINGTON, July 9. Upon Colonel Read has been placed the spnnsihility of recruiting the regular army to war strength. On the first of last April he commenced a terrific drive to rerruit 183,000 men for the regular establishment. He procured the co-operation of the press, and with his subordinates throughout the entire country has continuously pounded his drive with marked success, having increased enlistments from 200 to 2,000 a day. Since the registration for selective drsft. rtiie! Rend ha not let up in hi effort to procure enlistment, and he 1 confident that before the draft army is called into service he will have the regular army on a good war basis. Colonel Read i an able soldier. He is quiet and unassuming, but unusual ly thorough. He accomplishe great recjlt without diaplay, and enjoy a d uk met confidence from enlisted men. FAIRVIEW. Mr. Kibbey will preach In Mr. Coy's plr bunday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Quick, M nd Mrs, James Quick and daughter Opal and wn Willie were the Sunday gueitta ef oeorge JKQllin ana family ef near LebanonMr. Jottn saundert atm remain. very ill. John O. RoHiiuon wa taken to the Witham hospital at Lebanon for mcd-

rnl tvtmeot 7!-.eie will be an w (reai si; n r ! "- r '. -V ( r

Former Boon Courly iiirt

CIm at Itoeteburtc, That State. Ward has been received here of the death of Mrs, Mary Perkins, of Roseburg, Oregon. Mm. Perkins Is an auv.t of Mis Alico Anderson of this city, and her huaband, Clurle W. Perkins, is a brother to Jatn Perkins. Mr. Perkin was formerly in the ment business in Lelwnnn. Mrs. Perkins wa born near Mechanicahurg. They moved to Oregon eight years ago from Indianapolis. The death occurred last ght The body of Mr. Perkins will be shipped to this city for burial. The funeral arrangements have not yet been made. GETTING OUT A PAPER UNDER FIRE IN RHEIMS f fs N"rsH.ai Mtr Aerrlee.l PARIS, July 10. The most remark able newspaper in the world is printed Rheims that shell-blasted city where the sound of the Get man guns s never quiet. Few of the Inhabitants of Rhrtfns remain, but the city is full nf soldiers. For thoir benefit the news paper ia printed Claude Helluy, editor of the Cour ier re la Champagne, the oldest paper in Rheims, ha just arrived here, and said today: Although I have closed down my printing office the inhabitant of Rheims are not without a newspaper, for the Eclaireur de I'Kst continuot to appear in the bombarded city. 1'roluccd on pedal pros almost daily. it consists of a small sheet, quarto sit printed in two columns on both side of the paper. Its contents are chiefly made up of the official war communique issued by the French and British government, the number nf shells which have fallen on the previous day, the ist of killed and wounded by the bombardment, municipal notices and some scrups of local news. JuiinK the lt two ycitiK -llic Courrier wa obliged to change its address twice. It moved first to the prernibea of a photongvavcr, whose workshop was situated in a part of Rheim which enjoyed a ct-rtain amount of tranquility. When we left there it was for the center of the city, a commercial printing-office op posite the little door of the cathedral. The Courrier was originally accom modated in the premises of a wellknown English firm of wool comber. The journal had acquired th private residence of the principal owner of the wool plant near the wool-combing factory on one side and not far from the Colbert Barracks on the other. Thi proved to be doubly dan gerous, for it received on the one hand the shells falling too short in tended for the barracks, and, on the other those too long meant for the factory. One day when we v. ere buy print ing off the edition a nhrapnel shell ruck the cylinder of the pre and the fragment flew in all directions. By a miracle no one wa hit A the staff fled into the adjoining shop they were followed by another shell which exploded in the middle of a roll of paper. They were about to take ref uge in the publishing department when a third shell anticipated them coming through the ceiling and destroying the machine used to print addresses. The workmen only reached the cellar, forty feet deep, in time. The same cellar served shortly after for a battery of artillery, which as passing on the neighboring boulevard when a shell fell in their midst After we had. settled down near the cathedral I occasionally revisited our old premises at Holden's, and every time I went there I noticed new depredations. A shell, landing at the foot of a wall, tore a hole in a rnnek partition and. striking a linotype ma chine threw it forward nearly two feet I traced the marks of fifty projectiles on the house, which is now partly destroyed. Behind out office the Holden factory, which covered several acres, had been burned by a shower of incendiary shells, and the chimney stack, Ho0 feet high, had been knocked over by a shot at the bue. Thi happened three weeks ago. f "Under the hadow of the cathedral we pent the least agttattd time. A shell ripped the roof of the K,claireur effice and another broke in three the electric standard on the pavement outside and blew in our mn liows, replaced so often that they 1!!9 Reward, M rM if thi f t -sin

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Made from any Ford Car $150.00 Complete Call and let us tell you about this wonderful machine.

Phone 158 consisted of tracing paper instead of glass. For a similar reason the tiles an the roof had mostly been replaced by tarpaulin, which in iU turn wa riddled by machine gun bullet from German airmen. "A furtnight before the beginning of the Franco-British offensive th German began to grind the city to powder bit by bit Each quarter in turn was mercilessly pounded on systematic lines. In the ruin incen diary shell lighted flame which completed the disaster. Asphyxiating bombs, distributed in profusion, pre vented the firemen and rescue eorps from approaching the groups of burning houses." BUY STAR BAKERY New Proprietor Took Possess ion Yesterday J. R. Deck Retires. The Star Bakery on South Lebanon street has been sold to Emmett Ryan and Russell Shahan. J. R. Beck, the former owner, has been accepted as baker with the Eli Lilly Base Hospital company, of Indiamnolis, and ftcpects to bo called to serve in the near tu ture. The new owners took possession yesterday. Mr. Ryan will manage the bakerv. He has had considerable ex perienee in the business. Both of the new owners are widely acquainted and liked, and will no doubt secure good business. NOBTHFiKIJ). Mr. Mod Mrs. Will Shaw are the nroud uarenta of an eight pound baby boy born Satuniay morning July T. Mr. and Mr. Henry baker spent Sunday .with relatives of Indianapolis. Perry Hancock and family. Homer Hammock and family spent Sunday with Mrs. Sarah L'avis and riaugtiier Nancy. Mrs. Oliver Harim of ohendan, pent last week with Ernest Harlin and familv. Mrs. Kancv Melette and daughter Viola spent Thursday afternoon with Johnny West and family. Jnhnnv Martin and Charles meen ch of Fairview took dinner at the K. W. .Steven home Friday. Mr. and Mr, tmmet fctioemaser ..nd Hauirhteis Bcmice and Rosemary spent Saturday night and Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Collie Stevens oi Lebanon. Mian Viola Oizold who has spent two weeks with her grandmother of t.adtden returned home rnnay afternoon. YESTERDAY'S KESl'LTS. AMERICAN ASSOCIATION. Indianapolis ut Toledo; game played Sunday. Louieville, 4; Columbus, O.St. I'aul, ; Kansas t ity, 0. Minneapolis, I; Milwaukee, 1. AMERICAN LEAGUE. Philadelphia; .1; Chicago, 2. Washington, t-'l; Detroit, l-ifl. New ork, as Louis, 1. Cleveland. 4: Ilt"n, , . . fi oTION.U. 4.E T. vr-. v-- ' ) LJ 8. -

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City Garage

DR.W.R.MAYO

WILL BE AT THE CLUTE HOTEL Lebanon, Indiana FRIDAY July 13, 1917!

And vary tour week thereafter. Dr. Mayo haa treated number of case of cancer without the Dr. Mays has treated (oeccssfully all forms of Chroi.Ie Pia that art curable, such a dias of th Brain, Heart, Lungs, Throat, Eye and Ear, Stomach, Liver, Kidney. Bladder, Blood To!, Beetum, Dropy, Female DUeaa, Nervou DUmms, Eeiema, Iupr, Catarrh In all stag, ate. l r XT A ipeedy, permanent mo lasting cur l what I B1 rj iVILn too beyond doubt tf year ease i curable; if not ! will not accept your money and promt te de anything for Jon. Tb beat reference I could give a to professions! rsUaiiiiity la the man cured, satisfied patients I dirai. Diseases Peculiar To Woman Gi?en Spcial Attention I will giv th POOREST man a chance as wD a th RICH U receive a cure from m at SMALL COST. There i ne man to pOOl to get my best advk FREE. Variocel and hydrocelt. Oar sea treatment eta U what jo should have. Only on visit ia required. We do mo eui3- Ail tign disappear within few day or week. Blood Peuwn, Skia DiMasea. W will giv you fereatmr4 that will ia a few day cure all rank aorea. gtriMOT,, Kidney, Bladder, Prostatic Gland are icttnL.c&,'f treated by a. Oar method immedltely benefit yes. Pile, Fistula, W can cur so quickly and eewfly that yoJ will be aurprued. VY will give yoa just th result od ear you are looking for. Kuptur T.-eatwI. After an examination we wffl tefl yew Jot what we c. do for yoa. If we ea not benefit and cur yea, ws wtU frankly and bonaatly tell yoa so. Call on or address, W. B MAYO, S4S N. Detswar Street, Indlanapolia, Indiana.

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CADILLAC, PAIGE AND DODGE BROS. CARS FIRESTONE AND U. S. TIRES ENGLISH AUTO AND m TRACTOR CO. CORY & BRATTON FOERAI. DIXECT0E8 09c phon 88: KeMdenea ahost I Ito and ItaaWy EVk. Eaat Casta Etreai

210NUHEXTS 5e ut or your monument if you wot flrvt c!sw tk 'd wo-!i-..vv li'p. Call us and we will bung you ! our shop for in'.'Hion. , Hhot) phune !'; tie. MS r 714 y; )-;!',' n (, - i t tj-j y . i ; r to.

South Lebanon Street

""X, -: i t Just Received a carload of Palmo Middlings hog feed UNION HARDWARE CO. PHONE 108 BBENT0N GA2AGS AutM Md Auto Supple East Main Street. Fbotta 294 SAFETY RAZOR BLADES BHASPENED Single edge, ptr dozen. ...... ....IS Evubio edge, per doxem ........ ,is W pay postage on way. Barker & Son. Lebanon Cr.OCEKILS Alsravj i.i C;e Lt -J ltt.vb & etc::: ;3

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