South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 126, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 6 May 1915 — Page 3
THURSDAY, MAY n, nnH TRENCH CONSCRIPTION UNNECESSARY IN ENGLAND MOTHER VICTORY T e MUST VILLA ARMY
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
iiiiiiiiiioiiii in ii Hi n FIFTEEN JM I CENTS MPJ
GBSE
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I AT LOW
German Snipers Keep Up Relentless Watch to Pick Off Reckless Individuals Only Move at Night.
LONDON', May f. Some of the rxciting numifnts of "o?ser ation duty" me graphically described by a P.riti.-h artillery otliccr In the: lolloping I tt r home: "One of tin little diversions of artillery officers is to take a turn as forward observing o!!i cr rinht in the fort most iuf intry trenches. It is only 1y going out tiler for a day and making a vprj- close scrutiny that one can bo bure which id theirs and which is ours. f?o one right I found myself aroused from my ir t hour's sleep "buck in the battery, and tol.l that by the hour before dawn I must be over In a certain trench and with a telephone communication to the battery. "It's rourh going to cut straight across that desolate no-man's land in black niuht. Time and again you catch yourself back just on the edge of a sheeny c ircle that is a hole which "Jack Johnson or his brother, the 'Woolly,' has made, and which h.us filled up with water enough to drown a man or two in. "The, constant buzzing and whist -liner of bullets which are kept flying over the trenches all night long is not n. music which tempts the wayfarer to linger. We were warned about a fallen tree, by that roadside which looks an ideal spot for a breather, but for Fiich as sit It Is too often fatal. The enemy have marked down its position and give the locality specicl attention. There is probably a rifle 'set on it. Keep Ducking IlnHet. "There is one comolation in that
Allen's Foot-Ease for the Trcops Over loo.noo parka gfs of Allen's Foot-Pane, the nutiseptlr jHibr to Shake into your Mumh or dissolve In tho fM.t-bath. are being used by the German and Allied troop at the rrnt. It rsts the fet, prevents friction f the shn and makes walking ray. suua everywhere, 1T.V. Sample sent ri:i:i:. Address. Allen S. Olmsted, LeKv, N. V.
I USE "TiZ" FOR SOBEJip FEET "TIZ" for puffed-up, aching sweaty, calloused feet and corns -
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Oood-bye Foro feet, biimini? feet, w.llen feet, sweaty feet, smelling feet, tired feet. Good-bye corns, callouses, bunions and. raw spot. No more shoe tightness, no more limping with pain r drawing1 up your face in agony. "TIZ" la magical, acts risht off. TIZ" draws out all tho polswnous exudations which puff up the feet tho only remedy that does. Us "TIZ" and wear snnaller shoes. Ah! "how comfortable your feet will feel. 'TIZ" is a delight. "TIZ" is harmless. Oct a 25 cent box of "TIZ" non at any druggist or department Ftorcs Ion't suffer. Have good feet, glad feet, feet that never grwell. never hurt, never get tired. A year's foot com tfort guaranteed or money refunded.
LESS MEAT IF BACK AND JjlDjBS HURT Take a glass of Salts to flush Kidneys if Bladder bothers you.
. ?,&$V$M&& mm fell i
LONDON. All talk of England's having to. resort to conscription to make tip the armies demanded by Lord Kitchener for active service at the front, has died away. No one knows just how many of tho youns men of the British Isles have volunteered but rumor has it that the volunteer army numbers over two million and that men can be had as fast as they are wanted. The photograph shows two Brit ish recruits taking the oath of military service.
siren singing of bullets, namely, that so long a.s you hear them they are not for you. The bullet that comes straight is a dog that bites before its bark is heard, so we know that it is quite needless to duck at the bullets we hear, but at first we keep on ducking because it is natural. "The actual trenches can be entered either by communication trenches, which have a reputation for being water courses, or openly across a bog of many pits. We decided that the communication trench, which is a very busy, narrow thoroughfare, was no place for our hurriedly-tiung wire, so we went straight across the open. "It was just on daylight when we reached the sniper's hole, a bit apart from the main trench line, which wo were to occupy for an observing station. A sniper's hole is likely to escape attention when the main trench comes in for its shell dose, but it has its disadvantages. "We had practically to sit immobile .all day: we dared hardly to stand up, as the place had no proper parapet; for looking around we used a periscope. "The periscope is wonderful. To be seated where you can se nothing but the muddy sides of a hole and then by applying the periscope, and without having to rise an inch, to have the whole of tliis extraordinary countryside revealed trenches and wire entanglements, sandbars, and shell holes showing up as if under a microscope. "What helped to keep us discreetly low was the sight of a loop-hole in the (lerman trench .'0 yards across the way; now It showed daylight through it, and now it was darkened. So we sat quite tight from morn to eve on that frosty day. "The sun came out. but wo were in the shadow. We tried to reckon the cost of stepping out into his warmlooking light. Someone back at the battery end of our wire asked ua what we were having for lunch, and hoped our feet were warm. "As long as the battery had no need for our eyes we were able to watch the strange life of that hillside. Two most relentless riflemen in a trench to our right occupied our attention a lot. We envied them their activity. They seemed to be aide to find targets when all the rest of the line was hushed, and we wondered if they took an enemy's life for each half dozen of their carefully-sighted shots. "The trench on our left had somo
shell poured fiercely into it; mud and turnips from the field behind came Hying over to us. We saw dead soldiers in a red and blue uniform lying in the forbidden land between the two trendies; one with a whitened skull. Aircraft came over from our side and were greeted with volleys or ritle fire; we reported this to our battery, and they delivered a shower of shrapnel which made all heads keep under. Our periscope was 'souvenired' later on with a rille bullet clean through tho tin sides. "Our day's journey was to finish in the afternoon, but not till the covering of darkness of the evening could we leave our post. For an hour or so we tried to sleep the numbed sleep of the trenches that sleep in which all the senses never share together, but always one or other seems to take it on itself to watch while the others rest. Then, as it was dark enough not to be able to distinguish the trench opposite, we put our chilled limbs under us and struggled out."
HE CARRIED LADY'S COAT Patrolman is Suspicious ami Arrests Henry Miller.
Henry Miller, who was a regular patron of the Hotel Io Gink last winter, registering under the namo of Snyder, wa arrested hy Officer DeLee at 9 o'clock Wednesday night, charged with stealing: a lady's coat. Miller was seen comlnp; down an alley on Sample st,, one-half block east of Michigan st., by Patrolman DeLco. When he saw tho o ft i cor watching him, Miller attempted to escape. Miller told conflicting stories as to where he obtained the coat, claiming that he found it in the alley, and later changing his alibi and saying that he found it lying in the middle of Sample st. The coat is of green chinchilla cloth, with large green buttons on the front and sleeves. It is being held at the police station waiting for identification by the owner.
rants mc1uiu:n dtvouci:. Judge Ford granted a divorce Wednesday afternoon In the superior court to (Marabella McFarren from William L. McFarren on the grounds of failure to support.
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bating meat regularly eventually, produces kidney trouble in some form tr other, says a well-known authority, Leau5 the uric acid in meat exCites the kidneys, they become overWorked: get siuggidh; clog up and pause all sorts of distress, particularly ackache and misery In the kidney region; rheumatic twinges, severe headaches, acid stomach, constipation, torpid livfr, sleeplessness, bladder and urinary irritation. The moment your back hurts or kidneys aren't acting ri?ht, or if Madtfer bothers you. set about four ounces of Jad Salts from any good pharmacy; take, a tablespoonful In a glass of water before breakfast for a few days itnd your kidneys will then act tine. This famous ealts Is made from th-3 icid of grapes and lemon Juice, combined with llthia, and has been used or generations to Hush clopged kidreys and stimulate them to normal Activity; abo to neutralize the acidt n tho urine so it m longer irritate, Xhus enabling bladder disorder. ! Jad Salts cannot injtir anyone; Snakes a. delightful effervescent lithlaPatfT drink which millions of men land worn,;. -ke now and then ti pceep th- kldnt-yn and urinary t-rgani .clean, thus uvutdinj: fctr-u- kidnej I
A New Method
of Baking Cakes
Mrs. Nevada Briggs, the baking expert, says: 'There 13 just one way to maVe your calces ri3o high and evenlygire them time to rise befor a crust U formd and tho batttr is stiffened by cooking." "If using a gas, gasoline or oil stove, light your orn when you put the cake in and keep the flame low until the cake has doubled in bulk; then increase the heat until it is evenly browned and will respond to the pressure of the finger. If using a coal or wood range, laave the oven door open until the cake is in; then turn on the drafts and by the tine tho oven is at baiting temperature, the cike will have raised BuSaciently." For rich, moist, feathery cakes Mrs. Briggs always recommends
IS Baking
ray,
OWDER
us
Itis double acting and sus'lalns the raise. You can oren and close the oven door, turn the tin around in the oven or do anything else necessary, without any danger of making the 'cake fall. Try your favorite cake next time with K C Baldng Powder and see how much higher it will rise. Make it just as you alwa?9 do, with the same quantity of baking powder. While K C ia less expensive than the old fashioned baking powders, it has even greater leavening etrength and it is guaranteed pure and healthful. Try a can and be convinced
10
Si
AUDUBON SOCIETY TO OPEN SESSIONS TONIGHT
Somo Interesting Addresses arc Promieil Trips to the Woods Are Scheduled.
With large delegations in attendance from Chicago and points in Indiana, the ISth annual meeting of the Indiana Audubon society will be opened at the high school auditorium tonight at 8 o'clock. Tho meetings will continue Friday and Saturday. Some interesting talks and excursions are promised visitors to the meeting, according to the program
given out by the society. Trips to the woods, to be made during the early
morning hours and In the afternoons, will bo conducted Friday and Saturday.
I no feature of tno riuay session will be bird talks which arc to be
given at the different schools through
out the city in the morning, by mem
bers of the society.
Tho executive committee which will
be in charge of the meetings is composed of George A. Baker, L. J. Montgomery. Miss Virginia Tutt, M. II Willing, Mrs. W. K. Miller, Dr. H. T Montgomery and Dr. Charles Stoltz. Tonight's program Is as follows: Music, chorus, Lafayctto and Madison schools; invocation. Itev. John V
DcGroote; addresses of welcome, for the city, Mayor Fred W. Keller, for
the schools. fcupt. L.. J. Montgomery, for the Women's clubs, Mrs. W. E.
Miller; music, vocal solos. "A Swallow
Song," "Down In the Forest," Miss
HortenFe Drummond; president's ad
dress. "Wild Ufe and Man," Stanley Coulter; address, "The Sand Dunes of
Indiana," W. S. Iilatchley; remarks,
Judge Timothy K. Howard, South
Bend.
PUPILS GIVE RECITAL Students at Conservatory Apicar in a Pleasing Program.
. Recital hall at the South Bend Conservatory of Music was filled for the general recital which was given Wednesday night. Tho varied numbers on the program reflected much credit on the teachers of the institution and all the numbers were well received by the audience. The hall was tastefully decorated for the occasion with spring flowers. Those who gave the recital were the pupils of Miss Dora Ilcrshenow, piano; Miss Valeria Bon Durant, piano; Miss Hazel Harris, voice; Frank E. Kcndrle, violin, and Max Miranda, piano. The pupils of Max Miranda will give a recital at the conservatory on next Tuesday evening at 8 o'clock. Miss Hazel Harris, soprano, will give a recital in Thurber hall, Fine Arts building, on May -G. The program will be tame that she will present on the evening of May 20, at the conservator. Miss Dora Hcrshenow, pianist, and Gerald Hunt, bass, will give a joint recital at the conservatory on tho evening of Thursday, May 2 7.
APPEAL FROM JUSTICE I'minot Woolvorton and William Jones Take Cases Up.
Appeals to the circuit court were taken Wednesday afternoon from Justice Peak's couit by Emmet Woolverton and William Jones. The Justice had found in favor of the Union Trust Co., who sues Emmet Woolverton for possession of a room at 120 S. Main st. and for $110 rent and damages. Jones sues I. Glaser for $150 damages on the grounds that a horse which he had put in the defendant's livery barn was injured by being kicked y one of the defendant's horses. The justice held that the Injury had been inflicted bv one of the plaintiffs own horses.
Ill VI V COBB BITTTICrt. NEW YOBK, May 6. Irvin Cobb, the novelist, who underwent an operation for hernia last Saturday at the Polyclinic hospital, waj reported as improving today. Ho is expected to leave the hospital in two or three weeks.
TO allow TiLvnns. SPRINGFIELD. 111., May C. Sen. Bailey's bill permitting railroads to exchange transportation for newspaper advertising was passed by the state senate Wednesday by a vote of yi p 12 -
Carranza Forces Are Bested
Near Guerrero Rumor of New Mexican Revolution Brings Forth Denial.
WASHINGTON', May G. Diaz Lombard o. Gen. Villa's minister of foreign
affairs, telegraphed the Villa agency
here Wednesday that the Carranzistas hail been defeated necr Guerrero by Gen. Urbina. The dispatch said the
Carranzistas lost h?avily and that
many prisoners were token. The Villa agency gac notice of the falsity of the reports from San Antonio, Texas, that Villa's general, Rosalio Hernandt-z, had started a new Mexican revolution. Enri-iue C. Llorente. Villa's confidential acent' here, telegraphed Gen. Hernandez and received a reply from him stating that the rumor of his defection trom Gen. Villa was absolutely false. Tho constitutionalist agency his a report from El Paso as foib-ws: "Americans arriving from Chilv.r.bua report a great scin-ity of :.. l ilies in that city and tk: : the ! u :- chants there accept V;'!.::a r.u;iv only in payment for food and mi..-.' it for other merchant: e." Another dispatch to tho Canary, agency says that Col. perrahli : prised the forces of Gen. Hernandez at Muzquiz today and captured 40 horses and supplies. State department officials said on Wednesday that reports from Duval West, the president's special and confidential agent in Mexico, which have come to Washington went direct to the white house. These reports related to progress made by Mr. West before he left Vera Cruz for Washington. He will go over thes;e reports with the president and submit his final observations on his arrival here toward the close of tho week.
SOCIAL SKSSIOX. A social session was hcbl after the business meeting of th? court of honor. No. 1176, at Modern Woodmen of America, last night. Prizes in contests were won by Glenn McClain and Mrs. Canard.
MI LLT X KHY A X X ( )U X CK I EXT. We should be pleased to show you our beautiful new line of mid-summer millinery. MRS. M. A. FRALICK, 131 N. Main St.
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