South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 91, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 31 March 1916 — Page 20
SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIME
20 mw.w i:vr:ic;. march 31. iru. RATION BILL More Carranzislas Join Villa Rärins USSIAN VICTORY i Ü o 7 Country to Far East Ships More Ammunition Than United States. Literacy Test and Asiatic Exclusion Provisions Are Unchanged. li 1 I
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WASIIIMiToX. M-ii-h :tl. At war and yt mot- p. --p'-rows than eT .fi t'- in !.-r hi-or!
Tiutt. in a r, ::h !.. o-Ti?'- the J.ip.iM fxi.t; . .1 judged hv th r . 1 1 i 1 1 1 put u:i by t he Japanese r 1 1 1 r i ? : t it-df. io-tlo-r with th t '-Hi ;!!(;. i ! n " ! forwarded th ;) . ri ni'-nt of oniMo-ie hei by it Ii t r 1 1 abroad. Japan, with th x pt.on f the l'nit-d States, is d"w prooably the iiK-t jirfp'Ti'in 1 1 . i i r m th world. And 11 is all i i - to the. var. It ! to Jajan. nior.- Uoiti .my o'hr facto r. that should :o the rr-'i:t for lliis-ia's iolos-.il drive through tilt- i'.iürav.s, thtou-h Asiatic Tuihf, . .ini v hb h no'' bid Aiir in e! nd to Constantinople lts-.-fif. Aft-r i tif l.assAtn hil-s haI 1 -1 1 thioun hark, broken and in ).-'ii( r, -on I U rnJ-n 1. o rg in Po land, the alias realized that lmbsxon thiiit inul'l b Jone ly th ar, as a f.o ti.r in the struus'e, was about due i t.ik- tii o,,nt. True, there were, i untoM thousands of Lassans who iiait ne.er sine. led Miiiik'1 hi; frappintf fallows able to withstand untold iia rdships. anl of uri'pif; ,n il ouraKe. Noihiii- to I'iirl.t With. I Jut they iial nothing to tiyht with. Tiiat was 'a ij von 1 1 iuden i.u r -;. military wizard thouh he 'is. was. aide
to s ( a si 1 send them iflip hack ,
fron l,oi. to Warsaw.. then take Warsaw, then Hr-.,t iatov.sk. and other of tli" ureat Polish fortresses. Jj.pan Was appealed to. and quick to set' th adxantaijf not, only to hfr jjili,-. iut to iH-!s!f, imnif liat'ly .! laisy wnh th result that the .olarnp .f inunition now reinv: sent out of japan is a.. Kre it, if not rcatrr, thau that of the L'nitc.i .State. Japan put tii czr on his feet ar.I fnahlfd him to t ome Sack. And at tin-' same time Japan - was 1elopintr an -industry that not only i nettin: her in illtoris-. hut which may prow of untold alue to her in the pot far distant fi.ture. The II us sinn misfortune was the stimulant tii a has sent the Tokio government reelif.ir joyously with war properity. Stream; upon streams of shells, .mir.. .hncs, uniform?' and other thin--? hnvo poured into Kussiit and still ate pourintr. Out-trip, rnitcd Stnt. Ja pat- has outstripped the I'nited States in Krapplirik? with the dye industry, which hefnre the war was practically monopolized hy (Jefmany. The government hat lended its support to manufacturers of syntelietic lives aril nudicine.-? with tlie result that a ? f.nno.nno corporation has hern orsranizecj and its stock oversui's( ri'-ed approximately M)0 tiiiiCn. And Japan has taken care that the inter, .-ted parties are strictly Japa n-- ' su Meets. Wlia.t she has ,oro in the dye slti; itioj s merely a:i e'.Mmjvle of what she Is doint; in other industries. The cement market of the far east is Tiow practically controlled hy Japan, where hefore th war Germany was s'ipreHie. Japanese paper mills, according to reports of American .h'rnts tiiere are scarcely able to take care of thr orders. Japan is the r,K nation that has prospered through her entrance into tlie woild war. And she is the only l-liej ent th.it at the end of the v. .ir will he -i'.ie to show a I glance ori tiir nlit side of the ledrr.
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DTSiCH22.HT Or CfiZlXLlrtZ ISTi SOLDlE&S
I!L r s' , Tex.. March '.K hespatches from Mexico continually tell of the desertion of larpe bodies of 'arranzista troops to the banner of 1 'i a ncisco Villa. It is believed that before long1 almost the entire force now supposed to he loyal to Carran.a vi;i join Villa. It is reported that half of the Carrnnza Garrison at Narnhpiipa. in the immediate district of the pursuit of Villa, has joined the outlaws.
LEE STILL CHAIRMAN IM IANAP LIS. March "1.- The i : -i e stale central committee loet h. -re Thursday. lMwm M. Lee w is reeUcud state 'liairnnn. Klias I S.iishiiry and Henry S. Uominuer of I r iha n.i poh.s w , -j- eh i ted sin rct.r and tn as-irer rcspe lively.
WILSON ENJOYS BASEBALL GAMES
President and Bride Keen on Golf and Yachting Trips in Mayflower.
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contains the exact kind of nourishment needed by (hose who have throat troubles and are weak and run down, and this tissue building food is easilytaken up by the system. That is why it is best for colds and as a tonic in the Spring.
W A SHI XUT )X. M arc h 1 . Pres-1 and Mrs. Wilson are looking forward with keen interest to the openIns: f the Uiseball soa.son. I'res't .Wilson and his consort enjoy other sptirts.' Tfht owing to the heavy cares Mf 'state, with which Mr. VVilsoir" has -had upon him almost continuously since his inaugurating, he ih unable to indulge in hut few of them.- " ' Golf takes the front lank in the president's recreations. He took up Kolf because it furnished both pleasure, und exercise at the same time. Owinc 'to the heavy demands on his time it is impossible for him to Ket away "from the v. hite house until Ions after 2 o'clock In the afternoon. And durinpr the winter months the days are so short that only about nine holes can be played. The president is becoming a very ooi golf player. He has always been a fair driver, but only recently has he become really ood with, irons. Mrs. Wilson is developing' into a fair player. It was not until last October that Mrs1. Wilson took up Rolf. This was after her encasement to the president. She besan with some friends and the members of her family on one of the smaller links around Washington. A few weeks before her engagement was announced. Mrs. Wilson played a few games with the president. She has been his golf companion on every occasion he has played since then. It was under his tutorage she began picking up the finer point.s of the game. loth the president and Mrs. Wilson get keen pleasure out of their game. And. like other perfectly
healthy human beings, they sometimes argue over their respective shots and whether the shot was pullej or sliced. They laugh at ach other, loo, when a deep hole in the rough becomes the lodging of the ball. Recently the president and Mrs. Wilson have taken to yachting trips. I'.oth the president and Mrs. Wilson arc fond of the water and when c'y of the Navy Ianiels assured the president the Mayilower could go down the Potomac and cruise around the Chesapeake and still be in touch with the white house, state, war and navy departments through ;he wireless, the president decided That an excellent way to spend a week end was on the Ma!lower. ilence. utmost every Saturday night -eis the Maoower with the president and his wife aboard steam out liom the Washington navy yard. Stop at Ilitori' lMaos. Stop.- at historic places along the taiiiows Potomac and the Chesai r.ike are made on these trips and tlie president anil wife go ashore and take lone walks. On the last trip a isit was paid to Newport News and the site of the Jamestown exposition. On a previous trip Fori Monroe and Old Point Comfort wa re iited. A trip to historical old Vorktowi. and to William and Mary i client at Williamsburg w ere made. Walks of from three to fSe miles are taken when the presidcir.i.il arty disembarks while on the ruises. The president has derived much pleasure and benefit troia these trips. On no trip has he gone so far as to be out of touch with Washington or more than l'J hoars deaminn time from the apital. The president, too. is fond of n.o:..r;ng and walking. When th
weather is so bad that golf is out of :! n .estion a. long motor ride is :.! '-Ii. The, rides usually are taken m i io.i rain or snowstorm in tlie winter months. It is not so m the s ..turner. When tlie weather heiO'iu hot it is labor to play golf, the prt-;dent and Mrs. Wilson use tiie .. t oiio ! i !es. Many trips into .he i. ri . vi mi . i1. g iounli e pia ruled U'i' Uto hoi iLoa vi lluä ipuu auul
early summer. The president hopes to be at the summer white house when the real hot weather arrives. The president is very fond of baseball as is his wife, and they are planning to attend riianv games this
spring. They shall attend the open-' : .. i. , I
IMK U.Hill" IIVIT. I'n üke Mr. Taft and Mr. I looseelt. Pies't Wilson is not fond of horseback riding. He does not care to go tishing for the reason he cannot spend a whole 'day at it.. I! ut the sports which the president dots indul-e in he enjoys and it can be expected he will make the most of the early baseball season.
SMOTHERED TO DEATH
Young Man at Ijafajetto lluricd in , Min of Oat. LA FA V i:TT i: , In d . . March ?. 1 . Joseph Heath. 22 years old, was smothered to death on his farm near Oxford Thursday while removing seed oats from a bin. The bottom of the bin gave way and Heath was buried under 11' feet of grain. Life was extinct when a rescuing" party reached him.
PUTS FRENCH HORSES IN KENTUCKY DERBY
RUSSIAN PEOPLE HAVE CONFIDENCE
Predict Retreat of German Armies From Native Soil by Fall.
International New s Service : PIITKOC.KAD. March P.l.
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Clarence Mackay. who has a reputation as an international sportsman, has entered two horses in the Kentucky Perby. For the first time in the lo years' history of the great classic, which has been the feature of the annual racing season on hurehill Iowns. Louisville. Mackay's cdors will go to the post. For a score or so of years Mr. Mackay has been a. prominent figure in racing cirv-les. not only in this country but in Kngland ac.d France as well, but particularly In the latter. The discontinuance of turf sport in France, however, has caused him to bring across the befct of his product of the Haras de Fresnay. with the result that of the four three-ar-olds wh'fh he caused to be 'io'ignt hre he has entered two. 1 .affoii''ieur and Lsprit tif (laulois, for the premier three-year-old classic of the early sear in tlie Rlue CJras state. Nt ither has as yet faced the starter, hut. ai cording to t'harles F. Hill, who has them in charge, both have shown in their trials abroad all the requisites of hiyh-i-lass thoroughbrevls. and it is considered among clo.e observers of matters e.piito. that if am line e.tn be taken thro ;h fh:r bredrng. they will hav to be let. Led wiltw
depression which followed the reverses of last summer has been conquered by the Russian people and the nation is full of new confidence which manifests itself everywhere, in the press, in public meetings and on the streets. The opening" of trie new offensive of the legions of the czar against the Herman and Austro-Hungarian tront has been awaited almost impatiently, because all classes are convinced that it will bring victory and that no enemy will be on Russian soil when fall conies. The war against Turkey is considered decided. All papers speak of Armenia as "the new Russian province" and predict the Turkish government will ask for a separate peace within two months. Russia in (iood Condition. The Course Hazettc, one . of the most conservative papers, says: "Russia today is in a better condition to bring the war to a victorious end than she was a year ago. Our army is numerically stronger than those of Germany. Austria -Hungary. RuUaria and Turkey combined and we have steadily improved our organization. The supply of guns', small arms and munitions is almost inexhaustible, thanks to the aid of our western allies, Japan and the United States. "There is no longer the slightest doubt that we can crush our enemies. Our frontier will not only be immensely extended in Asia Minor, but also to the' west. Hefore the coming summer ends a large part of Germany will be in ur possession and we may also have Constantinople, Avhich our allies Acre not able to take. ltegiii New Offensive. "The new offensive on mir westrn front may begin any moment nd is absolutely sure of success, ecause of our military superiority, nd of the fact that the Germans nd Aurians have been compelled o thin their lines to ward off erushittr defeats on their fronts in France nil on the Isonzo. "Although the lines of the enemy are thin, it will be no easy task to break them. because they are strongly fortified. Rut they will bo broken and then the retreat of the Germans and Austrians must become general. They cannot hold the territory they have invaded, and the conquered fortresses are of no use to them. "It is no vague prediction if we say that by August or September our armies will again be on German soil and the plains of Hungary. In the meantime the Germans will also be crushed in the western theater of war. but even if they should succeed in brtakir.g down th French army, that would not alter the situation as far as we are concerned. Russia is able to carry on the war alone and to win."
WASHINGTON. March SI. The Purnett immigration bill, with it? literacy test and Asiatic exclusion provisions unchanged, passed the hou?e late Thursday by a vote of r.OS to ST. It now goes to the senate, where favorable action is regarded as assured. The literacy test about which the fight against the bill was centered, was sustained to l"7. This provision has been the cause of vetoes to similar immigration bills by Pres'ts Cleveland. Taft and Wilson. The house passed the bill over the : Cleveland veto, but it failed in the : senate. Motions to override the vetoes of Pres'ts Taft ami Wilson were lost in the house by narrow i margins. Rep. Rurnett, chairman of the immigration committee, pre1 dieted tonight that there was sulfiJ cient strength to repass the bill in ! the event of another veto. The ! president has not indicated his purI pose to tlie house leaders.
.Not Party lanes. Roth records on the literacy test and on the pa-ssage of the bill, were without regard to party lines. Majority Leader Kitchin voted for the
1 literacy test and for the bill. Minorj ity Leader Mann voted against the j literacy test, and then for the bill, j The literacy test as adopted would j exclude all aliens over 1 years old.j physically capable of reading, who cannot read English or some other I language, except certain relatives of j persons already in this country and
certain classes of refugees from religious persecution. Asiatic exclusion provisions specifically bar Hindus and add to the excluded classes "persons who cannot become eligible, under existing laws, to become citizens of the United States by naturalization unless o'herwise provided for," by existing 01 future treaties, conventions or agreements. Pacific coast members were satisfied with this provision, which gives
1 legislative recognition to the exist- ; ing so-called "gentlemen's ngreej inent" with Japan for the exclusion of Japanese laborers, and the com
mittee advised the house that there was nothing offensive in the lan-
! gnage to the immigration bureau, j the state department or to any gov -j eminent. ! Throughout the house debate offiI cials of the American Federation of
Labor have been in the gallery- and Thursday they checked off the votes of members during the roll calls.
Balance of stock will post
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ilverware, etc.
o'clock after1
e many oargaros mat ar
to Ibe had in Diamonds, W atch-
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noon and 7 in tlie evenin
FREE Diamond Ring Given Away at Every Sale.
-The
Ante
ricaa Jewelry Temporary Location 122 SOUTH MICHIGAN STREET. Look for the Big Auction Signs.
Co
iki:i:: V a I ii a h I r, l'rev.-Mits Het L'i Ladie. Attending t Ii e f lernnii n sales.
"The Talk of the Town!" Ask those who have attended.
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I Buchas Gas Ranges a are economical durable and conv
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lent. The greatest feature in any gas range is to save ga Buck's ranges r.re built with this object in view infaot, the prime factor of a Buck's .Stove is to be economical You ean save enough on your gas bills to soon p.'.y for your rane. Come in and see the splendid stoes priced from Sl-.S" to 3.) .00
Simmies
IKUh IDS.
& VACUUM ICE! With Every Sailors DeLoxe Refrigerator Buy your refrigerator now get this coupon book good for 300 lbs. of Vacuum Ice you can use the book any time this summer. 25 patterns of DeLuxe Refrigerators to choose from priced Irom $7.85 to $50.00.
One of the Largest Complete Home-Furnishing Houses in Indiana. 110-112 N. MICHIGAN ST., SOUTH BEND.
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A v. ell furnish. -d hom" c: tb found. t:n i f ." happy lite. .Make vour homo asoou'tortahlo. !.! utif d. o'-nv onii-nt. h'erliil and atti.uiivo ;4j your nx-ar.s 'a ill jxrmit. , IJ'Al, honio i tli- only Iiome worth whi!A r;.OI fcrnit ur i an inv est m"nt that will return ir!v divbb-nds' in plonsure, 'nifort and . n ' i i satisfaction for ! e-y-nd its- artml oo-t jT1 bUprs and Cool forT:ituro is l)i Sailors P.ros. I.ind'
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Antarctic ice eovrs much opprr. The artichoke, which originally came from F.arbary. is not a botanical species, but a variety of the thistle, which grows spontaneously all along the African coast of the Mediterranean from Morocco to Palestine.
MATED IRON !n cremet ttrergth of
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Sellers "New Idea" Kitchen Cabinets Those who stop to realize that a Kitchen Cabinet will last a life time it properly made and that they use a cabinet three times a dav, every day in the year. Insist on a Sellers Cabinet, because they have more patented conveniences, highest quality of workmanship and finish, and cost no more than ordinary ones. We have them priced from $19.85 to $38.50.
High-Grade, Moder ale Priced Dining Suite This Suite is built to last, built of ooj material only N!id o.;k being used, and polished in Golden and fumed ( )ak
Bufiet, 44 in. lull
,324.85 45 in. diameter 1.85 ' 11
Rug Values that will Appeal to You
Wilton Velvet Ru -ize ( ft. special price only $19.85. This rug is well ma Je nf eui quality conies in floral anj oriental patterns and in many pretty ckr-
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Sailors Bros, h.iv the largest variety and the best values in the -hy. Manv different kinds of hmh-rad-Jo-Cart s and W :eker Carriaues inoiu line the famous W.iitney and oiinr n.ake. sri:n.r; A'oiit a d'-z.-n s.tyls of V.'i. ker trii'uos oA.rtd at rorr.irkabb sp-4-?al sa . i.'is. prires from si !.!." to S::..".o.
Sailors Special Sewing Machines only $19.85 Not only is ihi e-A-i:i maciiine iiie eaie-: running seVing machine in the v.-rhl. r i: .- handsomest se'i:iiC machine ever ma;: .! ps-eses supreme heaut;. ra:id -r. j a::.: a ;n rect symmetry of (, inline than anj. nc: c : ' regardless of 'name, make r price. It i- !at. It iv the very bot exing machine :n earth.. -price re S lü.nu ur S'-ojio. Tlie re is uhs -lutely he It er made.
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