South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 213, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 31 July 1916 — Page 3
irtK aUUlti BE.INU NE.W5-T1ME5
ftFTER WAR 1 !
IS ß!C QUESTIOM Readjustment of Belligerents Financially and Socially lo Be Problem. H.V Honry ( lows. -Tlmr Sjflni rrl 'i: NIIW YOIIK. July 31. Funla-w-ntül conditions are littl chiriKod. the war still 0Vf rrulin- all other conhidtrations. That .the struggle is drawing to its clo.i every one he-hfvf-s. but the date and the terms of jeaee are as much a matter of cupsswork as ever. The war misht end much earlier than anticipated. i-ro-Mded some sreat event occurred tending In that direction. It is to honed that prognostication that the end will come with the new ear will prove correct; hut such anticipations are almost too Rood to he true, and the strudle Is fjuite likely to bo carried into the corning year, Judpinj? by present resisting power of the (Icrmans. The latter will in nome respects prow in trenKth as their forces contract and fall hack upon undevastated country, supplied with rood railroad service and nearer the source of supplies. On the other hand, jus the allies press forward they leave behind them nothinn but chaos, their supplies become more and more distant, and trattic routes will be temporarily demoralized. Hence should the allies continue their present rate of success, real prore.cs for them w.. become more and more diJlicult us the ar.i-ies move forward. This week marks the second anniversary of the war. Conditions have vastly changed during the interval. At the beinnin the Germans were overwhelmingly on the atrro-Hive. Now the centra! powers are on the defensive nl driven back in every direction, while allied preparedness is becoming equally overwhelming on every Fide. Thus far the cost of the war to all the belligerents has been over 40 billion dollars, and about $1,300,l00,U0O of this amount was raised by loans in the United States. Should the struggle last another year, as expected by Kitchener, the outlay will run up to between 60 and 70 billions; a sum utterly beyond ordinary comprehension. IV-aee still seems a long way off, and when hostilities ease months must elapse before any treaty ot peace will be actually signed. After vr What? After the war what? This question is beginning to occupy public attention quite as much as the war itself. No mind Is farsighted enough to predict the outcome with any certainty, for in such stupendous upheavals it is the unexpected which usually happen:?. That great social iind political changes are impending in Europe nobody doubts, probably in the direction of lessening class differences and placing the control of political power and wealth more and more in the hands of the great middle dashes. The whole trend the world over is to place more and more power over individuals and industries in I nds of the government; at the same time putting control of the government still more in the hands of the people and less in control of the aristocracy. In brief, democracy will receie a tremendous impetus from war; and, while the change, whether It comes rapidly or slowly, will be disturbing, still to those who have real faith in the ultimate progress of civilization the outcome will bo welcome, in the firm hope of a new era of peace and social advancement. Ionmtc i:haustioii. A great many careful and experienced observers look for a period of excessive prostration among the betlligerents after the war. That there will be a period of severe economic exhaustion, need not be questioned, but nt a few of the prophets of distress have underestimated the recuperative powers of the great nations. Great Britain, for instance, is undergoing a terrific strain in financing not only her own huqe navy and army but also in the finanFOUR DOCTORS DISAGREED Pains Disappeared After Use of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. ' wnmlrtfrton. IJ. "1 was miff erlng from a terrttd tcurKa-che and ptuns in my ride, wun bearing down pain and waj very nervoti. I wjä always tired. f ICTi til always drwsy. A 17.y f. rwvor oould get enough sleep and could not e-t- I had fwir tioctom and each told me Boroethin; different. I read of Lydia E. Ilnkh.im's Vpt&le C-nrounl and dMd"d to try It. lot jrvioxl resrultH and 1 now feel ietUr than I have felt for year3 osui I km ri-inlnc n weight. I can gladly leoornmend it to all women." Mrs. r.eorve V. SeboM. Uli West 4ti Street. Wll-n! nerton. Tel. D.-cKache ami Urinr down pMr.3 fcrr dÄivjrer ainals which every won.an should hisxt. Kemovo tht caim rT th.es ajhe3 and paana by tkla Lydia L llrk!nr retn.ble Compound, that rood old root ar.d hrr n.eilcine. Thousjind of wmen havo te?tlf!d t. its virtues. For forty years it has been nuklnr women strong, curing bttckaohe. iifno'.isnes?, ul erition arni Inflajnjixatin. weakness, displ.-vcecnents, lrriTulHrliy nnd rncutr jLin. If )iiu Mant -jH-.ial adilot writ' I.jdl.V I!, llnkhmn MetlWHnc Co., confj.Untlal, Lynn Miwvj. Advt.
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cial aid given h r aliie.-s. I'nglaiid's j rf'Mnin s are not fonbned to hr J own ilar.d. l-ut must be measured j al.o by the enormo.is rts-mrces of
her colomt'S, h r n".-f i n Mi-i.t ahroad. and the fact that her imr i j -n inlustii-s and .t-a-lmrri coiomorce liae continued with little interruption. A nation carrying nearly one-half the trade of th world and controlling such vast resources outside of hersHf is not likely to sonnnslv crirmled bv contest with powers of much inferior resuurcv .-t. j fircat Hritain will probably come out) of the war in better condston than any f the bellii;Tents. She willj probably emerge an empire solidified, awakened, strengthened and more powerful than ever. IJeyonJj question the war h is welded the empire into a unit as nothing else could rpon Germany, however, the blow is likely to fall with much greater severity. German financial resources do not compare wtih the British. Her foreign commerce, which, ranged second in th world, will be ery seroiusly crippled. Atter the war grae lisal problems will require the skill of her best tinanciery if she is to escape national troubles. Germany may also he threatened with momentous .oti.il and political readjutsments. and should the allies impose heavy burdens her recovery may be relatively slow. Yet it must be remembered the recuperative powers of Germany are great. Her people have a wonderful genius for organization, scientific thoroughness, hard work and economy, and may be depended upon to strain every nerve for the restoration of national prestige. Her territory has not and may not be devastated by war. Her mills and her railroads are practically intact, and it is doubtful if the allies, even if successful, will ever make any perceptible inroads upon (Icrman soil. Germany's resourcefulness will be put to the greatest test imaginable, all the more surely because of the awful waste of life and skilled labor, but there is not the slightest doubt that she will make marvelous efforts towards recuperation. To Uevowr Kapidly. France and Italy may also be expected to recover more rapidly than anticipated in the present state of public opinion. Only a comparatively small strip of France has been destroyed; a valuable strip, it is true, but the injuries are of a sort that can l quickly repaired, and 12 months of reconstruction in. France will work miracles in the present regenerative temper of her people. The same will be true of Italy, provided the northern section of that country is preserved from invasion. Russia has been slightly hurt by the war. She is too vast, and has too large a population to fel the conflict very seriously. Russia is not a rich country except in undeveloped natural resources; but her more wealthy allies are able to give her abundant financial aid, and after the war Oewlopment on an enormous scale may be expected in Russia, in which the United States will undoubtedly have a share. In all of these countries, therefore, we may safely look for recovery from depression within a reasonable period after the resumption of peace, because these nations p...;sess great genius, high spirit and vast natural resources which are only awaiting r.ew d- "elopment. All thiee of these countries will be literally born again, history proving that Great Hritain. Germany and France have quickly recovered from struggles finite as severe relatively as the preseTrt. The snune can hardly be said of Austria-Hungary, the Balkan states or Turkey. These nations do not possess the at tributes just referred to. and some of them are decadent. For them a longer period of exhaustion is probably in store; and their irroblems. especially those of the Balkans, wil be found far more difficult of adjustment than those of the other great Kuropenn powers. GIVEN UP AS LOST, SEA CAPTAIN RETURNS HOME Spends Tliroo Dajs ami Nifrhts Without I'mh1 on lLand A ft or Wreck. .PHILADELPHIA. Pa.. July :;L Given up by hi family as lost. Capt Christian Jensen arrived here Sunday night with four other survivors of the wrecked barge Northwest, after clinging to the wreckage of his vessel for -is hours and spending three- days and night without food on ?andy Point island, off the South Carolina coast. When the mariner reached home he found his family in mourning. The Varge Northwest, accompanied by her sister craft, ilv Son.'hwest. left Philadelphia on July with coal for Jacksonville in tow with the tug Wellington. About eight miles off Cape Romaine on July 13. the ess-els were caught in the southern hurricane. The barges broke their towing hawsers, and both were quickl lost to sight. Within a short time the Northwest went to piei-fs. The sailors were hurled into the sea and drifted about for two days and nights until they were washed high up on the beach of Sandy Point island. At the end of the third day on the island one of the seamen swam to the Cape Romaine lighthouse several miles away and a boat was sent to rescue Jensen and h:s companions. All oi board the barge Southwest were drowned. FARMERS HUNT FOR GIRL Valah Ii- IUdie-tI t llae lUvn kiilnapixNl. WAI'ASH. Ind.. July Following the disappearance of the 1 1y ear-old daughter of Hiram I'usse. a wealthy farmer, many farmers Sunday night were Searching three counties for the girl, who Is believed to have been kidnaped. Moodhounds have been sent for iL an effort to trax.e her.
Text of Note of Protest on Blacklist
"The announcement that Hi. Rritannio Majesty's gov ernment has placed the names of certain pesons, firm.s and corporations in the I'nited States upon a prescriptive 'blacklist' and has forbiddc-a all financial or commercial dealings between them and citizens of Grrat Britain has been received with the most painful surprise by the people and government of the United States and seems to the government of the United States to embody a policy of arbitrary interference with neutral trade against which it is its duty to protest in the most decided terms. The scope and effect of the policy are extraordinary. British steamship companies will not accept cargoes from the proscribed firms or persons or transport their goods to any port, and steamship lin-s under neutral ownership understand that if they accept freight from them they are likely to be denied coal at British ports and excluded from other privileges which they have usually enjoyed, and may themselves be put on the blacklist. Neutral bankers refuse to answer to those on the list and neutral merchants decline to contract for their goods, fearing like proscription. It appears that British officials regard th prohibitions of the blacklist as applicable to domestic commercial transactions in foreign countries as well as in Great Hritain and her dependencies, for Americans doing business in foreign countries have been put on notice that their dealings with blacklisted firms are to be regarded as subject to veto by the British government. By the same principle Americans in the I'nited States might be made subject to similar punitive action if they were found dealing with any of their own countrymen whose names had thus been listed. Disastrous M fleets Obvious. "The harsh and even disastrous effects of this policy upon the trade of the United States and upon the neutral rights upon which it will not fail to insist are obvious. Upon the list of those prescribed and in effect shut out from the general commerce of the world may be found American concerns which are engaged in large commercial operations a.s importers of foreign products and materials and as distributors of American products and manufactures to foreign countries and which constitute important channels through which American trade reaches the outside world. Their foreign affiliations may have been fostered for many years, and when once broken cannot easily or promptly be reestablished. Other concerns may be put on the list at any time and without notice. It is understood that additions to the prescription may be made 'whenever on account of enemy nationality or enemy association of such persons or bodies of persons it appears to his majesty expedient to do so. The possibilities of unde served injury to American citizens from such measures, arbitrarily taken, and of serious and incalculable interruptions of American trade are without limit. "It has been stated on behalf of his majesty's government that their measures were aimed only at the enemies of Great Britain and would be adopted and enforced with strict regard to the rights of neutrals and with the least 'possible detriment to neutral trade, but it is evident that they are inevitably nnl essentially inconsistent with the rights of the citizens of all the nations not involved in war. The
Scene of the New Russian Drive
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i l Kovel, the railroad center which is an imiortant goal of the new Russian drive in Volhj-nia and Calicia. (2) The Styr river, scene of violent lighting. T ) Vladimir Volynski. a Teuton stronghold. (4) Lesnzrow, a vital ;Kint in the Russ advance, iö) Brody, one of tiie imiortant towns new directly menaced (C) Lemberg, capital of Caücia, and Russian goal.
goernment of the United States legs to remind the government of his Britannic majesty that citizens of the United States are entirely within their rights in attempting to trade with the people or the government of any of the nations now at war. fubject only to well-defined international practices and understandings which the government of the United States deems the government of Great Britain to have too highly and too frequently disregarded There are well known lcmedies and penalties for breaches of blockade where the blockade is real and in fact effective, for trade
in contraband, for every unneu Val act bv whomsoever attempw d. The government of the United States cannot consent to se those remedies and penalties altered or extended at the will of a single power or group of powers to the injury of its own citizens or in derogation of its own rights. Conspicuous among the principles which the civilized nations of the world have accepted for the safeguarding of the rights of neutrals is the just and honorable principle that neutrals may not be condemed nor their goods confiscated except upon fair adjudication and after an oppor tunity to lie heard in prize courts or elsewhere. Such safeguards the blacklist brushes aside. It condemns without hearing without notice and in advance. It is manifestly out of the question that the government of the United States should acquire in such methods or applications of punishment to its citizens. "Whatever may be suid with regard to the legality, in the icw of international obligation of the act of parliament upon which the practice of the blacklist as now employed by his majesty's government is understood to be based, the government of the United States is constrained to regard that practice a inconsistent with that true justice, sincere amity, and .mpartial fairness which should characterize the dealings of friendly rovernments with one another. The spirit of reciprocal trade '.etween the Cnited States anil Great Britain, the privilege long accorded to the nations of each to come and go with their ships and cargoes, to use each the other's shipping and be served each by the other's merchants is very serioesly impaired by arbitrary and sweeping practices such a.s this. There is no purpose or inclination on the part of the government of the United States to shield American citizens or business houses in any way from the legitimate consequences of unneutral acts or practices; it is quite willing that they should suffer the appropriate penalties which international law and the usage of nations have sanctioned; but his Britannic majesty's government cannot expect the government of the United States consent to see its citizens put on exparte blacklist without calling the attention of his majesty's government, in the gravest terms to the many serious consequences to neutral right and, neutral relations which such an act must necessarily involve. It hopes and believes that his majesty's government, in its natural abborence in a single pressing object of policy, ha. acted without a full realization of the many undesired and undesirable results that might ensue." Dr. Uaxson has removed his dental otlice from 120 S. Michigan street to room 4 20 Farmers Trust building. Adv. Kansas has S54.67& male inhabitant ?.
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BE 1 SAYS GERMANY Foreign Office Declares That It Is Impossible for Allies to Win War. International News Service" BERLIN, July Öl. "Building upon -wnat sne Tia? atreaJy achieved. Germany treads the threshold of the third year of fhe war with unshaken confidence, but the goal has not yet been reached, for th? enemy has not yet come to see the impossibility of subjugating Germany." The foregoing is the concluding paragraph of a statement issued, by thr German foreign otlice in which the causes, course and future of the war is discussed from a political standpoint. Germany accuses the allies of full responsibility for the conllict, declaring that Russia and Italy seek to expand their frontiers; that England tights, for the commercial supremacy of the world, and that France was led into the maelstrom by the passion of revenge. The statement, after uttering these accusations, continues: "In England, too. the mask has been dropped. It is openly admitted that Belgium was only a pretext to justify England's participation in the war, which was undertaken only for self-interest. "Germany must be destroyed. Germany shall never again raise her head economically nor militarily. In this way is the goal of our enemy more clearly enunciated during the second year of the war. It is equally char that the talk of a struggle of democracy against militarism is only a catchword used by our enemies to create sentiment and to cloak outwardly their real purpose of destruction." The foreign office declares that even after the conllict of arms ends the allies will wage a world-wide economic war which will not permit the world to come to rest on a basis of peaceful competition. As to neutral rights, the statement says this: "Out of regard for the rights of neutrals. Germany relinquished for the present one of her most effective weapons (the submarine) against the enemy, although she was compelled to wage a life and death struggle." SPLENDID CROPS FOUND TO BE READY IN GERMANY Clear Hot Summer Weather Insure Cianicrins of INmmI for Next 12 Month. International News Serve: .BEKLIX (via Lcndon), July 31. After many weeks of cloudy weather. with a super-abundant rainfall and cool rights, clear hot sinner weather, has ruled everywhere in Germany this week. The change came most opportunely, as the German harvest had begun and sunshine was needed to insure the garnering of the splendid crops. All reports from arricultural districts are of a decidedly optimistic character and create the general impression that the problem of feeding Germany during the next 12 months will be decidedly easier than in the last year. This opinion is reinforced by the crop conditions in the occupied territory which will be able to contribute a surplus above the wants of the native population for export to Germany. This will be especially true in the case of Courland. where the Associated Press correspondent this week found splendid crops nearing harvest, which has been planted by German troops on an extended held that had been almost wholly destroyed by the military operations during the German offensive of 191G. HEAT CLAIMS SEVEN MORE INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., July HI. Seven additional deaths due to heat were reiorted Sunday in Indiana and four more prostrations were recorded in Indianapolis. Three of the seven deaths were at Gary, making a total of 1C for that city. Two were claimed at Lafayette and one at Goshen. The highest temperature of the heat wave In Indiana was unofficially registered at Gary at 2 p. m., the temperature being 11 G degrees. The maximum here today was 90. The provernment weather forecaster here could see no relief for Monday. EX-G. A. R. HEAD DIES (Jen. lt. B. Hrown DUtiniruislHtl Ciil War Veteran. ZANESVILLE. O., July .11. Gen. K Ii. Drown, "2, past commander in chief of the grand army of the republic, and widely known as a distinquished civil war veteran and newspaper editor, died at 3:20 o'clock Sunday afternoon at his home in this city following a protracted illness of stomach trouble. For conspicuous bravery at Missionary Ilidge. Gen. Ilrown was awarded a medal by congress. TRANSLATE U. S. ANSWER Iteply on Mexl-an Situation Ciitcn to Carninza. MEXICO CITY. July CI. The uuser of the United States government, accepting the proposal for a conference concerning relations with Mexica, was translated into Spanish today and submitted to Gen, Carranza. France is stimulating attention to gardenic?.
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r 75 c Waists, A Middies at . ÖyC Plain, striped voile wai?ts, Middies of drill Qwith coupon ?'.h f 1.50 Crepe kJ Kimonos . . JfV 39c j u omens long serpenOtino crepe kimonos, in beautiful Ileal designs all si7,es. W Infants' 75c A O O Chesses at . HOC Q WTliite nainsook short drt'sses; embroidery Sr O lace trimmed. 0 75c Env. 3 tf Chemise . . . J C o Women's E n v e 1 o pe O demise, emb. trimm d; all sizes. O XtticoaU ..C v Hie striped gingham and blue chambray; 4rw wide bottom. j Wom's 35c -K Union Suits 19c Fine ribbed, low Q short sleeves, length, taped. neck, knee 34c jt Brassieres Perfect J) quality; all size,s fitting, finest embroidered ; O 75c Muslin f Petticoats . 39c -w Dcep emb. flounce, full cut; also grown; lace and emb. trimmed. To $5.00 Dresse?; . 1.39 Ore table of women's and misses' Wash q Dresses; all new styles O o o o o o o o These Items on Sale 8:30 to 10 A. M. Jlontion's Talcum Powder Jc Wom's ;?." Miiv. Drawer 17c JOe Iare Turk. Towel S'c Wom's STc dial. Kim'o :57c I -I ric fc cake Toi. Soap He Wom's fOc Sum. Corset JHc
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Here we have a picture of a fellow, both eye cloeJ. blazing awav into a dense flock of birds. Now, we "suppose there ARE chaps who could miss an old mulev cow at ten paces But, when the game ilies as thick as THESE bird- fly. it is merelv a matter of PULLING the TRIGGER! Unless "vour im is LOADED with FEATHERS, you r.re bound 'to drop SOME! The NEWS-TIMES is read every day by between -Io.uOü and 50.000 people. If you WANT a thing, make the fact KNOWN! How in the world would it be POSSIBLE for VOL' t clearly express ANY honest, legitimate WANT to these thousands of readers, all of them human and interested in much the SAME things that YOU are, without hitting a responsive chord SOMEWHERE ;
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