South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 181, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 30 June 1917 — Page 4
sATi nnw atti. i:oov. .ttm; r.n. ni7
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
Morning Evening Sun Jay. NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO., Publishers. - IL SUMMKIiS. I'mi.nt. J. M. S7 HPIIKN'SON. ".Umarr. JOHN HKNRY ZL'VIIir, K3!tor.
(Vaiu.it it. and that is that this aforesaid Mies "corre-
spomlent" seems to ai'pr'ivc f what he in juoted a" y.iywiir. 'ir..l armies that it was perfectly rijf ht and proper only more s.o. He lasse the American So-:al;.-t along with Vieri' k's m'tcazin. and urges their admi--ion to our exenange table, which is enough.
; Socialists c;tr.r,"t afford to have their rarty classed
?!?ÄWÄuVffÄÄrÄ "M any rrect
fcuth lWnd-Iwo LeaU Wirr; Dar nd MLt.
Home I'hnn 1141.
Off ire: 210 W. Cfix At.
Bll Ifiune 2100.
here ;n Aiihtu .1, any more than they tan afiord to l'f r; sm 1 with thi I. W. W. I ia y of the American order, at least, doesn't need to all upon 'Jermany or Vi'-rick's for any interpretation of what jt n'.caiiM. It doesn't need any pro-
olvice. It il"o.-n t mean the mob, nor mob
Cali at tbe ofT'r or tcdeph-- nTr rrin-VT irel .-.' for Cfpartrat wnntM notorial. A'ivTtUl. .'Iralnttoo. or ArrouDtlEi. Vor "want arlv" if .ru- raia.e 1 In Hi. tephrne
Cirertory. till win b- m! l after .D-rf. n l-p-rt In-itten- , ( .f rn.;in
Ulplrn -ri. Mr. to ti- tl of .l-pirtrr n with wM,h you ; r ub-. These ar.- ery extraordinary time., and democ
are dealirijf. 1l9 . -Tin.- )im t.Mrt"-ri tr:iU 5 .-. l or Lich rfp.;n4 to Horn Plön 111 -.n ! P"'.l -1'.
1 i peupl- to hm" th"'ir governors, and to say under what
M-rr.'.riff and nre-.ir.z nation, , , i o.n hv h-n .. fff,ti.rnrt Thfsp
1" vM.lr.fi r.'iitl'iD " -..o ...... ...... ...... v.
:f mors are chosen anl the rules and regulations laid
ra ; m'.ir,s dem rac y. It mean. first, the rieht of the
prnscRirTioN katis:
r!ni. uitir 2r-- Sur., r. .V- Mornlrur - r
lly. inrluiir,? Suniny. t null. .; vt",r !n !"'vaf,,'e ',
Mivfred riT r,irrr In S vth Hnd MUViw:ik;i. - uo er;
y-r in danre er 12- 1 wk. Kctered at tbe South
ai fcostoüU as aecni.d rl ruill.
dow n iy th-' ( or..-' T.t of the majority. They may not jr-rf' t. lxit if anyone thinks the kair would treat
A I VT. RT I s ING K.ITKH: A.k th, ndr.rtutn ;,,rtnt t h.-m any hMtrr. they oucht to cros the brine and join r.-r!n Ad.rrtUir.c i:ppfsTMtlvn : OiNK. I.nKKNZKN ihifji. We ar hilf inclined to hclicve Uncle .am would
.vijfi ntAN. 22.1 Fifth AT. Nvk rk it v. rvl A'lT. :ig .
ilrao
Tbe Newa-TltTiH f!,(lMTom t kfr. it ! vert:üK crant tliem sale pa.-J-ace as iar as me ;irsi sumnanue
folumn frf- fror frau iulr.t rilsrpr'-ntatn Any t,,,r,'n i.,. i,
- f any ;idf:: vraf-nt in t'j:a!'1'- "
defrauded t.ruga pitroh
cotcpletelj.
napr mnfer & f.iror cu the maiiagf aunt ry r'i 'rtmg i-
(act
JUNIi 3o, 19 1 7.
our lihorties l.r-in? threatened!" Huh! The only
! reason that this I. W. W.-i?m is permitted in the I nited
Statr-s is that wo tolorato too many kinds of liberty. In the Germany that it professes to love, or anywhere
Who's Who Behind the Scenes in the War Army 11Y GCOIUii: (iAKVIN.
i..F. c;i:. T.sKi;it ii. ni.is .itaiit C'liiei" of ;'iieral StafT. Horn in iVan.-yh ania, lec. 21, Is..::, and appointed to the military academy from that state in 1 7 1 . He t om.ni.-sior.ed a second lieutenant in the lirst artillery on June 1 Is",. He gained another pi:ide in tiiat branch of the service and in lsfS he was made a lieutenant colonel of volunteeres and was later promoted to the rank of brigadier general of volunteers. In l!0j he '.vas made a bricadier general in the ituular establishment.
THE MELTING POT COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.
I e..f-
SUFFRAGE OPPONENTS AND WOMEN.
w;ie prh.ips some parts of IH's.-ia. they would in
tirn's like these, be i-tood up atrainst the wall and shot.
Just nuw w!k'I1 Indiana, women are smattiir under the la.-h of that Indiarap(dis Miperior o at juri.-t who would lash froi-i them t h o pnvibe of (tini; !or constitutional convention delegates and pfrh.ap-; pave th way for annulling their votes altogether in th- state. we urge them to be calm; be calm. Who k :ou but that Jurltt is quite ( hivalrous after all. The up things that letral and political ftpponents to s'IIiaK' lae to ?j about women sometimes is real srrumptuo.is. mon;' the more friendly t''vaid w"in n. and lier legal and politi-."l rights, there is a t -nsiderable spi ink-
llll Ui V II l it iliK 1 I iU'- ll .1 U.- l lli l lO Sil. I
to her, occasionally. Horn -tim'-.s the er .ion arise" early in the morning, wh.n there's urgent ne es.-ity to draw her attention away from the prevailim; odor of cloves, or coh'ee beans, or mint. n other ocrasion there's natural soul-pressure that inspires verbal expression of her (p.ialities. The Indianapolis juri-t, no. he may not ha e even thought it, and he certainly did not rerite it in his opinion, but here is something from a member ff the I'lorida leeislatui o. spoken from the t!oor when the suffrage bill was up down there, which ve would commend t all men, jurist, politician, or otherwise, who wants to smooth over any thorny paths, leadir.:; to the feminine heart. , Head it over, commit it to memory, we would say.
' ll'anama make it possjbp- to raise many crops of the
nn nine remain.'; out In trust in the .oiil :11m taker
PANAMA'S FOOD CROPS. Panama, it is claimed, could feed an army if ;ts three greatest needs were met. Those needs are transportation facilities, immigration and apital. There lias recently been a commission from Panama in Washi tit,' ton presenting Panama's case and seeking means to
J remedy the defects. ! Panama's largest and most profitable crop wouid I be bananas. The eastern i oa.st of Panama alone could Ir iUi. ..ni.n:i)i t , ointilv fniir l,.in;ir.,is dailv to everv man.
t , , iwviB r I J " - - - -. - woman and child in the I'nited states. It costs only ? P an acre to clear, plant and cultivate a banana plantation the tirst ear, and 1 m an acre for several succeeding years. one acre yields about two hundred
j bu nches of the Iruit.
There are other crops, too, in which Panama could excel. The number of crops that might be raised on one field in a single vear is almost incredible. Corn ami bananas may be planted in the same field in November. There wouid be toasting ears in March and bananas in June. As soon as the latter are harvested, potatoes may be planted for harvesting in September.
jinio;is planted after the potatoes were out, would be ready by the end of November. The total output for J that year would then be twelve thousand pounds of j banana?, two thousand pounds of corn, six thousand j pounds of potatoes and three thousand pounds of 'onions. Not a lad jield for one acre.
The variation in soil, elevation and rainfall of
WASHINGTON. June 29. Gen. Pdiss is now acting chief of the general staft because of the absence of Gen. Huuh I., .cott. military head of the American commissiem to Uus sia. As chief of the general staff. Gen. Hlis is military adviser to the secretary of war. and it is his job to plan and see that the administration's plans for the participation of the force of the I'nited states in the yreat war are executed.
Pefore being assigned to his pres- ,
ent post Gen. Miss fame into prominence while military governor of Mandanao, one of the islands in the Philippine group, where he successfully subdued the rebillious tribes, lie was succeeded at that past b Prig. (.Jen. John J. Pershing, now a major general and in France at the head of the first American army to participate in the war against Prus-sianism.
The Stars Incline, but do not compel
HOROSCOPE
vhut'ti coming: "When God made woman he sent his ar.uel r.;e-seners throughout all the starlit realm.-, of space to gather al' there was of beauty, brightness, enchantment and divinity. When those angels had returned from their harve.-ting of beau! and laid their glittering burdens" at His feet. He began in their pre.-encc, the work of fashioning her. "He wrought with the gold and glow of the Ftar-shining glories of a rainbow's hues and the pallid silver of a southern moon. "He wrought with crimson perfume that wooned in the ro.-e's rubied hart, with pare, sweet Snow a-glisten from the lily's white crest and the fires and t'.ames that like Hashes leap from the jewel's depth. "Then, fclancing deep into Iii own bosom. He took the love which gleamed there like pome rare pearl beneath the wind-ki.-.-ed waves of a summer sa. made this into ,a human form, and all heavn bowed its head and veiled its face, for b: He had wrought woman."
tropics as well as some of those of the temperate zone.
With all this in mind, we cannot fail to wish the Panama commission all success in its undertaking.
MEXICO IS GOOD. Have you read the news from Mexico? Probably not. There i-n't any. Hut that fact alon Is. properly considered, so big a piece of news that it might almost justify some enterprising paper getting out an extra on the strength of it. Can't you just hear the newsboys shouting, "Extry extry all about nothin' doin" in Mexie "'.' Hecause no news from Mexico is always good new?. And for weeks we haven't heard anything from that
source aoout revolutions ami massacres ana rains on
American ranches or towns and defiance of Uncle Sam. Villa and 'arran.a and the rest are wondrously ejuiet, ami all Mexico seems to be most amazingly concerned in minding its own business. Why this sudden outburst of eloquent silence and eruption of good behavir? Perhaps Uncle Mini's war preparations against Germany explain it. We were too proud to Ms ht the Mexicans. They were convinced that they themselves could lick us out of our boots. Now that they have seen us declare war against
the most powerful nation in the world, and appropriate A? an honest chronicler of facts, we have to report ' $7."(m.rea.n0" to start with, and register ten million that, after delivering the above, this l'i' iida legislator 1 men for army service, and undertake to have two milvoted against the till for woman's suffrage. Hut that j Ii" under arms within a vear. and subscribe $2,00t,. doe?n't matter. His speech i full of possibilities ,,f ;'"'"('. efo for war bonds when only $ J.ooo.noo.noo was great usefulness, and the point is to .-ivc it widespread ' asked for. and give the Ited c'ross oxer $100,000.000, publicity so that it may reach the needy. We have no 'and arrange to build several million tons of ships and hesitation in saying that this detailed a count of worn-) tens of thousands of airplanes, and incidentally feed an'S creation m ty touch the spot, when that old n5' ;iP(1 arm all the allied nations vvt!'., tpty have seen a story "would te completely inefficacious-, even dangerou--. 1 licht. And they rather think they'll stop petering
"rade for a while.
I. W. W.-IZED SOCIALISM ACAIN. Now, we guess we'll be -luict. We nave been told in no uncertain landabe, bv one blatherskite of Niles.
ONLY ONE PERSON THAT COUNTS.
:i this p1d
S. c'y Hak er pointed out a useful dis-tinc tion the other
and several ,jav. when an interviewet- asked him about his "personal
exactly w here . i ge t M
other business, ir.cludir.-. for ln-t.m.e. our i rem attitude" toward the war, in the Jight of his previous to the arrest of John Z'mr.u i mar.. Sunday night, t- r j a c i n t principles. alleg. d seditious, treasonable, or some other kind of : - persons and personalities count for little in this soap-box utterance. I: . - -vot rt sporn!, U" wei.-n't ! kinl ,,f organized national effort." answered the war such a tonsummate ass. with h; arar. b.'.stj pro g, r- ' sv I t tlU . "Theie is but one real person involved, and mar.ism gone to m ed. we would pnr.t his letter, but if ; that is the composite people of the United States. They "it is a waste of lather to shae an as". vh..t mi.-t it , h.t e expressed the ir political philosophy throuKh the.
le to c;e wariH l notoriety t-. a slobbering id:d? j president, and ate organized as one man to vindicate It is the sam- old I. W. W. i-:a par.oiir..; m the dis- j that phibs phy." guise of socialism, an.', citb.r too ? am '.e s. or t,,o It would be well if all our con cre.-srnen and oiher knavish to discern the .lift rer.ee. A r.v tiling 1: e so- men with puidi po.ver in their hands could get that cialisir. m a di-organizing n;b.oi-m; d si i :. .p of all ' idea thoroughly into tlieir heads. We have been treat-
constituted autb'Tlt
If tlire is aii) iristiti. t :n under ol latelv to the ininspirmg spntacleof too manv orhce-
the 5jr. that would demand
st: o
ernnier.t. it is and i f o-;
li an sn-t;tut;on ia..hr snaoialism
cratical'.v i. w. v.ul.tr rule.
consent : l :
governed at 1 th ill do th -:. per s thit it ,.r.s t..o rn i.
te j ist , , j We a:e t
, uni: riisiere r 1 1 1 a i r . in
es. : ut there a own a e . 1 " o m it !;! - It is i
:-r (( .r..';;ol gov -1 1 i e s ; . t , N , , : j , i 0 !t mi Cht be dem-
a;:i it floia ts c ra i is ; . ! -v crnir.' r.t 1 "
la
leis taking the center ot the national stage and
L.ot-r'."i. :it
.ist bave the ; v - i r. ! g i ' :' e ( a culd re-
1 pat-r.-alis!
I ... 1
; n l a 'uiai
Mlcal h'l'U ! : o- tb...:
at ed i ei h t ps. . ..t iv i!e ge of s a :::g v. h-a so. lalism's - i eat 1 in
to., rv.u- ii go-, eminent: a k-'.'V -rnment th.at would
r a i;e : .
that h- iias i-t-ei. .o talk. W i...v- to
ise.i or t I-" t l;c w i : f ! o v . r -.
airing their personal vievv: and later on, airing their personal explanations of those personal iews and the re by obM ru . ti r. g imperative legislation and retarding th.-- i.iuiirhmt- o; ; procram cm which the country is almost unanimously agreed. We h ee a more popular name for what the scholarly sc retaiv calls "the composite pec pie of the United States1, it s "l ml,. Sam". And Uncle cares precious little abo ;t tb.e purelv personal attitude of any indl- : 1 ;al. in ot-.ce r out of it. What he wants is action He wants h:s decisions translated into prompt deeds. And no public man t. unts except as he registers those , rational de. '.sior.-- and helps make them ffective.
SATl IIDAV. JIM: IUI". Good and evil divide power this day, according to astrology. The sun and Jupiter rule strongly for the welfare of man, while Venus and Neptune are mildly adverse. It is ii time to push all large business affairs, especially those with foreign countries where aid from government heads is needed. Russia has sway making for great enterprises, which may be letarded by national events of sinister im
port. South America has a leading that should benefit the United States. This should be a lucky government for quests for positions or appointments. It is a fortunate rule under which to p.ok for work. Women are not likely to be so fortunate under this configuration as men, hut in the coming weeks they v ill prosper financially wherever they seek employment. Theaters have an uncertain rule. They are subject to c hanging condi'ions that will greatly alter methods of business and general policies concerning days. Fame for new managers and young players will be gained not alone on the stage in the next year. Diplomatic problems of greatest importance relating to allies with one of whom the United States may be at variance, are presaged. Congress continues under a planetary government that seems to promise many exciting incidents and tendencies toward lack of harmony. Danger of sudden deaths is believed to be increased during the next few weeks. Again the need of extreme cleanliness in person and care to prevent food contamination in cities is emphasized. Kpidemics that affect children are foreshadowed and these may srve to encourage vigilance on the part of healt'n authorities. The east will suffer more than the west. Persons whose birthdate it is should be careful of new enterprises and of false friends.
Children born on this day probably will be exceedingly clever, original in thought and enterprising. Girls may not be happy in marriage, but they will probably be brilliant and beautiful as well as exceedingly temperamental. (Copyright. 1M7.)
MI INTAL MOHUSTV. The world is full ed people w ith opinions loud and firm. In stating anything they always use the strongest term. They offer their convictions in an overwhelming shout That leaves no young and struggl'u; possibility of doubt. They have the truth immaculate, extremely purified, For vvhi'-h a thirsting world has very long and vainly su?hed. Hut truth remains a polypcn. Each side of u is true. It varies with each varying and shifting pojnt of view-. The people who are positive and jo not care to see The facet; of the truth which show themselves to you and me Declare that they have foun 1 it all and vigorously hoot The citizens who olfer contradiction or dispute. My friend, it is a very sad and scientific fact That little human knowledge; is conclusive and exact. Your brother has opinions which are greatly to his taste? Then do not pooh them from his mind in blithe and airy haste. We duly recognize that you're intelligent and bricht. Hut have not vet acknowledged jour monopoly of hght, Arthur Brooks Baker. LiTTLi: non mrs Hy William 1 Kirk. The sun was shining on Pas hed j during the week, sed Ma. I thot
you always sed you reemembered everything you did the nite befoar. Now you doant reemember what you did with yure munny or the three f 1 OKS. What three dogs? sed Pa. He was kind of white. The three hoamless dogs that fol-
wen he cairn to breakfust this morn
ing. What a hutiful morning, sed Ma. see how the morning sun gliels the domes of the city, sed Ma, vi my husband's dome or cu-pola. Ma sed. You are in grate spirits this A.
M.. sed Pa. How much munnv did'
you find on the floor this morning? Not a cent, sed Ma, but I feel happy beekaus my generus husband gaiv me so much munnv last nite wen he caim in from the lodge. You deer boy. srl Ma. lud I give you munny Lest nite? sed Pa. e f course you did, set! Ma. Poant be pretend-ing that you dident, you deer boy. What a big hart you hav e. sed Ma . Wait a minute, sed Pa, let me think. I am trying to remember, sed Pa. You are sure I gaiv you munny last nite. Yes indeed, sed Ma. x- you stuffed littel Hohbie's bank full too. You was talking t' yurself all the time vou was doing it, too, sed Ma, you deer old Santy Claws. I may be a Santy Claws, s-d Pa. but sumthing is wrong with my memory about best nite. What did I say wen I gaiv this munny to you tvl- Hohbie. You sed only one thing oaver ÖV eavtr. sed Ma. it was a cute Uttel jingcl. Ma sed. like this. Hi Hum. Hi Ho! Uesy cum V.- cesy go!
I see, sed Pa. 1 was kidding myself. Keesy cum, I doant think, sed Pa. I worked hard for that munny. You can have part of it back
lowed you hoam last nite, sed Ma. I suppose thay thot you was hoamless. too. Did I bring three docs hoam last nite? sed Pa. Maybe this is all a joak. Pa sed. If you think it is a joak. sed Ma, look out in the yard. I have the three dogs teid up out thare, sed Ma. Quite a menagerie, isn't it? Yes, Indeed, sed Pa. I wonder whare in the world I got them dogs. You sed thay were rite neer the bird stoar ware you got the six parrots, sed Ma. The six what? sed Pa. The six parrots, sed Ma. Purely vou reemember the ix parrots you brot hoam in a big cage. Sum deer frend of yures was carrying the
cage, sed Ma. He put the cage down j
on the porch and ran wen he saw my face at the window, sed Ma. How vary odd, sed Pa. I guess I will stop going out evenings. I got a Liberty Hond yesterday, sed Pa. but you can have the bond, sed Pa; I doant think too much liberty is good for me any moar. I guess I need watching. Dogs and parrots, sed Pa, dogs and parrots. Yes, sed Ma. you looked like Crusue w en you caim hoam and sounded like Caruso. Well, sed Pa, the sooner we live in the country, the better.
When the Earth is Nearest the Sun
hy ;itm:TT i si:kvis. "In a recent argument 1 contended that the earth is nearer tho
sun during the summer months than j s such as to tip the north end of
it is Pi winter. Am I right? C. W
perihelion point of the orbit, while its south end is correspondingly tipped toward the direction of the aphelion point. Since summer in either hemi
sphere must occur when that hem!-
sphere is inclined toward the sun Ohe sun then running high in the sky during the daytime , and since the direction of the axis in space
the axis toward the sun when the earth is at aphelion, or at its greatest distance, it necessarily follows that the summer of the northern hemisphere coincides in time with the earth's greatest distance from the sun.
M., Ocala. Fla." If you refer to the summer and winter of the northern hemisphere you are wrong, but with respect to the southern hemisphere vou would be right. The earth travels around
the sun in an elliptical orbit, hav im: The same reasonir g explains the an eccentiicity of about 1-httth. fct that the southern summer ocwhich means that the sun is situated '"ts when the earth is nearest the
aside from the center of the elli iS i sun. or in perihelion. To make
at a distance c u responding to l-tjoth this perfectly clear you should draw
of the semi-major axis of the ellipse. J an ellipse, putting the sun in one of
which axis is e.paal to the mean, or 1 its foci. i. e., nearer one end of the average, distance of the earth from lriff axis than the other, and then the sun. represent the earth by two little cirThe semi-major axis represents 'les. one at either eni of the e llipse, the unvarying distance that would with its axis so inclined in both
separate the earth from the sun if the orbit were a circle. In that case, of course, the sun would be situated at the center of the circle. Since the earth's mean distance
cases that the North pole (which you may represent as the upper one), leans in the direction of the perihelion end, whilo the lower, or southern, pole leans toward the
Asparagus for Canning Must be Fresh and Tender
:r.a:i did i. d .-av all g iU his ,-';ir. .lav uluht
d of oth-? f.-r it as i it t bet e ;s tins much J Sixtv thousa ud New Yorkers "hit the trail" during
tO ! Oth v;,,
about it. .! i t I- a ; r time f.'r tie t inhcrar.ie of ' Hilly Sun. lav s campaign. About one per cent of New any pro;.agar.d i . n ti t e orru r- or Is-. v hi i e. that j Vol k's sinners. if we're ".curing it right. And Hev. borders upon ar thm.i; t. .. alty to America in its U ha! It's Stelzle says Hilly never got within a thousand war program. And whether Zimmerman said what h- ( miles of the Great White Way. Null to make old 1 quoted a having said c-r r.ut. there i another thing j Satan giggle.
It is of the greatest importance that asparagus for canning be fresh and tender, says today's bulletin from the national emergency food garden commission, which is cooperating with this newspaper in its nation wide food conservation campaign. Select stalks of uniform age. size and color, wash them well in cold yater with a stiff vegetable brush, cutting off the woody part of the plant, and then cut into hight dength for tans. Space may be saved by uttir.g into inch lengths. Tie into bund!e and blanch by setting lower ends into an inch of boiling water for five minute.-, then immersing the whole tips for about five minutes longer, depending upon the age of the asparagus. Plun-'e immediately into cold water and pack tightly into jars with tips up if the whole .-talks are u-ed. Add a tc-aspoonful of salt to each p;art and nil the jars with hot water:
from the sun is known to be about ' aphelion end. A little diagram like orin.dO'i miles, it i only necessary i that is more enlightening than a
to divide this, by ;n in order to find ! paffe of print, provided that you j ... "i i- I
)i,uc much neare r the earth is to t.ie ciraw u i orreciiy
sun when at ore end of its orbit, and how much farther when at the other end. than it would be if the orbit were circular.
The tliffere-nce thus found, amounts, in each case, to about 1 .-
.-.eo.O'jrt miles. This
traded from the mean distance when the earth is at that end of the e llipse which is nearest the sun, and added when it is at the opposite e nd, making the total change of distance ::.oo o.e. oc miles. Since the earth takes a vear tc? complete a i ev olution, it goe s from one end of the major-axis of the ellipse to the other in six months, returning, in s.x months more, to the point from which it started. Thus twice in the course of a ear the earth's distance from the sun changes to the amount of .l.iHHii im miles.
There is one great fact about the surface of the earth which makes the arrangement of the axis with regard to the aphelion and perihelion points of the orbit as that arrangement now exists, of supreme importance to the earth's inhabi-
. i . ...... r l i l i
imounl is suo-i icinis. i oe nonriern nemispnere.
having its summer when the earth is farthest from the sun. enjoys a cooler summer, and conversely a warmer winter, than it would if the situation v-ere reversed. Hut. as we have seen, the situation actually is reversed with reference to the southern hemisphere.
At first sight it might he concluded that south of the equator the summers must be unbearably hot and the winters excessively cold. There is a tendency toward
then adjust and paitiallv. tighten the ! earth rotates or.ee every day is- not
tops!. Sterilize by placing jars in boiling water from an hour and a half to two hours, depending upon the age of the asparagus. He move Jars from boiling water, tighten tops, invert and place out of a draught to cool.
that state of things, but it is great-
Now. it so happens that at the i ly ameliorated by the fact that the
present time the arth is in peri- southern hemisphere is mainly a
helien. or at the end of the major-' water hemiphere. while the north
ern is far more extensively a land hemisphere. The function of the ocean in meteorology is to equalize temperatures and mooth down sea sonal inequalities. Thus the southern hemisphere appears to he peculiarly fitted to endure the seasonal exce.sses that the nituation of the aphelion and perinelion produces. The difference in the amount of heat received from the sun, caused by the change in distance of ".000,000 miles, is about six percent. If the northern hemisphere, with its vast land exranses, were to change places with the southern, the climatic consequences, esecially in winter, would probably be. in some ways, disastrous. This change has occurred in the past and will occur again in the future but that is another story.
axis of the orbit which is nearest the sun at the beginning of January, and at the more distant end. or In aphelion, at the beginning of July, from which it follows that the distance of the earth from the sun is : , eo o o-. o miles less in midwinter than in midsummer, as the seasons go in the northern hemisphere, while exaetly the opposite state of things exists with regard to th seasons of the southern hemisphere. wher midsutn rr.er conies in January and midwinter in July. The reason for thi- opposition in the seasons of the two hemispheres is that the axis' around which tha
upright to the plane of the orbit around the sun. but inclined about 1-4 degrees from a perpendicular to that plane, while the direction in which the axis inclines is such that
its north end. nr pole, is tipped to-1 Dr. Axtell, Den.Ist. w ard the present direction of the Trust Bldg.
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Union A.dv.
A Real Mother Jack Thrift was born in Bakerstoivn Of parents poor though good renown. That Jack might gain a higher rank, His mother took him to the bank, And to the banker, most polite, Said, "Here is but a little mite, And though 'tis quite a small amount, Our Jack must have a
bank account.
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South Bend National Bank 103 X. 3ficluai Street
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STRICTLY PURE
Ice made from Artesian Well Water under sanitary conditions must be pure.
AND IT IS PURE You can use it on the food, put it in the drinks or let the children eat it, because there is no danger.
ITS
PURE
Our ice lasts longer and is cleaner than any other ice ever sold in this city and it costs no more than other ice.
IT'S MADE IN SO. BEND
And the supply cannot fail.
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525-535 NORTH EMERICK ST. Bell 2221. Home 6123
Just a Short Job to wire your home. About two days after the men are on the job you'll be ready for ELECTRIC SERVICE Vou will use it eventually anyway Why not now?
I. & M.
BELL 462.
HOME 1197
WARNER BROS. SeeJ aniJ Farm Machinery il4 EL Wayne St.
WATCH US GRÖW!-
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