South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 197, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 16 July 1917 — Page 4
.ri.Ai rrvrr.viNG, jn.v ic. mi:
THE SOU TH 15 END NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
" 'TWAS A FAMOUS VICTORY." While w arc in a foreicn war fur democracy's sake,
1 I r- r- l I
u.i.iii cvcniii & aunjay. ( f,,r tMv preservation of man's inalienable right.- to .NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO., Publishers. !.-. i u a 1 it y. Justice and the pursuit of happiness, today, on 3. I- SUMMKJ.. l"M:.Ur,(. J. M. KTHIMl KN!ON. Mid j t h i s date, it is v II that we ."top and retlect. We ate
JOHN IIKNHY ZUVIIi:. Editor. Onlr AtnrttI rre Morning Vmrr In Northern Indian nl On!r I'upr lUnplo-ln? Ue lntrratlnl Ne rtU la few-.?". li-a i Two Lafc4 Wire: Itny al Mfbt.
tlome rhn. 1131.
Office: 210 W. C'lfax At.
BU lrne 2100.
"The EUri Incline, but do oteomjyel
HOROSCOPE
MONDAY, JTIiV 1. 1917. Astrologers read this as an unim
portant day In planetary direction.
faee to far this day with one of the mistakes of de-
inorrucy, resulting In a process quite an cruel as any thing that eould possibly he charged to the greediest
. . . . 1 . .. ...11.1 !..! !
amoerai. iruni). "'h rouumK men . Jus While Mara is strongly evil and Loth the, totality of justice and happiness, and in conform j s,lturn amI xeptune mildly adverse, ity with law. It ha- fdnce been corrected, and th j Uranu, am! the 5un are in U.nc;ic hands of the courts tied asainst any repetition of the j aspect.
airority, .a la-t for u time, hut the present stain, it wf.f.fn. must be ent in to its full depth".
C!l it tfce ff! or MfTa't. bo n-niVr and n for rpartsiDt wtnfd Kdit'.rlAl. A1vertii!rjir. Circulation, or ArroMoUag. For w-,nt M." if our narr H in the tepJ.one 2lrf(torT. t!U will I ronlVd after lnTt! n import lrutten flon fa knlMi Kr .lu-nln.n r.,-r ,!.!ItiTT if DaliTi. bkl
te'pbo?i(i serrlri.. rtru. f boiJ f Wartn.eut vltb which joa 1 V.'e mention it in passing because, recently there were VhirlüS- ?. TI1.,i" V,',,Lirtr,? X"uJUtt' f 1 1 ral threats of a similarity, with reference to the local Llci rrg;onJ to Home I't.on 11-1 ani Irll -' ftrect car strike. Agents for the Murdock interests. M-mrmrTinv KTKS: Mornin nJ nralr.ff njJttontj. ,v, d , ,,, .aJvived by counsel, who seemingly have Flni Cony, IV; Kundaj. So; Morning or l-veidc r.dit'n. ! J 3
omj. inciurtltur Min
JiT-ret r,j carrier r In advance, or
at a A poatefflec aa aecocd clan mall.
tdaj.'bj ru:id. f 3 io pu" year In sdran'e J fek-al memories that have gitr.e to rot, or an Inhuman la S .uth li-nd nnd MUbawaia. Jo-W ler or , ti.P mf. LnUTtu at tb Suutb ! '' 'nneji j.t only for knaves, sought to hip the striking
'n3"- cat men hack Into line by threatening wholesale sulti .i .v.- ..in. ..,. rtnL ff"" damages against the members of the union. The
ADTKRTI.mvn RATES
Frtr!m Adertiir. KeprebeutatiT. : CON K. I.OKKNZK.N j M unlocks, after having bought the local lines with hogs XKiL.tA. Z-Z Fifth At. New York City, .ml Adv. MM.; The Newa-Tlme et.de.iTora to Its a-lTertialng fattened from flops and hominy, welched from the rf;?!jTJZ??, lill 71 of Indiana by taking over the ill-cooked foods
paper will coofer a faror cn tue man aberrant ' T r.-V'riiuaT lL
tida conjpletelj.
JULY H), 1917.
PREFORM" IN (GERMAN V. The accounts of political tiniest in (Icrmany are interesting as evidence that the Herman people aru be winning to resent th'-ir political impotence. Hut they 'j!Ter lntle hop. f immediat reform. The ka.ser'-s promises repre-lnt concessions witli little practical k alue. 11c i rporteii to have offered 'nual suffrage" to I'russi.. It will he a notable s-tep towaid self-government if the present sstem whereby one Kast Prussian l.ind-bold-r can outvote, live Berliners is done away with; but it isn't clear whether that "equal suffrage" i to be, like out own. universal, direct ;r.u secret, and nothing is said ; bout the lat- of the change. The reform is presumably not t be inaugurated until after the war. And if Prussia and all t.ermany should be granted this bon, immediately, what would it mean'.' .Merely that the derma. i people were permitted to elect their own reichstag by fair representation. And that would get them nowhere. For the Herman iciehstag i.s not u governing body at all. It is little more than a debating society. It has been ( ailed, by its own members, a "hall of echoes'. It has no more power than the old Kilian duma. It can talk and talk and talk ntid the emperor, whn he pots tird of its talk, can dismiss it. So it matters little how the reichstag is elected. The real governing power of flermany is the bundesrath, which meets in secret. While the reichstag talks, the bundesrath acts. It is a council made up of the various German Mates composing; the empire, and it H chosen not by t:"" people of those states, but by their sovereigns. It is therefore really a council of kings. It may veto anv act of the reichstag. And yet it is rot supremo. The kaiser may veto tip' bundesrath. The authoiity Is iven him by the constitution. There can he no change in the Herman government amounting to anything until the constitution abolishes that imporial vote, and there can bo no such basic reform as that unless the kaiser himself consents lie may v to any attempt to limit his v to. S there you are" The Herman nation has been neatly hog-tied by the constitution in which it formerly ttk such pride; much the same as has Indiana, under our judicial bureaucracy. The Herman empire is a federation not of the people of its twenty-tive states, but of the royal houses of those states, with the Hohenzollern family at the top. Suffrago grants, therefore, are spec ions. The dlmissal of ministers is unimportant. Foreign .Minister Zimmerman may no. Chancellor ll.illwc- himself may go. hu they represent nobody but the kaistr. Their master may sacrifice them as "goats' to popular discontent, and k'cp right on loing a ho pleases Toliti rJ reform in Ccrmanv must becin at the top.
THE JAPANESE DEMOCRACY. There has been a goo,? deal of comment lately to th? e.Tect that Japan does not prop rly belong with th? allies that sho represents autocracy rather than th-? democracy for which her associates are lighting. Ir. Toyokichi Iyennra. lecturer on political si ietu e at th university of Chicago, insists that this it is unjus He says; "DeinocmC is n, syr.orm foi it public. Whether the government b a republic or a constittttior.nl monarchy, ilemoerary is enthioned in the country where social equality instead of feudal aristocracy provaiN: w lu re ns's real merit . cunts m i" than rank or fam.ly pedigree. whei every iiuliv ni.i.,1 has the right to fwll njo ment of lite. lii'crtN ami the pursuit of happine", av.d is 1.0 si ie of a loniiriant caste; h re rii;ln nilo; o i niulit, flr.l Militarism ts not t!e outr .'llinu fori; In short, whre justice, li'-eit,, ei;;i,i!;! and
the Michigan City penitentiary, had about reached the point where they were willing, if possible, to line their porkets atain, and this time by mulcting their w orkingm n for resistir.g starvation. It would be a case, quite parallel, indeed. Today, the la.-t ghastly act in the Dan bury hatters' tragedy is being performed, by sale of the home of one hundred and forty hatters, to satisfy the judgment of l.oewe v .Co., and the vengeance of the Anti-Boycott association of 'Connecticut. Most of these home-ow ners are old and pot r and have never had any chance at equality. Sum" had no part in the strike, had even quit work 1oi;k before the famous boycott was declared, and w hat they f,et of justice and happiness is to stand helpless while they're sold out of house and home. In all the history of troubles between capital and labor, in this democracy, there never was plainer sub version of unalienable rights or viler miscarriage of justice than in this famous "Danbury Hatters' Case". In In'j::, two thirds of the h;t making concerns of Danbury repudiated the agreement with their employe.
All the srns appear to indicate that before the end of this month
j a deeper realization of w ar w III he
appa rent. I'ndei this rule peace agitation will develop more strongly, and, as has been prognosticated before, if this peace inclination comes to naught, the struggle will be long. For today uncertainty and unrest appear to ho forecast for military men, who will be brought face to face with realities, owing to some unexpected event. It is not an auspicious -day for journeys on the water or for naval engagements. Hreat activity is seen by the seers where our ships are concerned. Again the aged are warned to be careful as they arc much more liable to sudden death under this rule than iiual. This is supposed to be a fairly lucky sway for all w ho seek appointments, whether for high place or low. lAjve affairs should nourish while this configuration prevails. hut Franus gives warning of deception and lack of constancy. Scandals and much murmuring among the people eem to be foreshadowed. Congress is warned of criticism that will be unwarranted, but it may cost members their scats, owing to agitation growing out of the war. The west comes under a direction making for Rieat sensations. Fame for women asiain is prophesied. Hue will gain distinction hv a
name in history. Persons whose birthdate it is have the auirury of rather a successful year, if they attend strictly to business. Children born on this day may he high strung and restless, fond of change and impetuous, hut lucky in all things. (Copyright. 1917)
Remove Pits or Not, as Desired, Canning Cherries
that had been itanding for eight years. Seven yrai s j Kupreme sacrifice that will write her
of "industrial disturbance" followed, which means s-ven years of lessee of abnormal profits by the manufacturers and seven years of hisses of rood, clothes and fuel by the employes, but by 1900 all save three of the factories had been unionized. I.oewe Vr Co. stood for "open shop" and the boycott declared against them was taken up by the American Federation of Labor. boewe iK: Co. instituted suit for damages under the Sherman anti-trust law, claiming that the union's action was "restraint of trade". The case was fouht through all the courts, and Loewc tv Co. are now collecting fsO.nOo damages by selling the poor workmen's homes at sheriff's saK This case must stand as an indelible stain upon American jurisprudence and an infamous travesty upon American justice. Those sheriff sales are a foul retlee tion upon a nition whoso sympathy for the common man is claimed to he world wide. Thank God, it helped cost one of the deciding judges the presidency. (ur highest courts distorted and misinterpreted national legislation that merciless capital might make labor its heipls.-, servant. In the debates in congress upon passage or the Sherman legislation, it was frequently and forcibly urged that the proposed law wouli not affect labor and farmers' organizations. The lesis lation could not have passed ha'd there been claim that the law would have such affect. Yet, the court, viciously and with purpose to give capital the advantage, overruled the plain and declared Intent of congress and ma do over that legislation into such power as the greedy bor crushers derired. loiter, congress, in the Clayton law, provoked by the infamous miscarriage of justice and rape of national intent by the high courts, declared that "Labor is not u commodity or article of commerce", but it's too late to help the Danlmry hatters and Loewe & Co. today are cutting off their pound of flesh. It was not too late, however, to send Justice Chalks Lvans Huuhes to private life.
Let the homeless hatters of I)anbur take their hungry wives and naked children and disappear from public view quickly! There's no hope of justice for them; Ioewe V: Co. mu-t have their j so, 00'. and we want to hear cheers for the Stars and Stripes, not the groans of a hundred and forty families driven out into destitution by our glorious courts of justice.
humanity are made the the- state.'
! .C-U" p' 11. i ip
.f
WHISKY AND VODKA. Much has been made of the fact that, if congress prohibits the nu-nufacture and sale of distilled spirits, it will immediately add $0u,o(m.ooo or $700.000 ooo to our war expenses. There would be a deficit of more than $ l,0,('o0.0oo made in the internal revenue, and It would cost Fiu-L' Sam Jl'uo.uuu.tiuu or more to buy the whisky now bottled in bond. It is interesting to retail, at this timr. the universal chorus vi praise for Kussia which went up in this country a couple of ears ago when the czar abolished the odka trah'.L. The Russian government had de iied about half a. billion dollars a year, the greater
j part of Us inminc, froia the- salt of vodka, w hich was Ja pubjio monopoly. We were enthusiastic in our ap
pl et i.ttitin of the nobility ,,f such a policy. Aie we mdng to change our tune now, whn the same problem comes home to u? Ami when we need our whisky money far less than Kussia needed her vodka Illoliev 7
It
Thi is a prvtt good de'.niti. n of demo. i.u .
tnust be admitted that in a : -nuine i oi.-titutional monarchy the popl may hae as much political freedom and powvr as in a republic In i . t I'.iitaia. for instame. the king is said to be a mere r :l ; cr stau:;. The actual head of the government is the pi tmiei, w cr
The bulletin today from the national emergency food garden commission, which Is cooperating with Tiie News-Times in its campaign for the prevention of waste of the surplus food products of the country, says that it is a matter of personal choice whether or not the pits are removed from cherries before canning. If cherries are pitted, care should he taken to save all the juice to be poured into the jars after the cherries are packed. Lady's glove buttoner is very useful in taking the pits out of cherries. Can cherries directly after washing or after pitting, if -the pits are removed packing the fruit into hot jars as tightly as possible without crushing. Then fill the jars with hot cherry juice or syrup made f one cup sugar to three cups cherry Juice or water as desired. If cherry Juice is available, it should be used. Adjust tops and partially tighten them, sterilise for Iß minutes, complete sealing and invett out of draught to cool. Wrap jars in pa petto prevent loss of color in storage. Sweet cherries are not generally pitted, and n little lighter syrup is used than in the case of the suur froit. Otherwise the process is the same. Hig department stores anil motion picture houses have been enlisted in the commission's nation-wide movement to conserve food and Charles Lathrop Pack, the president of the commission, sent out a plea to exhibitors to run a slide telling the women ef the country they can have the commission's canning and drying manuals for a two-cent stamp to pay postage. The manuals are in great demand by the stores for their canning exhibits. It develops that the government is unable to meet the demand" for data of this kind." said Sec'y p. S. Itidsdnle. "I have had a dozen calls frem congressmen asking for help. ene congressman wanted .V.noo of our manuals because he was swamped with requests and th government printing office, ho said, could not print this kind of data because of the call upon it for printing from oth r departments than the department of agriculture."
holds his ott'.ce by popular ch"i.e and ummiii een
more cU-ariy than o-.;r in every monunh or irter'al syst m J as bet Japan. sus Pr. Ie:
m:;t h
d tiiov r.iv v a
BY ORDER OF THE KINGS. The troops in Arizona st em to be sue-ceeding in preserving, to the copper kings their ungodly profits. The workmen's wages do rot go .p. The cost t.f tlmr bjead and butter does.
l ist as soon as the Arizona ronoer kine s?et thfir men
i' in !a'odued with t L aid of troops, they ought to join the
,, p':.,th adopte-d. adivsoiv uincii for defense, at Washington, and howl .-a. though, a mon.inhv. i a-;,5,'un th; vnhoiy proposition to tax excess profits on c 1 1 1 1 . e r
tile Iniled States. I . n u land , '
IIll'i.'1'.U'V of KUs-l.t". .
c.-ident dots. It U the same!
P
mpire vv h-: re th.
b
vv ! v
rr.
France. Italy and the
He add that Juj an h-rishes th. same, ideals as A:ur- Th.ete's a qi;er angle now to the Mexican situation, ica. and "it i-' e nly f.tting fur u. :a to join hai.d ar.J j Mexico is said to be inclined to jump in and help us in v.crk with ail the energy and resources they have at j the w ar ucainst Hermany. And our government is said o inn; and for the successful cor lu.-ion f th-. tie- j to be discouraging suvh a racv . because it would give ra endo us !u? :!:- are now f.cm". 1 Mexico an excuse for asking us for a bis loan, without
We
man's etni at'
a !
to
; t th;- h ii ucd ue r.tie - ! aI' compensating military advantage. "Beware the
t his own o'niiirv at tu'.l f.ue value. Hrt.iscrs learing gifts" is Fncle Sam's motto.
but it m.. v I ad:! v
gr.iot-d that the poüti al life of
th Japar.es liut'.on is tar more t! tun erat ir than most .iiit!;i .in ha v . i J p d . 'i- b uii- Japan's c prati-ui in f.up.tlng for the jdc.N he hohl in om -
mo t v it; t;s. ;tnd if she
:hts
t ii ri i h. 1 f a - hard
Heifer rich to saev'eed llcthmann-lledlweg V a i. am- to suit ti e poor of (lermuny. all right, dt u. IV rshing d-cjdes upon "Sammy" as the
VAt Uo, wc hall be pretty well -it;-:. d.
of the Am rit an sbliers
( "Sam", for short
i , r:a m
Theie
oificial"
in llurope. AH right!
A Girl's Impressions In the War Capital
Mils. WILSON Tltl'i: IIIXPmi:i:t ami iiomi:m ki:u. itv i:i. iinir.it. I nt-ril.it iMial New h Service: WASHINGTON. July 1.".. Who has seen a pictui of the Km pressAugusta, taken by the kaiser's side, since the great Furopean war beuan? am sure I have not. Kvery time, however, that I have seen Pres't Wilson. I have seen Mrs. Wilsen by his side. Mrs. Wilson is not active in social or civic life in Washington, but it seems to me she is extremely active in the life of the president of the L'nlted States. s-urely a woman's influence is at least helping to suide this nation of ours in its conduct of the war against Germany. Mrs. Wilson has the true cr;i e of a southern lady, and the serene loveliness of her smile must wtrk wonders in keeping the heart of our chief executive soft and unbiased in the daily grind of planning the reat-
THE MEL TING POT COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.
muioiiN mi: diliimha. Dilemmas are etremely inconvenient at their best. They mock a fellow's purpose and disarrange his re-t. It's hard to be confronted with a forking of the ways, The future dim ami shapeless ;n ohs-urity and haze; To know, no matter how you choose or how you lay your You're likely to encounter ample basis for regret.
bet.
To travel or to stay at home, to dght or run away. To lead a life that's good and dull or one that's had and gay; To put your money in the bank or live in better style-. To go and mend the puctures now or do it after while; To stay a maid or bachelor, immune from tare and strife. Or try your luck and fortune on the held of wedded life. No matter what your verdict now or which the real you take, No matter how sagacious he the cheerful choice you make. You feel a deep suspicion that the eonsequence will be A face to face encounter with a sad catastrophe. Alas, that the tlilemma could not be a unicorn Instead of puzzling people with that awful second horn! Arthur F.rooks Faker.
"You Bet I Hustle Home With My JUST RIGHT For Look at the Treat I Get," Says Mr. Coffee Bean.
JUST RIGHT is our superb 25c a pound Mend, and you never tasted bet-
Better Peanut ler at 30c' Frc5h roaskM dai,-v-Butter Tt nHC O U
Made While HC UllCC IVcUICU You Wait" 133 North Michigan St.
I j '&-! j l
km ay Tin: .ion. Sergeant: Where were you ever on picket duty'.' liecruit: At home. Whenever they killed a chicken I had to pick it Puck. om: to anotiii:k. "He says I am the only girl he hati ever loved." "I'd beware of him." "Why?" "I think it dangerous to tie up for life with a man who tal.es the brst thing that comes along." o a rsr.rrii man. Some years ago an Englishman met a party of American settlers journeying westward, and got into conversation with the leader, at; eminently practical man. "We t.nly brought useful people along," said the leader. "For instance, that big man over there is our blacksmith, the man next to him is our baker, and so on." "Hut," said the Englishman, "tliat very ohl fellow surely he can't be of much t'.se to you." "Oh. yes he is." was the reply. "That's grandfather. We shall open our new cemetery with him." o aimlm;i:mi:nts. Has the government completed its preparations fo- war? Yes. it has rjiven rush eirders to the army, crush orders to the navy, and hush orders to the press. Puck. WITHOUT NOTICE. "tVn., elid von leave your last place V" asked the boss. "I didn't leave it. It left me." "Kather strange, I should say." "Not at all. I worked in an ammunition factory." TOO UEsOFKCElTL. John, dear, I wish you would scoM the cook. I sue her fringing the pie with her talse teeth this morning." Puck. o mtoKE the iir.roiii). Mrs. P. aeon: Is your husbaml patriotic'.'
Mr". Egbert: Is he'.' Say. he's broken the record. "What record?" "Why the 'Watch on the Rhine' phonograph record " o UKTWKEX CJIKIi I'KIEXDS. Edith: The man I marry must he Lold and fearless. Ethel: Yes, dear, he must. Puck. NOT THE ANCIENT. Ile'istrar: And are you the oldest of the family? Frosh: Nope, pa and ma vre both older than 1 am. Chaparral. POTATOES. "Please, sir," said a small hoy, addressing the family grocer, "mother sent me for a quarter's worth of potatoes." "I'm sorry, young man," replied the grocer kindly, "hut you'll have to run home and tell your mother we don't cut em." W1IV TIIEV STAND. What do the buffaloes on the new nickels stand for? Uecause they havo r.ot got 100m to sit down. Harvard Lampoon. WATCHFUL. "Why wouldn't the recruiting ofiicer take you?" "Said they had r.U the wristwatch winders thej needed." Puck. A Tit EAT. "My. but that popcorn smells good!" exclaimed the girl. "I'll drive closer," remarked her escort. Puck. HOW IT HAPPENED. "This is my uncle Dud Dohhs," said Miss Clessaphine Clatter, who was exhibiting the family photograph album. "No, he didn't havo a strip of white whiskers growing on the front side of his neck, although 'most everybody vh Iooks at Iii picture asks that eji;estion. That is where his Adam's apple kept sliding up and down while he was trying to look pleasantly at the ca :n e ra . ' ' J u d g e .
Well Fitting Teeth
, ;; t ii Iteplaclrg lost r.atursd ones, eraj .'.'. 'vlli deep facial lines and hollows, and m"-- - restore roundness of contour, ban
lshing "premature aged looks. We mak them from serviceable, lnex pensive sets up to the finest that money can buy hut always AT REASONABLE CHARGES. No charges for extracting when order Ing new tteth. All work guaranteed. Other work at our old reasonable prices, as follows:
22-K Gold Crowns, low as White Crowns, low as Bridge Work, low as
$3
Porcelain Fillings .......$1.00 Hold Fillings 2.00 Silver Fillings 50c
Home Phono 8996. ltdl Phone 42.
WHITE DENTAL FARL0RS OPKN KVEMXGS. LDY ATTENDANT UV2 W. WASHINGTON AV. -
DR. E. H. BLÄHE
H
ire a Falfttfe! Servant
ELECTRIC SERVICE Its wages have not gone up in fact are lower now than tormerlv.
WIRE YOUR HOME"
I. &L M.
Bell 462
Home 1197
uj m
n
est war this country has ever participated in. Jhe is just an American woman of the type our mothers were. The masculine dash and manners of many of our modern women are entirely lacking in this lady of the white house. She is primarily a helpmeet ami a homemaker. I saw her leaving the white house for a tour of the F street shops and. by the way, F street is an euM to Fifth aw. Roylston st. or Michigan av. Hut to get back to the lirst lady of thv land, he was garbed in a pretty gown of white muslin for this shopping tour, and she walked out into the crowds, an ordinary Washington .woman, when she might have ridden in state in one of the white linuso limousines. I have seen Mrs. Wilson by the president's side at a state reception; I have seen her on the platform at a public gathering, and I have seen her in a box at a baseball game. Always she has been simply Mrs. V.'oodrow Wilson .and if the chief exe utive had not been with her I should never have dreamed she was the- tirst lady of the land. That is Mrs. Wilson the wife of the leader of the 1'nited States. J wor.oe: how she compares with theEmpress Augusta. Surely she is closer to her husband in his great struggle than the first lady of Germain is to the Prussian war lord.
Who's Who Behind the Scenes in the War A rmy IIY GEORGE GARVIN.
mug. ;i:x. wiujam a. mann Hurt -mi or .Militia A flairs. Horn in Pennsylvania, July ?,. 1ST.4. and appointed to the military academy from that state in 1 S 7 1 . He was graduated in 1S75 and assigned as a second lieutenant to the 17th infantry and has served throughout in that branch of the service. He was a member ef tie general staf. from l&Orj to 1!07 and for a portion of that time was president of the Army War college.
ONCE-OVERS .MAIlllIED MIA AND RIUGIIT EYES. For a mariied man. are you not too anxious for a little llirtation? Of course you would not have your wife know about it. and you work on the line of "what she does not knw won't hurt her." eh? Too much at stake for this attitude. For the sake of the smiles and companv of another woman, would you cause the little woman who bears our name to suffer sorrow and suspicion the rest of her life? Perhaps ou live in a large city: you think it almost impossible for her to tind out our tlirting. You may es ape for years, it is true, '"at von will be surprised howfast reports of your doings can reach your wife even in the large city. At any time jou are liable to b seeti by som of your wife's friends, who will, you may be sure, exaggerate the story. Why, man. if jour sense of honor is not sufficient to keep you from t'.iitinir. ou at least should have sene enuiili a- a man of affairs to realize that ou are playing a dangerous uarne. i Copyright. IM 7.)
Don't say you saw it in the newspaper." Say News-Times.
WASHINGTON. Julv l.V Gen
Mann succeeded Maj. Clen. Albert !
Mills as chief of the bureau of militia affairs and has continued the
work of reorganizing the militia tin- 1
der the Hay bill, which brings th state forces dire-ctly under the call of the president of the United States. With the trouble that was encountered when the militia was called into the federal service In ring the .Mexican trouble foremost in his thoughts. Gen. Mann set about to make similar oo-urronccs impossible in the future and undertook the task of bringing the shore forces up, to the same hig i standard ejf efficiency as prevailed in the regular establishment. Under his management the state organizations have weeded out all men with dependents as well as physically unlit men. He has sought to have the national guard a linished lighting force and today the men in this branch of the service are well trained and sufficiently tit for service to be among the first forces scheduled to te sent to the war theater, and if the recommendation of Gen. Mann is carried out. at least 123,000 members of the national guard will be on the French front before the snow flies. The national guard, when all units are filled to war strength, will number about 400. 0'b) men. and when all these forces are sent to Europe it will be the duty of the bureau to keep the units to full strength, filling the ranks from the locality in which the original unit was recruited.
Much of the power of te.nperance sentiment in Nebraska is the result of the attitude of P.ohernian youn-: women, who have let it be Known among the state's P.oheniian settlements that they will not marry young men who drioi
South
enoi
3
You owe it to Soutli Bend, to your merchants. You should buy at home. Our merchants deserve your support because: . . They Pay Taxes They Pay Rent They are Your Protection They protect you against inferior quality in purchases made by you. You can return inferior articles to your merchants and they will make good. Can you do this when you do not buy at home? Therefore by paying their rent, taxes, etc., the merchants of South Bend are helping to lighten your burden. They are cooperating -with you. You should support them in order to help yourself. Do not turn your merchants down and patronize strangers. Instead, in order to help your merchants, your town and yourself you must
Buy at Home
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Don'! say you svx it in ths newspaper. Say News-Times.
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