South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 204, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 23 July 1917 — Page 4
MohY fataing. .iri.v 2.1. 1 it,
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
I This extrc mely un-(jernian institution' the German J sr. fTüriK-nt. following Its usual custom of stirring up ! the ilrc?" in hostile countries, apparently has tried to , u. for its own purposes. It has not been proved that
M c r;i in E v e n i r. S u n J ay. NEW'S-TiMrV PRINTING m PuMiOiprv
a t ,, ... l!,.v-c. v I G rrnaii money ha." none into I. V. W. treasuries, or to JOliy ITI;m:y Zi;vi:i: Flitor. l- vv- w- lp;ders. l,ut tnere is no question that German (influence 1. n s ln used. And it's a profitable enterow Aanut-.i rr i..rnic pp Noriher indin j j,rij, j , ,r (jfrmariv provided the scheme works. What od Only l'apr llmplr.jtnr the International New ir?l, I j . ., th ismd-Tno Ll wirr Dar nd Nlbt. i;m excellent thing to induce widespread .strikes in
mining and manufacturing industries necessary to our
Uoir.P 1'hone 1131.
Office: 21U W. C-dfax Ar.
IV H rtione 210-
Cull it tbe offV or trn" abore nurrb.-. ?n't nT 1er.rtrant wantM I.;Horlal. .idvertUSri jr. Clrrul.itlon. or AroaiittEjf. l or - want ai' If yur r.ai I in the tetpnone
I""
! war prepa rations!
It is our government's business, however, to see that it won't work. This is no time for our usual good-
natured indulgence. enal and traitorous leaders must
PrnsmirTION KATI-S: Murlnj and Hrenlr.jr rdlt'.on. Flnrl I'c; Hunlr. c I Mornirr r Kvei.lr.g .lltin. rtallj. lndndlcg Funday, bv niad. ?:ji po.- year la ,lvnn'f Ie!lTrre4 ry carrier Id S.utti I:! nd Mlibrtwaka. l Pf -r to idrtnr, or 12.- by tu vk. liottfrtü at tue JoutD ßcu'i fcistwCie it aeif!.d lai mill.
ADVFRTISINO HAT KS: Ak tri ntTrt!!nff rjATtmnt. roreljn Ail .ert;'.j: lieprejentstlre : I'ONK, LOI.KNZF.N WOODMAN. K.fth At.. New York Citj. nnl Air. H1U. CLlro. TLe Nfi-Tli eialeivr.r p k. tta advertia.na; fr.!umrt fr trxm fr0'!uie:.t tnH:ppr ntati ui. Any person b'frau.ied through pitrm.ige f f any ndverti vnient in t b i pnper will roofer a faTor to the mauar tia-nt 1 riiirting tlia facta crmpletely.
JULY 23, 1017.
BIG INCKh'ASrf IN THL: HAMULI:. The 1. S. snu,e Las J : i i . 1 1 gotten the food lull oft its I.ai.u j..ir; alt r crippling it t a il'rct.1 of in.-eii-MLilit; am! r.'v 'i is If It. to the confer n . committee to finish. Wc ar to have a trio of food dictators und'.r the Mil a it stnr.'K instead f one. the senate apparently Leins feat f'U that Hoover misht dic tate, and per-hap--. n the int rests of the people. may expect now to witness something of a rush of f.Ml manipulator-, a-km to he associate. i with .Mr. Hoover in solir:' the food juestj. r,; oiuel.ol', for inM.UH'e, 1 1 k 3 r.a!'ody, of th- l-aroiis, and I)upoiit of powder fiin:e, as tl:e .ij.p-.ir en th oiio-il o" efene. N'h:ch len.ii.'t us. v note from our farm pane l.i-t -"i t'ird.i , juite on jiiciiMi -I ilispla !, just as thmiul) Iht fairn editor h .'aided it as assiuurue of plenty to
iit.-.Ki'i a ol.o e to -t it: v. ;otic-. we siv, that t lie f
f.Md speculators hae in cold storage over lifty million ..iii!ls ;,t 1 1 n 1 1 1 1 . thirty miliums of ured and ninety of fto.en nuats and ei:irs almost without munher Hut th t d.-esn't tell th- wloU.- str 1-y a lon shot, not -withstanding the enormous inc!-ase of Mich stoime nvtT la -1 ear's. .Ml of this M..ed stuff has I. ecu i.ouht hy th' speculators at h ay :.dv inee ,,n last ear's priee. .Mr. (''(jiisumc;-. recall last .'ear's prices. .-'ky hiuh. weren't the V Well, th' food speculators ;,r- Letting that ou will p i; higher this . ;ir. W hav a war o". our hands, this -ar. with a foreign demand for foUd stufl's that's bound to be simply wollish. (hir Ktain is oinc a b oa d a h ! - er t, foi . Poultry eats main. Mir allies and our own soldiers must have meats. Merit that poes into (.ins doesn't 1:11 onto ordinary taWes. If mi have to $ per one hundred pounds for ducken f?ed, ou fit ch'ckens rather than lo;ird them alou' for their ec-'s. nnd li"iu e forty-'ent 'i? i;s 'ntT cold storar- today to t nur' as i u 1 1 1 -c 11 1 eKk's in 1 e em her. I'pon tht's thinuM th- food spe ulators hae Kambb d a. neer before, and th" win our money unless you let up on eatirv: poultry, ine. ;(I1d e-.rs. or there is mvf rn iirnt fo I (ontrol at a er eaily date. You ran uiw ia.,t! -s das and pat.il. the uauilders asil. Congress , a ri K'W i s food (ontroj legislation ;md a'-otup!i-h the a'.ue result. I'tmun'ss has almost (d as f;ir as- W tll-kv M'd beop but 't T 1 1 ' I t 't lÜM'tlss "Why do fills 'jit wiont;?" '"Win re's the !ot 'harlie Ko.ss'.'" "'b n do. s tii Mibtr.ihend uitwaduht the neuter n-i!t-r?" ai'd other matt is uerinai.' t,, the food ipiestio't I'tfi'tp civiiik,' us ferd ( ontio!. i ir food uamlders are 'ertin- Lie mon v that there will le- pienty of fiuds to pa sit t,ts for i a' on .and ninety for Mtira s eius an I t!iit o u ) -v won't k i i: o rn i u n t control enough to at all t irt the liumane and hishU protitald. business of skinuius fobvs w ho w ill stand skinning. The senat "s tlite i;:ai- U..ird i to do.iUt a ! 1 1 1 a t '. t'ot to sellously intei f i e.
THE AUTOMOBILE SLUMP. After a period of marvelous development covering several years, the automobil industry is said to have suffered a decidid slump since the United States entered the war. This iP partly due to the wave of economy that has swept over the country. Many people probably bouu'ht Liberty bonds in June Instead of a new machine. There ar1 other reasons, however. Manufacturers have heen slowing up a littlo on pleasure cars because of difhculty in procuring raw materials. A lull was due. too, after the tremendous burst of speed In the business during the past few years. The decline in automobile purchasing hasn't heen so serious, however, as many people have thought. And there is no cause, for anxiety ahout the future. There may be a lessening in the purchase of the more expensive pleasure cars. Hut this is only temporary and Is more than Pnlanced by the Increasing use of all kinds of motor trucks and tractors. .lnce the heglnning of th.' war Kur:peari countries have been calling for more cars of all descriptions than ever before. They are used in countless ways by the armies of Europe. And they will ho needed hy our armies as well. The farm tractor is coming Into greater prominence and usefulness. As the horse and man supply decreases the need for a tarm machine to lo the work of both grows. The automobile has come to stay. Hoth as a pleasure hide and as a business asset, it will be used and needed more and more by everybody until we all take to f 1 y i r. g.
NO SOUL SLOUCH. .
A certain young lady whose features nightly illumine a thousand moving picture screens, and whose salary doubtless shames the president's, is reported to have uttered the sage remark that "There is such a thing as a soul slouch." Mf course there is. Mary, nnd we are glad if life has dealt so gently with you in the past that you are just lindint; it ut. t I lut soul slouches aren't in fashion this year. And that's ne comp natlni; thing above all the stress anil itorni of the days in which we are living we're tre-
i UK-mlousI v alive.
The Juan with a sloiichy walk is either lazy or indifferent. At leat he steps .short of his full capacity for physical activity The. man who is full of business seldom drags hi.; heels. And the man with enough to lo can't he .n the job and slump in his mind at the iaine time. A nation in trouble is a nation awakt. It's" the old story of the froys in the can of cream. One gave up and drowned. The ither kept kicking and when the fanner got to town there sat the frog smiling on a Moating island of butter. About the time that frog found himself in trouble, he decided that thre was no such thine; as a soul slouch. And the men and women of this country are finding it out too. Minda ar quickened, spirits are heartened and a new sens ol personal i esponsibilit y has entered the consciousness of eerv man and woman.
A
A klfAL MYSTERY. r. ' s d.so u. h frou: lt tbarah breathes mystery
;i?-d tlit ills ; u b as we bae pot known since the war l. i i. .... i . ... . i
i' a i . c i . i i. s in ? 1 1 p 1 1 s. u i 'p i is in u one i uousa ui i lain are w aht d b th- Y t innboip-e interests These j in ei. are to !e c:iv.ol m .: new plant, manufacturing ,
a i: t
mut P.- ir. u i f ui
NO MORE PR EE LUNCHES. It auuht have been expected that free lunch woulJ go the way oT a!l other free things. Saloon keepers, no doubt, feel the pinch of high prices and food scarcity as mil' h as other folk. it will be mis.sid in barroom circles. The free lunch is in' d our most ancient ami leep rooted American institutions, and has long been patronized and appre elated alike by tl e impecunious hobo, the honest working man and tlK' hungry business man dropping In for :t casual cocktail . n his way home to supper. Üut th' country can do without it. And there will be little pen lamentation, however Individuals may deplore it in their inmost thouchts. The liquor dealers may well plead that they can't afford to give food away any more. Foo l t unservationists give their unqualified approal. and stimate with satisfaction the quantity
'Tbe ßun Inc.lne, tot do aotrompr
HOROSCOPE
dlrertorT. hn tü miiu frr intrttön. lto rt Injtren-
tion to buioei4. La4 exutiua. po r .lllTry ef patera, bail ,f. punish d. M eIUeso,ne aliens must be put where!
LIci rtap.jnJ to i-)rri l'hone 111 .ml Ue'.l 210. , probabIv go back to work. I "
i ..f .i . . ........ Tl.r I
of i'!oisions it will save.
I'Mi-'Mcl A m t'ica nisiu and a I . . ,
l )r the free lunch has u nuou nteuiv been wasterus
1 ; 1 c 1 1 dem..' n! - ,x 1 ! i im t i : e , r 1 1 . , , . w o t ! . 1 n e v will
1 ct i e t . h .
i iii'ii h pay as tb are now --tting. j
Th'M will Ii.: i.idii.l with oppot t'.unu s for arioiis j klt'.d". of to uat.i'i. and utertainmeat. j It s.r.ir. Is .- . 1 th s.. up m must h. willing to sign an acieena t.t to i emain iuii i :-o:ie,J for ten month j
T'noy are to World o'it-.de
t tl
:;.ci.l epcage-l
!';r.is!it d. just w 1 at th.s l.o t . t . that t h s r,;,H
fron, all c
: :t f
i r p ! a i . . ' u 1 : t i s p T o i H t i i i
nmun.h ati-.n w ith tho the wölkt as al.d the wiil Know until it is
n w thit'.g is. it is rumored.
si pi- mt in w as in
Tiie co !t.tr In grer
fr-tr 1 by Tlimi, is ' . 1 i s . ,
faith 1!. hull. Thcie's tt hate for .t;' tho..s.,n,i patriot' What mere (u!d tiiev ? A b n..e to st l t tluar countiy with amp, r-ward for their s,-r a s at-, with all the ir. ster bt art could 1 -in1 throwii in.
It lias seldom ministered to real hunger. It has been an incentive for men to eat and tlrink more than was good for them. Mr. Hoover has urged the renunciation of the "fourth meal". He will surely favor renouncing the free lunch, which often amounts to a fifth or sixth meal. An the anti-liquor reformers will lejoice. too. They hae long sougb; to ban the free lunch, on the ground that it lured men to the saloons. Thus everybody con erned except inveterate free lunchers is satisfied.
Conscien e is uoing to race, pretty considerably, for a time. Some f our mmg men are going to discover, for th-. bist time in their lives, in many cases, that they have ' conscientious scruples". Hut, Washington news is to the effect that the exemption boards are going o
i require that the conscientious scruples against war serv.
MONDAY, .H id' 2.1, 1917. According to astrology the planetary rule today is not important. The sun. Saturn nnd Xeptune are all slightly adverse. It is a day in which initiative should not be tried in anything important. It is wise to pursue routine. The stars are read to foreshadow sensations and these will be precedel hy a brief period of uncertainty and prescience on th part of the public, the seers declare. In the balance hancs the fate of the world, astrologers declare, and they contradict one another in making prognostications concerning the war. There will no a chance for peace, one of the most eminent astrologers maintains, and this may not be accepted, but all will typend on some sudden turn of events. All the seers unite In foreseeing long drawn out hostilities unless the miracle of peace happens before the new year. The sun is in a place apparently presages anxieties and problems for legislators and there is an augury of much traveling on, tho part of congressmen before the new year. The death of a royalty is prognosticated. This will not affec international affairs, but it will be more or less dramatic. Increase of terrible and shocking crimes arr persistently foretold as a result of war conditions.
Children will occupy attention from the nation during the coming weeks in an unprecedented manner. Financial affairs that are of unexpected moment r.re prognosticated as bringing men and women into serious understanding of their larger responsibilities. Canada has the forecast of internal trouhles. owing to the asitation of important problems having a bearing on h? United States. Persons whose hirthdate it is may experience serious annoyances luring the coming year. Young women will have offers of marriage. Children horn on this day may have a philosophic and philanthropic trend of mind. These subjects of I.eo often have little money-making ability. (Copyright. 1517.
THE MEL TING POT COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.
Tin: s.i ltKsrirs or iiatk. Sagacious citizens progress with due deliberation, In business. loe or politics, in war or aviation. To throw precaution to the ind whicii blow from distant hamlets And treat conservative advice with disrespectful damlets. To pull the throttle open wide for extra-lecal speeding May prove the motto that mor-? hate results in less proceeding. Thcre comes across your optic fold an amiable maiden. With earrings, beaut, youth and wealth us visually laden. You quickly voice your loud desire to lead her to the altar. Hut she invokes the stable boy to fit you with a halter. And as you're gently led away by her athletic flunkey. You realize that you have been a very hasty donkey. You see a world replete with cold and folks that try to nab it; You make a Rugby football ruh in hectic haste to grab it; Hut soon hefore the referee in bankrupt operations, Your assets aid the lawyers to embellish their vacations. While you attempt another start in rounding up the dollars. And pinch your weekly laundry bills by wearing rubber collars. Arthur Irooks Baker.
Use Only Fresh Farm Blueberries For Preserving
t'so only fresh, firm and lean blueberries for canning s iys today's bulletin from the national emergency food garden commission, which is cooperating with this paper in its nation wide food conservation campaign, liest results are obtained if the fruit is canned the same day that it is picked. Pick over fruit carefully and wash by placing in a colander nnd pouring cold water through it. Pack int hot glass Jars and fill spaces with boiling water through it. (See below.) Adjust tops and partially sal jars (tin cans should be sealed completely). Sterilize in boiling water for lf minutes ami then tighten tops of jars immeliately after removing from the hot water. Invert in a place free from draughts to cool. Wrap in dark paper to prevent lops of color in storage. (Keep it dark.) If sirup Is desired, use a up of sugar to four ups of water and boil till dissolved. l"se sirup boiling hot. Blackberries and lewberries: Blackberries and lew herrie should be picked in shallow trays or baskets during the cool part of the day. canned as soon as possible after being picked. Greater care is necessary in handling these berries than in the case of blueberries because they are more easily jammed. The canning process is essentially the same except that the heavier sirup may be used if deslrel. An excellent sirup may be made of a cup of sugar dissolved in three cups of the juice from very ripe berries. This gives a vei v tine Mayor and adds color to the canned fruit making a palatable and attractive dessert. Send a two cent stamp u the National Kmergency Food Garden Commission, 210 Maryland Bldg., Washington, D. C. for free canning and drying manuals.
"Life is sad kind of picseen. They or whatever what they
tih: MANTcrw: lady. "I seen some dandy moving pictures last night," said the Manicure Lady. "There was one about a beautiful girl that loved a gent and cot turned down by him on account of him meeting her chum and liking the chum better. Gee, George, you should have saw her sad face when she seen the truth!" "I don't care for any moving pictures exctpt the comical ones and the pictures that .show troops landing or marching off somewhere,"
said the Head Barber, enough without that tures, the ones you "uighta censure them, they call it. That's
oughta." "I think that kind of pictures is showed to make folks think," sabl the Manicure Iidy. "Maybe when a gent that is Inclined to Mirt ss a picture like that he will go home and resolve not to t rille no more with n) young girl's affection. Anyhow, I hope it will have that effect, though goodness knows 1 never seen the gent yet that could trifle with my heart. Plenty of them tried it but all they ever got was the laugh. "I used to tell them that I felt sorry for them, hut lately I don't even let them down that easy. Male tlirts is one of the worst menaces to the bulwarks of our civilization, ns one of them lady writers said recently. Male Mirts is worse than female flirts, because most everyone figures out that gents Is sincere when they fall in love." "If I was sing!? there wouldn't bo no more falling in love for me," said the Head Barber, gloomily. "I got bawled out good and proper before I left home this morning because 1 stayed out playing billiards half an hour longer than T saht t would last night. I couldn't make
-Tr??H!M,''tm?tWi,nttMU'!,fl'ntvnw;i!W paii.j
the Missus believe I was in no billiard hall." "Maybe you wasn't," said the unfeeling Manicure Lady. "I read somewhere once that married men
always said they was playing bil- i
liards when they stayed downtown late at night, and that statistics showel only one married man out of 50 knew how to play billiards well enough to like the game." "That ain't so." said the Head Barber. "Almost any man can play billiards well enough to like the game. It ain't much of a trick to learn. You wouldn't think it was hard If you seen the shape of some of the heads in a billiard parlor. And nearly every gent likes the game, and besides, every married man likes to get ov t with the boys once In a while. It ain't right to be cooped up in a dat all the time, and if married folks sees each other too much they are apt to get tired of each other's society." "Goodness knows that could never happen up to our house," said the Manicure laly. "I guess outside of paydays my father don't show up at homo to spend the evenings more than once in a blue moon. He is quite a club man, gnd belongs to s many lodges that when h dies we'll be awful rich, if the lodges don't welch. There ain't anything father ain't joined except lady lodges. Mother ain't tired of seeing the old gent hanging around the house, and she ain't liable ever to get tired, either.' "Well. T gues that's a good way to live this life," mused the Head Barber. "Couples should stay at home a lot the first few years of married life, and the last few years, but in between then? has got to be a certain amount of going out by way of variety." "Well, father does plenty of it." saht the Manicure Lady, "whether it's by way of variety or burlesque."
I ETiilTI
1 11 MlS
lit?
A Girl's Impressions in the War Capital
The rest of us will wonder V.vu h a id la ;e that at the Uo m;M be shown by the life record and religious faith
and performance of th? p..sessor. This will nail conscientious slackers.
inj jf that ten month- we'll ! b t in on the -eret.
I
THE I. V. Y. AND GERMANY. We had I. W. W. trouU- s b, fore the war. Thi.pernaaoas tvpe -f läu pcan ' s m! u a 1 L--m" is no new thir.g. It m r I..' siio As its purpos,. more clearly, a'-i'1 bfcome more il'iiii.-iu- t iwiiied society, at a time V. htu We are engaged in a crucial, lo.iperativ e stt uggl lor hith mk ill a lul national ideals. Neither is it a ( h'U a 't a isticallv Grman pro.hn t. 1' i i'rem h ruthet ;nan German in its origin. Ut rtn.n ladivals tend naturally toward a rather orderly soclalb r.i, wli-ras )ihI.v,.i1;mu rg tow ard ana i chim--t ho i o-ite of ; ... ialism. The p.diiMlist, or the Industrie Woikt-r of the World, represents extreme, law 1 s.s in ci,..lu.ih.sm rath r than c ope:atie f.-ut. lit want others of his kind to hang tog.-ther wi?h him l-ng ( r,i.i'.i;!i to overthrow the sta! !;!; . I order. He wants '. destroy government and capita!, o'üüm .it'1 the world's wealth, take liif. share of the loot and do what hI ';es with it. Jut what i- o;ug to happen after- " ard in't clear to any'-tnly out.-ble the charmed ranks t-T tLt I. W. W. Perhaps they don't know them-elvcj
The .government crop re port Is a shot heard round the world. The promise of a billion bushels more than last yeir's crops means as much for the allied
ieau.se as a billion slieiis.
l') in the air we can win thi war, acoonling tn Sec';; Laker. Bat. Jerusalem, Newt! that' where congress has been righting it for the past ninety tlavs and it hasn't sc alped a single Teuton!
A guin. ih'.o's Ftibscription to the Liberty loan sure stumps us. Is that 1 ilirino hinting that he's with vs for world wide democracy"; or is he just sarcastic?
Gen. Chang has handed over Peklntc to Gen. Wang We nominate den. Bang for president of today's Chinese republic, if any.
And now they've linenl Joey Tinker $100 fcr spitting into an cmpir'j face at Columbus. Talk about personal liberty I
Who's Who Behind the Scenes in the War Army HY Gi:X)H(.C GARY IN.
I 'triform Give- Wn-dilnston Comic 0M'ia Aspect. Hy i:dn. iirniu lldernatlotuil New Service: WASHINGTON, July 2C. Washington is just a blaze of uniform.'. It's really the most striking rdght one sees on the streets. It looks like a foreign capital. f course, the khaki uniforms of cur own soldier boys predominate, but the horizon blue of the French c.Vieeis, the olive-drab of the Fnglish. the sea-green u the Russians, the glaring red of French living men and the blazing white if our own r.aval odicers give Washington the gayest appearance of any city 1 have seen on this side of the Atlantic. War is really picturesque. Looking at it from the standpdnt of a woman. I should sa that the Fnited States soldiers have lather the worst of it for uniforms, in the matter of appearance and comfort. The slouchy. loose-fitting uniforms of the Knglish soldiers really look awfully comfortable. They wear their coats loose and nice and our boys look as though they were moulded into their garment.-. The French soldiers look "all
dressed" up, too. I don't really believe they do nnv fighting in those light blue uniforms. Some of them wear the tightfst red trousers, too. but I guess those are just for dress uniforms. They wear a terrible lot of gold braid, too. Russian stddiers nren't half bad looking. It's rather a weird ort l ires.s for a man, though black trousers with a green coat. They are terribly close Utting, so much so that they always remind me of the hero in "The Chocolate Soldier." (Mir own United Stales naval officers are the very best lookup men in town, though. Their white duck uniforms always look so cool and they are real'y wor.derful lookin: men. It almost makes a girl wish she could be a sailor. i like our own lighting boys the best, though the enlisted men. They are such a daring, wholesome looking crowd of chaps, tanned and bronzed and strong looking. They are not at all lacking in gallantr.v, either, for I have watched them and they ore every one gentlemen. Washington just seems to be full of soldiers. They are here from every country. It makes the city really quite gay, though.
BHK.vniLK . i:tkl.
joiin l. cn.inr.i;L.!N In-lK'tor General.
Horn In New York. Jan. :0. l.'.. and appointed to the military academy from that stale in l7j. Was made a second lieutenant and assigned to the 'irs-t artillery in lve During the Spanish-Ame: dean war. while a captain, was- made a major and cliif ordi atice ott;.cr of v dunlfTs. In l:oJ0. when he l -- turned to the regular establishment, he was letaile! to the inspector Leneral's department, where he has continued. Ho was attache at the American t.r.bas- n Vienna. 1 S r 7 -s. and participated in the campaign against the Moros (Philippine islands in 1&0J.
ONCE- OVERS WHY TIIKY DON'T MAKIIY. (Copyright. 1917.) Fntil recently, when the report that married men might be excused from army or navy service was circulated, there was a cry from all parts of the country that young men were less and less prone to married life. Many theories were advanced for the caue. "Girls expect too much in the way of homo furnishings, in matters of dress and adornment, in expecting luxury." There were many other reasons given. The young men. realizing their inability to meet the demands, put away thought of married responsibilities, and Mitted at out from one little sweetheart to another. But even this was and is expensive. Kvery year the requirements and ourtesies expected of the would-be popular younc beau are a heavier drain n the income of the young and unattached man. Common j-ense and a better un-IcTstandlnE of each other is what the young men and women need if the marriage ratio is to be increased, tarring war marriages. Young men must expect to give up expensive habits; girls must be willing to join hands for loving sacrifice when they give their lives into the young man's keeping. Kqual love, equal intertst, qual willing. ness to sacrifice producers, not just consumers then will marriage be. in fact as well as theory desirable for every young person.
with the ( .icirncv of the army, th condition and state of supplies cf all kinds, of arms ..nd equipment, f the expenditure of public property arid nionevs, and the condition of accounts of 11 disbursing ofhcers of every branch of the ser-
v ice. c f the elMeiency of
WASHINGTON. July M.-As inspector general of the Fnited States army. Gen. Chamberlain's sphere of inquiry extend" to every branch .f the military affairs. He ha to do
conduct, discipline and fd'.oers and troops, and
report witn strict, im pa r tiality in retard to r!l irrt gul u itics that may be discovered. From the very lutie incumbent upon this department no argument is necessary to convince the reader that the troops in the Meld do not welcome a viit from an cfTiccr from this branch of the service.
SCUAI'S. Tho book of the Bible called Litlous is so called because it relates principally to the Invites and priests. Tho legion, the chiaf subdivision of the Roman army, contained about 6,000 men and a contingent of cavalry. All the common house rats !- loured originally to the ol.! world from which they came to this ontinent in ships. Two-passenger airplanes are now for sale at j::,000 caca. It is siid that the manufacturers expect tc
s- ell 2,500 machines within the
Vast
my:
50,00 People Daily 85,00People Sunday constitute the reading masses who depend upon THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES for their quick enlightenment on the happenings of the day and leadership in thought of what those happenings mean.
For its splendid reputation for stating only facts as facts, treating the news as narrative; For its honesty of conviction in its expression of editorial opinion logically pointing the way to a consistent line of truth; For treating the public . welfare as paramount to private gain championing the cause of humanity, even in preference to churchology or partisanship; THE NEWS-TIMES has literally become as a journalistic Bible to these tens of thousands of daily and Sunday readers AND THERE IS NO OTHER MEDIUM UNDER THE SUN THROUGH WHICH THEY CAN BE REACHED AS EFFECTIVELY IF THEY CAN BE REACHED OTHERWISE AT ALL.
This is a "tip" to advertisers: Is the patronage of these 50,000 to 65,000 readers to be desired or is to be ignored? The value of an advertisement depends upon the confidence which the reader has in the integrity of the medium. The lay public is coming to depend more and more upon the newspaper to speak the tnith, honestly and conscientiously, not only editorially, but in the news columns and advertising columns as well. THE NEWS-TIMES after this manner is a leader among its readers. They scan its columns for bargains as well as for the news and modes of thought. They scan no other because they have no other to scan.
This is a "tip" to readers: You want the news, and you want the be5t of news, truthfully told, and at the earliest possible moment, and you want editorial direction, with reference to that news, based upon honest conviction, even though you may not always agree with it, or accept its conclusions. You are only "kidding" yourself to prefer arything else. THE NEWS-TIMES oilers y j both extending even into its advertising columns insofar as it is able to supervise their contents. You are always as safe as the frailities of humanity will permit, both in your patronage of THE NEWS-TIMES and of its advertisers. It is
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