South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 275, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 2 October 1917 — Page 6
ii i i i i.w.mm.. ocnmnt ion.
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS -TIMES Morning EZvcnir.p; Sunday. NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO., Publishers. G. II. .LMMirn. I'rVJrnt. .T. M. STnrilKNSON. Min.if-r. JOHN IIK.NHV zuvj'K. I-Mlt r.
Onlr A-r tr I'r Mornlnr I'tprr In Northern Indiana nl Onv ri.fr t:rnpl Inc t! lnt-rnatlonl Nw rlc! to hiith lirnl ro I--;tei Wire: Iay nd ltit.
"More Water At Less Cost
Ifom rhn 1151.
e : 2V) W. Coif n At.
fi'l at t. efVe 0r f!epl.'-r. sib't-e nurnNm nnl :)k f"t" l i rrm". t nt"l fMit'-n il. AI rt! 1 1. g. 'Iftili Hon. f Afr-. ;r.ti;.ir I -r "wmt ala." !f -jinx u:r. la i: tl.e tefdjorje tire-f rr. M'l b- rudl'-d nfir lf.-rtln. I:j)'-rt i Ti :it f 'n - K n to Nr,!r.r. Un- et"'itl' 0. pr !!; v-ry f f aiTi. ba 2 t;-"-.-r- .!'. ff.. to '. f .-;'art:ij-nt with uLlh jou
rt- f;,rr Tl. .. s-Tl rr M t.v irteen tr':r.k llt.ts, II f j
n: rnj'cci tu J I . . i L'.!j I'.'l nt,d I.ta. 1V.
! n-f KITTION UTJ; ',' , r. t- y S I ; n I V
Ir.jj s;n-ty.
V rn'r.g n1 I'venlng IMm-u:, ; M rn:r. g r !'.n.!i-s: r.dltl':n.
r:,:il!. $.';i j-r jf.ir in .i'!vin'f
IOir.-i hj ;, rri'-r tr south l'. n 1 ;u.d MlnhawaVa. ." 00 ner Tir la a'lv.ri'-. r 12. by tue Lutrrt'J at tit Souta li J.J ;"st .'Ci- a (i 'y.'id !u-i n. ail.
ADVFKTI-IVO K ATI- : .-k the ad vertane: epi rtmnt. Forcen j'erf Ulng l;-; r-i r f ;ttiv : t'oNK, I. ' l: r.NZi: N W.'MjbiiAN. 22Ö 1 ':fth At.. N-w 1 tVc City, m l Adv. HMff.
CMcago. T!.e .Ne w i lue n !'-n.,r to k-r its rtlin jf
!'! r!. fret- from f r a i u : n t ;..;irf preRt.itl'"''! Any p'-rsca
'-f rauj-1 tLfarii ptr'ju.ik'" any ulvrtiru-:it In this
ppr will " i:f r L jr j:j tLr ihji :n-:it bj rep -rtlui; iL
e-
OCTOI5EK 2, 1917.
SILVER THIMBLES. The "Ml'vtr t i'i i j'Viiis to ! .-prr.uliii' to Ainer'ka. V.'t mar f .r;:ii.u atioi. ht-rc- and time .iryiiii; wuiiitn t. i-, c "l-l Mht-r Utensil.- t jtwt-lry a.s tuiitn!;utnn.- t war r -1 i -f fun-i.-. It'i an l-Ita i::il'"rt' l from Kurland. An appeal .j( this burt uas i: ij ! c thr- last car. Tliiinhles were askl fur pai tirisla: i , I, ..-. ius alnn:-t t-t-ry Ijimlish viti- ;!.. no jnatltr i.O'.v p''"r he may l. lias a tlUtr himMt. Hur.-Iruls f thoiisan.l.s of uomen, p.iftieuiarl .f the mitlole ati'l lov.tr clashes, brought tlK-i:-;hin;bUs, their m Mlv-r spwon.-,, th ir old silver uli links, and hrar.-icts, ami other treasurer, ami tossed tht-ia into the rn !tin- '-t. The originator.-; of the plan prnfeed -re it satisfaction o.tr the result. In onf y-ar, from th- jirurtels f this .aeritn-f, th y l oiht --v-ii autoniohile amhuhmceh ;-nd rive m jtor hw-pital hoat.-. and eontrihuted to various relief funds ff-r disil'h d soldi rs. The sih-r thimbl fund ab-ne aiuo"ntr! to JT.'.'i.oj. So far n.-i th- tuur'.s are concimd, however, no
v.H'de American need be greatly impressed by thes1
results. In fact, to any man or woman of genuin-; business Instincts-, the prrcelur- looks rather illy. If vornan want to melt up treasured trinkets and
FOR a specimen of "penny wie and pound foolishness", u e commend to the people of South Bend that action of the city board of public u-orks through i: w'.tter department, in the re perin of the old reservoir at the central pumping Nation, and cditerriiT; upon the public a nice, full-sized typhoid epidemic, including seven deatli.. What is c'ven lives and a hundred twenty-live doctor bills, nurse bills, and lo?s of time. etc.. cmpareJ with a fev.' dollars aveJ by the reutilization of such a death-trap, after it had been abandoned for practically two decades? "More water at le-5.crüt," says Supt. Toyne. "Cost or no coit," aid Maj. J. O. Cobb, of the U. S. health, service, after an investigation. "Discontinue its use." And it throws some Jijrht on the statement given out by William Shimer, state bacteriologist recently, that typhoid has been gradually increasing in South Be.id during the past three years. We wonder if the belated arrival of Surgeon Carrol Fox, who made the sanitary and housing survey last winter making it in the dead of winter had anything to do with his not discovering the faulty reservoir? And so it is that our city administration has saved a few dollars to crow about, upholding is claim of promised economy by sending seven people to their graves, and a hundred or more to the hospitals. We wonder what Supt. Toyne and the board of works thought that old reservoir was abandoned for anyway? Because, we suppose, of the extravagarce of previous administrations, the sum total of all municipal economy, of course, being wrapped up in the present one. What of it if the bottom of the reservoir was several feet below the river; what f it if it did leak surface and refuse water from the river to contaminate the entire city's supply? Something had to be done in order that the water department might be able to deposit its annual brag on "more water at less c-t!" Never mind the increased death rate; the loss of a few lives. It is about the cheapest, inexcusable, and literally brainless attempt at ecmoim, that could be conceived nf. It shows a conception ol the value of public heahti, and hon- to preserve it, that would scarcely do crcviit to an infant. We commend to the he-alt h board that henceforth they keep their noses a tri tie cloer to the spot that the city water comes from, and the next time such an undertaking comes along never mind the expediencies of administrative cooperation. Just tell the public. In municipal affairs, same as private, the cry of the age is for service and there, again, bobs up that pestiferous word: "eliiciency !"
THE MELTING POT
'Come Take Pot Lack With Us
try to d is to eliminate speculative profits ami excessive middleman protits and secure better distribution. Thre are 1-0, out), hho fewer cattle, hogs and sheep '.u this country than before the war and producers are butchering their brood stock because of the high
; prices. nur exports ni meat mums nave iUiU" ui"1'j Finally and conclusively, there is no hope of much j lower meat prices for years to eome. i There is absolutely no prospect of a smaller for-
lw,i.-l,.i.!c f i . i- tli.. . ii'.. tit vcnliiiii nt if tli.- w : i r, t In
I eitm demand tor our meais ar. imkm uuu e v f l m-fiil'H'i r will si.-, lighter rather than breed so loni: as
the prices are so high. This is the mat situation, and the American con-
uir thin. cs that they love so that they may f t 1 th
are making a real sacrihee that is fine. Hut it is certainly not justifiable on the score of business tliciency. No thimble or spoon or brach t, even at the present price of sjivr worth hilf so much when tuni'-d into bullion. Melting up such articles is sheer economic
w ts. in all vfch enterprises if real Mfecti encss s i
w r.ted th penplr concerned had far better ;rive r al money. They can l etter afford to do it, and the prof ed- will go much farther.
FINDING A BROTHER. I'rfd r:nglar.a, an JInglishman. was standing among the crowds that thronged Trafalgar square when the first inptallmer.i of American troops paraded through London. AH at on c it occurred to him that maybe his orotlu r I'ercy was in that parade. Percy was l orn In America, and hoi lived in America all his life, whil l'r-d lived in Kngland. The brothers had never met. i'rc l had no j articular reason for thinking tha Percy was in that Yankee army. He hadn't heard of IVrcv enlisting. P'U somehow the idea took hold of him. He looked intently at th face of every khakli lad trooper as the ranks swung by. He followed them to ;rcen park, and went from group to group, asking for Pen Lnglami. And hnally he found him. Tlr. Iroth-: pTi'ni-jol each other from photographs. It uas odd, ..cn't it that mysterious inner urg lcnhr.g a man. in spite of reason and common sense, to son, thing unexpc cted. t l things 1;U( that ai'e happening all the time. ps cli"ioi;its vay, to n-arly all of us. We simply don't notice them. V'heri joi hae a sadden impulse to write to a friend ou'e neglected, and then you et a U tttr from hin. v ritten on the same day; when you are -udiier.ly mowd to o home, and on your arrival tiud (hat some'. 'ody i sick cr .ilnTi.-o in need of you; when ou walk int a man's o:Tc e without any conscious pur-po-ami find an ir.vintion or piece of business; when in th-- pre--rr.cr cf a friend or relative ymi catch and rxj-r'-s-. an unspoken t h'vig ht it's all the same sort of thing. "Thouch? t ran - ferer.c--". or "mind-reading' is a erv ordinary phenomenon. howe r extraordinary it seems when we try to ex phi In it.
sumer might as well prepare to meet it first as last. There is only one way in which the great mass of consumers can meet this situation, ami that is hy suh-
! stitution of fish, poultry, vegetable and other dishes.
Government is powerless as to meat. Make up your mind to pay high prices for meat, or eat something equally as pood but cheaper. In other words, eat intelligently. It is really a tough proposition only before you've seriously tackled it.
"HOLLERING." "Why do chibir-n always play at the tops of their rdct?" asked a mar. w h.o neres were frazzled h
the shouting from t
"Why ch
MUNITIONS AND BIBLES. Next to guns and shells, the biggest war demand seems to be for Bibles. Publishing houses lind it impossible to keep up with their orders. "There is the biggest rush of l.ibles we have ever known," they say. Orders for future delivery are piled up to an extent suggestive of ...eel trust business. Publishers have already contracted for enough Testaments to supply two million soldiers . i l sailors with pocket editions. There is a natural disposition to give Testaments to departing soldiers, an i they accept them gladly. There ar special pocket - d-fions bound in khaki, meant to stand hard u.-age. And mui the orders roll in. The "civilian demand" is said to be as abnormal as the military demand. Noer was there such an insistent call for omplete editions of the dd and New Testaments. The religious spirit of the nation has deepened and strengthened sine1 we entered the war. It's a perfectly
The Stan Incline, bat do ot compel"
HOROSCOPE
TUESDAY, OCTOUIin '2, 1017. Astrologers tee this as an unfortunate day, hince Uranus, Mercury, Saturn. Neptune and Mars are all in evil place. When the planets exercise evil sway it is well to conserve all the energies and today it is especially important not to take the initiative in any matter with future possibilities. Warning is given of strange ebbs and tides of public opinion, and even periods of popular madness in the next few months. Persons In power will be misjudged and riots will be numerous, it is predicted. In this connection the prophecy made, last year when the stars presaged race troubles is to be re
called. Women and children will suffer severely, it is declared by the seers. Neptune again appears to fortrll a battle or a disaster at sea with L'ranus in a place where deception is indicated in connection with it. Danger through failure of transportation is foreshadowed, and this appears to be centered in water rather than on land. There is a sign that always forecasts suspicion, dishonesty and double dealing, which may affect persons that have lar?e responsibilities and many scandals are apparently scheduled for the winter. .Some questions involving the honor of the United states may Imperil relations with an ally, the seers predict.
THE CYCLE OF EVENTS. They beat their rpears to prjring hooks to fructify the earth. They turned the wheels of Industry for all that they were xorth. They blew th whistle early and they humped to beat the band The smoke of their activity rose upward in the land. And soon the country- blossomed with prosperity and wealth. While everybody swelled his chest and hrasgeJ about his healtePut all the people married with alacrity and pride; With most extrem velocity their number; multiplied; And soon there xva3n't standin- room for everybody's feet. Omitting painful comment on the lack of food to eat. Uefore the fleeting calendar had counted many years. They warmed their pruning hooks aain and bta. them back to spears. To boost for moderation in a world of rash extreme Will get you quickly labelled as a fan of empty dreams. Not only will your labors prove of slow and small avail, Put often they secure for you a residence in allIt frequently has happered to the publisher of books Discussing all the pros and cons of pears arid pruning hook?. Arthur Prooks LJak er.
!. H m l II l l It m m Ml III ll l. n i l ll l m ni m-m.m m n, n .1 frnrn
CATTY'. Ivendolyn: I hear that Fanny Forty-Odd is to be married. Who is the happy man? Grace: Why, her father!" -Ladies Home Journal. tiii: PAiiLon imiM.rmi:. "Are you engaged to that young man who called last night? I've heard seeral reports " "Goodness. Auntie, did we make as much noise as that?" Life. 0 NOT SO Mi:.T. 'narles Lamh was once asked to say grace at a dinner. He was surprised, and asked: "Is there no minister present?" He was told there was not.
"Then." he continued. "let us thank t God." Ladles' Home Journal. j
no i:ni:my alii:ns. "Who was the tirtt man. Pobby?" asked the teacher. "George Washington." "Why, no, Bobby. You ought to know better than that. It was Adam." "Oh. well," said Lobby, detenu i: ed to prove himself right, "I wasn ; counting foreigners." Ladies' HomJournal. o AIMMUXTATIOX. Time: "What do the inmates think of the new asylum'.'" Keeper: "They just rave over it." Indies' Home Journal.
Hot
in TT
Women in the War
Ily (L Kay Spencer.
Women will 1 .r imrnliirlv enc.n
natural thine, exemplified in the experience of nearly . tjhh. the warrns innuences of every belligerent. Struggle, sacrifice, hardship and sor-'the stars during war time, and they row turn minds öf men and women back to religious have been repeatedly cautioned to
things. War mak's them feel the realities of life a nothing else does. And in the ! tress- of such deep emotions they turn i aturally to the Hebrew and Chri.-.tinu scriptures which have solaced and staved so many :enet -at ions.
ANOTHER CONVERT TO LOYALTY. The Lev. Ibcuk White of New York, who received an unduly large share id' notoriety for his flag-burning ceremony a year or more ago, is now as ardent a patriot as William Jennings Pryan. He is quoted as having said recently: "I am making a plea to the radicals of America to patriotically support the conduct of the war. because the war was voted legally. While the enemy is battering at the gates sedition is inexcusable." It's a fine thing that Mr. Whit- has found this out.
f.e vacant lot hard by.
hihlrcn d" evervthip.g at the tops of the ir i It is t be hoped that he will convince his followers.
V OH
repli
e .
his W i f
Ami there the matter it.sted i Undoubtedly he v ill gain more for his cherished cause of
A little stcry in the Denver Tinu sheds a bit of universal brotherhood by his present attitude than by
hubt on the problem.
diminutiv e new oy, rnv litt! man?"
A kindly gentleman ask.s a
Where d you get your papers.
em o-i
"Oh. 1 buv "What do
-Fi' ev.ts-." "Ami ttl;.if do "Fi icr.ts." "Y-'U don't m.i "Nope." -Then what o. ' h. j ;s! to tf That h Ips to ar.d v oca 1:7.! to w h ; . h Is a ' o cci i v for dm
"Fe. am d r e n ; r
ir. The Tim
a 1 iC v
j his earlier denunc iations of patriotism. The rest of the
pacifists, socialists. pro-Germans ami other doubter.? i .u:'t learn this lesson too soon for their own good and the good of democracy.
a v
r then-.
; set lor them?" ,i c t !.:?;-; . at that.'
t :
.1 " r. :i n e to
ho!'
r
or.
explain 'hl'.dr
a bt of juvenile p-ych'-'log n holier ! i cause thev want
; .. s go. . 1 a rea.s.-n as nicest grown-ups ; th- thiv.gs thev do.
do tm-v var.t To m-iH-r.
i n pl.j'.r.s a ; v il evrlutpmis;
IT WORKS, SOMETIMES. Dispatches from Washington stated that the Argentine-German situation "might i e cleared." if Germany announced th.it she disapproved of von Luxberg's opinion that Argentine's minister of foreign affairs is "a notorious ass." c 'net . at sc ho.d, we c alled a much larger boy that and took it back four times in the next 3c seconds, and w e were cleared, and cleaned.
.lo
all chil
ler until thev're civilized
Mm j eoj,).. o-i iv hive r"t!ced, mver Mop hoi-
HOPELESS AS TO MEAT PRICES
( r
Whir.g.o: r.:r.tr.t w:i;
et.-ls out tr. jr.forrr.atior. that, our go - ,
:.t trv t i t. pr'.ce.s cn meats, that any
CONFESSES WHEN CAUGHT.
Real neat point made by that Argentit e deputy, who says that if Ferhn honestly disapproved of Von Lux .burg's murderous adice. it should have fired him iwbtn it reeeiel his dispatches and not waited until . i ........ ,.n. -....
Put it is one of German autocracy's p-eculiarities that it never disapproves of ar.y villainy until the villain
falls.
he wise and conscientious in all their relations with one another, Sunce new rivalries and jealousies will develop. Words should be guarded. Calamities have been long foretold for this month, which is held to be the beginning of "grave events." Pefore snow fall peace agitation will take a strange turn, astrologers declare, and extraordinary events will take place in the United States. Plots and perils that will be frustrated until later in the year are indicated for both New York city and Washington. Persons whose birthdat it is should not speculate and '.hould be especially careful of b.tters and writings during the coming year. Children born on this day mav be Inclined to waste money on amusement. Girls have the augury of happy marriage. (Copyright. 1917.)
grm woiik. A New York mother, on hearing that her sister had received a new little girl, said to Lillian, her little daughter: "Lillian, auntie has a new baby, and now mamma is the baby's aunt, papa is the baby's uncle and you are her little cousin." Well." said Lillian wonderingly. "wasn't that arranged quick?" La-die-' Home Journal.
touching i:t. pop, won't you do somtthin' for Mamie and me?" "What is it you kids want?" "Won't you tell us the beautiful fairv tales ma says you tell her?"
tr.-it o j
Argt-ntine's ser.ate broke with Germany by a vote of
II all chances of increased j j0 ;Q 1 We'd like the r.ame of that minority. Bu-
lfm alr-adv
ct: : an
prj e ,
is to get enough
:.d tii.it all that government will
. lill. it's a fairly decent senate that has only one hito.iC, or Heed, or LiFollette. in it
ig! Tin: sjr.m: ii:ali:u pays. Highest cash prices for gentlemen's and ladies' cast-ol" clothing. 123 W. Colfax. Advt.
IIDITII CA MILL. I regrvt I can not live longer for llngland.' On Monday evening, Oct. 11, 1915, the Hev. M. Gahan. a British chaplain in Brussels, was admitted by pcial passport to the prison of Ht. Gilles. As the divine entered the confines of the German military prison the muffled thunder of the heavy guns was finding its way through the multifarious noises of a military' street and the whole scene was dampened by a cold drizzle as if even the heavens would add to the depression of the prison atmosphere. A military court-marshal in the early afternoon had passed the final death sentence on one Edith Cavell, a British nurse who had remained behind when the royal armies retreated for the purpose of administering to the ease of her wounded countrymen, prisoners in the German hands. For ten weeks the little nurse had been confined in the great, gloomy prison on a technical sentence of espionage. Through her own words. In her signed statement and by public acknowledgment in the military court which tried her, Kdith Cavell admitted the charge to be true and the sentence juet. Actually, her offense consisted of maintaining a feort of "underground" route for assisting British prisoners in the German hands to escape and. as a rule, the men who thus regained freedom were experts in some line, and their observations within the enemy lines proved of much utility on their rejoining the British forces. The Rev. Gahan found the frail little woman calm and resigned. Fear was at no time expressed or admitted. After a touching Interview, she gave him messages to dear
friends and relatives, in assuring him her deportment before the firing squad would be truly British she said, "I have no fear nor shrinking. 1 have seen death so often that it is not strange or painful to me." All through the dreary afternoon the American legation was making a tireless effort in a great fight to thP life of the heroic nurse, or
at the least to obtain a sentence less horrible than death but hardly the less fearful. Mr. Whitlock. the American minister, assigned Gaston De Laval, attorney to the legation, to be Miss Cavell's counsel at the military tr.al. As we have seen, his efforts' were abortive indeed, the caso seems to have been almost hopeless from the first. At 8:30 word was received at the American legation that Miss Cavell was to be shot some time during the night. The legation assumed a feverish activity: these koen Americans had decided to tight the death penalty to the last. Attaches endeavored to get In contact with Baron von der Daneken. chief of the politicnl department. The Spanish minister was retained for the influence he wielded at that time. The situation became desperate when Baron von der Lancken could not be located. Early in the evening he had left his office for an even
ing's entertainment at the tnea.er. Baron von Falkenhauser and Count Harrach. members of the political department and on the staff of von Lancken, are located, however, and at lV3o the chief of the political department is found; he hurries to his office. After a short and earnest consultation the German officers de-cla-e thev cannot circumvent the decree of the military tribunal. The
sentence i to be carried through
20 of their rifles loaded blank. Feeling Js running high among the men and none wish to have a part in the work. For 24 hours Miss Cavell would take no food or drink. This, with the strain, has rendered her practically helpless. As the guards conduct her to the courtyard she faints in their arms, but, though desperately weak, she is revived and expresses a desire to go through with the ordeal. She is not afraid. A bandage is solicitously brought forward. Have her eyes bandaged? No! No! Since whn have Britons found a necessity for the eyes to be covered when rifles are to be faced? She has her wish. Would she like to say a fe;v words? Yes, she wants to say something, but this is what the astounded soldier hear: "I regret I cannot live longer (the officers smile) for old Knglandl" The officers' faces undergo a sudden change of expression, the smile disappears, and even the sternest officers feel nothing but admiration for this woman who speaks defiance with her last breath. The routine carried out hurriedly. When the men are filing out of the enclosure the doctors examine the body. It is curious, but only one bullet had entered the body, and was responsible for death. It had entered the head, penetrating the brain. There were 10 bullets in that file of 30 men and one only entered the little nurse's body. The Germans are marksmen and the reader may draw his own conclusion. Almost with the spark of life fleeting from the girl's body a wave of horror and disgust sweeps over the civilized peoples of the world. Von Hissing, the German military governor, lasts but a short time in the limelight. For the wave of loathing Is nowhere stronger than in Germany. The officers and government endeavor to palliate the situation, but the German people realize the inhumanity of the act and the monstrous blunder of the autocracy that autocracy of which the German people see the bitterest side inside the allied ring of steel. In a man's fight she did for her country what mer would let her do. And then did more. In a man's
fight they took and shot her down as they would a man. "It is worst than a crime; it is a blunder," said Fou:h of Napoleon'? summary execution of the young Due d'Enghien. The action of the German military authorities in Belgium who executed Edith Cavell belongs likewise to the class of blunders that are worse than crimes. L'Ecole Infirmiere Beige, the Belgian school of which Miss Cavell had charge, was started by her in one little room. Today It has a vast building, with a large staff of nurses.
1
WW
rth tCv
SAVIH
The value of bak
ing powder is based on its leavening strength. You can't judge it by the size of the can or by the amount you get for your money. You must estimate it by the amount of baking powder used in each baking and the results you get.
(7 n I n &
10
2
M
Li
is the'greatest value ever offered in Baking Powder it has greater raising "force" it goes further than most of the other brands. You use only a rounded or heaping teaspoonful where othcr3 call for two teaspoonfuls or more. But Baking Powder is not all you'll save when using Calumet. You save baking materials. Calumet never fails. The last level teaspoonful is as powerful as the first Calumet is perfectly manufactured keeps perfectly and is moderate in price. Tea tan Lea job hnj it To urt vies yt im if One trial will satisfy yon of these facts and demonstrate beyond doubt thai "dl timet spells economy." Your grocer sells it on a guarantee of money back if you are not pleased with results. Calumet contains only such ingredients as have been approved cficiaUy by the U. -i-Food Authorities. nlbntOl AWAKD3
-fair s
r- ' . - ' S
2? &Zf:;"-. J s rz Vl f"' - s 's, v
v1-.;.: sc--
.. '.S.' : J s - ' "
The hour for
the execution has
opi:.m:d art sti dio. Clara Schäfer has moved her studio to Farmers Trust Bids. She would be glad tu have you call. A.dvt-
arr: ed. The usual German tirinE rarty consist of ln men. two of which would carry rif!e loaded blank. No man could know- whether hi un caue,-i the death of the victim. To arrange the execution of Eith Cavell 30 men are necessary with
ONCE-OVERS Ti:i.LING TOO MCC1I AIIOI'T Yont iiomi:. Wives. It matter; not ho-.v good a friend you have, it is unwise to tell her too much about your household affairs. You may think she will not repeat it. but she in turn has also a good friend and the second good friend has a husband, who may repeat the story acaln to his go"l friend, anJ where -Iocs it end? And how near the "original ds it continue in tie cours-e .f its travel? Husbands, also, should be careful of their utterances about thenwives. The same proce-ss of travel, ar.d the heartaches the entanglements which result in these things become known. Coming back in a rnafr.iried
'form, thy are bound to create a bitterness which robs married lite
Of Its ha.pplr.ess and prevents the home from being a, haven of contentment and unalloyed joy. iCopjris-bt. 1317
vsrf y I (j fliers instantly
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