South Bend News-Times, Volume 35, Number 8, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 8 January 1918 — Page 6
r i I 1 1 - a r. v r.. I . t i
...n-.ni n, mis. THE SOUTH 3END NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NEVS -TIMES Morning Evening Sun Jay. NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO., Publishers. It. SUMMEIIS. rrcbP-nt J. M. STM'Iir.NSO.N Manager. JOHN IIKNKY ZUVKK. Editor.
J, ,A""'"1 Mrrnlnc I'apr In Northern Indian I .1 . 7 ,'"Jr f niplojla the lntrnmti.nAl herk n futt Ind-To Wire: r and Mtht.
lieme Thone 1151.
0Tie: CIO X. tlf A.
lull 21.
all .it the ofTi'o or fe!ephon af.ovr ntimSrn an- ask fur 'Iepartm-rjt ar. te-i IM itor:.il. AdTertiüijr. t lr tilati .n. er Artuuntlnr. lor "want If jour n.in-'- n in tue trephine cireturjr, bin win f, Jn.,ji(.,j ;,ftPr jn,,., ti:i Ke;,rt in.tt-n-jln to biulnea. ta.-j tP n poor deiiverj of t ;-r bad tepjjone nerTle. et'--, to Lead of df partTi.ont -w.it! wi.kh Jo'J T. v 1Snir- Th NAs-firn'i iH4 thirteen trunk ices, ail of al.a rciond tu Hon. Vh-m 1 KM and P-ell
Ft ItritiiTION' RATES: MorrJns nnd IlTr.nin F.ditinni. . initlc Copy, iv; Sundij, .V. Deüwnd bv arrif-r In Souta 1-Tid aii I Mhh iiraka. :.. f -r vr in advance. - r 12.; by the ek. Moruiiijr. od Kv.i.iti- JMitbn, daily, in Hiding Sunday, 17 ru.ill. " j.er monta 7 two rjont!.; .'-" i-r ra,t.th thcrearter, or J 1 n per j.ir in dyu e. LntTvJ at tbe South Ken 1 vtotri e d .vend clav mill. ADVERTISING RATES: Ask tbe a!vert!!ng epartrn-nt. fx.'srn AlvertUlJiS- ipren' ntativn : ( w.M;, I.OjU'.NZKN A. W OODMAN. I ;ftb Av.. Nw Vork City, rm 1 Adr. Uldg. CUcau. ie .eva-'l ime erelearurs t keep It advortiiüg
ruiuuin! rrr. rrnrn friuduru u:irepr nt.iti'n. Any i-ra n '
ur"aui'" i.';rf.;j-! patruieige ui miy üüveTtiien-.e-ut in thia piper i oi:f-r a la-or on tl.e luauagc-iaeut by reportm;: U.q I ta completely.
JANUARY 8, 1918.
NOT KNAVES ONLY FOOLS. Nothing" in this ur lu; lcen more dramatic than the sudden change the "'.fi ain', on a'in', -one atin' " in the Jlusso-Gennan j.caco m -:otiation.s. At the very moment when the bolsheviki kadtr-j .sctni J tc be Letraylnfj their allies and handing I tu. .-it over for the Prussian wolf to devour, the l:u&;au repieyentatives Lalktd. demonstrated their lundanu-ntal loyalty to Kus.ia, exjjo.sed the German trickery and urro;ancc and sent the 1'ruians about their business. Then the Germans returned l-ein a reconsideration. Whatever may come of those interrupt. d negotiations, It inny Lc taken for granted that Germany will not rcL anywhere near what she wants. The provisional Russian government may safeguard the interests of Itussia and her former allies to an unexpected decree. Lenine and Trotzky appear, after all, not the knaves we have thought them. Maybe we should withhold linal judgment for a while. Rut they stand forth none the less as fools. Their awakening to the import of the Prussian peril comes very' late in the day. Incalculable harm has already been done to the cause which they profess to serve in Itussia and elsewhere. Whatever they may save now from the wreckage is so much to be thankful for; but we cannot forget how much more they might ha3 saved by an earlier exercise of common caution and sanity. Having learned that the Prussians are humbuga in diplomacy, will they now remember it? They committed the vital blunder, in the beginning, of assuming that their Prussian enemy was sincere. They relied on the soft words of the kaiser and his redhanded butchers. They acted on the supposition that Germany was as generous as Itussia, and would act in good faith. Thus, before they besan treating for terms, they virtually disbanded their army. That was equivalent to a surrender. It left them without possibility of resistance, without any military trumps to play in the great diplomatic game. And the German government, quite naturally, took advantage of their helplesne5s. Americans rejoice at the accumulating evidence that the supposed crooks ore, according to their lights, patriots, and that the fools have left their folly, however late. We hope Itussia has thoroughly learned her lesion. The other alln-s didn't need the lesson. They already knew Germany.
an able and fluent writer. This knowledge and ability, applied to such a theme, full of promise, should insure a large circulation for Fn. Kern's biography in advance. The late senator was prominent in the public life of Indiana for many years, ond on" who.- throughout it all. retained the public respect. He was one of the big men of the first Wilson administration but absolutely forbid publicity of the many worthy things that he did or was responsible for.. More than any other one man. except William J. Uryan, he was responsible for the f.nal moulding of the Paltimore convention. Wh-n 12 states, including Illinois and Ohio asked permission to vote for him during th deadlock, he refused, and made the nomination of Wilson certain. The Tight on the temporary chairmanship which made possible the domination of the convention by the progressive element,' was planned almost wholly by him, and not by Mr. I.ryan, as Pry an will say in a contribution to the work. Mr. Kern was, indeed, one of Indiana's great men, rich in the humorous, the pathetic, and the trasic and every Indianian should etudy him. We understand
the volume will contain about ."00 pages, attractively printed and bound a work of a"t. as well as a treasure.
UNSCRAMBLING FREIGHT. Government control of the railroads has given immediate proof of its value, one of the linest evidences of what may be- clone through centralized authority i-$ the prompt and unprecedented action taken to relievethe recent serious coal famine in New York and New Hngland. Zero weather found the metropolis with empty coal binü. There was plenty of coal over in the Jersey freight yards, but they couldn't get it across the Hudson fast enough. Ice impeded the river t rattle. It was suggested to (U u. Director McAdoo that the coal trains, instead of being ferried across the river, should be taken through the Pennsylvania railroad tunnels, under Manhattan island, to the freight yards of the Long Island railroad. From there coal cars destined for New Fngland could be sent on. and New York coal could be unloaded and hauled by trucks to Brooklyn and across the Fast River bridges to Manhattan. No sooner suggested than don". Mr. McAdoo gave the order, and the plan worked admirably. It was the tirt time coal cars hail ever gone through those "gilt-edge pa-Ksenger tunnels." 'The Pennsylvania, under the old regime, would not have permitted it. Fr.der the present reinu the Pennsylvania has nothing to say about it. The tunnel hasn't been injured in the least. It is safe to say that freight of any kind will be sent hereafter through that tunnel, or any other tunnel that will stand the traffic, wnenever a public exigency requires. Following close upon this innovation tame an order to let the I'altirnore and Ohio passenger trains enter New York by way of the Pennsylvania tunnels and use the great Sl-V'C 0,000 Penr.sv lvania terminal station. Most certainly the Penr.sv lv ania would nev r have allowed that, but now any railroad, no matter how powerful it may have been in the past, will let any of its facilities e used for any purpose the government deems necessary. These instances will be multiplied a thousand tirjfos. a the plan unfolds. There w:ll be no more dog-in-the-manger policy irterfer::-. with our national transportation. Private right will yield to jub'.ie necessity. What the men operating any particular railroad could not or
SOLDIERS' CLOTHES AND SHOES. One of the reasons given for the slowness of the war department . in outfitting the men at the cantonments is that the national army has a larger physical average than previous armies have had. It is therefore necessary to provide larger sizes of clothing than usual. The c-'mmis.-ary department was unprepared for that, because it expected that the drafted men would be .smaller, if anything, than the regular army volunteer. Moreover, the selective sc r ice recruits have shown a scandalous tendency to grow after they have been measured for their outfits. A dispatch from one ol the cantonments recently announced that the soldiers had gained ar average of 1 " pounds apiece. That was ine. as a tribute to the salutary effects of army food, exercise and discipline b.ut it made their suits and overcoats too tight. s-'imilar reports are received regarding the shoe problem. Formerly the largest stock shoe for the army was No. 12. Now the quartermaster has had to add Nos. 1.1 and 14 to his stock. Rigger men have bigger feet. And it is found that marching makes a man's feet grow and spread so that he soon needs a size or two larger than before. This situation, however, is no cause for lamentation. Rig bodies and big feet are regarded as fine military assets, when they mean strength and health as they do in this case. And nobody will begrudge Sammy the extra cloth and shoe-leather.
Invaded Italy is proving herself as heroic as invaded France.
Other Editors Than Ours
SIFFKAGISTS ASK ACTION. (Indiana Daily Times.) Charles W. Fairbanks, a committee to whom was referred the request of Indiana suffragists that the state council of cJefense recommend the adoption of the federal suffrage amendment by congress as a war measure, reports that he is personally in favor of woman suffrage, but does not think it is a war measure. Thus the support that the women felt they had a right to expect from the state body is withdrawn ami at a time when women are of the greatest service to the nation. What individuals feel personally about the merits of the suffrage bill, of course, amounts to nothing unless that sentiment is translated into action. It was to secure positive action that the women appeared before the state council. They made a good case there. They set forth the fact that women are doing their dull duty in the prosecution of the war. The government is appealing to them to conserve food, several agencies are askin.r them to knit garments for the soldiers and everyone is depending on them to support the government in every way in their power. Then why is not their request for suffrage a war measure? The women of Indiana, had an unquestioned right to ask anil except support not only from the state council, but from other state agencies and olfieials, because the state, through the legislature, had conferred the ballot on them. That this action was nullified through the supreme court's interpretation of the state constitution, does not in any degree alter the fact that Indiana has gone on record. The state council at the most would have been echoing the sentiment of the commonwealth if it had acquiesced in the women's request. The time has passed when the support of voman's suffrage in principle only will pass muster as friendly action. The women wish to vote. They expect men to grant them the right to vote and they expect it more surely because o the part they are playing in the prosecution of the var. The time for action is short. If the state council of defense does not wih to add its voice to the already loud chorus that is demanding the adoption of the federal amendment, perhaps other state agencies will do so.
THE MELTING POT
"Come Take Pot Luck With Usn
tin: manic rui: rdav. Ry William I Kirk.
mat gent which just went out, father has
said he wouldn't send no tobacco to the soldiers." said the Manicure Ividy. "He said smoking was a bad habit. The old grouch!" "He didn't look as if he'd send anybody anything except a state-
Head Rarber. like him in this that's one good
ment," said the "There ain't many great nation, and tiling."
"I told him I thought he might do worse than slip the lys a fewsmokes," said the Manicure Iady. '"Goodness knows that whn the boys is setting around where them camphrcs are gleaming, like it says in the war songs, thev need a
a partv up home he
shows the old boys a letter he got from (?en. Sherman the time Mister Sherman went to the seashore, or wherever it was he marched." "I sent some tobacco to the soldiers yesteroaj," said the Head Rarber. "I know what it is to want a smoke and not have the price, and I want to do my bit for the scrappers. I'm going to send a fewpacks every month, while the tips holds out good." "That's a grand spirit, George, which deflects great credit on you!" de-clared the Manicure Iady. "You'll never be sorry for them generous things you do for the boys, and
smoke now and then to Uep-. them
from getting too homesick. Proiher when this war is OVT you. have
Wilfred is thinking of
enlisting. s'mCtnin- lo bra" boUt-
and I don't know what he'd do without his pipe." "Smoking is grand for the nerves.
I'd be a a . lot of I never if they
if jou're a nervous guy," Head Pari er, "and I thjnk nervous guy if there w'as shells busting around me. een them grape-shot, but
look anything like a grapefruit it must be tough dodging them. If I was over there at the front I'd be smoking steady, believe me!" "I seen a soldier yesterday that looked a lot like you." stud the Manicure lady. "At first I almost thought it was you, and then right away I remembered that you was over the age limit, and I knew better." "It might have been the kid brother," said the Head 1'arber. "He's in town with his regiment. He says it's the only life."
"That's what father says." the Manicure Iidy. "The old was a soldier in the Civilian and he had four years of it.
says Grant said he was as good a soldier as ever would be sure to live and draw a pension. Every time
"I don't do it to brag," said the
Head Rarber, "I do it because I don't like to think of no guy being
said the ' without a smoke after a hard day's
said gent war. He
advancing or trenching, or whatever you call it now. "I know how soothing a good smoke is after me and the Missus has had a battle. It kinda calms me off and keeps me from starting the war all over again and I guess that's the only reason she don't kick on my smoking, though she thinks, like most women, that it's a foolish habit and that it rucks the bankroll too severe." "When I get married." said the Manicure I-ady, "I will expect my husband to smoke. Most of the fe-w pents I ever seen that didn't use tobacco was always kind of nervous and cranky when they was talking, which was most of the time. A gent with a pipe in his mouth ain't never very gabby." "No," admitted the Head Harber, "that's a fact. Put girls, that never think of smoking, can talk quite some, and present company exceptionally."
(T n M " fA ( Come and See ff s7 J
L-i lli i
Determining the Length of Working Hours
RY GARRR'IT l SRItYISS.
"If the United States does not win the war," says
ex-Pres't Taft, "the only alternative will be to make
militarism the dominating policy of the government." Let the gentle folk who object to thorough-going war measures put that fact in their pipe and smoke it.
a piii:xomi;nar growth. (I-tfajette Courier.) The growth of the chemical indusfy in the United States since the beginning of the war has been tremendous. Factories have, sprung up throughout the country from whose facilities come tons of products heretofore imported products which we felt ourselves unable to manufacture, relying on foreign factories for our supply. ec'y Lane's annual report, a formidable almost forbidding array of figures, tells us that in the days before the war 90 percent of the artificial colors and dye used in American fabrics and other factory products were imported, and that we had but five r six dye concerns of our own. employing only a few hundred operatives and producing .1,".00 short tons of dyes a y ar. New there are 90 such enterprises, each making special colors, and a hundred firms making crudes and intermediates. Salphuri" rjjd
chemical barometer has doubled its production as has i
The war has been teaching some facts about the human machine that will be useful when peace comes. Fortunately, a man is a machine that thinks about itself, and consequently is able to do its own repairing, and to judge for itself how long and how fast it ought to run. When a motor burns itself out by running with no oil you cannot kick the poor, innocent machine for its stupidity; but when a man is guilty of equivalent foolishness he ought to be kicked. Now, one of the things the war has been teaching is about how long, at a time, human muscles can keep on doing their best work. In the munition factories over In England they found that when they reduced the number of hours of work from 62 to 50 per week the total
output per week increased
10 percent, while the rate of output per hour increased as much as 22 percent. This was in the case of the heavy work. When lighter work, clone by women, was reduced from 6S.2 to 00 hours per week, the total output was also "notably increased." From these observations Dr. C. S. Sherrington draws the conclusion that there- is, for manual labor, a certain length of working week, or working month, best - suited "for satisfactory production in permanence." Just what the length should be depends upon the kind of work, and has to be found out and measured by the method of experiment. Once discovered, or established, by careful observation this "optimum," or most favorable, number of working hours per week or month becomes' a valuable asset to both the employer and the worker. The whole subject rests upon the study of fatigue, a word that has a scientific meaning differing from its popular one. In the popular sense when you are fatigued you are "tired out," and that expression, like an axiom in Euclid, admits of no further definition you know what it means though you can't tell. Rut the scientific conception of fatigue is much m "re definite. A muscle is fatigued when by its activity it has produced a certain quantity of waste, or of "fatigue substances'' that "poison" it, and thereby more or less paralyze ius action for a time. It is something like the state of inefficiency into which the motor of an automobile falls when the cylinders get coated with carbon. When an automobile in that condition tries to climb a hill it knows, or would know if its automatism extended into the field of intelligence, what fatigue means in both the scientific and the popular sense. There is fatigue of nerves as well as of muscles, and it is the nerves that convey the Impulses from the brain to the muscles. Rut a nerve recovers from fatigue much more quickly than a muscle. Fatigue also affects the brain, the center of
same occupation, a fixed limit, determined by the principle of averages, offers the best plan, hut workers who work alone by themselves ought to find out by self-observation how long they can continue to work at a time with advantage. If they overstep the limit, whatever it may be. they lind that the qual-
as well as the quanin a unit of time is
ity of the work
out
Celebrating in avory Department . the Close of a Noteworthy y&ar in Merchandising Silk Party Frocks are Reduced S25.00 Silk Party Dresses are 316.75. SI 7.50 Silk Party Dresses are S 10.00.
Skirts and Blouses Reduced
tity turned
diminished. Not only the kind of werk, and its "laboriousness," or hardness, but also the individuality of the worker varies the result. Sometimes a man will be found who can, without fatigue, and with full efficiency, continue to work twice as long as another engaged in the same occupation. That is his gift, and he ought not to be deprived of it, since its use is to the common Henefit of
nearly mankind by increasing the sum of
production. These exceptional workers who seem never to tire probably represent the normal state of man. Science has discovered no indications that man was ever in his earlier
stages a "gentleman of leisure." It t
is a mistake to think that animal--, such as apes for instance, lead a life of idleness. They work for their lives every day of their existence, only, what is work for them looks like play or loitering to us. The lazy-looking cow chewing her cud is working the best way she knows and tiresome work you would find it if you had to do it, ami keep it up all day. Work is the glory and delight of
life, and the only acceptable excuse
for being in this world, and the object of all these practical investigations of the principle of fatigue and recovery is to find out, not what is the least possible amount of work that a human being can get along on, but what is the greatest amount that he can do without decreasing
his working capacity, j Such is the gospel of work, which ! those w ho are not of the elect may
regard as hard doctrine.
S3 and S3. 50 Lace and Taffeta Blouses are S1.50. S5.75 Serue or Poplin Separate Skirts are $3.95. Coats and Suits are Reduced S 16.75, s 10.75 and S25.00 Coats are reduced to $15.00. S25, S29.75 and S35.00 Coats are reduced to S20.00. ' $25.00 and S29.75 Winter Suits are reduced to $19.75. i
ugs and Draperies Reduced
Clearance prices on Curtain and Cretonne short lengths. Discontinued Patterns in Ru-s, RHDUCPD for Clearance. Silks Dress Goods Reduced S1.25 Chiffon Poplin at 89c yd. $2. no Satin Je Luxe at $1.69 yd. SI. 50 Stripe Satin at 95c yd. S2.M All Wool BmcaJe S9c yd. Reduced Prices on all Fur Cloths.
R
and Many other bargains
: t t-rv?
v. s
Broken lines Hancy Boots
at Guarantee Shoe Co.
.$4.95
T ' -; - ! ' ' Purina Poultry Feeds More Eggs Sturdy Chicks FRESH SUPPLY JUST RECEIVED v I I . " . -' '. ' fX x C "1 JkJ
CONQUEST and KULTUR Aims of the Germans IN THEIR OWN WORDS A compilation from German authorities by tlie committee on public information. By Wallace Notestln and E. E. Stoll The UniTersity of iflnneotA-
rm on
the run for
Purina.
in checkerboard bagsoi.,,. Order today from
For Sale by ARTIFICIAL ICE CO., 525 N. Emerick St.
When jou think of IlomefurnKhins think of Sailors."
Lv-oroduct coking. Light oil which contain tho hon-
would not do, under the dd competitive system, can nnd toluene needed for Pvrdrwiv..h , 'i,,, ' tr
tasky be done ty Lr.rie Sain. And it can be done with out Injustice to any railroad or ar.v stockholder.
un-
eight times its production in 1 f 1 1 . And so on along the whole gamut of the chemical products and by-products. The capital invested in chemical industries lias shown Mr increases, and manv new industries um v,e-
Kcramhled ad over the 1 r.it, d States and our long- ini. opened up to meet the war needs and the energy warring transportation Hr.e will be transformed into ' of our chemists and physicists. We can go forward cne harmonious. mothlv working svstem. jwith confidence that there will fe no yerious sh rtase
e: chemical proaucis, a::i mat our American chemists
prove themselves equal to any emergency. The
It is by such :ep- as theye that freight will he
BIOCRAPHY OF JOHN V. KHRN. The life of J hr. Worth Kerr, as it is being written
by "laude ti. i-ov. ..;. t!i- late s raUr's r-romiye-s to be ene f tb... !..; ! rilliant
all Irdiana s b. ra; h! perhaps no k? public life of Sen. K"" tt,.r jjun r
er; tary.
will
war has rallied the resources and resourcefulness of
the nation as r.o other crisis could have done. We are
j rayidly learning to stand alone:
the nervous the whole 1 neohslv into
doubtful. K er body mu
system, aln ever
state
a
hut gets
o!
whether simulta-
fatigue is
have noticed the
Ho.ee:-. it cannot be sai l that a declaration of war
ants o
v.s tl.e lL'.jit,vt Auytria-Hungary will add to tl.e number of this lie is I i o.intrv's enemies. N. V Hrald
effect of a chance of the subject of thought or attention when the mind seems to be tired or dulled instantly the mini! brightens up as if its current had been switched from a clwgued nto a free channel, or
from a group of fatigued cells to a ! NyauUand.
group of fresh ones. " liut the mind ; can certainly tire the- body out., whether or not it is ever f?self tired i
out. When the length of the working period affects a large number of persons working together at the
"If Belgium, as we hope and as the Belgians hope, is to be divided
! after the war between Germany and
France, vast portions of the Belgian and French Congo will have to be included in Clermany'ts colonial empire, which we would then complete by the acquisition of British Fast Africa and Uganda, in exchange for Kiau Chau, New Guinea, and the Australasian islands. .Such an empire could easily be defended from the sea. and It would hae to be considered whether we could not exchange Togoland, which is iso-
' lated. for northern Rhodesia and
Germany would then
have a colonial empire worthy of her enterprising spirit, and it would yield ue all the raw material we need. (Baron Albrecht von Hechenberg in Nord und Sud. Bound Table, March. 1917.
Hechenberg has boon in the foreign office and has held various colonial appointments.) "Because it is needful to insure our credit on sei and our military and economic situation for the future in face of I-'ngland, because the Belgian territory, which is of the greatest economic importance, is closely linkeel to our principal industrial territory. Belgium must be subjected to t lie legislation of the empire in monerary, financial and postal matters. Her railways and her water courses must be- closely connected with our communications. By constituting a Walloon territory and a Flemish territory with a preponderance of the Flemish, and by putting into German hands the properties and the economic undertakings which are of vital importance for dominating the counry, we shall organize the government and the administration in such a manner that the inhabitants will not be able to acquire ny influence over the political destiny of the German empire." (Memorial sent to the imperial chancellor, May 2 0, 1M3, by six industriil associations the League of Agriculturists, the German Feasants' league, the committee of the Christian German Peasant union, the Central Association of German Industrialists, the league of Industrialists and the Conservative Middle class association.
p. 123. See note, p. C3)
he complains of the Dutch profiting at the expense of the Germans ii? their customs arrangements, and of the dangers to Germany involved in the possession of the mouth of the Ilhine by a people so easily a prey to her e nemies. ( Volks-und Seewirtschaft, Jy"-'. II, pp. 1-S. Brnst von Halle was professor of political economy at the University of Berlin.) "You can not talk and ting about an invincible Watrh on thIlhine as long as the Dutch and the Swiss do not sing the same tune " (Bley, Die alldeutsche :..- wegung und die Niederlande. 1S97. p. 4.)
Don't Pay C&h for Yocr Qothins Your Onftt 1 Coed it GATELVS
tonality ShreBppalrQ
i-u K.Klcbfct.n St-
3
it
SOLE SAVERS
9
"We
.1 .
mav then leave It to Swit
zerland to ehoo.-e wneth-r she shall enter thA German customs union a:id the Ban-German eonfederation, bringing all her cantons or only the German on-s with her, or whether sh". shall form part of the German empire on equal term as a federal state." (Grossd utsehln nd um das Jahr 's:,) (13), rj'o, p. IT.)
HARRY LYERRICK
Funeral
Director
A 7 15 -
0- rrl f p
FVLL MOTOH EQUIPMENT
"To speak quite frankly: Austria will assent tlnally to that shift
ing of the weight of gravity
took place in 1C6. She will
WATCHES ON CREDIT
bi:
IUll IM
Olsen
214 S.
r r r
G.
Prof. Ernst nn Halle speaks
definitely of the necesr.ty of incor
porating Holland on the one hand and Austria and the Balkans on the other, because it' is an unnatural thing that Germany should not possess the mouths cf the great rivers, the Bhir.e and the Danube, which take their rise within her borders. Belgium should :e partitioned be
tween Germany
r. ounce all chief rulinc rope, as she of plen dor dependence of novereigr
which
re
claim to be the i in central Bu- j
was in her ancient days, There is no formal 1 involved, r.o curtailing
future powe
ty, no giving up of in- 1
herited power, but ail the .same i
thr will be an actual acknowl-
ELBEL BROS. VICTROLAS PIANOS PIANOLAS IIa Ia)in-nt .Michigan St., Near Washington
e dement
forces." (Naumann 1?16. p. 1.)
the existing position of
Central Burope,
Don't say you saw It In the
and France. Later newspaper. Say News-Times.
nun: al-tomomxj: Bide to and Crom th rtore. CHAllLLS Ik SAX 6t CO.
I'
(1 J. A r
