South Bend News-Times, Volume 35, Number 211, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 30 July 1918 — Page 6
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THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS - TIMES Morr.in; Evening Sun ja;. . THE NEiWb-TIMHb HRINTINd CO.
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th- on thou.mJ to ha'.f million dollar variety. Still they sa- th-v are koir.:; after th- "nchur.s' thi t!rr.e:
J that i what the unt'.v is beln made for ir.d -o 1 m-.y h .'- another lu-r.dun soriitlr.ru . sooner or later. But In u v onuratui-it- o jrf!v. s .n the lojal of o,i our.g luer. of w.ir-aK: on their (uinpliaiHf n ith j th- i ei-.t! alien i ?KItion- anjliur. They fc-d tri ' m-:c. vwee'-tmpfre.lly. and proed tli-'.r sen- of
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THE MEL TING POT "Come Take Pot Luck With Us"
tr e-h-jvc anj'tr yo i ha th1 'oe?t. of him. If you nitu rally q-iiek-terr.r ertd. ou hae a hard time ahead to control our natural impuNes h,A the effort will repay you. To think clearly, without amotion, i rider anroyciue, means succe..
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I ail M'er th country, and -.ve h.e seen t poit.-. from doBell rhoot iA. i v. h that a the onn that ha sore out fioji South
at tLf fli or t'llijne tSot iiiun :-: aud i-l. fo- J !nl Ai.d tl.vif Is a It.on in it beside; '.oj j i, oa had iiepartro-nt w juted L.;it rl '.. AdTertMa,:. CiP-uiatiuw uri. , ' Accounting. For -wuut .di." if jour cici- u in tU- t-itpUiiei Jt"r f T our c redentia.s . always in your pocki. tioTi-V-,b7 U-1::1. Jfter in"7V.u; K,p"rt -h oj rr..i need them a: r.ioM anv tin.e. , L.o3 to fi.iirss. r.ad vxfj'jtion, poor delivery of iaierp. b.ia J
.t-epdor.e ncrtie. t. fj L-td of firrtr..ent ilh v. u yo i i are deaüci;. TL .N - l!m-a tutrt.n trur.k hi t, j'.i t.f ;
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tB.CniITIÜ. ItATLS:-Mr.rii!a uud l.euir,; Ll t.a:k1 -Op.T. huiidar. 3-- IfhTrcd hy .-airier iu s.,utL Vf-ni and Mlibawaka. t;i per e.ir In a'lan-e. or l.'.- by te c. Morula; od Lve-.ii-.; LJition. iai! iii.ltidli.i.' Sund, bj iEiJ, 4w per nionrh; TO-- t. months: ;-V- pr Tu'Dth tber--iiter, or ?.u f,er ear hi -iüvau'e. 1 J r: t r- J nt the .oatb ll-.-ad i'0tü2ice a- ae-.-ond rUta mull.
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fh- A ..tr. j prime minister's j;e.-i,ün thai ther. r.'O leaton whj "one-half of tlie population huuld
AI i:ilT!MN; KAILS: AW t: ndtert;LiT dp.trtn.ect. I oreiifi A-lv-rt:-;ii' Ipxef-entativ m : Com; l.oi:i:.Nt:. ,V; AouiiMA.V. JU.-. i :fth Av., New V,rW city, au l A'lv HM.. al.nifo. Ib .fw-Jtuii nav.rs t- op its alTrt1lni? I'luraii- free frra frM'jiluit'Lt min: r :.:-- r t a t i u. Auy pt-raou 'i ra udeJ tarough patroantre f ;irv .id vrt!."'u.-ijt in thl ap-r i .-nfer .1 f.iu.r on tLie niau iz'-'i.f at v : :ortinz .'i ta corapietelj. JULY 30, 10J8.
die to make the other '..alt happ '' is re.-pectf ul ly t ec cinmenJtd to Austria'? great and 'j.d ally.
The ay a siiipyard is a ;?afer place to worf. in than the average factory. If they want any American "wo: kinen. n t that, the'wron? c-a to get them.'
(BMHM4BVBMMMVMBVBVMMHBaBBWBaaVaVaWBMBBWiBfaaMaBBBBl MBaMaMaMaW aaaBaMWaalBBBma MaaaaBBaBaakaaaBBaaVBHMiBB j jj Other Editors Than Ours !!
SHOTGUNS AND GERMANS.
One of the many grievance ufjainvt Americans that ;
oi-rorui'MTV rou miAii stati;mi:n: ( Indiana Klis l iino.) liat coiiail ucti t contribution has the Li.itcd States
t 1 '. ''I---, v in-ilu wiling w u r t rui I f li.. n- t '
th (icrm-iii have developed lateiv 1-, bated on the re- T . 1 , , . . ' J It :s ti;i:e all o. us he ivin s-oino tlioumit l tliis ported ue of fcaued-o:t shotguns by our troops. i ijnvticm and it not be suririinK if in etmatioii
There doesn't seem to be any olücial testimony a a , Jloii tliis line will astonish many of a?.
wiiether rerahir.g's army 1- uting thi weapon or not; Out it 1. certainly conceivable that an abbieviated
It appears that the initiatie in ail t lie- reu.! con -
j structivt policies since we entered the war lias hot
j refted with either the lower or the upper lio.iw- of con-
douoiv-barreled shotgun migLt do valiant execuiion in j Kress. The initiative ha come from sources oilier than
-.hort-raiife'e trench shooting. T'ne (iorman indignation, in fart. Monis to be due to this very eftcctiv tnr.i. It 10 a bari-arouH implement, our Hun critics say, which no 'honorable f'.hter.-."' would think of M.-iiir'. It is h weajion for harbariani. Tin- 1 haracteri;tic Teutonic Meat is intended to show unmistakably "where wo set on" in the kultured opinion of Central Curope. Hut we refuse to be impressed. Try as we may, we cannot figure out why a Hhotgun should be any worse than poison as. liquid fire, aerial torpedoes and other ingenious intioations made by th" gentle Germans in thin war. We cannot even see that a load of buckshot fired at 10 arils is any worc thin a .shrapnel shell tired at 1.000 yard.. The. ingredient are about the same, and meant for the same, purpo.-e. Certainly if shotguns will kill Huns with greater effectiveness than any of the more cov. entior.al weapons used in the battle zone, we are for them. We are accustomed, anyway, to nsinp Jiick.'hot for beasts and burglars.
THE FOOD SITUATION. Herbert Hoover, who has now taken up headquarters :n London as food administrator for all the allies, says: "We have turned the corner at last. During the prut 1- months the United States lias oxported 10 00O.O00 ton of food to the alliev. Djrir.p: the next 1- months v. c cm export Ll.000,000 ton?, including .'.',000,000 ions from Canada." Thanks to the enterprise of our farmers and stockraifccrs and the economy of our consumers, we have the food. Thanks to the encrjry of our s hipbuildere, we have the ships. There is e'iouirh shippii now to supply the soldiers. There will soon be enough to transport everything our civilian allies need. The lboat is no longer a menace. In contrast with this- tine outlook, ta s Mr. Hoover: "Hunger is the dominating factwith the enemy. Their lot-s of lives through malnutri-. tion this year will be larger than all the casualties of the western front." There is no doubt of it. The food situation m the Central empires ;s growing desperate. The German meat ration 16 betns reduced to six ounces a week in the cities, and that quantity is uncertain. The potato allowance is only one pound a week. Berliners are getting one er' each pr month. There is not enough food In liuiiiunij to feed tho natives. The Ukrainians have raided only enough for their own need?. lit none of the provinces overrun by Germany is there any help. German crops are tragically small, owing to drouth and frost. Austria-Hungary cannot feed herself. The food situation is better even than the military situation. Nature, o lon neutral, at last has joined the allie5.
the !t'is!atie hail, 'onsress ha, often u v illir.tfly and with perplexing and irritating blindness, oiilj leaiied and indorsed the policies which have been foinr.iluteu by brains outside its halls.. One example is enough. The revenue bill from which the jroverniiient hoped to oMairi much of tiic tnonej nece;arv- for the 'war showed absolutely nothing in the way of a constructive policy. It v. us, for the mot part, the work of congress, it was paroled, uncienti;li; unci subsequent experience shows that it was almost unworkable. It showed an astonishing lack of vision. This despite the fact that I'res't Wilson clearly pointed out a policy which was sound in every particular. Even when congress was shown the sound way to gu in this; matter, it lacked either in ability to see or indisposition to bee. and refused to travel very far alons the line indicated by the president. We shall not say that this failing on the part of our legislatures is more prevalent with republicans than with democrats. We suspect that many democrats, without understanding the fundamental reasons for a given policy, followed it becau-e they had confidence in the president and in those w ho had thought out the policy. Washington today is the Mecca of men of brains. The talent of the country has been called there and this talent is devoting its time and endeavor to great Problem-. This talent is working our policies and doing an astoni.-hing amount of constructive work. In the meantime congress- appears to be just congress. The fact bhould not be ignored by the people w no go to the polls next November. As never before we should be endeavoring to got the most virile, the most thoughtful, the most competent men we have into congress. These are days which demand thought; they are days which demand the elimination of prejudices either in favor of or against conventions; these are days for men who have vision and who dare to leave the beaten paths for new ways and new laws and new ideals. The congressional history from the beginning of the war to date suggests that while the country has been changing in its methods of thought, congress has been standing etill. The initiative in constructive work hus rested outside of congress. Here in the seventh district of Indiana, where we have a great active, industrial district, we should be thinking on these matters and coming to our decision as to what we shall do next November. Our present incumbent in congress has not offered a single constructive suggestion during his entire term of otrice. He has been pretty much a 'harmless spectator most of the time as if he had not the leas; comprehension of the great events in which he might be playing a distinguished role. It is as if we had no representation in congress from the seventh district and over much misrepresentation for Indiana in the senate. Stop for a moment and think. Think fairly and honestly. What single constructive program, policy or single measure has been Initiated uy Moores, Watson or New?
Pa took Ma v in- to a la:k war? w cud go ir. swimming a. cat.h a r.sh for dinner alter w e had shimmed. The naim of the !a:k wa" Greenwood Laik. Thare was a nice man at the laik. he lived thare. m naim Daddy Dalbeck or sumthing like that, he had a rate big bote wich ran by gas-oleen 1- he took Pa & me for a ride. I will thow ou ware the big fishes' are, he sed. Thay all know me by my rirst naim. the nhes in this lieer laik. I suppoas yo ; know the kind of bait to use, minnie. he St d. I hae a tetter bait than minnies. sed Pa, I have heer a spoon hook, sed Pa. wich will mail; any fish that ewer lu ed leee his happy hoam, sed Pa. I doaht know about that spoon hook, sed Daddy Dalbeck. I newer saw any tish caught around heer with one of them tin things. Thtish around heer are trying to help win the war. he sed, but thay wont eef tin. Von must use shiners or wurms. he sed. My deer fellow.-, sed Pa. reeiy jou mussent tell nie what kind of bait use in a laik. t w a born near a laik. sed Pa, &: I have caught moar fish than you ewer dreemed of, sed Pa. I have caught moar German Carp than there are German sucktr in the ki.er's army, Pa sed. All rite, sed Pa's frend. but you wont catch any tish with that tov hook vou have thare. A hh that
vud fall tor that, he sed. wad talk Jjii-druf cute to keep his scales on, he sed. Vou are peeking to .1 old Ike Walton. Pa sed. Fishing i? my long uk. ed Pa. Almost any time I vih I so 4 catch a string of fish sed Pa. Then Pa threw his spoon hoo k in the water oC- pulled it all oaver in ' the water. See it chining thare. 1 I'.obbie. sed Pa. Many a man is led ' on. sed Pa. by the shining lure of gold it diamonds. & his Finnish is the sahn as the tinish of these tinny r:sh. Pa sed. All is not gold that slitter, sed Pa. so remember that wen you grow up. Vou will newer get a b te with that .jewelry on ur line, sed Pa's . frend. Reemember that wen you gro w u p, he sed. Flut jet then Pa's line caugnt on :s;'mthing A; he beegan to pvli so hard that the bote t-topped. It i a whale, sed Pa. It is a log. sed Pa's fr.td. A whale cuddent slop this bote wt.i it is going full power, he sed. This is a good bote. Vou are caught on a .og. Then Pa's line busted in two i. Pa swoar. I herd what he sed but , I wuddent rite it in thin story. Thare was a D t a M in what Pa sed & h.e dident say Deer Me. either. 1 will cloas now with a littel jinuel wich 1 rote: It must be f.ne to catch a rish eet it wen it's in a dish But wen yure tishline brakes apart ;TIie rishtr j;its a broaken hart.
her r as
out to not your
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no
hijim. mci; TO f Tili: OTIUZIi GIRL. I Dili's, if the plainly dressed younj j woman who works in the place, where vou are employed seems mel-' ancholy. did jo-i ever think it may be the result of your attitude to-) ward her'." , You -liur.- h?r because .he S not j well dressed.
You üj ot invite vour home, classing he equal. You hae shown hei
place in .vour circle. How is she to feel'. No strong minded, strong wiiled md independent irl is going to bland for sich shabby treatment. May ie. fh h.i? high ideals. and while sensing the reason for your snippy, snobby actions, keeps her good cli.ii acter. but has a stabbing heartache which sots with her wherever she oes. making selfdenial harder. Remember, shoddv actions indicate a shoddy heart. 1 a clean, puie. helpful, hopeful girl, who looks deeper thin ojtside embellishment : show a heart. Don't v--- a shim.
Starvation Dropsy
m woods nt rcin.NhON m. n.
OUTH BEND S SPLENDID SHOWING. .-oath Hnd has nothing to be ashamed of with respect to Saturday's attempt at rounding up the so-called slackers. That only two men should remain scrious.y suspected is complimentary. That only 75 out of the hundreds accosted should need to be taken to the police station for not having their credentials and 73 of these should be able to proves their way out, shows that Houth Fiend and St. Joseph county, are not in the slacker column with respect to its registered solditrv at least. And in the main too. the performance was gone through and laken good-naturedly. There were fewstrenuous objections to the action of the home guardsmen in carrying on their work, though of course, some of them, as alwa8 happens, could hardly exercise their authority without abusing it. A man accompanied by h.s wife and children, in all probability has a home somewhere, and probably being in a defeiied classication an how-, it would seem that lie niifcht have been as.-wed for his name and adu:ts.-. and liav e beet: permitted to go home with the piuviltt of plowing his case iuiei". iieport ould easily have been made to the extmplio.: boards, and his case followed up, if r.eces.-at v.
However, as before stated, some men cannot enjoy j t itnority withojt abus.ng it; without placing it decided-
WHY AMIlIUCANsj AUI3 lUillTI'K. (Lairte Herald.) After all lighting ability is not a race characteristic. Intelligence, will and a good reason for lighting have much to do with it. The only racial Americans are the Indians. The rest of us are a high mix, with Irish. German. sVotch, Knglih. Italian. Dutch, Scandinavian. Polish, Slav and other kinds of blood in our American veins. All Uurope contributed through the brief period or'
Jour history to make what we call the American. And
if the American tigius well it is because ne Knows wnai he is righting for and what he is not fighting for. He knows he is not righting to oppress a weak people or to rob anybody of land or anything else. He knows he is not righting for money, or because some crazy kaiser orders him to light. He knows he is righting for humanity, to save men. women and children from the crushing oppression of autocracy . He knows he is righting for ideals to make the world a better place to live in to hurl the mighty from their seats of power and lift up his fellow humans to a higher state of civilization abd happiness. And he as gladly risks his life in this war for humanity as he 'would jump into a raging torrent to save the life of an unknown child. They say the Canadians, the Australians and the Americans are wonderful Fighters. Isn't it because of what thev know they are lighting lor'.' lor the same reason., won't the llritish. the i'rench and the Italians be better lighters now that their governments have something mote inspiring to tight for than mere bits of land something that appeals lo the
fii..bb-. .ruauties m any ied-o!oodcd man no matter
i what h: race or language".' j It takes something mi.1 re than stein discipline and ', blind obedience to make a superior oldiel". And that 'something more now inspires the soldiers of the allied armies.
j ing. T:.at he- does not succeed is not altogether hi-1
(fault. He- tries hard, in an interview published on Sun-
sOllJtY UGH Mil. HAY!. 1 1 Vttni Tlu cmn Ilcmihlic )
lv on exhibition. ueh are as the 'man proud man" that 0l:,. Uttn vho ;iVe abnormally envious can envy Mr. r.-keptare told about, but thev weie so far in the lna. chairman of the lepublicun national commit:iii:icrity among the horn suardsmen Saturuay, as to ! tee. He evidently feels tue aw kwardness of his po-i---n-r flier '.-.niffv . nf s h Ä ., , 8 io - c-. t io i. He is tvideUtly doing his beat, to hide hia feel-
.:. rather than the rule. We at looking forward anx-
... ih'.y now to the Fourth L.ietty Loan and w ondering ; jiy by the New York Times, t0 reconcile a de.,;re for
republican success in the congressional elections this autumn with a conviction that now. more than in or-
! clinary times, country must reach above party. Yet in
I spite of his efforts he cannot keep from saying things . . - j
i ;ike mis: jemg ' "livery republican vote cuat is another nail in the
j kaiser's corrin: every lepunhcan congressman elected is i --. 1- v?ni iv.lp.i on h s tnmb "
Tnis does not mean anv thing unless it means that
- walk up t the scratch, you ".et. He u.t; rounded-up hjeiuuny will take heart if the democrats do well at
ke cattle on a western prairie in the "wr chest'' drive, j the polls next autumn. Does Mr. Hays really believe
such rubbish'.' Or ciid he just say it, because he thinks this is the way a chairman ought to talk, without believing it? Any way you t ike him vou cannot h!p heir..: sorrv for Mr. Haj.
A new and strange disease, due to the wai'. is reported from the inter. or of Germany. The first cases of it appeared among the captive soldiers in the prison camps, particularly the Russians, but it lias now become quite common among the civil population, and is said to be spreading rapidly. It is not, however, an epidemic or infection of any kind, but a curious type of edema, or watery swelling, putting, and water logging of all the tissues of the body, particularly the loose connective tissue just under the skin, due to too bulky and watery a diet. Rumors of its development have appeared in the newspapers and in the medical journals for more than a year oast, and a formal name ha been given to it in the omcial German health reports "Krlegsoidem" (war dropsy). Hut we have only just received our first definite, clearcut description of the malady from an Unglisii physician who has returned home after a term of imprisonment in one of the German camps. It appeared first in prison camps, because the prisoners of war were from the beginning deliberately placed on what was practically a starvation ration, and as the civilian population was gradually reduced to nearly the same level, it made its appearance among them. The disease doet not seem to be due to an actual shortage in the total amount of good, but to the absence of certain elements, particularly fats and meats and to the fact that too large a number of the heat units required are supplied in coarse and bulky forms: such as carrots. turnips, cabbages, potatoes, and slobbery stews. The picture of the condition is first, marked and rapidly increasing muscular weakness and sense of fatigue, great depression, and a curious apathetic and indifferent mental state. With this comes purling
and waxy swelling of all the tissues ' of the face, particularly of the!, cheeks and eyelids. dropsy of the j lungs, dropsy 0f the abdomen, i swelling of the limbs. and weak j rapid action of the heart. j If t'ne missing elements in the j diet can be supplied, the condition i clears up quite rapidly and the pa- j
tients make a goon recoxery. u not. the weakness steadily progresses, the swelling continues to increase, until the patient is swollen like a tick, a mere walking sponge, the mind begins to wander, unconsciousness sets in. and death comes by heart failure, from literal drowning in one's own body fluids. When the body is examined after
death, the most striking finding is j a total and absolute disappearance j of fat or fattv tissue which form t normally almost one-fifth of the weight of the entire body in con.lit'ors of average health. The cells ;
f which u-ed to contain ike fat have, i emptied themselves completely of ' I this and rilled up n water. ! Tlii or'e Ui the very many. : striking illustrations futv.ished by ! this war of the vital importance not' merely of a suracient amount of food but of an adequate variety and proper proportion of the four "veat groups ,,f foodstuffs: '-'read
portions are tempered with judgment and mercy, they are seldom tit to eat, or to live and grow fat on, unless their victims can slip out and get something to eat between meals, like the soldier in Chittendon's famous low pro'ein experiments are said to have done. And this, luckle-s civilians found out to their tost. They had a sufficient number of caloriee in their diet, but nine-tenths of those calories were in the form of starch, and that starch in the shape of potatoes, carrots, and black, sour rye or barley breads, instead of good white bread and biscuits and cakes. It filled them, in fact blew their stomachs up like balloons, but it wasn't satisfying, and even they, meek and flunky-like as they were, rebelled and insisted upon something better.
i;yj: to i;yi:. Yoj may be all right, but- if v ou cannot 'ook a man in the eye when ; he is talking to you he has a little reason to thit.k there is something I shady about j on. ' It may be jisr a habit, vour looking anywhere but at the one who addresses vou or to w horn you are 'talking, but t i worth while to break the habit. j Make the e'Toit. no matter w ha it coats. ! There uro some crooks who can
hold their eye steady under scrutiny. Dut usjally tile eve of such a one is rather epr saionless. You don't vant to be catalogued as a man with a past or as a man to be watched on account of your shifty eye. If it is diffidence. practice selfcontrol and indifference to what others may think, and look the other fellow in the eve squarely. He is human. The first time vou succeed in embarrassing or disconcerting the other fellow by lool-ing him in the eye. you will get vour confidence all in a minute and you will be easy and natural. Relieve it'.' Try it and see. Copyright. 1 J 1 S .
ONCE-OVERS what Tin: oTircii rrci.iiow THINKS Or YOU. Don't be so thin-skinned that you cannot stand a bt of criticism. You may think it shows independence to allow yourself to be aroused to ire whenever some one dares to differ with you but it is anything but that. The man who is absolutely independent is the man who has perfect control over himself and who can stand anything to it spells improvement. It is the. weakest individuals who lose their mental balance over trivial things, and the man who can keep control of his emotions in spite of aggravations, shows up as the stronger even' time. In big business, though a man may be in a towering rage within, he must shove a cool and calm exterior, and he knows it is the only way to win out. As soon as jour opponent begins
"NO CAT. NO DllVlb DOG." Providence. R. I. Because Sergt. S. Pearlin of the local United states marine corps recruiting station would not allow him to take a huge black cat to the Paris island training camp with him. M. J. Mcltivet refused to enlist in the marine corps and has returned to Fall River, black cat and all. When McDonough walked into the recruiting station he was hugging the big animal under his t:rm. "Why the rat-killer?" asked Pearhn. "You said it." answered McDonough. 'T havo read about the rats in the trenches and I'm more afraid of rats than anything in the world. I've taught Tommy here to watch over me while f sleep and keep the rats off. I'm going to take him to camp with int." "Nothing doing." sai.j pearhn. "No cat, no devil dog." answered McDonough, as he walked out of the recruiting station. Brooklvn Kairle A MIND KIIADFJI. "Does she know her own mind?" "Not half so well as she knows the mind of the boob she's trying to make up her mind about."
Save money by patronlzinj merchants that advertise.
.eat. butter, and
'triiuruin's" iu the
.f the committee will have the i:e:-e to indulge some -such process against the monetary slackers: above the draft 3e and able. We mention that "and able ' ad- '. ise ily.
ir.deeo, to ere wont be any st.-; ...p. alou; .'.
eutnlov ed ai.ii!.?'. t he j - .'.cr.d r.iai: : we oem tb :.n
- v ! a ho i an sCarvely artoi d a ü"-bond. He wii; be made
.n the Third Liberty Loan drive, and the War Savings trie, but we tear it might r.ever do t embarrass the mere rebti'-d monetary J!.f ir. n v. !:.. she :b be of
sel.se of fruits. ;ti.J xegetablesr Under bread, of course, would come, biscuits, cake-. puddings. cereals at.d potatoes. Under meat. fish. tigs. milk, and cheese: and under butter, fats. oils. and nut and cream. When Germany f.rt launched lie.war of conquest upon the sleeping world, with the methodical thoroughness born of her 4 0 years' preparation mi advance, she placed every man. woman, and child in her empire upon a ration, an elaborately
made ration at that. Now laboratory planned rations are admirable nd excellent in their place, but un-Jes-: considerations of pure calorie. and pro'ein and rurhnnhydrate pro-
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ct
Chautauquas
"An Integral Part of Our National Defense" President Wilson says: President Wilson on Dec H, 1517, wrote the Pmiier.t of the InUrnationa Lyceum nd Chautauqua Association as folio i : Your tpeikers, gointf from community to corrTuri:ty. meeh-.g
standing contact. hav been effective mewerer for tr.e dtlivery a
Zr s- " m iiivviutij i:vj tii . I i t , a a work that the Chautuqu is doir.g has not lost importance because UAf Kl l r t h V. a -inA4 . , : i
Let me express the hore that you will let no d.scouraierr.ert weaken your activities, and that the peorle will net in the n:rrxrt ef patriotic Institution that may te siU to te an integral pdrt ot the national deiche." Vice-President Marshall says: "There is no place where more e cod can be done to tbe sp t rr.rr.er.t and to the cause than upon the ChautaciQua rlatform. The peoriwho need information Kill be there. r.d. more and more as the yea-. So by, persons who can get It are availing themselves ct that avenue. ' Secretary of War Baker says : J constantly facing the splendid results of the work done b . the Chautauquas In this country in creating and stata.r.irg a our.J patriotic pubitc feeling, and in carnir torward the Kreat r.atK-r.a: enterprises which the government is necessarily bringing to the rtt tion of our people; and I want voj to know that as an c'ficer ct th government I not only appreciate the importance of the lecture pla form as a means of communication and expansion, hut alio apprec'.a'o the work which oa and your associates are do.r.g as a contnbut:on t - our National cause." Two years ago we might have done without Chautauquas, but we cannot do without them today. Read the Week's Festal Program that is Coming Then Buy Your Season Ticket at $2.50 And 10 Per Cent War Tax
ggiREDPATH CjyTAyQUAtSfgS;i:l:;l
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Chautauqua Week here July 31 to August 7.
r Tu A Ci W
Soldier's Teeth Must Be Sound
t'ncle t?arn raliz- tL" ltjtc nie of tron?. liatl y. -rvi(ei. : t-eth id ad.uoit to r-i L-.i"tb
Ixt til be nn ohlea lesaon to TOf -;r dnta! '.-k :!'. ft. of clvet acrxtiny and elimination It nt r:ght 4 oar standard
DR. E. H. BLAUtE
OnAran t--d
WHITE DENTAL PARLORS
111- W. WMkiatUt 0r HrT' IV. V Mr. OM Eflai, rWll fboa 4 H rb.i 11 AiUuJ.i.i
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