South Bend News-Times, Volume 37, Number 187, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 5 July 1920 — Page 2
MOMVw Molt.MNC, JI I.V 5. 102
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
TELLS OF PAUL'S LETTERS IN TALK . AT TRINITY M. E
New Minister to Greece
Jlcv. Ru-cll L. Phillips Says There Were Two Prevailing Strain-.
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"Thre are two prpv.ijilr.ir str.'iln.i in I'au.'x s'curi'l y i t ! "- f Titr.thv. ?uld the llf v. UuvMl I. Phillips at the Trinity II. 1Z. church Sunday morning, "nr of a ji-r.sjnal triumph ,nt!aii, J, th- 'Iii, r of a u . . .a.v. ir the (oniirmanc; of th spread ui
the church.
nie cirumta nrs s;.
thr writing of raul' ?r
1" TlnotJ.y p.re most inter -tir.g. Thre 1. no druht in my mind but that F.tul Uns aj-q-jltt' 1 afUr his tir,t Roman imprison:;. tnt anil that h" made oth-r journ H, possibly preaching th gospel in pain and again In Asi.i Minor as he rev;Mt-l th rhurch s whi( h h had rstahlished. It wa-s durir.tr thi.s trip that he Wt Timothy at Kphtsus as thy head cf that church. Paul .rrftcl. "It was not long until Paul ums irr-tMl for a sc r I titiw .tu takn to Rome unJ-.r the wici'.i d rird ruthless reiirn of N n. who put nil Christian unir th ban and who t.iw jit to put scores to d ath for p.o other reason thin that thy wt rillv hri"stian.-." Iurin:? this Imprisonment Paul w;-s rio ilo-iht plan..! in Hi historic l;;n-K-n with none nf th i'rson:il j I ivilege which had h-en extend d him i.cfort-. N friend was with him hut Iuke. the physirl tn, who had ,ortn his traveling mate for sine yfars. Thcr- then wr- the circumstances aurroundim? the writings "f this pistlc; th rca-ns will oino V.uL as wc i rorced. "Thotiuh I. ml w;is fl-prcsjcil physically and very Ion ly in heart lus spirit in Jesus Christ was bouyant. fven more than ever. There Is prcvak-nt in this letter the assurance of a personal triumph attained. The.e last words f I'aul are fraught with some memorable .t. tement.s which the- Christian church ish-ill never (surrender nor forst-t. This tireless apostle proclaimed th'- great joy of his 1 i f v In these words: " 'Oed sravo us not a spirit nf f.: irful'ness; I jr-iffer yet I am not ashamed; for I know him whom I have believed, and urn persuaded that h able to keep that which I have committer; unto him against thr.t day. I urTe- hardship, unto bonds, as a malefactor, hut ihr word of (Jod is not bound. The firm foundation of Hod standest, having thi.s .seal, the Tord knowpth them that are his. I haw fought the good ficht. I have- finished th course, I have kept the faith;' hence. ;for;h there ig laid up for me a crown f righteousness which the T-ord. the righteous Judge, shall gie to me at that day. In this Paul rroclaimel he entire essence of his spiritual life. Hold-: Tcvp Anvjcty. "He pass. s from this spirit of personal attainment to his deep anxiety for the church of Jesus Christ .which h h i established in so many piateJ. ' 'Cftn fous that h -would never be .able to visit them again for death was hanging over him; conscious of his deep concern about the progress of this important work; conscious of the groat factor Timothy could be In keeping this work going; conscious too of tlu fact that Timothy was at times despondent and fearful, yet knowing full well that, hU child In the fropel, a man of strength, was always obedient unto, commands and commissions; with this consciouMiess upon him Paul sets himself to the- task of strengthening Timothy for the purpose of commissioning him to take the place of the one who was assing out of this great held of Christian endeavor. "Paul summon? .all his mental ability for thU vital matter of the conservation and the progress of .th gospel of Jesus Christ. He sets In the fcrground an utterance t f confidence in the ono whom ho i addressing and with whom lie is pleading, having been reminded of the unfeigned faith that is in thee, which dwelt tlrst In thy grandmother L.ois, and thy mother Eunice; and, I am persuaded in thee also. Appeal fr Timothy. "Paul follow? this with an appeal for Timothy to put all fear and every idea of Miffering aside, 'for which cause I put these in remembrance that thou stir up the gift of (lod. which Is in thee through the laying on of my hands; for God rave us not a spirit of fearfulness; but of power and love and discipline. He not ashamed therefore of the testimony of our Lord, no' of me his prisoner, but suffer hardship with the gospel according to the power of God.' His closing appeal Is pathetic, yet powerful, and full of the spirit which was continually dominating Paul life, 'Suffer hardship, do the work of an evangelist, fulfill thy ministry for I am already being offered.'
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MANY BOYS WILL SPEND VACATION . AT NAVY SCHOOL Navy Department Establishes Summer School For Boys Between 16 and 20.
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Lieut. Col. Edward Capps, a professor of classics at Princeton, who will take up his duties as minister to Greece shortly. He was photographed in his Ked Cross uniform when he was Red Cross commisinner to Greece. Says Germany Will Weather Period of Reconstruction
Constantinople Statu
Gradually Working Out nV MAX TltlTW, The status of Turkey is slowly bo!r. worked out. Constantinople and the Straits, that great commercial prt7C and the cause of so rr.iny wars, while nominally remaining ur.Ur the "ultnn's- authority, ar- to bo controlled by an International commission und r the Jurisdiction of the League-of Nations. This is not so good, a? kicking the Turks out of Europe would have been, but it nct thin to it, an i along with other measures, it possibly depriws them of power for much harm to v ertern commerce ar.d civil:-! lion. Only on? alternative i likely f strike American? as better than that. It is to let the Greek government, instead of an impersonal international commission, take that j.d of bovir.jr Constantinople and keeping the Posj'oru and the Dardanelles open to the world's commerce. The Greeks have just bt-en given rermlsion to go Into th uwrna dirtrlct 'an1 clean tip TJ-tapha let;l ar.d his Turkish re-bl. and Mill r.o doubt handle that Jcb with alacrity an1 success. If they do, the:m. might well be gien ;n 'creasing measure of responsibility and authority in ar.d around th:r cbrinus old capital. It would he historic Juetl: to them, ar.d would ".i!p fo keep the ur.??:'e.i k abb Turk properly fubdued. Thev could pr:V-ab'v handle the assi-nment. tm !.: Veniejos, quite f.ati'factonly.
BEPvLIX, July 4. Germany - here to stay. Germany was built to J withstand the shock of wars and j
she mos surely will weather the ri:icai ctorni period of Europe's, reeon: truct ion. Hui'ii impre-ssioiis arc forced home on the casuai visitor to Germany today, in spite of all that he has read of the disorganization of the country, in spite of all that he is told about the acute food and price situation, and in spite of all that he sees of the nation's political muddle. In many respects Germany is almost as much of a political question mark as Ituasia. The cost of living situation has become much more pressing during the last two or three months. Disorganization, of course, then- is. though not to the extent that one has been led to expect. Distinct Imprecision. But through various channeLs one gets a distinct impression that th Germany of today, for j.urposes of publicity, is not being as sanguine, vocally, about its outlook, as the facts warrant. Here and there notes of complaint are sounded that somehow hark Lack to the locked gates of a football tield on the eve of a championship game. "Pear stories." we all remember, leaked out front the secret practice tield, tales of injuries to players, perhaps stories for tho false encouragement of the enemy camp. You have all read these German "bear stories." There's a lot that is true in any of them. Put it is impossible to avoid the conclusion that "Heinie" isn't averse to dis-pl. tying his raggedness and his wounds at the most important international crossroads that he will continue to be a pessimist until reparations are fixed, or bo long thereafter as there is any controversial and therefore possibly changeable, item in the bill covering in part the late unpleasantness. Consider an example. Germany is printing much paper money much more than should be printed by a government which has a comparatively small gold reserve; much more than is warranted by the general luiancial -condition of the nation. General Publicity. Presumably, general publicity regarding the extent of this printing of paper money would tend to cheapen it, make prices of food and necessities higher and make the dollar value of the mark lower. There is therefore, a certain amount of o facial secrecy about the extent of paper production. P.ut ou ask a great banker or a high otiicial to explain why the value of the mark has imr roved abroad, ami he will quote you some of these Pgurcs; he will tell you that before the war paper money and bullion were in a certain ratio and that today it is in such and uch a ratio an infinitesimal fraction of th.T paper money being backed by any tangible security. He will cite you various and sundry other facts, all goir.g to prove that the mark has no legitimate right to be worth todav as much as one thirty-sixth of a dollar. American business men. American government representatives and American newspaper men will all tell you that government and banking crMcials. in their public or confidential statements, have constantly predicted things for the value of the mark during a period of four or five months. And they're persist
ing in it still, in spite of the steady!
rise in the. foreign value of the mark. The value of the mark in Germanv is another story. It's purchasing power is a pitiful thin?. More of that elsewhere. Mukcf Intimate. In Berlin, also, many people are trying to estimate the number of billions of marks held abroad for speculative purposes. Tor the money kings of the world have ruled on tho future of Germany and found It
sound. They discount the poverty clamor in so far as it deals with the question of international solvency, and they buy marks for investment. With the actual poverty of the people, the inevitable companion of an inflated currency, they have no concern. Industrial IHiture. The Industrial future of Germany depends on the recovery of the mark because, shorn of rich coal, iron and agricultural districts and of her colonies, she must be able to buy raw materials, outside for the production of the finished goods for which she was famous before the war. Every bet the money kings put down on Germany's recovery such bets are laid when they buy marks helps raise the value of the mark. There is yet another factor which is working, in its indirect economic way. toward the recovery of the mark, and therefore toward Germany's goal, that of being able to buy outside raw materials for manufactures for home and foreign consumption. Th economists, in their wisdom, explain that the International value of money is based chiefly upon a balance of trade for or against a nation. America exports more goods to England than England sends to America. England then owes America a balance of as many billions. The pound drops. Then you can get what is normally a $500 investment in England for 1400. and you send your money to England for investment. England has sold you what the economists call an "Invisible export." Germany Ls doing a land-oftice business in these "invisible export" commodities, today. Many Germans resent this. but many other Germans who hi'd an adequate Income when the mark bought something now lind that their Income will not even buy food. They must convert their principal Into' cash to meet today's needs. They sell their investments. I met one man who was buying apartment houses for a wealthy American. Others are buying securities, factories, plants of various kinds. Millions and millions of good American dollars are pouring into Germany. It all helps to swing the economic pendulum back oward normal.
J. E. Tomeroy, sitting in his wireless station at Bath, Me., and holding the telephone two inches from his head, heard distinctly the music of a band playing at Ossinlng, N. Y.
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CHASE
THE
SPOTS We won't knock the spots out of your garments. We'll take them out. though, effectively with kindest, most considerate treatment. The sort of treatment that always makes the garments come back with a smile, radiant in color, bright, crisp, clean in appearance. We'll clean anything but a load of coal. Lincoln 1903 Perfection Cleaners & Dyers 1101 King St
CHICAGO, July 4. One thousand boys between the ages of 10 and 20 year3, living in the territory west of Pennsylvania to the Pacific coast will spend a six weeks' vacation at Great Iikes Naval Training station, 20 miles from Chicago, this summer. The navy department ha& established two summer schools for boy; one at Great Lakes and the other at Hampton Roads, each with a ca.pacitv of 1,000 boys. The entrants are required to eni list in the reserve corps for a period of three months. Tho government furnishes uniforms, equipment and subsistence, pays the student the regular pay allotment of an apprentice seaman, and pays his transportation homes The student's only ex-pense is his transportation to the camp. Enlist Locally. Enlistments are to be mad3 through local recruiting oiticera. The quota, for the recruiting districts follows: ral1as. 62: Houston, 34: Jackson. 21; little Kock, 2S; Xew Orleans, 23: Oklahoma City. ::7; Chicago, 75: Cincinnati, 43: Detroit, 65; Indianapolis, 50; Louisville, 50; Milwaukee, 57; Peoria, 50; Denver, 21; De-6 Moines, 53: Kansas City, 4 6; Minneapolis, 65; Omaha, 37; St. Louis, 17; El Paso, S; Los Angeles, 16; Portland. ZÜ; Fait Lake. 23; San Diesro, 4; San Francisco, 33; Seattle, 18.
RUSSIAN RULE IN VOGUE IN SPAIN Liberal Newspapers Claim Country is Being Run by Despotic Powers. MADRID July 4. Spiln has been ruled since March 24, 1S19, by its successive gcverr.ments in the same way as Russia was ruled under the old despotic emperors, assert the Liberal newspapers. "On that date the constitutional guarantees Mere suspended in all tho provinces." says 1a Llbertad. "and till this date have never been restored. Even when the general elections were in progress public rights under only one of the articles cf th.Q constitution, and then only the second paragraph of Article XIII. were permitted to be exercised that is to say. the right of holding quiet public meetings. "This permission was useless by Itself without being accompanied by the others consecrating the same precept of the fundamental law, since what could be the object of holding meetings while the prohibition was still enforced against the free expression of opinion and while the press continued muzzleel?" The censorship continually exer cised not only on Spanish papers but on telegrams to the? foreign press also is tharply criticised. ERECT MONUMENT FOR CLEMENCEAU
Famous Sculptor Claims He Will Complete Work Some Time Next Summer.
Calvin Coolidge is Simple Life Example
BY W. JI. ALBURN. The public has been hearing a good deal lately about the financial status and procedure of the family o" Calvin Coolidge, governor of Massachusetts and republican candidate for the vice presidency. And it is good for the public. If widely published statements are trustworthy. Gov. Coolidge's "gubernatorial mansion" In IJoston consists of two rooms in a humble hotel, which cost him some-thing
like $2 a day, while his family back j home lives in a house that rents fori
$32 a month and hesitates to ask the landlord to paint it because he
might then jump the rent to $35. It! appears, further, that the governor ' has nver risen to the dignitv of a
mtor car, and Mrs-. Coolidge con-K's:-fs that her ida of opulence i to own a flivver. Moreover, Mrs. Coolidge is credited with the statement that she has reduced tho clothing problem to a state of masculine simplicity, because her husband chooses her dresses for her whether on the score of taste or of cost is not altogether clear. One cf the boys earns his spending money by selling papers. Here is one of the ablest and most highly esteemed men in American public life, living on a scale of modesty and frugality which thousands of Americans in private life would consider intolerable, and yet doing It with perfect dignity, and losin? nothing of other people's respect by so doing. Such an example is needed at this time.
PARIS, July 4. Clemenceau is shown at the front, standing at the edge of a trench, with his friends the French poilus below and about him, in the monument to be erected in his native country, the Vendee, early next year. Francois Sicard, the sculptor, is chiselling the group work out of hard Burgundlan stone. Unfinished, th work is already said to visualize with great character, the scene so often pictured of the old "Tiger." mentally and almost physically, fighting for France. The premier's figure stands eight feet high. He is, as alwiys in the war days, wearing the lonpr. loose cvercoat and the soft, slouchlly crumpled hat, leaning on a cane. Ills face is toward the enemy, his eyes watching the horizon, following Indications given him by a seated officer with maps, beside him. On his right are grouped soldiers and in the trench below are more pf the men in the ranks, looking with mingled astonisnment and admiration at their minister of war. The scene is said by critics to be vividly natural, rough and muddy but heroic and full of the color and character of war days.
Store Closed All Day Monday, July 5 th
July Sales continues Tuesday, July 6th
Robeirfeoini
Sales
July Clearance
The response to these annual sales was quick an enthusiastic. The buying extremely liberal. Tomorrow we offer values equal to those of yesterday. Every day presents new opportunities of economies. Vacation Time Frocks
Tub frocks for duty at all times.
Smart morning frocks of plaid ginghams. Dainty frocks of summery flowered voiles. Crisp organdies, sheer and cool for the evening summer dances and parade all unusually low priced at this July Sales $5.95, $10, $13.95 and $i8.50
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Silk Petticoats Taffeta flounces, jersey tops, all taffeta at $3.95 Mescalines at $6.95.
White Tub Skirts A vacation wardrobe is never complete without one or more of these practical skirts
Of White Gabardine:-
In many models wonderful values represented at $6.9 5, $8.95. $10.00.
Also White Surf Satin:-
A tub skirt that appeals to all outdoor sports and only priced at $5.95.
On the northern coast of Scotland it is a favorite theory with the fishing and sea-faring people that in a ttorm three waves are strong an.l violent, while the fourth Is comparatively weak and less dangerous.
It the end of 10ears
Saving money is good in any form, but saving money so that it accumulates by its own value is a far better conception of thrift. The dollar hoarded away in the old coffee pot will stay there unless someone steals it or its easy access tempts you to spend it. But'money in the bank is safe, you'll get the saving habit in a manner that will give you added interest in seeing it grow. Start a savings account with us today. An account started before July 10th will draw -interest from July 1st. Farmers Trust Co. Main and Jefferson
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Samuel C. Lontz & Sons The Home of Klean Kua East Colfax Avenue
YOU Polish-Americans must decide. The fate of the new-born Republic is in your hands. Poland has thrown off the yoke of the oppressor and is entering upon a new life full of promise But, Poland must have money at once. She is borrowing $50,000,000, giving in exchange 6 percent twentyyear gold bonds, backed by all the great resources of the country and by the undying patriotism of 35,000,000 liberty-lovirrg people. Poland is not a beggar. She wants a loan, money that she has not and you have. Shall it be said of tho 2.500,000 Poles in the United States who subscribed for $365,000,000 worth of American Liberty Bonds, that they are deaf to this appeal? Poland needs this money to rehabilitate herself build railroads to transport her products to Waiting markets; to develop her mines and exploit her forests and to buy raw materials so that her waiting millions may return to work. Your kindred in Poland have not the money to loan their Government You have. By buying Polish government bonds and sending them to Poland you are able to send money to your relatives and friends in Poland, which is the same as ready cash. You will thus help both the government and your friends. Jan Ignacy Paderewski, former premier of Poland, says: 'The Polish Government does not ask for charity, does not want any gifts, does not appeal for sacrifices. The Polish Government asks you to trust to it ' your savings and to help your Mother country as well as yourself. Your money is safe. I join my voice with that of the Polish Government and appeal to you all, my fellow countrymen Gen. Pilsudski, Chief of State of Poland, said: "I regret that I can only subscribe $10,000 to the loan. Money is to a nation what arms and ammunition are to an army. Without money a nation c&n no more exist than can an army without munitions of war. "I am confident that the help of our sons in the United States will be forthcoming. They will not fail us. Our countrymen in America realize that support must be given in order that what has been won and created shall not perish. . Your conscience surely will not permit you to refuse to respond to this appeal. . Shall Poland perish? She relieu for her life on her sons and the sons of her sons, who have always responded loyally. Answer, You Poles of America "Shall Poland Perish?" You can get Polish Bonds from all Polish Societies and Building and Loan Associations or at any of these banks: Peoples State Bank St. Joseph Loan Trust Co. . or Send Check or Money Order to NATIONAL CAMPAIGN COMMITTEE REPUBLIC OF POLAND LOAN Casimir Prince Lubomirski, Honorary Chairman
450 MUNSEY BUILDING
WASHINGTON, D. C.
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