South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 184, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 3 July 1921 — Page 22
SUNDAY, JULY 3, 1921 22 THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
GERMANY TO RISE AND BE CONQUERED SAYS OLD PROPHET
Hun Will Strengthen and Then Fall Before Russia Thinks Munich Seer.
Hi:i:U.V, July 2. Dime History ir up the Treaty of Ver.illls; .i. r. w Hoh' nzollorn Kalr will be r.--:'rr l to th Prussian thron for a ! w ytars, only to ho rlethron"! a:. 1 r x utr 1. Hr.ßlarid and France uill in; n.ti 1 In a nw world war v. l.;. h ujli pr vrnt thrlr Interference Iu ( I. rr:; iny's working out of her own ilf srlny. Afi'-r years of terror a T-i w ,'ror;i'.vf I! or Napoleon will ar;:-f frum the rankfl of the common I .; :. who will first establish a military dictatorship an-l later crowp l.lrii Kirrt? of Germany. Thc-' are a few of tho prophetic hLit'.riil deductions of Dr. Max K rnrnerlch, of Munich, which, In r.irn;Iii. t form, arc belnt? parsed from hand to hin 1 In royalist circles and among the former officers of the c;-riii.in ponral staff. In 1312 and icn. when thh comhlnatlon of the roj!!" and lep student of history warned Ii'.a countrymen of the lra-r-n lir.' war and revolution, of the forthcoming destruction of Austria and restoration of Poland, of the IliiH-ian revolution and tho division of the socialK party and Its comlr.it xi.r- to pfiwfr. Germany laughed at lr. Kemmerich and called him crazy. Pfforo the war tho historical peer advocated the accumulation of vast störe.- of fo.l to protect Germany from tho coming hunger blockade. In the summer of 1918 he went to the Pavari in War . Ministry and advir! thn organization of elexrted homo guards to protect South Germany In tho coming revolution. The modern fJnrrrnn Cassandra was laughed at and shown the door. Historical Iirrnll ll.sm.
Gonn iny has seen what she considered, in Impossible come to pa?.-. Tho former feoffors have been linprf.s-d. and today pome of the wis-i-t Kray-hearled military Rreniuses of Germany aro carefully tudylnj? Ir. Kemmerichs historical deductions. History moves in cycles, accordlnpr to tho -eer Hp is not an absolut detormlnis-t. admitting: a limited freedom of will- for the ir.dvidual. but not for the mass of people. Py laws of eternal and external parallelism ho foretell the future. It's a eis" of the schoolboy's phrase, "History r. -peats Itself." Great historical ritture.s am tho products of their times, but are only In a limited way re.-'ponsiblo for their Limes. Reviewing his pamphlet, received from a German general staff officer, one. may summarize the following; main pdnt: Tii'' llusslan revolution, which parallels the French revolution of I'M:-.".::, will last about five years. A i-t v r.ar, f the Romanoff dynasty, will t tk.- the throne in 192 or 1923, with unlimited power. Th" pomanoff restoration will encu; ;-e the 1 1 ohenzollern -upportr.- uh.o will place a prince of this h. ;:-.. ui-oti the throne of North Ger
many. Pavari.a will separate from th Federation and pro her own way for about twenty years. North Gerli, in t rr rU:n will break out in its wor.t forms in II .M. with a fight bets.. . . the royalists and their opponII Ju iiolh rn to Ile 11cutcl. The n w Ilohcnzollern monarch will jia omo preliminary sue-es.--s. hut after two years ho will siüVr a decisive defeat and flee. As he ivaches the border he will be captured, endure a long imprisonment and final execution. The flight, impi isonment and execution will occupy approximately the years 1927 to 11. 11. In tho meantime Bavaria will have taken part in neither the extreme r- icthm nor radicalism, although a '.South German monarchy may be established. There will be massacres of th" German populations in Boliona or Poland, or perhaps In both cur. tries. .six y.-ar of terrorism, with radical j-Totip:? ir. power, will follow the execution of the Hoher.zollern king. Sprir.itlriT from the iowest depths of ?'.. ma.s. s, ,rnm the extreme radical?, a nw (. i-omwrll will restore ( T.icr by a military dictatorship. Pic years latter he will be proclaimed kins-. The monarchy will be ir.( -ab b-d on the Pritish pattern and will rio ,,- a restoration of the king by the grace ,.f God." Onn.my to Gito Way to Russia. Tho dictator-king will lead his arm: s a:;air.st the Pivarians and. after defeating them .restore the unity of tb.e m; ire. Tills will end the German revolution, the latter events talcing place botwa n the years 1940 and 10 14. A period of peace and prosperity will follow, with a Gerr.v.n hegemony In Purpe. This era of expar.-i n and power will extend ot r about a century and one-half, when Germany will finally give way to Pus.-: i. "Pet us briefly summarize our deductions." concludes the prophet. Vo r.re fieed with two decades of blood and terror. Hand In hand with our civil wars wo will wage war against our m-ighhors, and we will 1 e vlctcri.vt. f T a nation In Its mutation ' riods develop tremendous xpan?b.'n p-wrr. Tho war period which began in 1911. Is- far from ended. V.o or two new world wars will jt'Vi r.t the great powers from int rt'-rir. : !n our lnt-rn.il troubles. "The- V r illos Trrnty will be torn up. It will civ- courage to thnso who in desperate moments do not dare to look into tho future to know that in tho middle or end of this period Germany will unm!:ak. becomo the first power in Purop .stronger, richer rnd greater than In the days of the Salis-'h r. K lis. r."
No Dukedom fol Them
Sqnlre) PlUllIps of Westtowaa, Pa., who refuses an laiglish dukedom. Ids w1fc and (alKve) llielr mh, .Mexanrrh, who bs le piixial af a chance to Inherit a title by Iiis decision.
ry e. m. nni:rRV. WESTTOWN. Ta., July 2. Suppose you got a cablegram from England saying an undo had died, leaving you heir to 12, 000, 000 and a dukedom! "Wouldn't you grab the first boat? "Not on your life!" cays 'Squire Phillips. Here's a man who turned down a rosy bequest Just like that! Pecause he'd rather be an American citizen and a country Vquire.' His full name I Thierry Van Castile Phillips. "What do I want to be a duke for?" demanded 'Squire Phillips. "I'd have to give up my American citizenship. And I'd have to resign a Justice of the peace. And I'd have to give up my old house and my elm tree and my flivver. No, sir, no flunkies calling me 'Your Grace!' "Why. my gosh. I only just achieved my ambition to be elected justier of the peace! Oh. no, I don't work at the job. Haven't even performed any marriage." "Heavens! How could you?" put in the ducal 'squire s wife. "There Isn't even a Pible in the house! And the maiden ladies down the road
probably wouldn't lend you one because you've got a reputation for swearing too much." "How do you figure a 'squire's Job better than a duke's?" I asked. "Not for the fees; I don't need them," said Phillips. "I've been pinched so often and hailed before a J. P. for violating some pesky villago ordinance that 1 yearned to be a J. P. myself. And, believe me, I'm waiting for the first 'squire that comes flivvering down this road. I'll plaster a fine on him just to get even." So the title and estates of the recently deceased Puke de Moro go hogging while the hereditary duke
sits, unshaven and valepess. on his old-fashioned front porch, and waits
for his prey. "Duke" Phillips Is the eldest nephew of the deceased Puke de Moro. Hi. grandfather was the Graml Duke Sharvaloski Philip! de Moro, a Polish nobleman who fled Warsaw in IS -IS. after making a botch of an attempet to kill the Czar of Russia and. changing his name to .S. Moro Phillips, became an American citizen, married a Philadelphia society belie, and becomo the "fertiazer king," leaving r. fortune of $1"), 000, 000. Against Titles. "Grandfather was against titles." sviid 'Squire Phillips, "but when he 1 i I in lSSr. Fncle Moro went to England with his share of the estate and assumed the title as grandfather's eldest son. He played the duke, all right, and ho looked just like a butler." The Vquiro boasts of another title, lie says Ids mother's father was Abraham Thierry Van Castile, made a baron by a former king of Holland, but who also dis'ike I titles and called hiins- If A. T. Van Castile. "You see tho abhorrence of pomp runs in the family, excopt for Uncle Morro." Mid the 'squire. "Even down to me," says Alexander, the 'squire's youngest son. The 'squire is 4T,, married and his two sons. He likes to wear obi elothe.s and collect antiques. The house he lives in used to he a school house and he bought it because he lik-l the six big rim trees in the front ard. It's 2 miles west of Philadelphia. He only has an acre of ground because he thinks farming is too hard work. His sister. Mrs. Juile Van Castle Thompson, who lives in Europe, has just become engaged to Viscount Furneps, wealthy Pritish shipping ma gnat e.
deemed it wise to follow in the wake , of each schooner. In fact, the ' s-hoor.ors and th submarines bo- i
came quite chummy, o much so '.
that a telephone line was strung from the schooner to each submarine, which remained below the surface all day long. It Is very probable that If the U-bcat had been sighted there might have been some telephoning to the submarine astern. At night time the submarine commanders broucht their craft to the surface, and their good friends on board the schooners loaded them down with gifts of food fupplles and fuel. One pair of thoso stransre marine
"pals" was dragging along In a calm off the Virginia Capes In midsummer. 191?. The submarine had been cn the surface till nearly daybreak. and the former naval omcer in the schooner had been up all night tending to the wants cf his friends in the submarine. So at daybreak he turned in for a short sleep, and the submarine opened her submerging valves and went below. Find U-Poat on Sitrfantv Shortly after 8 o'clock in the morning the lookout on the schooner reported a bark that a small vessel was alongside the bark. Tho lookout continued to make reports on the aetlitics of the two vessels. The American submarine stayed below, the naval commander on the schooner exulted In wcl-carned sleep, and the Scandinavian fklpper of the schooner went about hia usual duties. Just before noon the submarine
commander telephoned to the schooner asking if all was clear for him to bring his vessel to the surface to give the crew a bit of frefh air. The skipper of the schooner telephoned back for tho submarine to come up. The submarine, was hardly on the surface before there was a distant boom; the bark astern was 6cen to
turn her tail upward and sink, and toward tho schooner there came .scurrying through the oaean what was unmistakably a submarine. She had not sighted the American submarine. The American submarine commander was back to his vessel In a twinkling. Hatches were suddenly closed, orders were given to prepare for action, and the boat made a quick dive below the nirface. but not quick enough; for almost simp.l taneously the aproaching U-boat sighted the submarine and made another quick dive. Constant Fearch for many hours failed to turn up tho missing U-boat. Xavy Department Wrath. Disappointment on that day wa.s sullicient, hut it was even greater when some time later it was learned that the. U-boat had been alongside the bark for more than four hour, with hrr hatches wide open, loading copper bars from the 1-ark before sending her to the bottom with a bomb. While this perfect target was open the American submarine had loafed below the surface; the American naval commander on the schooner had slept peacefully, and the skipper of tho schooner had cone blisfully on with his deck duties. There was a warm time In the navy department. The skipper of the schooner wa.s sharply called to accoun-t for his failure to report the bark and the vessel alongside. He maintained that he had believed it to be a small tug towing the bark. After the armistice, when the navy department secured the U-117 together with its log, it was learned that the U-boat commander recorded this as his most narrow escape in American waters. It Is small wonder that there wa.s grim satisfaction on the faces of watching naval otficers a few weeks ago. when the U-117 turned her tall to the clouds ami took her last dive, an ignominious end, sunk by aerial bombers while anchored as a
helpktss target. And so another chapter of the disappointments of the sea was closed.
Reveal Failure of Navy To Capture Hun U-Boat
i rrriNG cake. If you hae difficulty with your cVrwO ! c min.g s ale try cutting out a portion ri.ht across the middle first and put the two sj los that are left togetb.tr. If carefully cut they will ft exactly and the cake, put together, will hold moisture longer.
WASHINGTON. July 2. Hidden away in the archives cf the great grey navy building here are hundreds of romances and adventures of the. seas which may never come to light. In steel bound flies are the records of succeses and of failures during the world war which swell. d the heart of seafaring men with pride and caused them to tear their hair in anguish. Perhaps the most romantic records 'concern the activities of the United States navy against the German U-boats, records which have never been opened to the public. With the recent sinking of the U-117 off Cape Charles by aerial bombers there has come to light the story of a great disappointment to the American navy. The U-117 left Kiel on June 12, 1D1S, under command of a German, who la believed to have served as a gunner's mate in the United States navy at cne time. Apparently well versed on condition in American waters, this U-boat captain turned her toward the shores cf the United States. From a date late in June until early In September the U-117 wa.s a menace to American and foreign shipping off the coasts of the north Atlantic. Mines were sown by the U-117 from Maine to Hntteras, and five steam o-;. and eight schooners fell prey to the underseas destroyer. The navy department adopted drastic measures. Thirty-five patrol boats we re s nt to capture the Uboat. but without success; she ccntlnue 1 her raids, particularly upon schooners. At this time tbe PritLsh navy was having some success with Q-boats. or mystery ships. innrrnt-!ooking vessels, which were quickly turned Into armed fighting craft when attacked by the U-be-ats. American naval otficers desired to outfit some
possssion of five sailing- schooners and went to sea. The n:.val ofiicers were out of the navy and apparent owners of sailing vessels, but they retained the commercial "skippers" of their schooners. It was a strange coincidence that when thes five small schooners put to sea an American submarine
NICKEIj trimmings. One means by which the Parisian is injecting gaiety into frocks for fall is by the extensive use of' metal trimmings. Red is strong among colors.
TRIMMING.
Praid-like trimming often finds itself in reality a narrow fold, fastened to the suit or gown at only one side and sporting an elusive bit of embroidery at the very edge.
There are about 30 different kinds of buttons made In this country, from fdiell and pearl down to china and papier-mache.
Watch One Corn
end in this way then decide
cf these mystery ships. 1
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Tho ror.tr' -sleral library at Washington has a collection of about 2C mir.i.'ituro books. th largest of which is les than two ln"hc quare.
Crws In Polgium must wear carrings, to which are attached numbered metal tags for taxation pur-
i
understood that Woodrow Wilson intervened, holding that such e.v-e!s were a violation of international law. ThLs was the firs: bitter disappointment to those charged with making a defens against the submarines. The U-117 was continually reverted to the navy de-pas nur.t as still active in American waters, sinking schooner and sowing mines. The navy was nonplussed. Qulen Soanii of th Seas. Quietly and without ostentation five commanders were relieve of their naval duty. They came into
Learn now the rlsKt way to end corns. c Apply Blue-jay the liquid or the plaster to one corn. Mark how the pain stops. Watch the corn, in a little whilejoosen and come out. Stop paring corns it is dangerous. Put aside the old. harsh treatments. Try this new way at once. Blue-jay is the scientific Plaster or Liquid Blue jay The Scientific Corn Ender BAUER & BLACK Chicago Mew York Toronto M&ktra cf B & B Sterile SurkJ
Dreuincs and Allied Product
method. A famous chemist invented it. This great surgical dressing house makes it Countless people use it. Blue-jay is ending not less than 20 million corns a year. A touch applies it. The action is gentle, the results are sure and final. Fairness to yourself requires that you try it if you ever suffer corns.
End other foot troubles To kcrp the feet In preper concltion bathe them with blue. jay Foot So p. h check exceMive per. piratiorv. It top marling and burn in. Then ue B! jeJay Foot Relief. ootlunc cooling mataage for ach in I muaiJet and tendons. A final luxury it Blue-iay Foot Powder, an anti.eptjc. deodorant powder that keeps feet fecim fine. The new Blue-Jay treatments Eft'-h. 35c: Coir.bir.tion pkg.. S 1 .00.
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