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THE INTELLIGENCER ESTABLISHED IMO. Published every morning except Monday by Tho Anderson Intelligen cer at 140 West Whitner Street, An derson, S. C. SEMI-WEEKLY INTELLIGENCER Published Tuesdays end Fridays L. M. GLENN_Editor and Manager Entered aa second-class matter April 28. 1914, at the poet office at Anderson, South Carolina, under Gie Act of March 3, 1879. ASSOCIATED PRESS DISPATCHES Telephone .821 SUBSCRIPTION BATES DAILY One Year .16.00 Six Months . 2.60 Three Months. 1.25 One Month.42 One Week . JO SEMI-WEEKLY One Year .$1.60 Six Months . .76 The Intelligencer ls delivered by carriers in the city. Look at the painted label on your paper. The date thereon shows when the subscription expires. Notice date on label carefully, and if not correct please notify us at moe. Subscribers desiring the address of their paper changed, will please state ia their communication both the old and new addresses. To insure prompt delivery, com plaints of non-delivery In the etty af Anderson should be made to the Circulation Department before 9 a. m. and a copy will be sent at ones. All checks and drafts should be drawn to The Anderson Intelligencer*. ADVERTISING Rates will he furnished on applica tion. No tf advertising discontinued ex cept on written order. The Intelligencer will publish brief and rational letters on subjer's of general interest when they are ac companied hy the names and ad dresses ot the authors and are not of a defamatory nature. Anonymous communications will not be noticed. Rejected manuscripts will not be re turned. In order to avoid delays on account ?f personal absence, letters to The Intelligencer intended for publication should not be addressed to any indi vidual connected with the paper, but .imply ic. The Intelilgenoer. THURSDAY, JULY b, IOIB. ? ??M.,- "!?. WEATHER FORECAST Probably fair Thursday and Fri day. OHE WAY **t6 HELP ANDERSON COLLEGE. Sem i names ot prospective students to Dr, Kinard. Whit, Anderson College needs this summer, saya Dr. Kinard, ls an active co-overatlon ot all the people, men and women, in the canvas for stu dents. They can do this by sending to Dr. Kinard, either by telephone, or mall, the names of any prospective students in this or other States. .Let everybody, help. ABE TRAINMEN HUMAN BEINGS 1 The. management of tbe Chicago surface linea, following the recent strike, sent a letter to 12.000 em ployees, including all trainmen. Saya its half-page ad in ' tho Chicago Tribune: "The letter stated that wo were go tug. to buy some advertising in the newspapers' for' our -employees, and would'ask them to pressnt to the pub lic their own suggestions for the im provement of the service. Here is the first letter received in response tb od rs. We believe lt containa a sug tj?stlon which will appeal instantly iff f*$*y one." :.' And- here is what the employee W.tote to tho management: "Your let ter meeta with the bea' tr approval at the trainmen itt your , employ, and has already take' the desired effect. If you will permit me to offer a BUR gestion which may be beneficial to alt concerned, I am sure the best resulta car. be obtainers. -Ask . the people to write ,of oby. courtesies extended by conductors or motormen that nre worthy of mantle^, . the same to bb tt?ed aa a mark of credit to the aaid trainmen. I assure you, you will be pleased with the future service of the trainmen, es there has been a marxed improvement already." Tho. management's comment on thu lotter rrom the conductor Ia that "lt goos tb the heart of the whole matter of service in a very' direct way." It ia right that complaints be made by the public to Gie management ot ?ag which goes wrong. Com os triers belong, In theory at , to the people. The people hato right to demand good'service, and keep it goori it ls otten necessary complain of lt when it ls bad. But how about. praising it when it satisfactory? How long ls it going tshe people to- learn that other minds work Just as theirs al irj'? ^leTetig?f doe? hil irork better for a little praise for lerlt. lt's only human naturi* that lie conductor will do the same? The lassender know* tiio glow and en huslasm which follows approbation. Ie knows how much more efficient ho s when appreciated. He known the lack feeling Of "What's th? use?" fol ?iwliiK continual unmerited complaint, s thu trainman mude of different lay? .ROUnu nos AM? MK AT PUCES. Most anything, of courae, will serve s un rxcus*e to advance the price of lent. The reason gi/en by agents of lie meat packers for a recent Jump a eastern wholesale rates has at i;ast the merit of novelty. Tho cx lanatlon ls that the wave of prohl it ion throughout the country has reutly curtailed the huslnei n of the rlilskey distilleries, so there ls uct nough of the whiskey refuse grain ? fatten thu usual number of cattle, ml the consequent scarcity of cattle < forcing prices up. , It's Just another indication of the omplexlty ..' the liquor problem. It oesn't BPwm ever to have occurred o the liquor men themselves to figure ut an argument like this against pro Ibltlr A somawhat more convincing expi ation of the acknowledged meat hortage-and there's less beef and Hutton stored in New York than there as been in tho same season for ten ears-ls the enormous demand by ho European armies. Four thousand teers a day are going abroad to feed lie allies' troops. BIGGER INCOME TAX RETURNS. The income tax collections for the iast year show a healthy growth over ; he year before, in spite of the fact hat there was less busness done and iresumably less money made. Up to uly 1 the receipts were about $80, 00.000, which ls $8,500,000 more than cn days' grace may bring $5,000,000 sst year's total, and the subsquent o $10,000,000 more. The personal tsx brought the big est surprise. For the fiscal year of 914 there was a total of $28,000,000 ollectcd from 375,508 persons. This ear, while the number of taxed In ou?es liss not increased much, thc irovlous amount had been exceeded iy $13.000.000 up to July 1, with sev rai possible millions yet to come In. A large part of the gain ls due, of ourse, to the feet that the 191? tax?s vere only for a ten-month period, rhtle the last collections are for a full 'ear. Much of the Increase, however, s due to an increaso of governmental ifnelency In.handling the collections. _ABt year the system WBB chaotic, rho attempt to collect from incomes it their source broke down. Payment lecanio largely a matter of chanee. Mow the system has got lato better vorklng order, and the public has a' letter understanding of lt. Muddle, .other than dishonesty, seems to have >ben responsible for most of the first silures to pay. There ia little evl lence ot intentional tax-dodging. BRIDAL GALLUSES. The New York Wrold seems to think here ls komething funny In this quo tation from the Jollet Herald-News, which lt sarcastically captions "An Example of Climax:" "The charm ot i perfect June evening with tbs odor rf ros?s In the air and a cloudless larmoiiy to the appointments of a iky, added the final note of exquisite iweet?y simple wedding last night at 3race M. E. Church which united in he hedy bonds ot marriage Miss Edna Mlchofs and Howard Bateman. One rf the interesting features of the bridegroom's part In the wedding wa? he feet that the suspendere which he ?wore had been carefully embroidered seventy years before by his grand mother tor his grandfather's wedding agy." Hut If the bride had Worn her grand mother's silken hose on the same l?appy occasion, or her gTOat-aunt's bridal veil brought over-Seas by ber sailor great-great Unele, ot something like that, the mention ot h would nave been taken with entire and sen timental seriousness. Was it not In deed a delic?ate sentiment Which pro ceed a delicate sentiment which prom ted the bridegroom thus to show his i-?preciaHon of his grandmother's dainty and affectionate handiwork? And lt women are to hive votes, why shouldn't men have embroidery? rs hot perfect equality What ls de sired hy all true feminists? Although, when ont. comes to think ot t, a mod ern man who craved embroidered lingerie Will probably be compelled to look among lils grandmother's bslstsj legs td find t. What has become, anyhow, el the Old-fashioned girl who used to em broider suspenders for her beloved? Has a Kane*. . If your scribe ls not being deceived, looks like lt l? time red, red, red wa termelon siicee were being handed around. This particular trait seems to be a little scarce this season.-Leo let ter to Lake City Newa, . A Spot On Th Hy Douglas Bi "Who wins'" cried the "Who win*; in this war Then from out of the bi "I win!" croaked the CH He was twenty-five yea An upright, ambitions Great success wa? his J His motto "I know that And bis syears. althone A climax of centuries t From whoBc wisdom pl Good work for his brsir And he had, ob, so man His mother, his friends Whose tender thoughts Mach day-and at night Bul then up from the t A terrible wailing arosi "We're insulted-revenj "Come, man, you must So tiley took him and s (Nor recked they of ho? They Bent him-and otl (What matter? Not th He was twenty-five yeal As truft as the steel of That sent his soul shrii Away from the place w Now the iieart that was LieB cold in the welterl From tho thing, once a Or horrid, unspeakable Ah, the war leads to he Tis so brave to be at t (But lt's deadly, destru While those left behind "Who wins?" cried thc "Who wins in thia war Then from out of the bi "I win!" croaked the c UNPREPA (Chicago Tribune.) ^^^^ Dispatches from Denver announc ing the amalgamation of the four powerful railway employes' unions for increased wages and service demands mean Bomethlng real to informed per sons. It is a mobilization for war between tho brotherhoods and the railroad managers, with the nation as unprepared air' helpless as Chicago was last month for the traction strike. Unless the coming session of con gress develops more adequate pro tection the probable course of eventB during the coming spring, when new schedules will be demanded, is not encouraging. Under the Newlands act the ma chinery for mediation and arbitration has been provided, but there is no obligation to accept the board's ser vices, and Chicago will witness that even a powerful public opinion is not powerful enough at times. Besides the men complain that arbibraticai has been used aa a mask to stack the bards. Since the recent proceeding In Chicago there have been violent expressions. The Utopian theory Cracks undc. the strain of ornerier, we are told. Tho award was accept ed for the stipulated period of mc year and in Gie meantime all tho units will be welded together into one ? LITTLE LEAKS RUNNING + ? STEADILY + "It*s only a little leak and doesn't amount to anything" is the way that the steady drip or the fine stream from a faucet is usually regarded. But the little teak ls on the Joh twen ty-four hours a day and Bevon davs In the week and while it may not ap- ' pear to be waatlag much water, it ? ia actually leting a great deal ron away. A round orifice 1-32 Inch in .diameter will pass 270 gallons of wa ter in twenty-tour hours at a pres sure of SO pounds to the square inch. Increase Gie pressure by 10 pound s and Gie amount is 320 gallons, at 50 pounds pressure it is 380 gallons and. at 60 pounds, 420 galloas. Scc'C ot our most progressive towns that have every outlet metered show a daily per capita consumption of only 70 gal lons, so that at 60 pounds pressure, which is now quite common, that fine stream ls wasting the equivalent ot a day's supply for six persons. A stream of water 1-32 Inch in dia meter lent any bigger than a good sised daming needle Increase rt to 1-16 inch about the sise of one of those crochet booka that grandma uses, and Gie amount it will get hway with in twenty-four hours ts amasing. Starting at 850 gallons for 80 pounds pressure, it reaches 1230 gallons at SO pounds. Enough to sup ply almost eighteen people for wash ing, drinking and bathing for a day and night. These are only the fine toaks that look like negligible quan tities as they leave Ute ta. Take a faucet that ls openly splattering with a leak equivalent to 1-8 inch and It's criminal. The amount lt runs to waste would supply an orphan asylum aa lt gete away With 4,520 gallons at ?6 pounds pressure in twenty-four boura. Grangebarg weed. The ralsng of tobacco ls being at tempted again tb thia county with very good succ?s in the vicinity of Branch ville. Several farmers in Gita section of the county have undertaken the growing of thia plant, and they have been so successful that lt ls under stood that a warehouse is to be erected at Branchville and a buyer ls to be at (Branchville at the opening rf the sea eon, about a month from thia time. Orangeburg New*. . ie Battlefield ronston. eagle, high soaring, down below?" mle's dull roaring, rrion crow, V TS in tho making, young matt. ust ofr the taking; I can!" ;h few, represented ;one, led up and fomented i and lila brawn, y to love him ; and n maid always were of him, when she pray.:d. teats of the greedy se must be speedy! help crush our foes!" ent bim to battle, pes thut ran high!) 1er such cattle, ey who should dleT) .s In the making; the shell eking and quaking, hero he fell, brave, loyal, humble, ng spilth man now a jumble filth. mor and glory, he front! ctlve and gory, I bear the brunt.) eagle, high soaring, down below?" mic's dull roaring, arrlon crow. REDNESS compact fighting machine. This does not look promising for settlement by , arbitration, which, after all, the pub lic Interest demands, under the pro per guarantees to the men. It Is apparent that congress must take sotiie action. Canada lias had excellent success with a law which goes one stop ?srther than ours by prohibiting lo- kouts or strikes, un til the board of mediation has made a complete Investigation of the issues and made its findings public. In seven years tbere have been oly eigh teen cases In which strikes were not either a verte-1 or ended, and the labur forces have not been treated unfairly. Others urge the necessity ?? compel?-; 'ng the disputants to accept th? offices of the board if a strike is insisted up on even after the first investigation. At any rate, the public that makes the laws of the country cannot afford to readopt the trial by bs*N U U1U test of justice. Arb??n Jen might! not be perfect and still bf a godsend. Now that the employes h ve perfect ed their offensive abd tl s railroads are prepared for the dat 1, ls it not about time for the publt< . that must act as referee In all Int astrlal dis putes, to come forward v?th rules limiting the struggle to a, eflnite are na? * ABOUT THE St ?TE. * + + ???+*??*??*??*?< ??*>*>?*> Six Tons per Ac <a> Mr. H. C. Smith, of Yoe ville No. ?7 recently cut his alfalfa di I secured a yield of approximately t$j live tona of hay off two acres. This ,1 the second cutting Mr. Smith has gotj n this year. Provided the Beesons em good, he ls expecting to obtain at le st 25-more tons of alfalfa olf the t^?>acre patch this year.-Yorkvllle Bad irer. . Florence Weef Mr. A. J. Coleman, ofr ampllco, Is In the city today to eitel I the meet ing of the board of regis qt tioh as this is tho first Monday in hs month, but he found that everything wak closed up hero so it ls not like} that the board held a meeting. Ml Coleman fa among the first to pnt tal bern of to bacco. He baa a ba?? eua jg out now. One other-cttisen of hi* lection baa put In a barn also, Mr. tl Ile Harrell, of the Hyman section. I r. Coleman says that while the tobacc crop ls not what it should be for thf time of thc year, lt has come out a great deal since the recent rains ann the farmers are now hopeful of a ha ter yletu. Florence Times. I UNCLAIMED LSI Following ls the list j mailling uncalled for in i at Anderen, S. C., inf*; lng July ,, 1915. Peti Ithese will please say advertised. One cent vertlsod matter. A-Miss Ola Asl tost, B.-Mrs. F>, A. Brownlee, Henry C.-Auoer earlies. Cogswell, B. V. O??BV ?Mrs. M. V. Carter, f Ii.-Lois E. D?sona. IS.-W. L. Earody, G.-August Gary, Brewer HAD. J.-'Bud Jones, ! Jones. K.--M. D. King. L.-Sam Lee roy, M-J. M. Hatt?ngly, KhT?.y, MB as Andry McGee. P.-Miss Prari Pruitt. R.->Vba. Alberta and! 8.-Sa-h ahlfl?t. Ider T.-A. W. Tindall. XJ-Batallo Underwc W.-Mrs. Dotar V ' . '-. . Tr; /* ( . m wi ra pos toface end calling for they were Sit ad Adger. Nelly D. Cassel, ?Julia Gall' Amanda *iag. i.-. ?? Me Clem Clyde Rles, h. Turner. MTS. M. J. M .tWLRfJt FOR THE PICNIC BASKET + ? Crab Meat Salad. A particularly delectable salad for automobile hamper is made by re ovlng slices from the stem ends of !rm tomatoes, peel the vegetables id with a sharp pointed spoon re ove the centres. Sprinkle with salt id invert on the ice to chill. Have e crab moat flaked into small pieces, |ld a Little shredded lettuces, ana olsten with a mayonnaise dressing, which just a taste of chill sauce has en added. Mix well, fill into the tilled tomato shells and arrange in of the coveed porcelain dishes tied into the hamper. Mint Lemon Pu noli. . Prepare a strong lemonade, using al leaping cupful of svgar and four large | mons to eacb it art of water. He veen the rimer* rulse the sterns! nd lower !ca\ e ut a few sprigs of | int that have been well washed, rop these into the lemonade, chill rectly oh the ice for three or four jours, and Just before turning into ie thermos bottle strain out the mint a ada dE'wimi iiutuun ui mw gi? r ale. Strawberry Bans. Sift half ?\ teaspoonful of soda ?nd teaspoonful ot cream of tartar with ree cupfuls of pastry flour. Work ?ito this with the finger tips half ? upi ul of butter. Then stir in. two tge that have been beaten with half cupful of sugar and enough cob! reet milk to make a stiff do veil, ould these into bums and lay '".?ni a a greased t|n. Before putt tem Into the oven, make an opt i the aide of each; flit these' rawberry jam, draw the dough over ie opening, pinch the edges tightly ?gethor, and bake about fifteen ra lu tes. Novelty Sandwich**. Chop together one small white on >n ten pitted olives, ode sweet green epper ( -'rom which the seeds bas? leen removed,) four - crisp lette?e pires and a sour pickle. Beat these igredienta Into one cupful ot cream hoese. Season to taste with a very Ittl? aalt, and add enough mayon alse dressing to form a paste that -Jilt agreed. Use as a fliting betweefr aln alices of buttere dbrown bread. Boston Sandwiches. Onto ono cunful ot grated Araerl n cheese beat six tablespoonfuils of ..til or chutney sauce and spread be Ween alternate slices or brown andi ?rbft? bread. Use three slices WM read for each sandwich; remove ths| ?rusts and cut Into neat circles. To Beep Quilts Clea?. Many different methods have, beth ,Md by careful "^ousekeep'era for eepfng the qui:** or eiderdown com ortables clean at the top whore they nab against tho face. , ? Thone who have tried turning the heet over have found that it Ira* osslblo to rsteln lt in place; and pin ling lt with eahsy pms has not irovHft entirely aatisfactory. ?or aside rom the looks ot the pins, which at-? ot attractive, they are liable to tear ha sheet; bat a strip of ck?th sixteen aches wide, turned over ide quilt, so hat eight inches will be on each sidle t IL leah excellent protector. It may be of linea or fine cotton, nade either wtth ? bern one inch wide ill around, stitched on the &iehine /br lerastitched, or the outside edge, thc aw that ia intended for the outside ?f tho <rutlt, may be scalloped and a* each band embroidery put on li ai me wmat??. This could be made of s itrtp of embroidered flouncing ?ahiea ina little open work and not d^c-r scallops, an they would soon become ?rlnkied. T?S appearance ot thew ir the ?beet turned over, ittie work attached te iff when they are sofie*. , ?ashing. They satis many' cleansing lille. (?bittob. Mrs. M. ?.l"Wtfb??**.: li. Winn. " . ... Silk shirts are a necessir keeps in tune with the t Here's an unusual collec ty gay but it's the thing Also a good showing in shirts for the sports anc 50c, $1.00, $1.50, an? ^ Plenty of conservative l , patterns that are differel 50, $1.00, $1.50, and "Tm* Stol PRESS Cd '?Lost Face.'? (Chicago Tribune.) It is a striking circumstance of China's danger and humiliation ?hat she admits her face is in the dirt. A wensness of Chinese character waa to take the injury and hide it under an appearance of unhurt pride. If face could be saved the Injury waa not mortal. This was like a disease which ga-c no warning by pain. If the Chinese people know they have been humiliated and are in dan ger ot having their developing na tionalism extinguished they may be come more dangerous than they ever have been to the invador ot their rights. "We are ashamed of the humiliation" says President Yuan Shih Kai in a proclamation remarkable for admit ting that face is wholly lost, "but should we blame others while we our selves are at fault? Our own weak ness has invited the .Insult, andi I feel that I um a man of little virtue ana abzllity. However, we have no right to stake the existence of a nation; therefore we have to work out ita sal we are willing' f?~at}mit to themselves that humiliation ls up on them' they are at least stirring in their sleep. That may 'be the sign of an awakening. Exit Minister Sullivan. (News and Courier.) ? James M. Sullivan, American min ister to the Dominican Republic, bas been informed hy Secretary of State Lansing that the department of state la prepared to accept his resignation If he will be so good as to tender lt'. This, of course, ?is just a pol'.ie- way of "firing" Mr. Sullivan. The decision to get rid of Mr. Sullivan was hafted upon the result ot an investigation by a commission headed by Senator Phe lan of California. The commission ex onerated Mr. Sullivan so far as allega tions of -dishonest dealings were con cerned, but found that he was,temper amentally unfit for the position which I. he held under the t??vernineiit. ; it ls better to get ri?: of an unfit pub lic brflccr than to re'Aln bim for fear ot th? scandal which his retirement would create, la the circumstances therefore, it is well that Mr. Sullivan should go. Thc whole affair, however, ls most regrettable and will do harm, f?ne does not need now to go into de rails or to recall Mr. Bryan's letter ?ut "deserving-democrats." Th? liven expose, ought to help elimi nate from the: dSplomate service of -the government the spirit and the philosophy or which that letter was I an expression; tatt in the meantime, j lt ls not pleasant to contemplate the I impression which the episode will, create in other Latin-American coun i^rJea than Santo Domingo. Far many of the men who hav? In the represented the United States in countries have been men Who weire or were f?nuiod to be "on th? ihs*?." Th? Si'Uiv?n affair will not help' re fute this estimate. . W ^ t We HeraUs*. 'The? ?Hg?t. ? (Minneapolis journs?.'. " ! To understand, to gW elong wlthfthis world, nay to improve this world as well s>3 to accommodate, oneself io lt, . requires an iotellectualtcderanco rath ?'j.er than a moral' ?Wfctlon. What II wera the wara M rs?g?on, the per secutions of InjoMfre* In religion's name, but-ike4'contentious endeav ors of morallly convinced mon to Im pone their notion* ?pon the world? We Americana- believe lu democracy, but whfl* ^?jjjftay believe in It, wa know that'af, a.. matter of fact the greater dart of tho world's population does bot. ?ftuowlhg the fact, how can we ey-pect Ra asians or Germans io think as?! act ea democrats teddie} think sAd *c*? Tb* expectation is ab? Burd.^Ohr *ewd?sta ibe'icve war is ttartjrtal. They may )" righi, but tbejftannot expect Barop?, tho major .Mdmew- ot tits people, to think se. ut the only napple whom they need convince are the Colosse. Americans live tr-fth no nelrch bo inabtt almost a continent walch Wm y for every man who ime. t :tion-patterns pret this season, $3.50. the turn back collar i the sporters. if !$2.00. ? V J shirts in styles and nt. k , f V $2.00. \ it**Ao .Caarftn iMMENT iverywhero Is retty much alike. Hence >ur dearest conviction Is that all the 'est of the world 1B like ourselves, >r is going to he like ourselves soon. Dint ls an illusion which will cause us some severo croppers, if we ob slnately Indulge lt. Kind words butter no parsnips, and noble abstractions do not-alter facts. We live in a World that ls what it is, regardless of what we Americans may say or believe. Mb st of that world never heard o. JYashlngion's "Fare well Address" or ot Lincoln's "Speech at Gettysburg." It has oilier notions, ideals, convictions than our own, and for its own particular act .of such no tions each portion of it (except China) is perfectly ready to bleed and die: Thc'Heart of a Child. \ (Spartanburg Herald.) There is n. wid* field of controversy as to the influences -ot heredity and environment/. of course. The argu ment is limitless arid ? .world of lit erature has been produced along this line, but environment,, that thing un der human control, has never been absolved! from trreat responsibility/.In s ^mtfs^telT~oV~'t?h3-4?t dual, especially the environment of tliiB child, in. the earliest Btages of its development-? -Seeds are sown then in the heart of* thv child that, though they may He dormant, so dormant that they are hadly known to be, there. by the owner of th*? heart, himself, they Bpving up In due ttfifb and bring forth fruits of Ute brain and heart that determine the char acter of the Individual in his mature years. The fundamental principles ot life are right then .out in the heart of a child. . They are there., He may not understand them or be able io - interpret them for a long'while, .brit when the awakening cornea and aa" begins to look about, to take stock of his ideas and his conception of Itfe, he finds thora stor'tfll away, placed ther0 by some oho, he.'hardly knows who. />-: So those entrusted with tho sacred dUty of moulding the ^character and life of a child tpny consider seri ously what things they aro putting in that little ?lead,'pr heart, by their , teaching, but more especially by. their example. . '?-V-: J. . Newspaper and War, . ? (Pittsburgh Post.) , t A magazine that ought to kn?w better make* an ?asertion Togardltg newspapers wanting war roi* the said ot sellirx? larger editions. "TheA?Mfe becomes calloused," says The Review of Reviews, "thus tbe sale of large s and the demand for extras to wane. The only way to stlai lUatc the appetite tor -sensation was tt? - bring things nearer home. Hence tho uso ot the Lusitania incident. The newspapers seemed intent upon get ting America into war over that bad altair'." . This silly assumption Gmt newspa pers want wart? refuted fey the uni versal attitude of the American press In commending the sound sense and moderation shown hjr government and people In support of a peaceful pol icy. Buch talk as that maga, dulgvs ls Gie sort of gross niisrepre soRtation shout American/ principie?* that found belief among foreigners wno are Just twinning te have their eyes opened and their minds treed from prejudice, a Because an event Or supreme Sm* portante ?Urtle* the world and there ie extraordinary demand for Informc tiorf, the hasty coaclnalon ls drawn Us?t such-and-such happening is wanted wy newspapers. No one in bis right aeasee would affirm that airy newspaper on earth wanta a Lusitania or a Titanic sunk, a vast territory hor rified by Hood, firs, earthqtiafc? or ey clont*. fireat calamities accelerate de ni arid for newspapers tb giro alt tia Information possible, and, frequently puhHc aervWe eataJla f?r heavlf ? expem-e than the comparattvely slight Increase in receipts from extra .ales of papers.