The Lancaster news. (Lancaster, S.C.) 1905-current, March 15, 1918, Page PAGE SIX, Image 6
PAGE SIX
fblkes Kne
? w-s
demanded 1
/"-Jni'' That's th
/k Lnzianne.
/ any other co
and your gr<
^ torm li Get in lin
^asas?]
air-tight, sa
"When It Poor*. iTf IjL
It Reign*" / <T
TIIK DOG?MAN'S MOST
CONSTANT COM I'AN I
(Charlie White-Moon.)
I have never met a good man.
man or child that did not love 11
ers, music and animals. If y
means will allow it, you keep
horse, a cow or a dog. Nearly ev
one can have a dog. Remember t
they have diseases the same as we
.and that the same remedies that c
you will help them. If you hav
horse or cow, give plenty of feed
the right kind; don't compel then:
live on the same feed all the tir
you would not like to eat nothing
meat and bread every meal, year
and year out; you would not like
be deprived of salt for months a
time. Change your animal's feed
least onee a week, oftener if you ci
give them turnips, carriots, cabba
potatoes or something of that ki
often as possible during the winl
and grass at least once a week
summer. Keep salt before y<
stock all the time. They have nn
intelligence along that line than j
have, and will never eat too mu<
and they know better when they
warn, it man you possimy can. Ab<
all things, be kind to your aninw
1 know that kindness pays; my <
perience has taught this, and 1 pr
tice it among my own stock, an<
have horses, birds, tame fish, a r;
bit, cats and a monkey. Of all I
noble animals associated with m;
there are none that will return kli
ness for abuse, love for neglect, a
affection for punishment, like a d<
Heat and half starve him, he v
crouch at the feet of his cruel nu
A Grippe Epidemi
1 Every winter Health Boar<
warn against this weakenir
disease which often strike
those who are least prepare
to resist it You should strength*
yourself against grippe by takir
gCOTT'g
OmismO
which is the cream of cod liver o
refined, purified and so skilful
prepared that it enriches the bio*
streams, creates reserve streng
and fortifies the lungs and thro;
Dnn'l /1<?1 nu i* m nu moon mnr
lltv*/ I1IV.UII lift uv
M Use scon s
f[ Refuse Substitute
Soott * llowiw, HloooOatd. N. J. 1'
K3n
mm?3
----IB
I
PV"
\e Olde Dayes
wGoode Coffee
I \
[ po<>d follows of long ago gathered about
itiva board for a snack and a smack, they
;hat coffee be ye very best in ye land.
ie kind you get today when you drink
Just try it. If it doesn't taste better than
ff?e, you've got a real "kick" coming to you,
jeer will refu nd every penny you paid for it.
s with the thousands of good people who
nine regularly. Buy some today, in the
nitary can.
FZMNlfm
COFFEE
! ter, lick th ehand that bruises his
ION body; he will guard the property and
| the life of a master who is not onehalf
as much entitled to a Heaven as
wo- a dog. Many men say they keep a
ow. dog; but there is a great difference
uur between "owning" and "keeping" a
( a dog. A man may own a dog that
ery meets his master crouching on the
hat ground, sneaking up to him with his
(j0 tail between his legs, in mortal fear
ure of a kick or cuff instead of the kinde
a ly Put for which he hopes and to
0j which he is entitled, his hair matted
, to and unkempt. mangey and halfne.
starved. The man who keeps a dog
j)Ul will be met with a frisking, barking,
ln jolly friend when he conies home, a
l() companion that guards him from en,
emies and if need lie yields nn his Hf??
? a ? r ? ?
at|in his defense. The man who keeps
in. a dog will be proud of him; his hair
will be kept smooth and flossy, his
nd. bodv clean and free from disease.
er That kind of a dog is a companion
in to the best man, woman or child that
our God ever let live. I have noticed
ore that dogs seem to have an intuitive
fOU knowledge of men. and often readily
. distinguish the kind from the un(ju
kind at the very first meeting. I
ive ' wou'd ',e a little suspicious of the
,ls [ man my dog showed a strong dislike
ex_ j for. believing that there was a good
a,._i reason for the dog's aversion. On
I i j the other hand. I would have much
:iconfidence in the man who could
Lhe easily make friends with my dog.
in 1
an. |
MAJOR GENERAL BAILEY
"p1 BACK AT CAMP JACKSON
,in
l,s~ Has lloon to Front?Kejiortod Willi
.Ma ior (ionoral W ood When
C Latter Was Wounded.
Js
!g Columbia. March 14 ?Major Qenj
oral Charles J. Hailey, who lias been
.J absent in France for several months.
?n has returned to Columbia and re)g
i suni' d command of Camp Jackson, j
i lie was accompanied to the western,
j theater of war by Captain KimberI
ley. his personal aid. and Col. C. I).
^ Huberts, his chief of staff, both o
whom also have returned to Columbia.
Clereral Hailey has made ar-i
tan^ements for his permanent stay'
lv
J in ill's city and has secured a resi |
Ja . .
^ nonce here.
' It is said General IJailey, Colonel j
Roberts. Major General Leonard
Wood, and Colonel Kilhonrne were!
standing in a group behind the!
tienches in France talking, when!
the shell exploded which wound ^
General Wood and Colonel Robertsj
r-lg escaped unscathed.
j
m
TT73HH
THE LANCASTER NE1
CASUALTY LIST POLICY
EVOKES MUCH PROTEST
President Personally Considers (Question
and Congressmen Hecount
Many Objections.
Washington, March 14.?Protests
against the war department's new
policy of issuing casualty lists without
addresses, continue to reach
members of congress.
President Wilson is understood to
ue giving personal consideration to
the reasons for the decision and it is
known that the department has asked
General Pershing, who suggested
it at the instance of the French government,
to forward a full statement
of the military considerations involved
so they may be laid before the
American public. Members of the
cabinet said that the matter was not
discussed there.
In connection with the plan now
being considered of issuing lists!
iwice a month or once a week instead
of daily, it has been suggested that
undei\this scheme there might be no
objection to giving addresses and
names of relatives of the men. One
of the chief objections to the plan
was the announcement of the dates
on which men were killed or wounded,
thus giving the enemy exact information
as to the results of certain
engagements.
In the house Representative McKenzie.
of Illinois, Republican, cited
the case of a Montana man whose
name, appearing on a casualty list,
was identical with that of a boy in
the army from an Illinois town. He
was Joined by Representatives Littell,
of Kansas, and Graham, of Illinois.
Republicans, in insisting that
names should not be made public
without addresses.
Representatives Glass, of Virginia:
Garrett, of Tennessee, and
Humphreys, of Mississippi, Democrats,
defended the action of the department,
saying the decision had
been reached by men who know more
iiDout tne question tnan mem tier 8 ot |
congress. Representative Garrett
said the newspapers had failed to impress
upon the people the fact that
the department promptly notified the
relatives of each man whose name
appears on a list.
NEW YORK LEGISLATURE
STRIKES AT PROHIBITION
i
I Rejects Dry Amendment, Adopting
Substitute Providing for Referendum
on (Question.
Albany, N. Y.. March 14.?A proposal
to ratify the federal prohibition
amendment this year received j
what is considered a death blow in I
the New York legislature, when the
assembly, by a vote of 84 to 64, and
after one of the most spirited debates
in years, adopted a substitute which
would provide for a referendum this
fall on the ratitlcation question. The
senate has not yet acted upon the
proposal, but a committee of that
body earlier in the day favorably
reported a referendum bill. The referendum
proposition now is apparently
up to Governor Whitman, as
there is little doubt but that it will
pass the legislature.
When informed of the action, the
governor made this statement:
"I favor tlie ratitlcation of the federal
amendment. it is clearly impossible
for me to say what disposi-:
lion I could make of a measure he-;
fore the legislature has acted."
The governor let it be known,
however, that he considered the sub-1
stitutlon by the legislature a mistake.
William H. Anderson, state superintendent
of the Anti-Saloon league,
said:
"The fight is not over, even for this
| session. I>irect ratification is no
more dead than city local option was
dead when it received a set back last
winter."
Those in favor of the referendum
declared that the submission to the
people could in no way delay ultimate
ratification as some of the state
legislatures do not meet this year.
<p
.
, ...
DEAD AVIATOR'S PAKE NTS
Columbia. March 14.?In the name
of the state and himself. Governor
j Manning wired condolence to Mr. and
i Mrs. W. S. Montgomery, of Spartanburg,
on the accidental death of
| their son, Lieut. Frank Glbbes Monti
gomery, of the American aviation
' corps, In France.
?: *
ON ALL DAYS '
VTTH EACH TUKnASE OF
VH EAT rUXJB PGR HDttt 1>SE
MINT BUY AISO AH it JIM UMJ||T|J|jP
AncumTcroma axLUi
(?S, LANCASTER, S. C.
YANKEES MAKING RAIDS
INTO ENEMY TERRITORY
Americana Unaided Carried Out
Hald Monday and Again Tuesday
They Attacked.
The American troops holding a
portion of the line of battle northwest
of Toul, apparently are making
raids into enemy territory a part of
their daily routine. Following their
incursion of Monday morning, after
a bombardment, they raided German
front lines for 300 yards unaided, as
had been customary, by the French,
they set out again Tuesday and made
a successful surprise attack on
trenches south of Richecourt. which
lies to the northeast of Xlvray,
where some of the hardest fighting
in which they have been engaged has
taken place.
All along the western front Intensive
artillery duels and raiding
operations are continuing on isolated
sectors. The Australians again have
carried out successfull raids into
German trenches northeast of Messines,
killing a number of Germans
and making prisoners of others. In
Lorraine the French near Moncel
put down effectively a strong German
attempt at a foray, 'inflicting
ntstiYj' un me enemy an<i also
taking prisoners. In addition to a
continuation of the artillery duels
along the Italian front, there is considerable
aerial activity daily. In
fights in the air Monday the Italians
brought down five hostile planes.
The British troops in Palestine
are giving the Turks no rest. Again
they have driven forward their lines
northwest of Jerusalem. Numerous
casulaties were inflicted on the Ottoman
troops and several machine guns
were captured.
Monday night's air raid over Paris
was the most disastrous in point of
casualties, the Germans have yet carried
out there. Thirty-four persons
were killed and 7S? injured by bombs
in Paris and its suburbs and 66 other
persons were suffocated in the metropolitan
railway tube, where they
had fled to escape the missiles of the
I'li.loi'i: Qnma an ... ? aU I..
carried out the attack, and four of I
them were brought down by the'
French.
"Berlin says the raid was made as a
reprisal for the bombing of Suttgart
and other German towns.
German aircraft attacked the
Yorkshire coast of Kngland Tuesday
night, and British aviators have
dropped a ton of bombs on the town
of Cobienz, in Prussia.
The situation in Siberia apparently
is daily growing more serious.
As yet tlie Japanese government has
reached no decision concerning
whether Japanese troops are to be
sent to Siberia, according to an an\
\ Swil
IAt a recent he
was introduced co
Swift & Company,\
sidering for some ti
The need for t
eral years. The
recently been subje
delay in putting be
relying on the fair-i
The feeling ag
the belief that the
consumer are ad^
1 resuiung in unreasi
Swift & Com]
an insignificant fac
For the fiscal 3
& Company were 1
Sales _
$875,000,000.
Profits M
$34,650,000.
nru'- * ? ?
?I , x ins is equivalent
I would 1
%
Most Olc
-^Are Con
I
I Dr. Caldwell'^
I is a combinatiod
G *4? i 1 ;-i I
uvc 1IC1US wilii pepsi
and especially adap <
elderly people, won i
is the standard fami
less homes. Sold :>
where for 50 cts. an
A trial bottle can t
I charge, by writing to!!
457 Washington St.,
nouncement made by Premier Terauchi.
In the meantime the Bolshevik!
1 forces have defeated General Sem- 1
eiyifr. the antt-Holsheviki leader, and
compelled him to retreat Into Manchuria.
Former German prisoners
I are believed to be aiding the Bolshevik!
troops.
Whether or not the revolutlonits
will follow SemenofT into Chinese ter- 1
ritory is not known at present, but
a warning has been issued to them '
by the Chinese commander at Harbin
that any invasion of Chinese territory
will be regarded as an act of
war.
An American steamer on its way to
France has successfully defended itself
against a German submarine attack.
In the encounter the underwater
boat shelled the steamer,
damaging the bridge and boring a
hole through a smoke stack.
I
[ SKCRKTAHY HAKEIl MKT
BY PURSUING IN PA HIS I
Paris. March 14.?Newton D. Baker.
the American secretary of war. .
arrived in Paris Tuesday morning. |
He was received by General Per- i
shlng. General Tasker 11. Bliss, the 1
American chief of staff, French of-. I
(icers represent'ng Premier C'lemenceau,
and Ambassador Sharp. The!
secretary's voyage was without inci-'
dent. j!
Secretary .Baker, with his staff. .
reached Paris at 6:30 a. m. from thel
French seaport where they landed.].
Their trip to Paris was made in a
special car attached to the regular |
Ft & Comp
Publicity
aring of the Federal Trade
rrespondence taken from 1
vhich showed that the Com
me an educational advertis
his publicity has been apps
gross misrepresentation t
cted has convinced us that5
fore the public the basic fa<
mindedness of the America
ainst the American packer
income and well-being of
tersely affected by the p
onably large profits.
?&ny's net profit is reasons
tor in the cost of living.
rear 1917 the total sales an<
r ??
is ioiiows:
: to a $3,465. profit on a business
Swift Ac Company had made no pro!
iave received only one-eighth of a ce
>r the consumer would have saved onl
>n dressed beef.
Swift & Company,
FRIDAY, MARCH 15, 1918.
i People
stipated^
f
Syrup Pepsin
' oKsimple laxa- *
in, gehtle in action,
ed as a remedy for
en and children. It
9 v
y remedy id county
druggists everyd
$1.00?two sizes.
e obtained, free of
Dr. W. B. Caldwell,
Monticello, Illinois. ^
night train.
Few people knew of the secretary's
arrival, there being only a
Bmall crowd at the station. The
members of the party were taken to
the hotel Crillon, which will be their
headquarters durine their ntnv (n
Paris.
No submarines were sighted during
the voyage across and the weather
was fine except on two days when
stormy conditions were encountered.
THE RED CROSS NURSES OF EUROP1
ARE GIVING TOASTED
CIGARETTES TO THE BOYS
To anyone who doesn't know of the
wonderful advances that have been made
in the preparation of smoking tobaccos
in the last few years it may sound strange
to speak of toasted cigarettes.
Strictly speaking, we should say cigarettes
made of toasted tobacco; the smokers
of this country will recognize it more
readily by its trade name. M LUCKY
STRIKE "?the toasted cigarette.
The American Tobacco Company are
producing millions of these toasted cigarettes
and these are being bought in
enormous quantities through the various
tobacco funds conducted by the newspapers
of the country and forwarded
through the Red Crocs Society to the boys
in France.
This new process of treating tobacco
not only improves the flavor of the tobacco
but it seats in this flavor and makes
the cigarettes keep better.
The Red Cross nurse is always glad to
have a cigarette for the wounded soldier,
as, in most instances, that is the fust
thing asked for.
>any 1
Commission there
the private files of j
pany had been con- jj
ing campaign.
irent to us for sev- ll
o which we have I
we should no longer jj
:ts of our business, ||
.n people. |
is based largely on I
the producer and |
ackers* operations, 1
*ble, and represents |
d net profit of Swift |
i of $87,500. 1
it at all, the cattle raiaer j
nt per pound more for hia ?
Iy one-quarter of a cent per