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Tjj> PAGE SIX _ V/HAT SAMMIES EAT M Uleat Twice Daily, White Bread, Vegetables, Chief Foods. f 'Cofltt 8erved at Breakfast and Buttarmllk. Tea, Cocoa or Water >' at Other Meala. I1 The old idea' that army diet should <?onslst largely of beans, hardtack and .eroffee, Is no longer approved, writes Belle Case Harrington In Leslie's. In the present training camps meat, preferably beef. Is served twice a day, ; -with white bread buked In the geueral cainp bakery and kept 24 hours before serving. Where greeu vegetables ' can be obtained they are used, other wlse canned goods are substituted. ?CofTee Is served at breakfast, and buttermilk, lemonade, tea, cocoa or water at other meals. Meals, which In /he vernueular are "mess" or "chow," ?re served cafeteria style. Every soldier Is furnished with tin outfit which consists of a ment-puu, knife, fork and spoon, und u longbundled cup. The cover of the meutimn serves as a plate, and the outfit Is wo arranged thnt each mnn may do his own cooking In case of au emergency. Each man tajies his meut-pun und passes before a table where he Is served wlt^Mlie various dishes prepared. He then goes to a table, or If there Is none, drops down on the Xfound, and eats in absolute coutentauent. Don't feel too sorry for the tioys, even if they do write longingly tiome wishing for mother's cooking or -Jane's fried chicken. Men In outdoor training have good appetites, and they aire far better off physically thun If ted on the salads and Ices and sodas they probably would have at home. "What they miss most Is sweets. If ;you are sending things from home put fln cookies, candles and jams or Jellies. JMllk chocolate Is one of the things a soldier seems to crave, and a Jar of . . malted milk will come handy If he la . "w mot feeling well. Be sure not to send -food thnt Is too rich as the boys are cm plain diet. r < Due of the comforting thoughts to he^riends at home Is the fact that ^0lcle Sum Is bound to maintain good health among his soldiers. Even If here were no humane considerations, his would be necessary from h purelyeconomlc standpoint. 8lck soldiers 4#? a menace, and a regiment not up 6 par in the matter of health Is an atwful handicap. All men are vaccinated for smallpox, und inoculated agHlnst yphold as soon as they enter service. Minor disorders, such as blisters, bowel trouble, or sore throat are carefully watched/by the officers In charge, and there Is u hospital with trnlned nirfses in every camp* No faking can pass. "The officers have sharp eyes to discriminate between real and simulated iUncjis. As the hoysryy, "There are only two times a duycwhen a fellowcan got sick"?at sick call, which occurs at 7 a. m., and aguln at 5 :.H0 p. m. .Between times "he Just hus to atund It." Itegular habits, outdoor life, plain ^ood, and strenuous military drill, are An themselves strong factors toward jgood health, and muuy a man who enters the service a comparative weak Ino will ? n " vi/mr wui uuv ui yuymgue ami strong of limb. S A? k'or drinking, it "Isn't done-l"-' *5 Saloons and even soft drink establishments are not allowed to any. thing to a soldier in unlA)rm, and ' "TJUny young jmen_yyho ha^jMieretofore t) e^tfoccasion a 1 drlnkefHT now proudly .proclaim themselves teetotalers. -* ^ 'Sheep-Killing Parrots ?t Large. i Not long ago no little consternation (isvas created by the escape at Sun Frnnjjdsco of two keas, or sheep-kllllng pur arota. which were being shipped from ^Australia to the Smithsonian Institution, at Washington, says Popular Me^ehnnles Magazine. The birds liberated themselves hy splintering the slate of Jttlielr wooden crates with their powertftfl henks. The federal authorities . offered a reward of $100 for each bird taken dead or alive. This species of _ ?. Iparrot has made Itself an enemy <>f man In both Austrnlln and New Zea!Vand hy slaying sheep for the sake of ' anting parts of the tlesh, of which it a very fond, and there bounties are paid for killing the birds. % - Preferred a Democrat, ft A Bartholomew county drafted man Varjio failed to appear for examination ^v'^lfien called, was arrested and taken Sefore the draft board, says the InInnapolls News. He said he didn't x. fwlsh t<r go to war and wished to be ' !?xem|)ted. A member of the board told him he could go before a notary jpublic and hav^ hhs blank filled out. "I don't want to go before n notary public," he pjfcicd. "I'd rather go be 0~\v *nre VifHF . *7'.,, ; inter&SflrftjU- fc* pe^y^ent. ** yb * Ttfxperlinent.s ju%| cftlffpleted by two * * JPr6nch sob-ntht.n "?!Hve reopened the controversy whether rij%mer.tnry manifestations of life run be^bdueed in - slnorgauir matter. These men took a jKtass tube containing a solution of colBdMhl silica, sealed It i>y melting the ghm and subjected tube and contents a high temperature, longdate >ur'Ii to (sterilize them thoroughly, according Jto ail current ideas of sterilization. The tube was then kept moderately varm tor two' months, and when -opened the contents were fu^ bf living bacteria. Objectors contend that tiie coRotdal nlllca probably. operates to protect Imcteria'originally In the solution from the effect* Of the beat . . fBtfrtllsatlon. .? V ' . * * * A LIVING IN CITIES I* Now S Residents Are Not as Neighbor shl| as in Country. v Life In Metropolitan Municipalities It wasl Battle for Existence, With Na Time for Sociability. tlon ? weight * Who, then. Is iny neighbor?" the made a man "In fho olf" ??*? *- ** ? v.ij ycui u?K8 niraseii, |. .|t_ as he regards a row of similar house, frouts arid reflects on the fact that he lP'nK ^ lias only a nodding acquaintance at page is I best with the majority of the Inmates. I nf . y Interdependence Is fostered by the [ conditions of living In the country. | ready a Ordinarily we do not need the help | The , of the next house, near or far. But , i > .. of mot* let nre come, or u destructive storm, or a predatory visitor, or u serious 111- remain* ness, and the neighbor may be as wel- pace if come as angels, says u writer in Phila* . ? f expandi delphiu Ledger. ; City life is often a battle of the put wil strong, because there are crowds and weight there are many mouths to feed and p many shuffling feet to be shod. If we let ourselves think of It. the vast mul- prised titude of identities striving to establish an,i pv themselves Is almost terrifying. Where did so many people come from? Where are the.V all going? How are t.fey to and foi find a lodging for the utght? Each tons, of the moving swartn is the center of ^ to1 a circle of friends. The humblest, un- hepn j.t less deeply unfortunate, has ties thut stppj j bind him to earth and make life?In a N degree?dear to hlra. , tract, t Out of the pagau wilderness to the urbun lights and roarings comes buI colic youth. What wl.. the city do to BLEAl that unsophlstlcatlon? Or In what . _ __ way will Its rugged. Innocent power -'YLI In time come to prevail upon the city? Your shrewdest, hardest captain of i business closes bis eyes at his desk and Is taken back to murmurous water Ker #irnolra onH Knuu a# 1 i, of klne, of burning leaven, to the nomjne, sound of the whetted scythe or the j sight of bnked apples In the window of j votes b< : the woodshed- I tlon agi j Why can't they brown flapjacks or can not I bake beans or concoct apple sauce or, primary cook oatmeal as they did down on the.p0rjury | farm? . | The table was always big enough' I for the unexpected gueet. An egg or a I* I quart of milk was no such great event Candida as It Is In a city. There used to be the ap time, too, to settle the affairs of the openly i borough and the nation, to dlscuse the pull Horace Greeley and to wind the clock. [prjVatel i between supper and early bedtime. Ithev w< We have tlltratlon. and the vacuum ? * . , . . , nomlnei cleaner, and the servant question, and i all the other city advantages. Hut It! ? ec nn was something to know the neighbors, rr'n,fi 1 I iuiiI somehow or other "the men that lavv 's ' were hoys when I was a boy" mean and hi something In a lifetime that the brisk, I great. ambitious, clean-shaven, up-pushing j generation does not convey. It would do these take-lt-or-leave-lt fellows good ' to study the lurge, leisurely, tranquil- party a Izlng ways of their forebears In the highest i days when "civilization" was not on a pie in t j tear from the cheap lunch to the bar- I slgnntu j gain counter, and home was not u way- ' open 1 >* station betwixt the Joyrlde and the moving pictures. to orga Dispersing a Crowd. ment f I "I have Just corne back from forty- jdefeatlr | eight hours' duty In Paris," writes an eratic p officer In a Highland regiment. "My end fur servant and I, both In the kilt, were were s? buying some stuff outside a shop, as per of one ikh'h in ?'nriM, wni'n n crowa or niittee nhont twenty people gathered round, P a(.co] nnd stmply stared?sonn* amused, some open-mouthed, and some doubtless ln;an ? admiration. I was amused at first, s,atebnt it got ? bit too much of a good *bls wl1 thing, and my servant, who Is a wag, efforts said: 'Shall I hand round the hat. state f 8'r'* Candida So, not thinking he would. I said: 'Yes, do,' and?If he didn't whip off his ggp ( Balmoral and take it round perfectly seriously, with a childlike expression mrgk on his face. They cleared off all right, some grinning, and others looking very sheepish. But we got nothing." Prepare to Care for Themselves. Lcavei Nowhere have the French snown their remarkable national vitality more striking than In the way they have the tlei kept up the pursuits of peace while Just t hearing the brunt of the most exacting JjhoVu: war In history. So far from having their Industries broken by conflict they have developed scores of new ones, writes a correspondent. An exhibit StjA now being held III I'arls Is given over * entirely to products manufactured In M > I''ranee, whieh were formerly Imported. ^i The first division consists of articles A I rl> br< tight fore gn nations, ' largely from (lermany, while the see- ^F^^k ond is made up of articles formerly made In the northern French districts now occunled 11V the liivmlor uhl/>h are now being manufactured in south*] ern FranceTime Will Tell. Nora?I>o you tlilnk marriage Is al- It'aWoi ways a failure? w) Ada?Always a failure! Well, I ?i should say not. Why. I know a case paim." where a wife fairly Idolizes her has- way 1 baud, and he?why, he cun't keep away that"" from her a minute. ?uio Norn?Mess ine, how long have they tinKH been married? ing * Ada?Nearly s week. _ j th,',^ I back* _, s't' I coats v'rvfia ? I MTdt "Clever, tsn't he?" . "Very. He can even persiwde his SoM small t .y who waken at sevenw|clock , ed as t Sunday morning, ready for plpUtfh gokby I.ai ] back to sleep for another tortfr oftwo.*1 j Mackej THE LANCASTER NEWS, LANC ITY-FIVE SHIPS his own sigi FIRST WEEK IN JULY denies that I ference with hipping Turned Out by the teeman or t oping Board Has a I>ea<l iparty to the . . . _ private secre leight of 122,771 Tons. . . ernor of this for the Unite llngton, July 11.?Comple- own 8,Knatu verifies the 23 ships of 122.771 deadthe conspirac tons in the first week of July cjjne(| to be l total of 223 new vessels mer friend ai ider the direction of the ship- candidate th oard. Their aggregate ton- PaPer devote 1.415.022. G8tS ?.f the8' own HiKnaiur ie new fleet. 218 vessels al- di(late for t] re In actual service. was responsl July production is at the rate movement or s than 3.000.000 tons for the'ua,,y nan,ed ler of the year and if this ,irket" Auto i maintained by the rapidly "The high ng shipyards, the year's out-j Greenville op 1 he close to 5,000,000 dead- press of the tons. for governor n ? i ..... t , 1 marr made a first week s total in Julv com|if he would 14 requisitioned steel vesselsi lieutenant go e contract steel vessels, with !ng primary repute tonnage of 108.271, 'he election ur wooden ships of 14,500 governor, th . him the sum . i r t?>< i u. i. hile, etc. A tal of 124 wooden ships have ... , , , supported by unched to date. Twenty-four . ,. , . . . .... individuals, nps have been built on con. , . . . , . cumstantial < he remainder being requisi- . . for the Unit vessels. ^ openly refus SE AND McLAURIN OST READ OUT PARTY signed by h was ordered ontinued From Page 1.) committee r? -?? authority o leral election an independent which has b snt was organized against the State and ci ea of your party, over 1,200 bis charge ol elng polled at the said elec- continui ainst them. These electors be was : participate In the coming of 1916 by r election unless deliberately never bad tt ing themselves. protest In th ft ofnMml no nrltSo An . V. ~ nf"" that ?'e< ...."i efforts to de States senate and a prominent Jn ^ te now for the same offlre 'nlty and to br iproaehing primary election, prorlalm|nff by word of mouth, through cra^ die press of the State and _ v, advised his followers that . , . . ... Through ?re not bound to support the es of the party in the generali The Instigator of the cures inder the written and moral ??? \s guilty as the real criminal. ______ s punishment should be as Would Sell Party, ornier office holder in the nd now a candhlate for the ottire hi the gift of the peo-j he public press over his own MB re and on the stump has charged a candidate for the States senate with conspiracy nize an Independent moveor the purpose of betraying, lg and destroying the Demoarty In this State, and to that ids to the amount of $45,000 ilicited from a former memIhe national Republican comfrotn this State with which mplish their criminal purpose corrupt the electorate In thisj The sad experience only of| ite Republican with former, in this line alone saved the' rom these conspirators. Thisi te for the senate admits over :ures Malarial Fever. ie 'Gels-It' Peel Off This Corn." ) The Toe as Smooth aa the Palm of Tour Hand. corn never grew that "detail not pet. It never Irritates th, never makes your toe sore wo drops of ''Qets-It" and ! the corn-pain vanishes. f you in pet:l the < oru i igbt nderfultoS?e"Geta-lt" Peel Off Corns! V \m^ ith your flnicer and there you ^ ?aln-free and happy, with the j i smooth and corn-free as your "Oats-It" Is the only safe aik| n the world to treat a corn or It's the sure way?the way ever falls. It Is tried and true I nC i by millions every year. It ??r r,01. a works. "Oets-It" makes cut- i , per nd digging at a corn and fuss- I I vstnrp i rlth bandages, salves or any- i ' else entirely unnecessary, i ts-It," the guaranteed, money orn-remo ver. t he on I y su re way, but a trifle at any drug store. V >yj?. Lawrence A Co.,Chicago, I1L w ^ in iAncaster and recommend Lu?- wuim b uem corn rented* li n easier I'hatyt w^ido not be-Tl \ r & Co^. St/ms ran be put In k i- ^N'ew? 'has ??o P" V, j V or th0 r ? 1 r ^ Ar? V . -*" * r^PF \SThK, S. C. iature that the proposl- of Senator Tillman a s ide and considered, but arisen in the approach le was a party to a con- election, unforseen and the'Repuhllcan commit- satisfactory to the rank hat he agreed to be a the party in this State, conspiracy. The former mittee Is powerless ti tary of the former gov- matter, except to refer i State, now a candidate a convention of the pai d States senate, over his with the charges first re, in the public preRs, trusting that the peopl essential facts, alleges the matter as It deser y. but claims that he de- their duly elected deleg a party to it. The for- vided ill the rules of the nd close associate^ of this reference the committee e publisher of a news- visable at this time, id to the political Inter- "In this critical stag e conspirators, over hlR fairs of our State i e, charges that this can- brought about by the w tie United States senate many, in which the ver; ble for the independent government Is at stake ganized by him and act- ()f the Democratlc partj the candidates on the niies, the party intrust mobile Promised. government of the State sheriff of the county of is treachery to the Pres enly states in the public United States, who Is rei State that a candidate thp conduct an(i the su in me approaching prl- ... , c . , . . . , mination of the war. J proposition to him that become a candidate for is nnt^ing short of tr? ivernor at the approach- ??election and advocate <4"W"TT a T7P of this candidate for I ?1AV li# at he would furnish I p i of $2,000, an automo- Ml CpSlIl i 11 of these charges are an(J pleasant 1; the direct testimony of .. and the strongest cir- mending tO C evidence. A candidate health has I ed States senate has ed to attend the cam- using it. iRS In this State or to Frc ereln for the reason as- I Mi lm that said campaign ^ by a partisan executive rfuslng to recognize the ? f this new committee I een duly elertod by the aunty conventions since f fraud. This candidate Bs to assert and charge defeated In the election fraud, although he has J. is courage to contest or o courts or In any man- Sold :tlon. He continues his stroy the faith of the 5 organization of his paring reproach thereon by A ... . himself to be a Demo- A mild, pleasantherbs with pep ^ P ^ \ Otf rs. ntKnr /"J irr?r\rv^ ? VHUVI Ul^VV/llliWI 1 the unfortunate death i charge by wntin Chills and Fever. tOfl Street, Mont HI More Truth T! Heat It. Heat it, little car. They all wonder what you are. Climbing all the hills on high, Passing many others by. As it passed the first man cussed. While the second merely fussed. But the third man said: "They say It won't stop; It's a Chevrolet." All consent with one accord, It's a car you can afford. In the swamp or in wet grass None of the others are in its class. In the sand or in the mud It pulls out where others Just chug, h'conomical? Well, I should say None can equal the Chevrolet. Summer. Winter, Spring or Fall Has u little on them all. H V price of the Chevrolet will .advance $50 A cent increase in freight charge**. Wc have in price. /. E. GREEI Lancaster, Chester and , LANCASTER, SOUTI H?Pi??iBP^? m - , . ,? vf* / -a ? FRIDAY, JULY 12, 1918. ituation has! NO ADVANCE IN PRICE " IVer/n- A STHMA {& and file 01 T^t9 f? P?. "cu(fre" but rebel u often MSS17ML Your com-1 brought by- /^?\ u act In the ^7,^ the same to. m rty, together Lliml J *\IJ mentioned, ... . ' 23c?50c?*1.00 e will treat ves, through ? . . . . State and nation and to our boys in ates as pro- _ , .. . . . . France. No party can survive that party, which , A, , , AU deems inad qulet'y condones a crime on the part of its candidates, and if allowed to p of the af continue th0 party will soon become ^1 . .. a stench in the nostrils of all honest md nation, ,At ? <?w citizens. You alone have the power ar with Ger... . to purge and save the party and your Y iii6 or our jfl remedy is at the ballot box. , a b?l*aya (Signed) "John Gary Kvans, r to Its ene- "Chairman State Democratic Execu ed with the tive Committee. i and nation order of the State Democratic i? . ... Kxecutive Committee." ildent of the sponsible for _ _ 666 cures Headaches, Hiliousness, icceasful tei- |j0sa Qf Appetite, or that tired aeh>uch conduct jnK feeling, due to Malaria or Cold^l (ason to the K"lne Tonic. used Dr. Caldwell's Syrup and find it a most effective axative?one that is worth recom>ne's friends. I know that my ^ seen greatly improved since ^ >m a letter to Dr. Caldwell written by\ S Alice Lombard, 22 Boylston St, I % Springfield, Mate. J Caldwell's j up Pepsin I rhe Perfect Laxative \ by Druggists Everywhere '0 cts. (2?) $1.00 tasting combination of simple laxative sin. Brings relief without griping or A trial bottle can be obtained free of g to Dr. W. B. Caldwell, 458 Washingicello, Illinois. HT| .... \W3| ban Poetry J ^ C- ' ; '=?. One thing sure, If nothing more, You can't beat it, so don't get sore. J? Easy riding, very nice, Heats the auto world for price. ? Jit If you think some other best b ? flfr We can change your mind by test. On the hill or in the sand * \ It can go to beat the hand. > Come and try it if you will, , Going up the steepest hill. Maybe we are talking funny Hut this car Is backed by money. 4 We can meet you any day And beat you with a Chevrolet. Come and get a demonstration It will gain your admiration. If you want a car, come try it. And we are sure that you will buy it. . w'sgi ^ ^h9 u^ust 1, and in addition there will be a ^ a few cars for delivery before the ad- .? N, Dealer J Union Gounties, I fl IjDAROLI^L^) \ .