Newspaper Page Text
V- yRIDAY, OCTOBER 11, 1918. THE BOUBBOH NEWS, PAEIS, KNTTTCKY. f-vS wtixf' piGiSETnr 9 Yes I Everybody Takes Cascarets Only 10 cents! Harmless cathartic for sluggish liver and bowels Feel bully! Cheer up! Take Cas carets to liven your liver and clean t&e bowels and stop headaches, bil iousness, bad breath, coated tongue, sallowness, sour stomach and gases. To-night take Cascarets and enjoy the nicest, gentlest liver and bowjel cleansing you ever experienced. frake up feeling grand Everybody's doing it. Cascarets best laxative for cluldren. They gladly take this pleasant candy cathartic because it never gripes or sickens like other things. (adv) IS fi s - Buy MORE Bonds Wfiat Makes the Rumble of Thunder? Why does thunder rumble? The path of a lightning flash through the air may be several miles in length. All along this path the sudden expansion of the heated air a true explosion sets up an atmospheric wave which spreads in all directions and eventual ly registers upon our ears as thunfler. Since the lightning discharge is almost Instantaneous, the sound wave is pro duced at very nearly the same time along the whole path. But the sound irave travels slowly through the air. Its speed is approximately 1,090 feet per second. Thus the sound from the part of the lightning's path that is nearest to us reaches us first, and that from other parts of the path after ward, according to their distance. In termittent clashes and booming effects are due chiefly to irregularities in the shape of the path. Popular Science Monthly. Buy MORE Bonds BAD BREATH Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets GeE at the Cause and Remove It Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets, the substi tute for calomel, act gently on the bowels and positively do the work, j People afflicted with bad breath find ouick relief through Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets. The pleasant, sugar coated tablets are taken for bad breath hy all who know them. " ' Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets act gently but firmly on the bowels and liver, stimulating them to natural action, clearing the blood and gently purifying the entire system. They do that which dangerous calomel does without any of the bad after effects. 1 .-All the benefits of nasty, sickening, griping cathartics are derived from Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets without griping, pain or any disagreeable effects. Dr. F. M. Edwards discovered the formula after seventeen years of prac tice among patients afflicted with bowel and liver complaint; with the attendant bad breath. Dr. Edwards Olive Tablets are purely a vegetable compound mixed with olive oil; you will know them by their olive color. Take one or two every night for a week and note the effect 10c and 25c per box. All druggists. The Communication Army A bird's-eye view of the country today, would show a mighty panorama of mili tary and industrial activities. Radiating' . and from the army and navy centers throughout the land would appear the thousands of telephone lines by which all these vast enter prises are directed and co-ordinated a veritable maze of wires linking together the camps, yards, fortifications, plants and offices, and swarming with linemen, cablemen and installers, busy with Uncle Sam's existing and ever-increasing demands for telephone service, 'All this is but a part of the vast work which the Bell system is doing, but among the unfore seen conditions which the war has imposed upon us is the necessity of practically suspending the commercial development of our business. Confronted with an abnormal increase in the use of the telephone and an unprecedented demand for new and additional service, we cannot accept or fill orders except subject practically to an in definite delay. This situation is due to the inw portanoe of conserving our supplies so that the government's requirements may be promptly met at any time a request is made. At a time like this, we believe the public will iappreciate a frank statement of the situation and win join us in our efforts to serve the government first and efficiently. CUMBERLAND TELEPHONE AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY Incorporated GALLS OH FARMERS 10 BACK UP GRANGE HEAD SEES BONDS ONLY MEDIUM THROUGH WHICH PEACE MAY BE HAD. AS By L. J. Tabor, Master Ohio State Grange. Wo are in the midst of the greatest financial task of history. A task that will test the patriotism and tax ,to some degree the resources of the na tion, but a task that can and will be gloriously accomplished. Upon the farmers of the nation rests a heavy responsibility. The pro duction of the food necessary to win the war Is wholly upon the shoulders of the tillers of the soil. He must also do his full duty in providing the sinews of war that are so vital to victory. More than eighty thousand sons of farmers in this district are wearing the uniform of their country. Thou sands more will soon be in camp. To help protect his loved ones, to sup port the country whose Institutions have blessed him, to shorten the pe riod of bloodshed and to hasten vic tory every farmer In the Fourth Fed eral Reserve district should purchase Liberty Bonds to the very limit Let there be no slacker dollars In the hands of our farmers. Let us make our motto for the Fourth Lib erty Loan Drive "Another bond in every farm home in the district' The organized farmers have earn estly striven to respond to every re quest and every call of the govern ment Let every grange member and every farmer render all possible as sistance to the cause so near to the hearts of all. The successful termina tion of the great bond drive now on will be one more indication that the sacrifice and suffering of the present will soon terminate in Victory and Peace. Is Uncle Sam's Credit As Good As Kaiser's? Did yon know that Germany had launched her Ninth War LoanT She did recently. She offers it at 5 per cent She probably will raise all she asks. It is in our hands to show Ger many with the Fourth Liberty Loan just what the difference is between Germans and Americana. Buy MORE Bonds MS, v from the National Capitol SON EEMARKABLE DELIVERANCE OF JUDGE MAKES'CLEAR MEAN ING OF LOYALTY (Continued from' Page 1) would try to build up inside of your self a whole group of feelings for the1 United States the same as you felt towards the Fatherland when you left Germany. Thprp hnvp Vion a good many Germans before me in tne last month. It has been an im pressive trial. They have lived in this country, like yourself, ten, twen ty, thirty, fortv years ! and thpy hnri to give their evidence through an in terpreter. Ana as I looked at-them and tried as best I could to under stand them, there was written all over every one of them, "Made in Germany." American life had not dimmed that mark in the least. It stood there as bright and fresh as the inscription upon a new coin. I do not blame you and these men alone. I blame myself. I blapne my country. We urged you to come. "We welcomed you; we gave you op portunity; we gave you land; we con ferred upon you the diadem of American citizenship and then we left you. We paid no attention to what you have been doing. And -now the world war has thrown a searchlight upon our national life, and what have we discovered? We find all over these United States, in groups, little Germanies, little Ita lics, little Australian, little Norways, little Russias. These foreign people have thrown a circle about them selves, and, instead of keeping the oath they took that they would try to grow American souls inside of them, they have studiously striven to exclude everything American and to cherish everything foreign. A clever gentlejman wrote a romance called "America, the Melting Pot." It ap pealed to our vanity, and through all these years we have been seeing romance instead of fact. That is the awful truth. The figure of my country stands beside you to-day. It says to me: Do not blame this man alone. I am partly to blame. Pun ish him for his offense, but let him know that I see things in a new light, that a new era has come. Punish hipn to teach him, and the like of him, and all those who have been misled by him and his like, that a change has come; that there must be an interpretation anew of the oath of allegiance. It has been in the past nothing but a formula of words. From this time on it must be translated into living characters incarnate in the life of every foreign er who has his dwelling place in our midst. If they have been cherish ing foreign history, foreign ideals, foreign loyalty, it must be stopped, and they must begin at once, all over again, to cherish American thought, American history, American ideals. That means something that is to be done in your daily life. It does not mean simply that you will not take up arms against the United States. It goes deeper far than that. It means that you will live for the United States, and that you will cherish and grow American souls in side of you. It means that you will take down from the walls of your homes the picture of the Kaiser and put up the picture of Washington; that you will take down the picture of Bismarck and hang up the pic ture of Lincoln. It means that you will begin to sing American songs; that you will begin earnestly to study American history; that you will be gin to open your lives through every avenue to the influence of American life. It means that you will begin first of all to learn English, the lan guage of this country, so that there may be a door into your souls through which American life may enter. I am not so simple as to entertain the idea that racial habits and quali ties can be put aside by the will in a day, in a year, in a generation; but because that is difficult is all the more reason why you should get about it and quit cherishing a foreign life. If half the effort had been put forth in these foreign communities to build up an American life in the hearts of these foreign-born citizens that has been put forth to perpetuate a for eign life, our situation would have been entirely different from what it is to-day. You have violated your oath of allegiance in this: You have cherished foreign ideals 'and tried to make them everlasting. That is the basic wrong of these thousands of lit- islands of foreigners that have been formed through our whole lim its, that, instead of trying to buna up an American life in them, they have striven studiously from year to year to stifle American life and to make foreigness perpetual. That is dis loyalty. And the object, one of the big objects, of this serious proceed ing in this court, and other like pro ceedings in other courts, is to give notice that they must be stopped. I have seen before jmy eyes another day of judgment. When we get through with this war, and civil lib ertv is made safe once more upon this earth, there is going to be a day of iudement in these United States. Foreign-born citizens and the institu tions which have cherished foreign ness are going to be brought to the judgment bar of this Republic. That day of judgment looks more to me to-day like the great Day of Judg ment than anything that I have thought of for many years. There is m'n(r r Ho RPnnralinti rvn that, dav of1 the sheep from the goats. Every institution that has been engaged in this business of making foreigness perpetual in the United States will have to change or cease. That is go ing to cut deep, but it is coming. I recognize the right of foreign born citizens to hear their religion, if they cannot understand it in Eng lish, spoken to them in the tongue that they can understand. If they have not yet acquired enough Eng lish to read, they are entitled to have a paper that shall speak to them the language that they can understand. I cannot go further than that. And this is the capital thing that is going to be settled on that day of judg ment, namely, thatthe right to those things is temporary, and it cannot be enjoyed by anybody who is not willing to regard it as temporary and to set about earnestly making the time of that enjoyment as short' as possible. That means a funda mental revision of these foreign churches. No freedom of t.h ars in these United States. It won't pro tect any press or any church which. while it is trying to meet a tem porary need, does not set itself earn estly about the business of making that temDorarv situation inst n temporary as possible, and not mak ing it, as has been true in the uast just as near perpetual as possible. Men who are not willing- to do that will have to choose. If they prefer to cherish foreign ideals, they will find, if necessary, we will cancel every certificate of citizenship in. these United States. The Federal Government has power to deal with that subject and it is going to deal with it. Nothing else than that surely can be possible. And the ob ject of the sentence which I pro nounce upon you to-day is not alone to punish you for the disloyalty of which you have been guilty, but to serve notice upon you, and the like of you, and all of the groups of peo ple in this district who have been cherishing foreignness, that the end of that regime has come. It is a call to every one of you to set about earnestly the growing of an Ameri can soul inside of you. The Court finds and adjudges that you are guilty under each count of the indictment, and as a punishment therefor it is further adjudged that you be imprisoned in the Federal Penitentiary at Leavenworth for the term of three years. The sentences imder thfi ft. counts 0f the indict- under the three counts of the indict ment are to run concurrently and not successively. fe fe CATAMtH CANNOT BE CURED with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a local disease, greatly in fluenced by constitutional conditions, and in order to cure it you must take an internal remedy. Hall's Catarrh Medicine is taken internally and acts through the blood on the mucous surfaces of the system. Hall's Ca tarrh Medicine was prescribed by one of the best physicians in this country for years. It is composed of some of the best tonics known, com bined with some of the best blood purifiers. The perfect combination of the ingredients in Hall's Catarrh Medicine is what produces such, won derful results in catarrhal conditions. Send for testimonials, free. F. J. CHENEY & CO., Props., Toledo, Ohio. Hall's Family Pills for constipation. All Druggists, 75c. (adv-oct) , mik SAVE THE PEACH STONES, PITS AND SlLtiliLS. A request has been issued by the United States Food Administration to save all peach stones, prune pits, date seeds, Brazil nut shells, plum "pits, apricot pits, walnut shells, olive pits, butternut shells, cherry pits and other such refuse. Merchants have been applied, to by the Food Administration to help this saving. They have been asked to have receptacles placed in their stores, accompanied by a sign or placard calling attention to the Gov ernment's request. A box has been placed by Dr. and Mrs. Frank M. Faries, in front of the law office of Judge Harmon Stitt, on Broadway, and others should be placed at con venient places throughout the city for the same purpose. The Government gives this reason for asking the saving of stones, etc.: "Only the best gas masks will save our soldiers from a painful death. These masks cannot be made without good charcoal. Wpod charcoal has proved deficient. The necessary charcoal can be made from the shells and pits indicated above. Enormous quantities of these are needed at once. The Government needs every one of these stones and pits and must have them immediately. Everyone is earnestly urged to help in this work by saving and storing the stones and pits." Buy MORE Bonds va la a CAN NOW EAT AND COMPORT. SLEEP IN If troubled with indigestion or sleeplessness you should read what Miss Agnes Turner, Chicago, 111., has to say: "Overwork, irregular meals and carelsness regarding the ordinary rules of health, gradually under minded it until last fall I became a wreck of my former self. I suffered from continual headache, was unable to digest my food, which seemed to lay as a dead weight on my stomach. I was very constipated and my com plexion became dark, yellow and muddy as I felt. Sleeplessness was added to my misery, and I would awake as tired as when I went to sleep. I heard of Chamberlain's Tab lets and found such relief after tak ing them that I kept up the treatment for, nearly two months. They cleans ed my stomach, invigorated my sys tem, and since that time I can eat and sleep in comfort. I am to-day entire- ly wen ( adv-oct) Careful of Speech. "Is the faculty of your college well organized?" "Very. We haven't a single professor who would dare to make a statement of fact without first having it approved by a trust magnate or a corporation lawyer." Life. Buy MORE Bonds A BEAUTEETIX WOMAN Do you know that a beautiful wo man always has a good digestion? If your digestion is faulty, eat light of meats, and take an occasional dose of Chamberlain's Tablets to strengthen your digestion. Price 25c. (adr-oct) HpKEEP YOUR SHOESNEffrlH BBBI .BBBBaW .BBbY BBBBBbBi 11 ' SHOE J I POLISHES m Bourbon Laundry DAVIS & FUNK, Proprietors Telephone No. 4 West Fifh Street xr5r---n 2 ss """" e J tlsi I "RbbBW?? I ZDJT :J The Bourbon Laundry- Paris, A MAN AND HIS WIFE Suit li l"'1 LEVY, THE DRY CLEANER Cumberland Phone 40 IXXi IX: GEO. W. DAVIS ! FUNERAL DIRECTOR Motor Equipment . ,jj BOTH PHONES-DAY 137; NIGHT 299 Corner Fifth and Pleasant Streets, Paris, K N I I " ". ' " " ' ' ' ' 7" ' mj - p j u mjt "M m . - ' m w JB CAHAL BROS. BABBER SHOP Prompt and Courteous Attention to Patrons. HOT AND COLD BATHS Do You Need Glasses? Let us make a thorough, scieatific examination of your eyes, based on ethical grounds, not to rerommena classes unless you need them. Ask yourself these questions: "Do I have headaches, nervous spells, drawn, tired eyes? Does type sometimes blur? Do I see spots before my eyes?" Answer fairly and squarely, for your own good, for over-strain repeatedly day by day will DreaK down tne del icate nerves and muscles of the eyes and irreparable injury may result. Our years of experience insures ac curate results. Dr. Wm. Riley Franklin Suite 205-6 First National Bank, Both Phones, ' - Paris, Ky. sX x I I I K I X I X I X I X I X I X I X I X I SATISFACTION OUR WATCHWORD! With all the latest improve ments in laundry appliances and expert helpers we are prepared to do work mfe- -.. nor to none, and solicit your patronage. Kentucky j may both derive saiisfaction 1 by having their worn and soiled garments cleaned by us. The cost is nominal, while the pleas ure of wearing old clothes "that have the appearance of new, in conjunction with the knowledge that you are effecting a great j ving, must surely satisfy you. J A phone brings us. Home Phone 1692 brighter; EVENINGS Nothing adds to the pleasures of a home, or makes life more worth living, than a 'Well illumi nated house. 9se Glectriciiy Tor EigMing .--. WfA mjgL It's the only satisfactory wiyvfe ?! use Sets Tor dealing and CookHi It's the only sensible plan. Let Us Fix You Up For the Use of Stth Electricity and Gas. Paris Gas &Betfric'Cv (Iitnrati)