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PERSONALS visiting Miss Agnes Price ^„ds in Thibodaux. jlrs. Prosser of Amelia was in town Saturday. u n Fielden Price left yesterday for Port Arthur, Texas. jfio, Louise Marchette is visiting stives in Matthews. Jennie Marchette is visiting in New Orleans. end Mrs. George Bernauer, jpent Sunday in Patterson. lira A. Dupis is visiting her sis v Dm Allemands. Mr Dewey Jordan of Houston, less* spent Sunday in Morgan City. jj, and Mrs. Bob Hamilton frrod to Patterson yesterday. Kin Louise Savior of Westvego is yinitjng her sister, Mrs. McHusband. «in, Lucile McCormick left yes ud ljr for Houma to visit relatives. Kr Emile and Wilfred Dugas left j„tertoy for Des Allemand». Mr Robert Hale of Franklin was a visitor to Morgan City yesterday Mrs. Albert Toernor was a vis „ to Port Arthur, Sunday. MÛ8 Charline Peterman spent the day #ith Miss Belle Johnson in Ber vick yesterday. Mr. and Mrs. Nerson Johnson and tM> ily and Miss C.harline Peterman yrtMfd to Charenton yesterday. Miss Maud Kreisle and Cora Al pha fl»ent Sunday in New Orleans with relatives. Mim Eunice Laparouse, after a visit to her aunt, returned to her home in Houma. Mia. Nephius has returned home, after a visit to her sister, Mrs. Geo. Bigler. Mrs. Chester Ozo and little daugh ter left Sunfey for Port Arthur, Texas to visit relatives. ton, Joe and Vorice Hernan d Matthews visited relatives RütMyrtle Christy, after an ex* ÉM visit to relatives in New Or tas haa returned home. . Br Maud Buniff of Glenwild I a visitor to Morgan City Satur Xr. George Bienvenu of Lafay '.jMi gpeut yesterday in 'Morgan Julia Hatch and daughter r. Walter of Glenwild were [ Saturday. 'Hhs Cera Hebert, who attended ■mer school, has return ha bur home in Berwick. UBa Dugas, after a pleasant ■ * 1 ta Mi« FW. Fields, has re- - I to bar home at Bayou Sale. and Laura Lee Fields IfUtiRg relatives and frien<)s in Jfe H. Halbui spent Sunday with ' ! |e Charenton Æ 7-:------ \ ™"t Rodrigue motored to Eh and Neville Fields left i spend a white in Des ' * * 1 ' bew and Eunice Hale tte visiting their çousin rJUpBoqf. Wurice Greenwald hafl game at Patterson Ü£*« SKpMat E Soumeillan Charles Delas d the Best IV. in Photoplays. Railroad Avenue X TONIGHT Vitagraph Blue Rijbbon ' 14?'. oice & Harry Morey In » roMorrow Night Triangle Fiature Hat's AD" Stone Comedy BORN to Mr. and Mrs. Alvin Brizzard, Sunday morning, July 29, 1917, a fine 9-pound son. Mr. and Mrs. George Picou of Avoca were the guest of his brother, Mr. Lewis Picou. Bergeron and returned Messrs. Leslie Lewis Soumeillan have ---------- from a pleasant visit to New York, j ieft Sunday on No. 1 to spend a j few days with relatives in Lafayette, j Mrs. Bouis Morrison returned Mr. Tommie Stone of Lafayette spent Sunday in Morgan City with friends. Saturday after a visit to relatives in Homer, La. . Mr. J. M. Dyer returned Satur- ! day after several weeks visit at Covington, La. Charenton yesterday. Mrs. R. McHusband and children after attending the funeral of her mother in Westvego have returned home. SILO INFORMATION Silos are no longer an experiment j , —they are a cuecess. They are to farm crops what the tin can it to vegetable crops, and like the tin can j which reduces the cost of supplying j the family table, the silo re< ^ es ! the cost of feeding livestock. e> have an additional advantage t ey : may be used year after year, and if j your silo is built of concrete it will become stronger year after year in stead of deteriorating. The silo is best adapted where corn and sorghums are easily gVown. It is most often found on livestock j farms but it has been shown to be a profitable investment on truck and tobacco farms. Silage may be fed to any kind of livestock and its use for wintering mules has been proved satisfactory and profitable. It provides forage the year round. Dairy farmers have found the silo | especially valuable in milk produc tion. To make the silo a profitable investment, however, a farmer should have at least ten cows or the equivalent of this number of other stock, says the University of : Florida extension division. The size of the silo will depend j upon the amount of silage to be daily. Silage should be removed from the top at the raie of two to three inches daily,* the warmer the weather during use the more silage must be removed to the surface daily to prevent spoiling. A common error in building is to make the diameter too la age for the size of the hen). The weight of a cubic foot of silage varies with the height of the silo but in one thirty feet high it will aver age about forty pounds. So, by knowing the amount of silage to be fed daily, it is possible to estimate whpt the diameter of the silo should ^ to P*™" «"oval °f a cer-j tam """her of inches each day. A 900-pound cow will ordinarily j consume 30 pounds of silage a day, a 1200 pound cow about 40 pounds. Yearlings wiU eat about one-half as much as mature animals; fatten ing cattle, 25 to 35 pounds for each ; 1000 pounds of live weight. Horses m m am , " *hould be limited to 15 or 20 pounds , daJ y After determining the diameter silage that will be required dur ing the season, determine the > ight If „ the s !!°. is to have \ pl "* °" y ° Ui ; fa ™' lfc 18 Vu'!*"* gin work on it now so that it will bei !v eady ,i°. !f CqlVe y0 " r _ Cr ^ PS __ at JUSt ! j j the right time.—Modern Farming. Work called for and delivered A. J. Glaser, Tailor, Phone 273. tf ! of Dual Prime Minister, Asks For Peace Without Victory j Austria-Hungary Ready io a j Negotiate with Allies j --- Vienna, via Copenhagen, July 29. —Reiterating that Austro-Hungary was realy to accept an honorable peace, but that the dual monarchy, j n conjunction with its allies, would in fight to the last declined to enter ne . gotiations on the basis of a peace by ! understanding, as recently outftned at hy the German imperial chancellor .and the Reichstag, Count Ottokar Czernin von Chudenitz, the Austro Hungarian minister, in an interview to day discussed peace possibilities, DARK AGE BRUTES j By Ellis Parker Butler of the Vigilantes j 1 Make no mistake about the Ger , man Empire. Have no pity for it. It to ig not a modern nation u is a Mid to d | g ^ ge brute. j In the Dark Ages the robber bar - j ong were tbe curse 0 f Europe. From es ! their castles they sailed forthwith b ] udgeons and battle-axes, riding : rougb sbod over tbe ] ands 0 f their if j friendS) raiding and robbing their ne j gbbors> holding captives for ran somj stealing food> money and vir gins, making the outraged lands that pay the expenses of the raids ru ined them. j England, France, Russia, Italy, Canada, Australia, the United States —a 11 these > as they entered this Present war, planned grea* systems war tax finance, but Germany did not - You hea * now and then that the German war finance plan was | different It was. The German plan was the plan of the brutes of the Dark Ages. The German Chancellor has explained it. The cost of the war wou ld be met by indemnities ex acted from Germany's enemes. : p u t in plain words thus: For years Germany sat hugging her j bludgeon, hoarding her money, j fed;talking and toasting "The Day!" "The Day of what? The Day when, ]fke the brutes of the Middle Ages, sbe would pounce on her neighbors, ro b them of land and wealth, leave ! them wrecked bleeding and ruined. The Day" meant the day of the ! raid ; the Day when the same old J robber lust would have its same old ; glut of slaughter and rapine. Ger- ! many needed no war tax systems! J Her prostrate victims would pay for j the war. Well, but-! Like a brute shei strode across her friendly neighbor, I Belgium. When The Day came she ! put her foot on Belgium's face and. leaped at the throat of France. She j hoped to have France Egging for i mercy before England cou , d raiBe j her hand fa help ghe wouId ^ and throttle Russia before Eng i and awokCf and France and Russia ; bleeding and pro strate, would empty their coffers . France ' and R U8sia , 1 LIICIT CU11 , prostratet were Germany's war tax system. Robber baron! The Dark Age cut-throat come again. But the foot slipped. The plan Went askew. Today Germany—the |P^ple~ ÏT that th e Robber Kaiser is not to come home with hands dri ing foreign gold. "What! we must pay? ! Gott im Himmel, what for a Robber j Kaiser is this !" - Buck up, America? Stand fast, j Allies! Yet a little longer and they ! will be hanging Robber Kaiser and Robber Kaiserlings in Germany. Oh, golly! What a rage-fest there will be in Germany when the people learn the truth! 'CIVILIZATION' Manager Loeb announces as his attraction for Friday, August 3rd, Thos. H. Ince's million dollar spec tacle, "Civilization," direct from the Criterion Theatre, New York. The world will ever owe the great pro ducer a debt of gratitude for giving it such a masterpiece as this, his latest offering. Much has been said and written about his wonderwork of genius and learning, but half has not been penned that could be in behalf of such a noble and dignified work. In fact, the average vocabul ary is a poverty stricken waste when compared with the soul stirring eloquence of the picture itself. "Civilization," is dedicated to the Mothers of Men and by reason of that fact, or, perhaps, in spite of it, makes its strongest appeal to hu manity—because, we all had moth ers, and we all welcome a tribute to her who suffered that we might be. It is indeed a beautiful thought magnified ten thousand times. Daily Review 40c per month deli vered to your home. Food, Revenue and Pro liibition Upon U. S. 1 Senate Calsndar . r 1 r Amendments to Follow Com mitteeVWork, -- Washington, July 29.—All three 0 f the big issues before Congress, food control revenue and prohibi tion, are on the calendar of Con press this week, with minor ques tion coming up in such numbers that the leaders are about resigned to in definite prolongation of the esssion. The immediate work to be done on food and revenue legislation must be done in committee, but be fore the week is over the food con ferees" and the Senate finance com j mittees revising the war tax bill to report out their measures. hope CIVILIZATION 1 At the Evangeline theatre August 3rd, Thos. H. Ince's wonder specta cle of the twentieth centurv, "Civili - «rnc pan» pal u M ,, *,5 ATI ^ » V I IVjn -- za tion." In presenting this remark ab l e creation for the edification and enjoyment of the amusement seek er * Mr. Ince may well take pride, as j he has created something that will ,on K Kve in the minds of thise for tunate enough to see it and will then he classed with the master P ieces °f an art that has already ! P roved i*® advantage over the speak ,nR stage. ! You must see this marvelous crea J Hon to appreciate the importance ; of the simple teachings of the Bible, ! The real inspiration for the produc J tion is to be found in Holy Writ and j therein lies its claim to the atten ition of profound thinkers and stu dents ' I __ _ ■ ! Mr -' Charles B. Fanner, of Hous -T? xa . s ' Government Auditor for lth . e shl PP ,n lf Board is in Morgan i City on business. j The following message has been received by The REVIEW from Mr. A. M. Cotten, who is now on a plea sure trip w*h his family to Render sqnvilIe ' N ' C: " We havn>t received 1 The Review as yet. Are lost without lit. Please forward it at once. We J u , deh ?hted with this country.The climate is .lovely.' CATHOLIC CHURCH Sunday School every Sundav High Mass every first Sunday 9:30 a. m. Low Mass every other Sunday 7:0X> a. m. ■mm-mmmmmarnrn m m '■■■■■a T HE kind of printing that ..... Li. psyt dividends is the kind you should have. Pale, maddy, poorly arranged printed matter it worse than »one. The quality of your business is often judged by the quality of your stationery — inferior printing gives an impression of cheapness that is bird to overcome, while good printing earrieswi.h it a deairmblesugges tion of quality. We produce only Quality Printing. Whether you want on inexpensive handbill or a letterhead in oolors, if yon order it from na yon will bn earn of getting good work. We have the equipment sad the "know how" that enables us to get out really good print ing—printi eg that impresses people with the good teste of its users. That is the only kind of printing that ays MORGAN CITY REVIEW Publishers sed Printers Telephone 278 We are cominuing our iamous line Stone Cakes Sîiipmenîs— Always Fresh ill TRY THAT Dyleco Coffee MAKES YOU WANT ANOTHER CUP Watermelons—Juicy—Sweet PHONE 287 DYER-lfllMP CO, LTD. LEWIS J* BASS, Receiver (Continued from pa^e 1) months the Navy League has de veloped," says a statement issued by the League, ''what might fairly be termed a national industry for more than 100,000 women through out the United States are engaged in making these garments for sailors and more ihan 70,000 sets of these garments have been made or are in the making up to the present time. New orders are being received that will increase the output several thousand sets a month "Every American warship now in the European war zone and on ac tive patrol duty is today supplied with these woolen garments for every man on board. The marines now in France have them. The ap preciation of this service by officers and men of the Navy and Marine Corps has been too often reported to require repetition .here. The work will be carried forward until every sailor in the American Navy and every United States Marine is sup plied and made ready for war ser vic t e. Then it will be „ necessary to The Big Sensation ! THOS. H. INCE Offers without fear of contradiction g ih ■* -enre-t silent drama the Wiv-H h is eve- known in the history of advanced Moving Pictures "CIVILIZATION" Inspired b< Lp pju-pnt conflict to show how War wa* forced upon the Allied Na ion- Tho iruth is depicted so perffct tnat it has astonishf d the most critical. . SCENE. FROM THOS. H. INCE'S CIVILIZATION Evangeline Fri. Aug. A Gigantic Pictorial Illustration Based on Facts IT IS YOUR DUTY TO SEE IT 50,000 People, 2,000 horses, 40 Battleships, 25 Submarines, Etc. Matinee 3 p.m. Night 7p.m. 25c to Everybody have renewal outfits ready for the men when they are needed. It is a tiling not generally understood by the American public that Congress does not provide for any renewal of a sailor's outfit during his enlist ment. He is given a firsi outfit of clothes free of charge, but when, in his four years!of service, these wear out or are lost, or must be replaced for any reason, he has to buy them with his own money. To buy warm woolen garments of the best mater ials would be too costly for most of the men. So the Navy League wants to supply renewal outfits. "But now it is made certain that the volunteer spirit of American women is adequate to take care of this work for t,he American sailors and to render much needed service to the sailors of our Allies' navies as well. Thus the women of the Com forts Committee are to share in the work which their Government is do iig in helping the Allies who are joined with us in this great struggle for civilization." _