PRESIDENT WILSON EXPLAINS ARMY DRAFT MEASURE By Associated Press Washington, April 20.—As one step toward meeting opposition in Con gress Uie administration's army plans. President Wilson yesterday sent 0 a letter to Representative Helvering, of Kansas, explaining what is meant by selective draft, and expressing ear nest hope tii&t the bill drafted by the War Department would be passed. The letter said: "I welcome the inquiry of your letter of April 19, because I have realized the truth of what you say from my own observations, namely, that what is meant to be understood by the selective draft is not generally understood throughout the country. "The process of the draft is, I think, very clearly set forth in the bill drafted by the War De partment and which I so earnest ly hope the Congress will adopt, but it is worth while to state the idea which underlies the bill a little more fully. "X took occasion the other day in an address to the people of the country to point out the many forms of patriotic service that were open to them and to emphasize the fact that the mili tary part of the service was by no means the only part, and per haps, all things considered, not the most vital part. Our object is a mobilization of all the pro ductive and active forces of the nation and their development to the highest point of co-operation and efficiency and the idea of the selective draft is that those should be chosen tor service in the army who can be most read- Amazing Power of Bon-Opio To Make Weak Eyes Strong Doctor Says It Strengthens Eyesight 50 per cent in One Week's Time in Many Instances A Free Prescription You Can Have Filled and Use at Home Victims of eye' strain and other eye weaknesses and those who wear glasses, will be glad to know that according to Dr. Lewis there is real hope and help for them. Many whose eyes were foiling say they have had their eyes restored by this remarkable prescription and many who once wore glasses say they have thrown them away. One man says, after using it: "I was almost blind. Couid not see to read at all. Now I can read every thing without my glasses, and my eyes do not hurt any more. At night they would pain dreadfully. Now they feel fine all the time. It was like a miracle to me." A lady who used it says: "The atmos phere seemed hazy with or without glasses, but after using this prescription for fifteen days everything seems clear I can read even fine print without glasses." Another who used it says: "I was bothered with eye strain caused by ▼./erworked, tired eyes, which induced fierce headaches. I have worn glasses for several years, both for distance and work, and without them I could not read my own name on an envelope or the type writing on the machine before me. I can do both now and have discarded my long distance glasses altogether. I can count the fluttering leaves on the trees across the street now, whieh for several years have looked like a dim green blur to me I cannot express my jov at what It has done for mo. It is believed that thousands who wear glasses can now discard them in a reason- I)r. Ferdinand King, a New Yoork City Physician and Medical Author says: "There can be no strong, vigorous, Iron men nor beautiful, healthy, rosy cheeked women without Iron—N'uxated Iron taken three times per day after meals will increase the strength and endurance of weak, nervous, run-down folks 100 per cent. In two weeks' time in many instances. Avoid the old forms of metallic iron which may injure the teeth, corrode the stomach, and thereby do more harm than good. Take only organic iron—Xuxatcd Iron.'' It is dis pensed In this city by Croll Keller, G. A. Gorgas, J. Nelson Clark and all good druggists. M ■ w m ■ ml- ■■■ i I ■ i 1 m ri r MB qjust as you go to a friend when in trouble—when I you're smoke-hungry go to good old tried and true KING OSCAR Sc CIGAR , ■ I • ' I JOHN C. HERMAN & CO. Makers FKRDAR EVENING, ily spared from the prosecution of the other activities which the country must engage in and to which it must devote a great deal of its best energy and capacity. "The volunteer system does not do this. When men choose them • selves they sometimes choose without due regard to their other responsibilities. Men may come from the farms or from the mines or from the factories or centers of business who ought not to come, but ought to stand back of the armies in the field and see that they get everything that they need and that the people of the country are sustained in the meantime. "The principle of the selective draft, in short, has at its heart this idea, that there is a universal obligation to serve and that a public authority should choose those upon whom the obligation of military service shall rest, and also in a sense choose those who shall do the rest of the nation's ■work. The bill, if adopted, will do more, I believe, than any other single instrumentality to create the Impression of universal military service in the army and out of it, and if properly adminis tered will be a great source of stimulation. "Those who feel that we are turning away altogether from the voluntary principle seem to for get that some 600,000 men will be needed to fill the ranks of the regular army and the National Guard and that a very great field of individual - enthusiasm lies there wide open." able time and multitudes more will be able ti> strengthen their eyes so as to be spared the trouble and expense of ever getting glasses. Eye troubles of many descriptions may be wonderfully benetlied by the use "of this prescription nt home. Go to any active drug store and get a bottle of Bon Opto tablets. Drop one Bon-Opto tablet iu a fourth of a glass of water and let it dissolve. With this liquid bathe the eyes two to four times daily. You should notice your eyes clear up perceptibly right from the start, and inflammation and redness will quickly disappear. If your eyes bother you even a little it is your duty to take steps to save them now before it is too late. Many hopelessly blind might have saved their sight if they had cared for their eyes in time. Note: Another prominent Physician to whom the nbove article i submitted, said: "Yes. the Bon-Opto prescription is truly a wonderful eye remedy. Its constituent ingredients are well known to eminent eye specialists and widely prescribed by them. I have used it very suc cessfully in my own practice on patients whose eyes were strained through overwork or misfit glasses. I can highly recommend It In ease of weak, watery, aching, smarting. Itching, burn ing eyes, red lids, blurred vision or for eyes in flamed from exposure to smoke, sun. dust or wind. It is one of the very few preparations 1 feel should be kept on hand for regular use in almost every family." Bon-Opto. referred to above, is not a patent medicine or a secret remedy. It is an ethical preparation, the for mula being printed on the package. The man ufacturers guarantee it to strengthen eyesight 50 percent in one week's time in many instances or refund the money. It can be obtained from any good druggist and is sold in this city by GRANT'S GRANDSON IS IN THE WAR Algernon Sartoris Is With Foreign Legion Fighting For France New York, April 20. —"At last X am able to be proud thatl am an Ameri can citizen and a daughter of France at the same time! And I am proud, too, that my husband, the grandson of General Grant, is serving as a pri vate in the Foreign Legion of France." Mrs. Algeron Sartoris, daughter of France and adopted daughter of the United States since she became the wife of Captain Algeron Sartoris, grandson of the eighteenth President of the United States, made this decla ration at the Ritz-Carlton hotel, where she has been staying since her arrival In New York with her friend, Coun tess Regis, to raise afund for the re storation of the historic buildings of her native land. "America's entrance into the war Is one of the brightest days In the history of my country," continued Mrs. Sar toris. "Before I came to America I had to make many explanations to my French friends as to why America did not espouse the cause of th ellies. After the Lusitania they said: 'What next?' and I who lost eleven friends on the Lusitania answered: 'lt will be soon.' Then the Falaba came. Then the others: my friends would shrug their shoulders and say, 'What of your America now'." and I would an swer, 'Wait you will see.' And now in this magnificent way President Wilson has answered all his critics and has given France new cause and justifica tion for the love which it hasalways feltfor America. "For France really loves America. We understand America as we will never understand the English. The English are our allies —noble, splen did—and it is quite true that the hardest lesson the English troops had to learn was to retreat. But France and America have the bond of people who feel the same things In the same way. It is a comradeship of emo tion." Himb;itul \s I'rivnlo At this point Mrs. Sartoris showed me a postal card photograph of her husband, Captain Algernon Sartoris, in the uniform of a French private. Captain Sartoris won that ranking in thewa with Spain, when he sedved on General Fitzhugh Lee's staff. "Captain Sartoris wanted to serve in England," explained the French granddaughter-in-law of General Grant, "but the English will not take anyone who will not swear allegiance to Great Britain and giveup citizen ship in his own country—that is, they will accept Americans only for avia tion and for ambulance service. That is'why my husband enlisted as a pri vate in the Foreign Legion. There he swore allegiance to France for the duration of the war, but did not for feit his American citizenship. Our 10-year-old son wants to go to Anna polis and Is already a great strategist. He knows al the names of the French, British and German generals, the size of thecontending fleets, and from time to time he has said to me. 'Why don't WE Americans go in and lick them, mother?' " "You have spoken of the French at titude toward American entrance in the war. What is the French attitude toward peace?" I asked. No Peace Till Victory "There can be no peace—until peace is possible—that is, there can be no peace without victory," Mrs. Sartoris answered. "France does not demand impossible terms, but it has lost mil lions of its bravest and best. France was attacked without warning, aqd if the Belgians had not made their rhag niflcent resistance it is almost sure the Germans would have gotten to Paris. Never was a nation so unprepared. Why, the day beforewar was declared I was playing tennis in Brittany with a French officer, who said to me, "They say we shall have war, but it Is non sense." The next afternoon mobiliza tion orders were posted in the village. Generally, you know a discount of 20 per cent, of men who do notrespond to the mobilization order, is antciipated. But in France no one man failed to answer. "I came to America," Mrs. Sartoris continued, "to interest my fellow Americans in a fund to restore the historic buildings In France after the war. Some of these buildings, of course, will not be restored. It is planned to leave the great ruins of Reims Cathedral exactly as it is, ex cept that it will be propped up. and to place underneath themiraculourfly preserved statue of the Virgin a sign, 'This way the Germans passed.' "I think it would be a splendid thing if France could owe to America the restoration of its cathedrals and public buildings." Mrs. Sartoris was a war nurse before she came to this country on her mission.—By Nixon Greeley Smith in the New York Even ing World. Rhodes Scholars Get Leaves to Aid Red Cross Work Oxford, England, April 20.—Ob serving that "the war has continued throughout the academic year to in terfere with the normal operation of the scholarship system," a statement of the Rhodes Trust just issued says that leaves of absence have been granted for periods of three months, six months or a year to eighten Ameri can Rhodes scholars "who wished to take part in the work of the Red Cross Society and Young Men's Christian Association." A number took similar work for a month or six weeks in the vacations. Seventy-six Americans and eighten colonials have been at Oxford for the whole or a part of the of the past year. The trust announces Its Intention of distributing the recently cancelled German scholarships "among com munities within the British empire not provided for under Mr. Rhodes' will." Don Jamie's Pro-German Ardor Considerably Cooled Madrid, Spain, April 20.—Don Jaime, of Bourbon, who has been re peatedly classed among the Spanish partisans of the German cause, is said now by his _ former secretary, Don Francisco Melgar, to entertain quite opposite sentiments. Senor Mel gar declared recently that coldness prevailed between Emperor William and Don Jaime, despite the statements to the contrary by the so-called Car list papers that are Germanophlle. In a letter to Senor Melgar, Don Jaime says: "You know that tho kind of friendship shown me In Berlin on the occasion of my last trip there consisted in having me arrested and in behaving with incredible rudeness tojward me." SWEEDS RIDE SECON DCLASS Stockholm, April 20.—First class coaches are no longer carried by the Swedish trains. While they were profitable from a financial standpoint, their abolition makes posnlbel a re duction of the number of cars drawn by each locomotive and helps husbund Sweden's dwindling stock of coal. HAB RISBURG SSS&I TELEGRXPK Australia Does Rushing Business Selling Europe Jack Rabbits For Meat Melbourne, Australia, April 20. — Rabbit-trapping and exportation of re frigerated rabbits has experienced a boom as a result of the war. Hereto fore the rabbits have been a curse to Australia and millions of pounds sterl ing have been expended in an effort to eradicate them. Lately, however, the commonwealth authorities have been taking an ac tive interest in rabbits for consump tion both in Australia and abroad. The view that the rabbit is a pest which should be extirpated is not being en couraged. Steps have been taken by the government to have the poisoning of the animals suspended, and trap pers are being urged to maintain the output for consumption. Undoubtedly this policy is a. result of the war strain upon food supplies in Great Britain and among the other Entente allies. A month or two ago the British government notified the Commonwealth government that it had decided to buy the whole of the surplus of Australian refrigerated rab bits for the season of 1917. The trans action will involve about $2,500,000. Last season Australia exported 10,- 296,000 panrs of rabbits, showing the extent of the supply which Great Britain has contracted to take. Drinking Not Encouraged in the British Armies London, April 20. —In reply to an appeal from temperance societies that "teetotalers serving in the army should not be given orders which involve the breaking of their pledge," Arthur Henderson, labor member of the war cabinet, sent a statement on behalf of the cabinet, saying: "As regards the army, both from what I have seen and what I have heard, I am satisfied that the stand ard of sobriety and good conduct among the men generally is higher than It has ever been before, and compares favorably with that pre vailing among the civil population. There is no reason to fear that a young man of good principles and careful training will be exposed to special temptations as a soldier, or that he will find himself unsupported in standing to his convitions." ENGLISH SMOKE MUCH London, April 21. —Despite the gov ernment's restrictions against tobac co importations, last year showed a heavy Increase in the amount con sumed in Great Britain. A total of 48,600,000 pounds sterling was spent last year for 130,700,000 pounds of tobacco, as against 40,000,00 pounds sterling on 126,000,000 pounds the previous year. England's tobacco ex penditure per heard for the year was $5.25, BRITISH NAVY SOBER London, April 20.—Statistics gath ered by the admiralty show that there are 47.000 total abstainers in the Brit ish navy. How America Will Recruit Her Army Raising- arnyes is more difficult, as well as more important, than raising flags, and one of the chief difficulties in the United States is the feeling against conscription. "There is enough patriotism in this country to get a volunteer army, and until that is demon strated untrue we should not resort to conscription," declares Senator Thomas of Colorado, while Senators Stone of Missouri, and Gallinger of New Hampshire are among those who think the re cruiting problem can be best solved by increasing the soldiers' pay. Among Southern congressmen also, we find opposition to universal service on the ground that it would be inadvisable to give thou sands of negroes training in the use of arms. Samuel Gompers is also reported to be against conscrip tion. On the other hand, a recent canvass of 476 newspapers by the National Security League revealed 270 of thenrin favor of universal military training, 49 opposed to it, and 157 non-committal. The Milwaukee Sentinel may be said to reflect the consensus of argument in favor of obligatory military training: "Under the voluntary system in time of war, the serviceable manhood of the na tion is divided into two parts. There are the patriotic young men who volunteer to go to the front and, if need be, die in order that the nation may live; and there are the slackers who are perfectly will ing to sacrifice the other fellows on the altar of patriotism. That is not a democratic arrangement. A Democracy which offers equality of opportunity, has a right to exact in return equality of service." Read THE LITERARY DIGEST for April 21st in order to get every view-point upon the great est problem that is now confronting the Government. Among other articles in this number that are of unusual public interest are: Who Will Foot the War-Bill The Various Plans For Raising the Vast Sums Required and How They Affect the Individual Pocket book. Casting Bread Across the Waters German Plots Among Negroes Britain's Achievement at Arre- Forming the All-American War-Group Moral Climax of the War Germany Annoyed With President Wilson Ireland's Evil Genius Saving the Soldiers From Wound-Infection Passing of the Auto-Gear Patent Medicine Poetry Concrete Ships Albert Ryder—A Poet's Painter D'Annunzio Salutes Us What Shell-Fire Has Done to Reims Can Billy Sunday Win New York? The Unseemliness of Funerals Striking Illustrations, Including Humorous Cartoons "The Digest" Policy in War and Peace The entry of this- nation into the war will have no interest of our country, THE DIGEST will continue to effect upon the general policy of THE LITERARY print the news, from whatever point it may come, holding DIGEST to give all the news from all sides. Every loyal it to be the desire of every true patriot to know the exact American and Canadian will be anxious to know what situation. To crystalize the viewpoint of the day in all the enemy is saying and doing, to understand his view- lands, including our own, and to present it as accurately point, and to form as clear a idea as possible of the trend as possible to the reader, is the aim, now as ever, of this of public feeling among the nations arrayed against us. foremost of news-magazines. Read it and judge the re- To the extent, then, that this is compatible with the suit for yourself. April 21st Number on Sale To-day—All News Dealers—lo Cents "VTT7 , T7'C r\r A T T7T> C 1 ma y obtain copies of "The Literary Digest" rNIL W DIRECT by applying to the Publishers Til The B"X • i m f Distinction to 1 j TT/MCllKif 7 B |fA^\C\T lllcra L/KpSl FUNK & WAGNALLS COMPANY (Publisher of the Famous NEW Standard Dictionary), NEW YORK WAR JUSTICE IS . NOT OVER HARSH i Court-Martial Sentences Nearly Always Suspended in the French Army By Associated Press Paris, April 20.—Two-thirds of the court-martial cases at the war front and immediately behind the front have developed from either drunken ness or fear, sometimes from both, according to Monsieur Kene de Plan hol, who has had more than two years' experience as counsel for the defense in such cases. Drum-head court martials, with summary execu tions of spices and deserters, have been far less frequent than might be imagined. Not only have sentences to death been infrequent, but. extraordi nary as it appears, the verdicts of jus tice at the front are seldom executed. Thegeneral in command of the sec tor has the power of suspending all court-martial sentences until the end of the -war, and he exercises that pre rogative nearly always, even in cases of second offenses. The only penalties immediately applied are those of death and punishment that involves military degradation. Even in these cases the condemned man usually begs to be sent back to the battle line and his request is sometimes accorded aft er a certain lapse of time. Sentences to prison and hard labor are few. It is considered absurd to lodge in prison rugged soldiers whose misdeeds would thus have the effect of relieving them from fighting while well behaved soldiers are risking their lives. That is why military jurisdic tion at the front has become essential ly a jurisdiction of honor. More Latitude Given The changed conditions of warfare have developed situations to which old martial laws are not adaptable. A much disputed point is: When has an infraction of discipline or a crime been committed "in the presence of the enemy," an aggravating circum stance under military jurisprudence. In trench warfare the old definitions of "presence of the enemy" have be come obsolete; great latitude is now given for leniency on this point and it is exercised in all but the most flagrant cases. Under the old martial laws the sus pension of sentences for first offenses was not obligatory but was simply a matter of discretion on the part of the general commanding. Amend ments passed by Parliament in the course of the present war make such extensions of sentence obligatory for all cases excepting those of capital offense. Drunkenness, the most frequent of all infractions of law and discipline, is punished by imprisonment from two months upward. A frequent and effective means of defense invoked by counsel for ac cused soldiers is the citation for gal lant conduct on the battlefield. It APRIL 20, 1917 often happens that a soldier refractory to army discipline is a great fighter an, between court-martials, accumu lates honors and decorations that it Is difficult to ignore. "Nerve Wear" One of the most obstinate drinkers and most insolent men of his regiment when under the influence of liquor, went back to the front b'* favor ot a suspended sentence and won the sig nal honor of an individual citation in an engagement in which his regiment was collectively cited. He appeared before the court-martial with a new bar on his war cross ribbon and his judges couldn't refuse his request for "another chance at the Germans." Cases of desertion with downright fear as the cause are not uncommon, and Monsieur de Planhol concludes that very few soldiers are totally ex empt from fear. Men who have fought bravely in numerous actions, he says, finally give way to what he calls "never wear;" their moral courage is no longer sufficient to overcome physi cal fear and they run away from dan ger. Their number, though, is small In comparison with those who forget "TIZ" FOR FEET' No More Sore, Tired, Tender Feet; No Puffed-up, Calloused Feet or Painful Corns-Try "Tiz" Why go limping around with ach ing, pufted-up feet—feet so tired, chafed, sore and swollen you can hardly get your shoes on or off? Why don't you get a 25-cent box of "Tiz" from the drug store now and gladden your tortured feet? "Tiz" makes your feet glow with comfort; takes down swellings and their duty In the stpefactlon of ex cessive drinking. Even these, con. sldering the millions of men mobilized, are so small a percentage as to coji* stltute no reflection on the army as a whole. Anyone, from a private to a colonel, may act as a defender of the court martlaled soldier. Civilians also ars allowed to represent them and somo eminent French lawyers, such as Maltro Demange who was the chief counsel for Captain Dreyfus, Maitra Michel Pelletier, and Maitre Henri Gerand have acted as counsel for thtf defense of soldiers at the front. GOVERNMENT BUYS THE BEST* Chicago, April 20. One milllo pounds of bacon at 35 cents a poun<£ has been purchased here by the ernnieDt in the last few days. This is the highest grade of bacon. Among packers it was said that a modification of Government specifications as trf bacon would make for economy. Ned sausage and canned cornbeef als(> has been bought in considerable quantities. draws the soreness and misery right out of feet that chafe, smart and burn. "Tiz" instantly stops pain in corns, callouses and bunions. "Tiz" is glorious for tired, aching, sore feet. No more shoe tightness—no more foot torture. Ask for "Tiz." Get only "Tiz." — Adv. 9