Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 4 March 1918 — Page 5
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THE INDIANAPOLIS NEWS. MONDAY. MAECH i. 1018.
R —t
Presenting for
Immedidte Spring and Early Summer Wear
'G«nntnt« dittingraished in appeannct—beArinx th« stamp of refinement and quiet elegance—apparent in • ^ TAILLEUR AND DRESS SUITS— COATS — STREET FROCKS — DAYTIME DRESSES —BLOUSES —SEPARATE SKIRTS AND DIQHT WEIGHT FURS.
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TAfl rats CULL FOR
“WIN THE WAR FOR PERMANENT PEACE” IS TITLE.
GATHERING MARCH 16-18
Kntif Steond Floor, Occidental Building Corner Illinois and Washington btreets
Prince MIreko Dead. lAMaTKRI^AM. March 4. - Prince Wko, eertmd e<>n of King Nicholas f llonten^ro, died at Vienna Sunday linmorrhage of the lunge. He had een III twb year* Prince Mirko was Jrtv-nlne ^eare oW. He remained tn loBtcnegro after trie royal family fled
from the Austrian invaders. He attempted to enter into separate peace negotiations with Austria, but his efforts were of no avail. It v®* reported In January. 1917, that Prince Mirko was to be made the r^ler of a new south Slavonic state, to be created by the central powers. His wife* was Princess Natalie. and they had three sons.
NEW YORK, March 4 —"Win the war for permanent peace" is the title for a national convention called by William Howard Taft and a committee of prominent men and women to meet in Philadelphia from March 1« to II. The name, according to Mr. Taft, was chosen because it offers a "rallying cry In the present war crisis ” The convention will be held under the auspices of the League to Enforce Peace, and Mr Taft, as head of the organisation, will preside. Other members of the committee include Cardinal Oibbons. Samuel Oompers, president of the American Federation of Labor; A Lawrence Lowell, president of Harvard university. Dr Anna Howard Shgw, chairman of the women’s committee of the council of national defense. Senator John Sharpe Williams, of Mississippi, Arthur Capper, Governor of Kansas, and Cyrus H K. Curtia Philadelphia publisher. * The call for the convention states the object as follows: "To sustain the determination of our people to fight until Prussian militarism has been defeated, confirm opposition to a premature peace and focus attention upon the only advantage the American people are hoping to gain from the war—a permanent peace guaranteed by a league of nations ” Asserting Russia’s experience had been a lesson to persons who believed the objects for which America entered the war could be attained by negotiations. Mr Taft said "It is claai to every thinking patriot that the speeches of the German and Austrian chancellors were made, not in good faith, with anyTionp.st Intention of reaching a fair ground foi settlement, but for the purpose of encouraging pacifist sentiments among their enemies and weakening the spirit of the United States and of our allies The German chancellor h>poeritlcall> accepts certain of the principles laid down by President Wilson at the very time when Germany has repudiated the whole basis of our •peace program,’ and defied our demand for the evacuation of Russian territory and such an attempt as will leave the Russian people to work out their own future ’’
PRAISES INDIANA'S WAR SPIRIT
The Rev. Lyman P. Powell, president of Hobart college, who was one of the speakers in the county war conferences which were held recently under the direction of the Indiana council of defense, has written his impres'fions of his trip through Indiana for the March issue of the Laving Churclj. Dr. HoBart makes reference to Will H. Hays, chairman of the state council of defense, and praises other Indiana men and women. His article, which appears under the title “In Lincoln's Land,” is in part as
follows:
Sixty year* ago, Lincoln and Douglas went through the valley of democracy debating the eupreme Issue of the time, which Lincoln summed up In the statement "A nation can not endure half elave and half free It must be all one, thing or all the other.” For a month past eight men, four clvlii^s and four soldiers, latelv from the war xone, have been lifting this question into international significance All over Indiana we have been speaking in defense of the proposition that the world can not endure half-autocratic and half-democratic. I was the first to arrive, the middle of January', on the spot, and was sent out as an advance guard, speaking daily before clubs, cMleges and universities Then men like President YVllbor, of Leland Stanford university; the Hon. Everett Colby, of New Jersey, Mr E* F. Trefz, of Chicago, Lieutenant McQuarrie, of the British army. Major Gidley, of the Canadian armv. Captain DeBeaufort, of the Belgian army, and Lieutenant Masson, of the Canadian troops, gathered at Indianapolis, and a series of war conferences in ninety of the ninetytwo counties of Indiana began We were reinforced by some of Indiana’s ablest speakeis, both men and women, and but for the circumstance that those of us from the outside had been in the war zone our services would never have been needea The Vee-president of the United States is reported to ha\e said that Indiana produces more first-rate secondclass men than any other section Even at the risk of violating the con^entlons of lese majesfe, I respectfulH differ from our Vice-President The men and the women of Indiana with whom w’e were associated on and off the platform were not second-class They would hold their own with the best The Republican party has sought in the chairman of the state council of defense. Will H Hays, the chairman to conduct its political campal|:n George Ade is a name that carries its own connotation Dr J J Pettljohn, head of the speakers’ bureau, a man of national dimensions and capable of an\ service to which ho may be called, was our inspiring director, and associated with him were such men a.s Messrs Uavanagh and Bittner The list of local speakers included such names as Davis, Dushane, Maple Wright, Taylor and Mrs Anna Studebaker Carlisle, Mrs Curtis Hodges
Whatever the Price We Give You the Best for the Moneys
25c WOMEN’S SWISS HAND KERCHIEFS, embroidered in dainty colors, many novelties in this lot; "f (f ^ choice XtJC
INDIAHA m GOODS Co
3M-S12 E. Washington St, Jitst But 9t Coortiiwise. day..
l(k WOMEN'S LAWir HANDKBBCHIBFS,^!
hematit^od, ered in &in^
special Toes- ... 5c'
GaUi-Curci sings a joyous love l3nic Mniriage of Fignro—I Know Not Wh»t ‘ Tm Doing (Moaart) Amelita^^iJIi-Curci ^ yictrola Red Seal Record 64748. Ten-inch, $1
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The passionate love song of the saucy young page Cherubino in Mozart’s Marriage ot Figaro” is an aria that merits the interpretation of a .Galli-Gurci. , . , It is a number that is alive with melody: that gives color to every fleeting change of the emotions. . ... This famous coloratura soprano smgs it with a sympathy that vividly portrays the eagerness and joy and tenderness surging within the heart of the love-sick youth. It is a record will delight every lover of fine music. Go to any Victor dealer’, and he wiU Galli-Curcl record ior you. Victor, and Victrolas. $10 to S400. inetar Talkhig Maehiiio Compuir, Cundeii, N. J. mneordfl and Victor Machine* are adentiftcally coordinated and a^chronixed m the idkKilutdy e^Kmtial to a p«:lect reproducuon. Naw VMtr fUeecde dsMWMltatii at *■ daalan aa Aa lit al aach asaath IM T'm m ^ Victrola Tiads mm^ Ot thm Vkaai rtMma Uachtoa Cmmoemr tjaatgaaHag xbm pradata af this Cowpaay uly.
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and Mrs Juban Clarke But I mention thesa only to suggest types to whom e\er5' outside speaker was glad to defer. The audiencea, eveo'whare wanted especially to hear the iren who had come from the war xone and our speeches had in consequence to be the longest Again and again some count'* chairman aaid to me' "You are the first man from the war zone oor people will ever have had a chance to see" As the weeks sped swiftlv on some of us began to feel like miniature circuses There were sometimes three or four set speeches a day, and as we circled round and round the state, reaching before the end of the campalgb more than l.OOO.twO people, we seemed to be known in every hotel at which we stayed and in every train on which w'e traveled From the moment we appeared in the morning until far into the night we were on exhibition and were expected to talk Once an audience waited from 7 So p m to 10 15 p m for Us war speaker delaved bv belated trains And we talked Whether it was to an audience of three liundred or three thousand, the Interest was at a white heat Everybodv' wanted flrst-hartd impressions No one was content with mere generalizations Facts, experiences, convictions were demanded, and the responsibility for transmitting first-hand impressions became so great that formal speaking increasingly gave wa> to heart-to-heart •talks designed to make the listener understand the colossal and comprehensive problem before America With but one able exception, tiobodj e\er dreamed of using notes Many a prepared speech fell to pieces in the first moments as it became evident In looking at the sea of upturned faces that people had come to get a visualization of what we had seen at the
front
Such listener.^ certainly no speakers since Lincoln’s day can ever ha\e had The audiences fell into two types. The one responaed to every mood of the speaker Sentence after sentence was interrupted with applause f>aughter chased tears away only to be submerged in turn in tears One audience I shall never forget 'Phe meeting was held m the countv courtlioiise, seating 1,000 people, and there was scarcely standing room All lonnd the square there was a cordon «f horses and buggies and an occasional automobile representing a farming population draw'n, when the thermometer was at zero and the snow heaped high, from distances as great as twenty miles When I pleaded that Americans siiould see straight and that the melting of tiie ' anous races which have come to our shores should now be complete In the common fight against the foe, one farmer in an audience in which the inaioiltv were farmers cried out as though stung by sheer uneilpectedness ’Down with the Tluns'" Tlie other t\ pe of audience Settled down a.s in I.Jncoln s day to listen with ejes fixed on the speaker and without the slightest indication of appio\al or disappioval The complimenf of perfect attention was never more richly paid than bv the Hooslers. and T remesnber one man about flftv years old sitting iii the gallery of the oiiera house, from whom I could not take mv eyes during the hour that I spoke. He seemed like Lincoln come to life He had the Lincoln form, the UiiHoln face, the patient, gentle, earnest absorption which one sees in those few pictures of Lincoln made befoie he giew a beard Ne\er once during the honi did that modern Tdncoln mo'e hand or head He slmph listened And when at the close 1 appealed to the audience to rise to the dignitv of the greatest world crisis exer known to banish hatred of the indiMdual fiom their hearts, to fight willi ruthless hut not malicious earnestness against the foe. and after seeing oui allies die for us these years past to be glad to die if necessary for them, the modern lancoln simply* bent solemnly forward and as the audience melted away lingered dristfully for a moment and w'as the last to lea\e the galler' i j ’Tlie trenches for mey said a soldier after w'e had been speaking together for several davs and traveling night after night m da% coaches on belated tiains. catching fort\ winks of sleep when we could, and greeting the reception committee wuth the cheerfulness of a soldier, though we often heard that in addition to the usual program several other meetings, often overflow, had been arranged ^ Mv Belgian friend, whovconfided to me that he was no speaker and yet bv the simplicit' of his manner and the I veracity of his story held hla audience ' an hour and a half, was worth the 1 whole month’s traveling simply to I meet His story of the luncheon wMth I King Albert, the beloved, threw upon the screen of the imagination a picture , never to be forgotten The altogether cl arming Lieutenant McKJuarrie I shall alwavs lememberfor the freshness and 1 nov aricv 9'’ his indoimtable spirit and the inevpiessibly delightful words he spoke, off as well as on the platform • • • \ 'The good work goes on .\ll over the state the teachers fiie now Instructing the children, and the children are passing on the torch to parent.s who could I not. or did not, attend meetings I Under an organization singularly comprehensive, the campaign will not end until every man, woman and 1 child in Indiana understands his spe1 cial responBiblUty to the country* No I such campaign of patriotic education • has perhaps, evCr before been undertaken in the New World, and the consequences ^re certain to be felt tn week.s to come throughout the entire ' land I shall always count it one of * the great privileges of my* life to have t had some share in thus campaign and ' to have helped the Hoosjer leaders carry out the well-conceived propa1 ganda, which will hasten the end ot the war and make us all, at last, one people COLORED SOLDIERS SPEAK j Members of 317th Engineer*- Regiment From Camp Sherman in City. Members of the 317th engineers regli ment, from Camp Sherman, at Chillii cothe, O. who aie here to take part I in a military concert this evening at j Caleb Mills hall, spoke in many of the (Colored churches in the city yesterday. For most part they devoted thg time to a discussion of the progress of \he colored soldiers in Camp Sherman and what is being accomplished for them The recital is to be given under the auspices of the .Alien Chapel African Methodist Episcopal church choir, wltli J Wesley Jones as director, and Ed Sanders as manager The affair is a benefit for the purpose of aosisting toward the payment of mstiuments for the members of the band An octet from the regiment will take part Rus.sell Smith’s orchestia will give a special program beginning at 7 45 Other local talent to be heard will be the Y M C A. quartet, composed of Clarence Hicks Wallace Woolfolk, Charles Samuels and George P.obinson; Mrs Mattie Lamond. Frank Clay and -the Home Trio, composed of Theodore Cable. Frank Brown and Russell Smith The doors will open at 7 o’clock. STREET CAR STRIKES TRUCK Albert W. Daugherty, Driver, Suffers Bruises and Cuts. Albert W. Daugherty. 1326 East Washington street, emp'oyed by the New Sanitary Cake Company, 10 South Oriental street, was Injured about the right lag and suffered bruises and cuts when tfie delivery truck which he was driving was struck by Gray street "dinkey" No 210 at Washington and Pine streets, early today He wan taken t his home Danghertv wiui driving west In the street car tracks in front of the csr. and apparentlv did not hear It. The iriKk was thrown toward the right curb when struck, and Daugherty was thrown in front of It and rolle»I uIoiik the stieet to the turb. accorillng to wDneases 'Die driverless truck msde a turn In linril of the street car and was headed east on Ihs opposile side of the strest when stopped W ^ Bunch was ms* toroisu of the car. ^
New Dresses for Spring The season’s newest styles—satin, taffeta, creM de chine, ailk Mplin, foulard, comynad 'witbjGeoxgette crepe in the newest preferred shades—Pekin bhie, Frai^ blue, Copenhagen, tMupa, eoiT, wk* teria, rose, reseda, navy, black, also beautiful fancy plaids and stripes.
Splendid variety of styles, ahowing the favwei . fashions for spring. New and norm style toaoies in the collars, the belts, the aleevea, tlM skirtB and the trimmings that give freehness and dkarm to these newest dresses. You’ll appreciate, too, the vaiun represented st our nu>ds8t prices— $6.48 $8.48 $9.9g $11.50 $12.50 $14.50 Upward to $29.50 ALL ALTERATIONS FREIS. 0msmnmsmnsmmmsmmnssmimssso^smsmsf^st9ismmmonsssm0issttsmnmsmsHmssmmssmtmKsn(0nttstKntsinsttnHKtt&nn^^ Skirts Made to Meiasure M4N.TAILORED SKIRTS, newest spring, models, to measure. Perfect fit guaranteed.! Select any silk or woolen material in our dress* goods section and we will tailor to your measure any skirt you select. Price for the making.'
Women’s Hose 35c BURSON SEAMLESS HOSIERY, in black, white or* OfZp balbriggan, special, a pair, 49c RUSSIAN CALF OR KHAKI MERCERIZED LISLE STOCKINGS for women, special, OQp IPSWICH GAUZE LISLE STOCKin black or white; 25c “I Qp value... — WAYNE KNIT SILK BOOT HOSE with lisle top, white yf Q/* only, a pair, i ^«/V PURE THREAD SILK BOOT 9OSE, full-fashioned; black, white, gold, canary, bronze and cordovan, a pair OOv
BARGAIN TABLE BcINDIANAP olis PUBLIC SCHOOL TABLETS, (none to denlers). limit 10, special Tuesday— 5 for iSc 5e BLUEBIRD CROCHET COTTOhi, white, black and colora also variegated, limit one box— 3 for 10c
Extra Special CLARK’S O. N. T. CROCHET
7k
COTTON, white or ecru, a ball
K. M. C. CROCHET COT-
TON, white or efcru, a ball.. i ‘C WHITE KID OR CAPE GLOVES, broken sizes;! $1.75 qual- S8c CAPE GLOVES, black, Un or grayynet all sizes; $1.69 OP
quality
CAPE GLOVES, black, tan or gray, not all sizes; |2.00 $1.69
quality.
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Women’s Muslin Underwear, Save Money It will pay you to buy your muslin'underwear this season at the “Indiana.” We are selling them practically at last year’s prices—we have hundreds of dozens purchased last year if bought today would cost
10 to 25 per cent. more. So buy now and save money. MUSLIN GOWNS, slipover style, lace or em-
broidery trimmed-
69c, 79c, 98c and
up to $2.48
V-NECK GOWNS, embroidery trimmed, some
lace trimmed—
69c, 79c, 89c and
up to $1.50
dainty lace or
59c, 69c, 79c and
up to $2.25
ENVELOPE CHEMISE,
broidery trimmed
em-
MUSLIN SKIRTS, epibroidery trimmed, same lace trimmed, special value, 59c,
79c, 98c and
up
$2.98
to
CORSET COVERS, good quality muslin or nainsook, trimmed in laces or emj^roid-
ery, 49c, 59c, 79c and MUSLIN DRAWERS, good selection, embroidery trimmed, some
lace trimmed, 59c,
79c, 98c and—
$1.25
EXTRA SIZE GOWNS.‘skirts, ENVELOPE CHEMISE, CORSET
COVERS AND DRAWERS at popular prices. ^ Full line of SILK COVERS and ENVELOPE CHEMISE, Desh or white.
35c Corset Covers, Drawers and Bras- OQA sieres iUa/C.
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|iS|MARKETSHOPPERS
FIND OUR ALABAMA STRJBBT tBNTRAlfCB CONVENUCNT. JUST ACROSS FROM MARKRT
WOULD STRING THEM UP. Thrift Stamp Speaker Wishes to Get Rid of All Traitors. [Special to The IndisnapoHe NewsJ C’.P.KENUASTLE, Ind . March 4.-At ;i war mass meeting held heic >esterdas afternoon. Fred L Sims, of South Bend, was the principal speaker. The courtroom was filled with patriotic men end women. Mr Sims’s message to the reople of Putnam county was to buv only essential articles, and with the nioiK'v they save bu> Thrift stamps and War Savings stamps, and in this way help the government to release for war purposes all men, materials and equipment of factories now working on noncssentials Ml Sima sajs "our chief business now is war, and war means only the killing of Germans Until thev are killed off they will not cease to fight to conquer said there are only two rlaces for all mdn One is for America, the other is against before the vear is out he is going to. a (lei man 'settlement near South Bend refused Ut-biiv Liberty bonds, and urdess everv O^man in that community goes on record .'is being for America, there will be a little war in thenortheri, part of the state He vatd thus Jar the Slogan that America is the "melting
pot of the world," has proved wrong. It IS only a melting pot In so far as the {lubllc schools gp Here onlv ‘ is the ti ue melting pot at work, but once the foreigner gets away from this influence he can do most anything for his home country and still be regarded as an Americar. He suggested that the time ha.s come that this country will he better off if a lot of traitors are got rid of In the manner they should be—strung up to a tree. ^
_Tu8cania Survivor Didn’t Even Get Feet Wet, He Says
rSpectal to The Indlanapolie Newe] MARION, Ind., March 4.—Grover J. Kaderaaker. of the 20th United States Foresters, who waV a Tuscania survivor, has written his parents, Mr. and Mrs. John T Rademaker, of this city, that he did not so much as get hts feet wet when the Tuscania was sunk. Writing from Belfast. Ireland, February 8, RademakeF says: "I am here, and feeling fine, and we are treated royally I suppose you have read in the papers of our accident. I sure am a lucky boy, for I got out all right’ didn’t even get mv feet wet. Our boat was hit In the evening, and I was on it for two hours liefore J got off. It held up One. "I enjoyed the trip until —— feen-
BOYS’ SHOES Jolld «unmetai. buttoa ^ ^ or blucher; alzes ^ I Kim I to 5H RAPP'S SHOE STORE <Faraievly Brawa**> 904 BAsr WAtHUveroN n.
sored). Say, Ireland for mine. Wa are being treated like we were the only boys on earth. I wish X could Hve here. Would have sent you a cablegram but lost all my dope. "When I get back I can tell you things that will make yottr hafr turn gray. 1 did not gat-one hit exdted. and that is why I am here.” BOY LOSES LEFT FOOT. Clarence Nichols Falls Under Wheels, Trying to Board Car. Clarence Nichols, age fifteen. 1027 Oakland avenue. Suffered the loM of ^ left foot Sunday at MaaaachuaeUs avenue and New Jeraev street when be slipped as he attempted to board an Bast Tenth street car which was In motion, and fell tinder the whe^ Dr. H. W. Miller. 4S3 North East street, gave the boy first aid attention and sent him to the city hospiul.
HUG’S CUT PRICE DRUGS
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91.00 Pierce’s Golden Med. Dts..gl SUM) Fellow’s Com. Sy. Hypo.Si 91.00 Wyeth’e 9age aad SalRthar.]
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9t,99 Beef, Wtoe and Mo Malt Nat^e..l9pt A foe T5e MoUta** Food fide HM>ltek*a Malted MtSi 91.00 tloeltek*a Malted Mitk. 99.79 Merilehi*B Molted WMt.
ad ftdd.....I
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Haag’^ Pilto for Inditeation, Sick Headache, Biljmsncea and CoMtipatiM. *5e*
Color Eastor Hats With Colorito, 10 Colors, 22c Each . HAAG’S DRUG STORES
lUN PENNSYLVANIA ST. 802 MASSACHUSETTS AVE.
53 South rillfiolt Stroot. Coritor
27 S. ILLINOIS STREET 116 N. ILLINOIS STREET
INDIANAPOLIS, IND.
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