South Bend News-Times, Volume 31, Number 75, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 9 March 1914 — Page 2
MONDAY, MAItCII 0. 1011
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES.
BEAU TIF UL PEGGY HAS BECOME REAL COWGIRL
lb autiful "W'zzy." as her pal in the screen world affect ionally calls her. Is away out west in Present!. Ariz. And she's making mighty good of i-r time. too. First it was lonely Poy. or i:iear.ore, to !) more correct. Just thought he coulif not .ct and it. Sin tried fancy work, but that palled. She thousht po-sibly she- could ftudy rock formation and become learned. Hut that seemed too dry a Job. o about the third day she hit upon
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KEEPS SCAL
HPIGI D AIDS HATUHE AND P CLEAN FROM DJUIDRUF
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IIasonabl tare and fffort are all that are required to enable almost any woman to have pood hair. When the hair falls out and is Mrini;y. uneven, dry, brittle anud generally unsightly, the condition is nearly always due to dandruff. Dandruff robs the hair of its natural beauty and abundance. It is by checking the ycale like accumulations that Xewbro'p Herpicide proves its value a.s a scalp prophylactic and is an aid to nature. A clean scalj), an increased softness and brilliancy of the hair, relief from itching scalp and an absence of falling hair are all indicative of the great ettlcieney of Herpicide. The hair properly treated and cared for becomes one of woman's greatest charms. Beautiful hair and lots of it may be the reward of every woman willing to- devote a little personal effort to the use of the First and Original remedy compound in harmony with the contagious theory of dandruff. The ab-
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sence of an itching scalp is one of the first and most grateful manifestations of the efficiency of Herpicide noticed by the intelligent user. The preparation has a delightful and exquisite odor which alone would make it a popular hair dressing. You can obtain a trial size bottle and booklet tilling all about the hair by sending ten cents in postage or silver to T"he Herpicide Co., Dept. S, Detroit, .Mich. Your dealer sells Herpicide in two sizes, ."0 cents and $1.00, and guarantees satisfactory results or money refunded. Insist upon having genuine Herpicide and not some "off brand" said to be "Just as good" preparation. There is only one excuse for the "off brand," it pays the dealer a larger proiit. It costs you just as much 5s the real article. Why take chances? Herpicide applications obtained at 'the better barber shops and hair dressing parlors. Wettiek's are Special As Advertisement.
VESSEL WORTH ft
HALF MDl ON
the happy plan of learning to be a regular cowgirl. Tom Max, whose ability as a horseman Is known all over the west, offered to teach her to ride. That was
made her own riding skirt. And now they say she sits in her saddle as if to the manner born. Peggy is one of the bright stars. of the Arizona Selig Moving Picture Co. all Peggy needed. She went home and
TEEN MONEY
KINGS OWN 1ST OF THIS COUNTRY
Eminent Statistican is Authority for Statement That Interlocking Direcorates Give Few Control of All Wealth.
iiv ;uo ;akim;k. WASHINGTON, March 0 Most of the United States is owned by 1 men. Testimony to this effect was presented before the joint committee of the .senate and house considering the president's trust bills. In diagram iorm it was set out by Dr. Frank J. AVarne, the well-known statistician, lie presented the committee with figures on interlocking directorates, and it appears that the principal owners of America are the following: V. K. YanderbiK, James Stillman, George V. Paker, D. C. Ledyard, W. K. Yanderbilt. jr.. H. H. Dedyard. C. Hmwn, Marvin Himhitt, V. H. Xewman. J. P. Morgan, William Rockefeller, C. M. Depew and F. W. Yanderbilt. These jnen have P) t connections with transportation lines. :;i with financial companies, with industrials, among their interlocking directorates. How Things interlock are indicated by the J'ollowing list of institutions controlled by these men: The New York Central railroad, U. S. Steel corporation. Amalgamated Cpper International Mercantile Marine. Adams Fxpress, American Telephone, Ktna Insurance, National City Pank of New York, lnion Pacific railroad. Northern Pacific railroad and I'nion Trust of Detroit.
plenty of rel salmon, a pound rf which is equivalent to ,,G cents worth of eggs at 3 4 cents a dozen, 3 3 cents worth of sirloin steak at 27 cents a pound, 32 cents worth of mutton at 10 cents a pound, 21 cents worth of chicken at '17 cents a pound, and 13 cents worth of ham at 18 cents a pound. A little while ago the department put out a bulletin on corn meal with a similar moral. When the government has got everybody to eating red salmon and corn meal, it is understood that wages will be reduced to meet the new lowered standard of
life. Eventually we may achieve the j
simple life found among the native Filipinos, Fast Indies and Chinese, where a handful of rice a day is used to sustain life, and the day's wage is standardized accordingly.
IS
NOW 11 DERELICT
U. S. Naval Tug "Potomac" Abandoned When Crew is Menaced by Intense Cold and Mammoth Wall of Ice.
The question whether the traftic known as the "prison contract labor fystem" shall be banished forever J'rom the I'nited States is now up to 1 ; United States senators. The Uooher bill, prohibiting the sale of convictjuade goods transported in ititerstate ommerce in violation of the laws of Mutes- inti which such goods are imported, passed the huse last Wednesday by the overwhelming vote of 302 to 3. The three who voted against it "were Hammond and Volstead of Minnesota,-anil Hard wick of Georgia. The bill is now in the interstate commerce tommittee of the senate. The only active opponent of this legislation in the senate is Knute Nelsn of Minnesota, His argument is that such a law would prevent the state of Minnesota from exporting to other states twin made by Minnesota prisoners in the state factory. As a nutter of fre-'t the Minnesota factory does not make enough to supply the 1'armers of the state itself, so his argument is not sound.
Canned Salmon Cheapest. In iev of the increased cost of living, the department of agriculture has Issued a circular answering the question. What is the food which supplies the most nourishment at the least e..st? The ar,sr is. canned red Salmon of the b. -t quality at ! cents per pound. While the rich are eating eggs, steak, mutton, chicken, ham. tc., the poor may be content with
A Cry From Middlemen. Pecause most reforms seek to give something to the poor without taking anything from the rich they encounter the same kind of thing encountered recently by the department of agriculture when it started its campaign for co-operative buying and selling. Its intelligent suggestions would naturally cut out profits made by the middlemen, so the middlemen have been heard from and a scream circular has reached our desk, saying please kill article entitled "A Successful Farmers' Purchasing Agency," and substitute the following. What follows is a statement from the department that there is no intention to interfere with the middlemen and that all the department has hoped do is to answer a few questions about how some rural organizers have applied co-operation successfully without interfering with the profits of anybody.
According to this month's bulletin of the department of labor the price or necessary foods was higher on Nov. !.". 1013, than at any other time dur
ing the 2 4 years preceding, when they I
reached the maximum of 72. S above I the average for 1S90-1S9J. Dast De- j
eemoer s pi ices weie oeiow me ;ierage for the year in the case of seven articles sirloin steak, pork chops, bacon, ham, hens, Hour and sugar.
SEVEN DIE AFTER RECEIVING TREATMENT
Yictiuis Suffered From Mood Poisoning ami Deaths Create Problem. LOS ANOKLE. Calif.. March 9. While undergoing treatment for a blood ailment at the county hospital, four patients died Saturday evening, three Sunday and another is dying Sunday night under circumstances so far which have not been explained. The dead are John Suurins. John C. McEagin, Charlef McLean. K. J. Mason. Tom King, Willard Lemon and C. M. Mayham. all of Los Angeles. Harvey Lane, the eighth patierr, is
not expected to last through the night, j
The treatment involved the administration of neo-salvarsan. a modified from of a blood remedy invented several years aco by Dr. Paul Ebrich, of Frankfort. ( J e r m a n y .
JJY VICTOR KLLIOTT. WASHINGTON, March 9. Somewhere "north of T.3" there floats a ship worth half a million dollars, deserted by her crew and the property of anyone who takes charge of her. The law of the sea declares that she is a derelict and that the man or men who bring her safely back to port are entitled to salvage up to the total value of the boat. The ship is the naval tug "Potomac" recently abandoned by her crew because of the intense cold and the danger of being crushed in the 40foot ice which surrounded her on all sides. Secretary of the Navy Daniels sent word to Poatswain Wilkinson, commanding the Potomac to use every effort to save his vessel, "but to place the safety of his men paramount." Wilkinson stayed by the ship until the ice towered in great bergs over her superstructure and threatened to fall in a hail of death upon her decks. Then he gave the reluctant order to abandon the ship and the crew of the sturdy tug made their way over the broken ice to the mainland while the Potomac without a crew to man her or a hand to buide her rudder, floated slowly northward to what is regarded as almost certain destruction in the Straits of Pelle Isle. Went to Aid Fidiermen. A little more than two months ago there come word to Washington that 4 0 American fishermen were caught in the ice in the Pay of Island, Newfoundland, and were in danger of their lives, their boats being powerless to move because of the great sheets of ice which surrounded them. Appeals were made to the navy department to sond aid to them and the tug Potomas, then at Norfolk, Va.. was ordered to the rescue under forced draft. A fortnight after leaving Norfolk, the Potomas reached the entrance to the Pay of Islands, only to find that the mouth of the bay was filled with ice which was rapidly becoming packed into a solid mass. Time and time again the sturdy little tug tried to crash her way through the wall of ice but each time she was thrown back. Venture a Failure. After several days of vain attempts to reach the fishermen. Poatswain Wilkinson decided that the venture was a failure and so reported to Washington, with the additional information that the Potomac would return to Portland. Me., with the supplies which she had been unable to get to the fishermen. As it turned out these supplies came in very handy before the voyage was ended. Less than ten miles from the entrance to the Pay of Islands the Potomac ran into another sea of ice which had lately formed. In three days it was impossible to get the tug out of the ice which had frozen solid under her to a thickness of 40 feet until the ttig was literally encased in a block of ice several miles wide and long. If for any reason this block should suddenly have split and dropped the Potomac intjp the water between there would havoVcn little hope of saving any of the crew.
JULIA MARLOWE ILL
XOTH'i: OF ADMINISTRATION. Notice, is hereby given that the umlerlg::Ml iins l.en appointed by the Tlerk of U e Circuit Court of St. Joseph County, Stnte of Indiana. Administrator of the P tate ef Augusta Itenfrautz, late of St. Jo sepl County, deceased. s.dd P.-tate i supposed to be solvent. HintMAN A. TOIin.KA. Ad ministrator. Mfivli VA. Howell. Jones A; Pevine, Attorneys for Administrator. mar 2. 0. 1G
Famous .Ci.ess Undergoes Operation in Baltimore Hospital.
BALTIMORE. Mil.. March 9. Miss Julia Marlowe has be-n operated on for appendicitis at a local hospital. No details of the operation could be ascertained tonisrht. the hospital authorities having been pledged to secrecy.
New Jersey, Indiana & Illinois R. R. Co.
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AN EXTERNAL REMEDY FOR
Appendicitis, Blood Poison, Pneuraonia,Quinsy. Ovarian Troubles, Sprains, Guts, and IiiNamma(ionvof the Bowels. Prepared Iy APPEN-D-FORM CO., Elkbart. Iml. j on sali: ijy and i-hi:i: uooklkt at
S. F. APPLEGATE & CO.
Effective March 2nd, 1911.
South l.rnd. Kirer Wharton ., SueeucTjj .. Pine
SOUTH BOUND. No. 1 No. 3 No. o
.. T.:r.a am 10:!."aai 1 :l."pni . . r. : 47 a ui 10 a m 1' :HJ m . . 0 ::T a in 10 :A2 a in 2 A2 p ui .. 7:00 am 10:.lum i.'lpra . . 7:1 jam llaam S :00 pm
NORTH BOUND. No. N. 4 No. fi Pine 7:4-' Mta 11 :-." am r :1!T pni Swteueys 7 :.'7 am 11 :..7 am :."" pin Wbartons am l'J pm r.:4Jpni Ki7er s:iram l'J:ir pm .? :,V pra South Head N:,".Ojiiu l-:"opm 4:10 pm All trains daily except Sunday. This Company Reserves right to vary from this without notice. II. J. JACKSON, Commercial Ajfent.
SUFFRAGE!" LEADER CRITICISES SENATORS Mrs. Medill MoCormlck Deals In Personalities Slightly Sarcastic.
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Robertson Eros. Co
ROBERTSON'S stands foremost in Silk Supremacy our stocks aglow with the novelties, and the ever popular weaves we are the established headquarters for the more particular element of South Bend's good dressers.
i AMONG THE NEWEST FABRICS ARE
Black Crepe de Chine a beautiful soft clinging conception that moulds in artistic lines. A value most unusual, at $2.00 vard 44 inches wide.
WASHINGTON, March 9. Mrs. Medill MeCormick, chairman of the congressional committee of the Woman Suffrage association. Sunday indulged in sarcastic reference to the speeches of senators on the pending constitutional amendment, calling them by name. It is the first time these ladies waging warfare for the vote have openly criticised public men by name. "It was not very difficult for John Sharp Williams and men of his type to give a reason for opposir the amendment." said Mrs. MeCormick. "Sen. Williams would repeal the 15th amendment if he could. "Put the entertaining feature of the debate was to observe how other men expressed themselves. Sen. Pryan of Florida, quoted Aristole. For a man in his situation perhaps what was written many centuries ago was as good as anything else."
ART DEALERS PAY TOO . BIG PRICES FOR WORK Masterpieces Were Hid on at Figures Never to 1)C Kcachcd Again.
Printed Crepe de Chine, embracing all the beautiful combinations that eive the tone to smart clothes. 40 inches wide at a remarkable low price. $2.50 per yard, Krinkle Crepe the wavy kind so enticing to the touch the season's most desirabl efabrics all the latest in fashion's colors at $2.00 yard. Brocade Poplins a very popular and serviceable fabric, firmly woven, lustrous finish, in all the latest colorings and black, $1.25 yard.
"ShoIver-frooF9 .. irm.CfC' m
Foulards
The height of the season finds our stocks of these famous Foulards complete all the wanted shades printed in a
Qv'O wondertul variety oi
designs. Their quality proves
mthe wearing. They are
pure dye.
Cheney Bros.' Foulards our exclusive brand of popular priced silks. A most beniliifnl splpriinn hif nrrivprl in oil ih
mm . , . . y J - .. I ill lit IMC newest designs at 85c yard.
NTFAV YORK. March 0. From the
friends of Theron J. Klakeslee it was learned that his suicide in his own art gallery on Saturday night had i much deeper significance than was at first supposed. Additional reasons for his untoward act were given Sunday. A poll of the various art dealers and j
buyers in New 1 ork city tiisciosetl tne fact that the general art market is suffering the most drastic slump that has been known in many years Predictions that several other of the largest art concerns in the city would share in the immediate future the fate of Moulton and Uicketts and that of the IJlakeslee firm will be heard on every side. "The cause of all this." said a well known art authority, "lies in the simple fact that the art market has been highly inflated and is now fading to a normal point. Millionaires with fabulous sums to spend have bought works of art far beyond their worth. Two of the most famous of these are dead, and three or four of the others have reached their limit. "Scores of dealers, insane for the
moment and thinking that this unnatural condition would last always, have j bought far beyond their means. Their , met ores are now on their hands and 1
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they cannot dispose of them today nor will they be able to dispose of them tomorrow."
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;HBMEY
S&brMi
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24 inch Foulards in a large variety of combinations that is bound to please you when priced at 69c yard. 22 in. Foulards in small figures and stripes handsome shades in taupe, mahogany, wisteria, green, copen, tan, navy, brown, at 50c.
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PICTORIAL REVIEW PATTERNS
mm 1 1
NOTIONS. German Silver Thimbles, assorted sizes, Tuesday 5c. Wash Proof Dress Fasteners, Tuesday Sc. 6 yard bolls Bias Tape all widths, Tuesday 5c. ,
1 CAREFUL CORSETING
CONCERNS YOU. If so, come to our big demonstration of Bon Ton and Royal Worcester Corsets all this week in our Corset Department, third tloor.
NOTIONS. Dutch Linen Tape, Tuesday 4 c. Queen Collar Supports, 6 on card, black and white, Tuesday 5c. 50 yards Silk Thread, Tuesday 4c spool.
WILL USE ARMY TO DISBURSE UNEMPLOYED f?ACRAMK.TO, Calif.. March 0. Infantry, cavalry and artillery will be at the state arsenal here early Monday to enforce, if necessary, orders of'the city authorities that "Ceneral" Kelly's army of the unemployed return to Fan Francisco. Infantry and cavalry at the arsenal and Adjt. Gen. Torbes has called infantry companies from Orville and Chico and the field artillery from Stockton to join the forces here.
WASH GOODS DEPARTMENT rials almost doubled, making this department one Has been enlarged and the selections of new mate of the linest, the exclusive patterns from exclusive manufacturers are here, now.
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White Ratine, the most popular of summer wear Time to get busy now. Summer is not far away. 40 inches wide 85c; 45 inches wide, 95c and $1.25. Ramie Linen in many beautiful colorings a quality cloth for wear. 36 inch 39c; 45 inch, 85c.
Crepes in Vcile and Plesse pretty floral designs, stripes and plain colors. Exceptional values. 2 7 inches wide 12 Vic and 15c 30 inches wide 19c and 25c 40 inches wide 42c to $1.25 Creaseless Linen pre shrunk; a dependable linen. 36 inch 75c; 45 inch 85c.
RICE, RATINE OR BEAUTY CLOTH This is a new pattern that has become very popular and will be extensively worn. We have it in all colors, 2 7 inches wide 25c. STRIPED SILK GINGHAMS, 5oo vards will be placed on a Special counter on Tuesday for
i a Special Price of 19c.
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Gov. Johnson assured the city authorities that if ariot occurred which the police could not curb he would declare martial law. Citizens of this city raised $2,500 to transport the army to San Francisco, whence it started on a march to Washington, where its members
were to demand work from Pres. Wilson. If the men refuse to entrain quietly for Pan Francisco the police will force them to po and in the event of serious rioting-, the national puard will be called upon. Itival factions of "General" Kelly's army were reunited .Sunday rjnd 1,500
men nuide a demand on the city for food. "General" Kelly sai l if food was not furnished by Monday he could not control them any longer, .ix men ate at at restaurant Sunday nibt and then refused to pay saying they were members of the "unemployed" and that was their "peculiarity."
MUCaI bum
Here's One of the Manp Bargains at Smith & Wherrett's FIRST ANNUAL SPRING SALE Guaranteed Brass Bed, Spring and Mattress Complete, only $18.75 .
The Sprin- Is All Iron; Made of the cry finest double wove n wire fabric and supiKjrtcd w i t h IS strong copiK-r coil springs.
III h t;Mfiis
f " j W I fill
Tlie Mattro N filled with t li e very lst felted cotton; a Iarffe n s s o rtment of Art Tickings to select from and ptia ran teed t o welsh l" lb".
Guaranteed Brass Bed having full 2 inch continuous posts and five extra large fillers Complete Outfit, Bed, Spring and Mattress only $18.75
South Bend's Cash Store
Smith & Wherrett 326-328 South Michigan Street
e-
When our wagon
livers Furniture to your heme everybod y will know that it is paid for.
I I t I
COONLEY DRUG CO. and LANDON & CO.
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