South Bend News-Times, Volume 31, Number 146, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 19 May 1914 — Page 6

TUESDAY, MAY 1. 19K

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMEi

t

SOUTH BEND XJ3WS-

THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY. 10 Wwt Co!f.x Avrnue. South Bnd. Indiana Cster4 iccond clase matter at the Postorflce at South Bend. Indiana

; Krry day is a cleanup day In Vera I

j Cruz, and the city Is faid to be becom- J j in? quite habitable. If the Mexicans! are wise they will a.k Uncle Sam to

occupy some more of their cities. j

t BT CARRIER. Dallr and Fasdagr la advance, per Daily acd Sunday by tha week. ..12a Jttr IS. 00 Daily, finglt copy .20 auaday, single copy ..2a BT MAIL pCUj and Euntfaj tn advance, per year 14.00 tcJly, In advance. pr yar S3. 00

In the strussle for position South

Bond lias ben mercifully saved from the c liar. Now let the watchword If j upward and onward. Some watch-1 word, believe us.

THE MELTING POT

COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

If your name appeara in the telephone directory you cin telephone roar want "a-d" to The Nrws-Tlirca ofHce acd a I'M will be mailed after ltn laiertlcn. Home poaa 1151; Bell phone 2100. cone. lop.ekzbx & WOODMaN

Fcre'.gn Advertising RapTfsef.tativea.

Iinroln Reachy is as full of loops , I fis a lariat, hut the fear Is one of them i ! will straighten out on him. and then' 'everybody will feel forced to say, "I i

told you so." i

CI Fifth Avenne, New York.

Adverllainc Bulldlnr, Chicaxo

SOUTH HKM), INDIN.WA, MAY 19, 1911

Till: MEDIATION COM i;m;( i;. ithe house went the estimate for the If Prep. Wilson has hi. way, and I expenses of the federal child's bureau. It 1? obvious that in the main his 'of which Miss Iithrop in the head, w ishes must prevail, the Mexican j The committee, in its isolated wisdom question will be settled on a substan-j cut it down to $23,000. a sum the detial basis by the mediation confer- j partrnent could not start on with any fr.ee which opens in Niagara Fall?, j prospect of accomplishing anything:. Ont.. today. The United States will t when the recommendation went

Those fanciful pictures of aeroplane battles in midair are coming along toward realization. Uncle Yarn's fliers are to be equipped with light rapid fire guns. Nothing doing in eclipses until Aug. -I, when the moon will hang a veil ever half the face of the sun. Kurope gets the whole show this time.

THHOUCiH Till: DAY AY IT 1 1 Till' I IU 'AIA OF X. I). U.

The tla.s in journalism of Mic Inherit) of Notre Damn N responsible for what follows. If serious conoqucinTs otiMie we will rnnnlii In wlulon until thf eritement subsides. C. X. V.

tures the do be taking dov n at; S(.uth Herd. Roth of us auree 1 that; it was a mighty slick business. Rut ; Hank he kinda'thot that them there j fellers what go past the machire and, then run around and get in line again i w ere about as bad as them rer eat rs jwhat the trot down at Terra Haute.; Some men are so small that they j ! ought to use insect powder after sha - I in?. I

Advice to married women: Reware! of letting vour husband know that '

KOMK people are born great, others you have lost your ring he may rind

- m -

not be content with a temporary solution or a patching up of the dirhculty. The two paramount conditions upon which Pres. Wilson insists are the (diminution of Huerta and a permanent and satisfactory solution of the agrarian question In Mexico. In Insisting" upon thes conditions I'ren. Wilson considers that the agrarian question is at the root of MexIco'a troubles since the system now

In operation keeps a large share of the. population in a state bordering on peonage and prevents the progress of the people In intelligence and thrift, and that Huerta is standing in the Tvay of such a peaceful revolution. If the mediators persist In their opinion that they cannot take up the agrarian question they can lardly hop to .accomplish the purpose of their conference. Any compromise with Huerta will bo equally disastrous to the object of the task they have undertaken. Permitting Huerta to name his successor in accordance with his demands would not be complying with the first condition named by Pres. Wilson. It would, on the contrary, continue the existence of a frovemment founded on assassination. It would be better for Mexico if all the leading factors In the present revolution could be eliminated and a president be chosen from an element which is not seekins power as it is feared Carranza and Villa are. Though acceding to Hucrta's demand It would hasten the reconstruction of the. government and the readjustment of the people's rights. Carranza havlnp refused to send delegates to the conference the questions to be considered are distinctly between the United States and Huerta, and If the mediators conclude that the demands of the former are Just ajid for the best interests of Mexico, Carranza will have to make his peace with the United states. This contingency may introduce a supplementary problem, but the boasted patriotism of the constitutional leader will be depended upon to bring: about an amicable adjustment.

In to the house, where the clear light of heaven shines more brightly it was immediately raised to $19,000. This appropriation was confirmed by the senate committee, which may have had as narrow views of the needs of the bureau as those of the house committee, but saw the futility of them. So the children are to have a

chance. Miss Lathrop is not to be (hampered in her work. Rut it must

have been a great disappointment to the exploiters of child labor to witness this growing menace to one of their greatest economic. Apparently the Influences which have heretofore prevailed are losing their grip. Congress is taking a more intelligent and humane view of tho child question, a question which lies at the very roots of our welfare as a

nation, and the boys and girls of the ' future are going to have even a better : chance than they had before employ. ers found they could double their j profits by employing them.

All the central banks of the European powers are increasing their gold reserve. Ordinarily that means war or the rumor of it.

Former Pres. Taft is quoted as having great hopes for the results of mediation, and we all hope he gets his wish.

achieve greatness, and still others read the Melting Pot. Now that the seriousness of the Mexican situation has become a thing of the past, and the Chicago RecordHerald and Inter-Oean have been combined we may expect to find the usual amount of space devoted to the activities (catastrophies of the stiff -ragets. As it appears to us: Is it mediation or Hesitation? R. D. Do It Now. UNCL.K SAM is offering a substitute for the water wagon of NewYear's fame. Join the Xavv.

Tampico is said to be a breeding spot for yellow fever, smallpox ana malaria. And. we suggest, trouble.

bit:

Apropos of Most Anything. iAV, have you got an extra

two

K. R.

it in his trousers pocket.

J. F. H.

That Seattle pastor who ridicules social workers must feel that they are showing him up.

Those Dutch will move as a coal stove.

be as hard to

. This is the day you select ycur candidates for office.

STATESMEN REAL AND NEAR

BT FRED C KELtXjf.

WASHINGTON. May 18. William S. West, the new senator from

Tin: ikj:i ixtkkvikw. On a number of occasions Bishop John Hazen White, the head of the

Kpiscopal church in Indiana, has been ; Georgia, is a man of great determinabecause of his position, a shining! tlon and persistence. If he were to ru fi. , tv,... i Pet up some fine morning v.ith the

a mess of young onions, and there

It's easy enough to he pleasant.

When the home team wins every day; Rut the man worth while Is the man who can smile When they hit the bottom and stay. OXK person in Indiana has thought out a new joke on the Mexican situation. He suggests that we take the ex out of Mexico and put it in front of Huerta. We had previously thought that the stock of Mexican jokes was exhausted, but acknowledge our mistake. A team in the New Kngland league has a player named Ciarter. He has given the Red Socks good support so far.

i nere s a cnance ior some more j there, too, but think 'em out for j yourself. ' W. V. ,' ROOSEVELT surely is a wonderful

man when he can break into the front page In these stirring times. I.. K. HANK and me had another big argument down at Si's store last night about them there moving pic-

have taken all sorts of pokes at him imd at times seriously disturbed his yerenity and good nature. Special subjects on which the bishop has been misquoted are marriage and politics. He has been represented as

, giving expression to views on the

marriage question which he abhors and as being disloyal In sentiment to the president of the United States, who he regards as his superior olRcer. Recently an alleged interview was sent out from Baltimore i:i which ho is made to criticise the Mexican policy of the administration. The bishop itterly repudiates it. He says he is a citizen, but not a politician, and performs his political duties as such. One of these political duties he believes to be loyalty to the administration in its policies, however much the individual may differ in opinion from the head of the government. The sharks of the press, and it is humiliating to admit that the press has its sharks, are not particular who they prey upon except that their victims shall be of a prominence to make their .faked stories 'valuable through arousing the interest of the public-. It is difficult to forestall or resist attacks of this insidious character and it often happens that the victim must suffer in silence, paying one of the penalties of eminence.

A vi:lcomi: phoimikcy. Justin McCarthy, the Irish playwright, prophecies the passing of the problem play. In fact, he thinks the public has -already had a surfeit of problem plays and of the sex. sociological and detective types of stake productions For the sake of the public and for tho sako of the stage it is hoped that this Is true. Patrons of the theater were Quite curious to see what sex and sociological plays would be like, but encountered their first experiences with as much timidity as curiosity but not enough to overcome the latter. They a.t through whole evenings listening to conversation which they would not have engaged in with each ether and scarcely permitting their eyes to meet. Curiosity satisfied, they continued to listen from a perhaps morbid sense of duty until the stuff besan to pall upon them, and they realized at last that pcmethlng very good had been very hadly overdone. For this reason, if vny of Mr. McCarthy's prophecy may come true. Rut it is a rich

struck. It save them the Midas touch ! u

were no young onions In market, he would get that mess of onions If it

took him a couple of years, and onions would never be out of his mind until he got them. No matter what it is that he starts at he goes the whole distance. When he was a youngster on the farm. AA'est got an idea Into his head that he would never amount to much unless he first acquired a rather elaborate education. He had no money, but he announced that he was going through college and law school and then would round out his equipment by taking a course at some good business college. Friends and klnfolk told him he would overdo the thing and waste a lot of time and that he'd better forget his foolish notions. Rut West shook his head and said that he was going to be educated or know the reason why. By teaching school for a while, he earned enough money to pay his way through college. It was slow, tedious work, because he had to stay out of college every other year to make the money he would spend the following year. Ry the time he had finished college, his brothers who had not paused to acquire a higher education were established in business and prospering.

lAcrjTxHly Keep Out.

The county jail is quarantined on j account rf a report of smallpox.ini same. Manchester (Ky.) Clarion. !

Mediation will be conducted under the Hague rules. If this fails perhaps they will use the Marquis of Queensberry rules. The Chicago council has decided that chickens shall no longer be alio A-ed to run at large on the streets. It might be well applied locally, and applied not only to domestic, but to all "type" of chicken. According to dispatches. Col. Roosevelt has bagged a rare and interesting hird. It will have to ne distinctly peculiar to tie more interesting than Bryan's Rird of Peace. Fear is felt for the success of the onion crop in the southern part of the state. This is a strong argument for the use of other vegetables this summer. C. B. J. 1 Km vol (Ry a Kan). When earth's last ball bat is busted and the Ralls are all shattered inside. AYhen the sharpest shoe spike is

rusted and The youngest of dopeists has died. We shall rest, and goodness we need

it; J,ie down for a season or two Till a Spalding the record shall (Jive us and start up the game anew. And all who were fans shall be happy. They shall sit in a big golden stand. They shall have free peanuts ami cream cones With stogies in either hand. They shall see all the big srtars in action. AVagiHT, Cobb and Matt., And each game will last for a. season and Thev'll ne'er get tired o that. K. R.

"You, too, might be making a lot of money by now," his friends told him, "If you hadn't fooled away your time in college." "Yes." retorted West, "but I started out to get a very thorough education and I never start anything that I don't finish." He then began the study of law and alternated between working and attending law school until he completed that course. Ry that time he was past 30 years of age, and everybody who knew him assumed that at last he was ready to bid farewell to his rchool days. But they were vastly mistaken, for there was still the business college. "Look how old you're getting to be," his brothers said to him more

COST OF JOY IU DI N(;. Fight years ago. lfi persons lost their lives within the limits of Chi-

eago because of automobile accidents.

.ix years ago. IS; five years ago, L'S; four years ago, Vi ; three years ago, 75; two years ago, 98; last year, 13. In four years, the number of non

fatal automobile accidents in Chicago! in sadness than in anger

increased from 09$, in 1910. to 2.019 last year. This i a larger t 1 1 of life and suffering than was exacted on the railroads in that city in that period. Is the same ratio true of the entire country?

Wouldn't it be worth our while to-

know? Ouchtn:t there to b as care-

"I don't fix mv age." replied AVest;

' the Almighty does that. Rut I mapped out a certain course to pursue, and I intend to do what I set out to do if it takes until I'm sixty."

WHAT THE PAPERS SAY

A SAMPIii: CRITICISM. The recent republican convention in Indiana condemned the present national administration in its platform because it has "declared for protection of the rights of every citizen of the United States residing in a foreign land, and has compelled thousands of citizens of the United States residing in Mexico to obtain it by fleeing across the border to avoid the bloody conse-

draw. and a large exodus of Americans followed. It will be seen that the ' policy of 'protecting citizens of the i United states by warning them to get ; out of the danger zone, the policy which republicans condemn for vote-

catching purposes, was reaiiy nineriied from the Taft administration. Wheeling (Ya.) Register.

ouences of 'watchful waiting'.

This is a samnle of the fault-finding

nf iVio ctnnHnattprs who are seeking i t here should be more intelligent m-

piii:yi;tiyi: policy. One i f the results of a survey of Svracuse. X. A., is the conclusion that

tinent to remind them ! ret out criminals and try to secure ch 2, 1912, more than a' their punishment, after offenses are res Wilson took his seat, j reported, but there has been little ef-

to make political capital out of the Mexican' policy of Pres. Wilson. Gov, H. D. Hatfield said something along the same line when in his "keynote" speech at Charleston, he criticized the president for his alleged failure to protect American citizens residing in Mexico. The administration has repeatedly warned American citizens to leave Mexico. Is that the policy which

thA rpnnblira.ns condemn? If it is. it

may be pertinent

that on March

vear before I

the state department of the Taft administration telegraphed the following instructions to Ambassador W ilson, at Mexico City: You are instructed, in your discretion, to inform Americans that the embassy deems it its duty to advise them to withdraw from any particular localities where conditions or prospects of lawlessness so threaten personal safety as to make withdrawal the part of common prudence, and to state that in any such cases consuls may take such charge of abandoned effects as may be possible under the circumstances. Acting upon these instructions. Ambassador AA'ilson advised Americans residing in Chihuahua, Durango. Morelos. and several other states to withShafroth; "I can't do it at all I really cannot." His refusal was so positive that he seemed almost alarmed, lest in a

formation gathered and turned in by the police. The New York bureau of municipal research calls attention to the great loss of oiticiency that is entailed by the failure of police departments to know what they are doing and whether the cities are getting better or worse. It is undeniable that the police authorities work in the dark. They fer-

the business college and started ovit at last to make his fortune, West was 33 years of age. He then started In ard made a half million dollars.

and gold has been poured Into their in 1(H.omotin

laps In flood".

Fortunes have been

by steam?

Dr. Dorniclo da Gama. ambassador to the United States from Rrazil, and

! one of the mediators of the Mexican

. , I mill If i CI t I' ' . . ' ' l I l.r Lflll Of course these figures a rent anv- . ...

mad In A single season bv inneallng r KeeP a Kreat man) important inings maae in a vingte season t appealing . thins, .4i;airi!it th,. automobile. anv to himself savin? never a word to

to the human hope that h way has

been found to save society from it-Mf. But the managers will not be dis-

more than the interstate

more quieklv how to secure safety

first

v -.....,,..-.--.... k.v.- l 141111 t'au ... ....

. , . ; perfectly easy tnat tne negotiations cidents are against continuing to r do .,. . t-.. i 1 j

courted by the prophecy. m fact )lV. P,n ' )V nn .V.r u'ri l'

i i i ;-i iit:i i h k i i l' i mi i i i r- r- i .

Rut if we cared to compile and' Tt was in connection with his marstudy them carefully, we might learn to a, aujlful widow, a member

oi a h canny e 1 ui k itmui , inai Ambassador de Gama made himself a reputation for unusual skill at

You notice how those deaths are in- keeping things quiet. A great many

i persons get married without much

being know n about it in advance. ! that hUt as a rule those persons are not; t members of a diplomatic corps. The folks' Brazilian ambassador is probably the , ; only person in the diplomatic circle I , at AVashington who ever accomplish-! w on- ed so important an event with uch ? complete secrecy. AA'ashlngton cor-i

tains a great number of persons who

they are preparing new horror- for the season to come, horrors to whi-h the morbid will tty ,nd from which the sensitive will shrink only to yield.

and the flow of gold will continue to ' frtiiT Infri th 1 n rw o f the m i n i i- r j in '

,'v.u. ...... ... ...... . . ...v 1 1 . . ,i, (-;)C;jfJj decreasing volume perhaps, but giMr.g j Some 'dav thrv-n he ample warning of ,ts exhaustion sofolks KCl

tnat tne managers may turn to j-ome- i

thing else. Emotional? A'cs. erv likelv. but

educational from a wrong mothe and!

AYhen he received his diploma from 1 weak moment he might be inveigled

into a serious situation. "AA'e aim to treat everybody right."

laughed one of the club members. "I grant that." said Shafroth. "but you know I have a flat rule against playing chess. I wouldn't get into a game of chess for anything." The explanation is that ever since the international chess match which was arranged by Tom Reed between the English house of commons and our house of representatives, and played by cable, with John Shafroth representing out side. Shafroth has avoided playing chess as he would avoid a pestilence. He won the match against the best player in the huse of commons, and as he explains it: "Ahy play again and ruin one's reputation?" (Copyright. 1914. by Fred C. Kelly. All rights reserved.)

commerce ; anybody. When the mediation plan

gets wen under way, one may rct

fort made to make the police depart

monts r.f American cities agencies to t prevent crime. ; In fire protection, in health and . sanitary work, in ecry social activity! the same tendency is to prevent evil conditions. It is an age-old custom that prevention is infinitely more effectual than efforts to cure. It is : time thu careful data be secured and ; compiled bv police departments. '

If one class of offenses becomes more troublesome than it was in the past there is very likely a reason for it. The next step is to find the reason. That is much more sensible than to keep blindly catching offenders and trying to make records for convictions. The big effort all the while should be to correct condlditions that produce crime. Springfield (Ohio) Xews.

Common folks, we

I w ho are run oer.

What will happen then

o mar. v

mean, the

e

a disturbed viewpoint something!

after the order of the education tbei Indiana bst one of its brilliant sons aim to know the gossip of everything! of l."0 gathered at the court house

child gets from the streets, refined of i in the death of John L. Griffiths, innourse and given in more preventable ? :1 -nicral at London. lie tame to form in order that tho mot s rup i-! Indiana a oung man and with his lous rr.av have no urgent excuse for ; el i!it and otatr won distinction

not hearing it.

in the practice of law and in politics.

GIYING CHILimUN A CHAM i:. It - n.s incredible to an inlander; In the sob inn gloom f th com-! that ; boatload of seamen could float' mittee room, where all oiitM-ie inMu- f.r thirteen days in the patli of transrnces are. removed and the ingrowing ' at lantic traffic without being picked; tendency prevails it is c imperatively ! up. but the ad story of the Columbian-

tnat is going n in a social way. Many of these were greatly vexed I with Ambassador da Gama when he returned from Xew York one morning with hi." wife. tntil thin not a ( soul, even among his most intimate associates, had any idea that he was

so much as engaged or that he was : special session and AY

that well acquainted in Xew A'ork. the South Rend Construction

His little coup caused great mortlflca- : nromised to nut on a double

tlon among thos- in the diplomatic men. The council alo arranged to

sim:.kixo uoh tih: pi;opij;. ! If Mayor Bauer, of Lafayette, were! deliberately setting out in search of j trouble, he could hardly have chosen ;

a more promising avenue than that which he selected when he recently

! sent a telegram to Cong. Peterson de

claring that the sentiment in lafayette and vicinity was strongly against the passage of the Hobson prohibition amendment In congress and urging him to work for its defeat. Church organizations at Lafayette, many of which were active in championing the election of Mr. Bauer to the mayoralty, are now said to be seething with Indignation and will probably call upon the major to explain why he has taken such a pronounced stand for the liquor element. He was elected on a citizens' ticket and w;ts supported by a large element of the church-going pople who recarded him as the champion of the forces opposed to the saloon. It is going to be extremely difficult to sympathize with Mayor Bauer if he soon finds himself the storm-center of trouble ;is a result of his presumption in assuming to be the mouthpiece of Lafayette public opinion in this instance. Quite apart from the claim of the temperance forces that his estimate is not accurate and that a vot would show Tipecanot county in favor of tb Hobson resolution, the fact remains that the mayor s jump into the breach was entirely voluntary and wholly unwarranted. There are oc(asi rs when the mayor of i city may

i very properly speak for his people. I Tdn , t- .r. i Inpti n Vir a v a r la

her of citizens and ad sed to pre t. . h not df. their case to the citv authont lthoritv to him to utter a prothrough a committee. This t he d ,- noum.prflpnl for fayette. and may cided to do. The council held a, tm. w. ..... . . t nn thrt riM ln

1. I.ongley of - A, . i,.

Twenty Years Ago

Heroin dern From the Columns i of The Dally Times. j

CANADIAN RESORTS

T!, eprc"ei'-n '!:' -gT-UToI ef A Iljeri. ll.JI .U V 'i .1!1I ...n,etl!;)','N mi -mi plied truthfulIV i!e-i rl'.-es the 'W1M11T1 1 1 I T I - ln,.N ff Ontario tb" rc-ur litrit lying h;t north "f I'n r i n t " ..a tli'e I ra ? ; 1 1 Trunk Kil'u:iv. II, ere it i the very l.',ii!.e f hole oinmuTiities to p'iy .01. 1 MV through inii"Ti""' il-ly t!:1.4 s! tilted ii.itur.il i.v-

tr .iitoI k'o 11 i. triy ordln try work d.- v individual. Mllko'K:. Alv'en.pjin Ivrk. rnneh Ri v -r. tleerglm l'.av. Ti;n ig.mi1. Lake f P.M vo. etc.. are hi'St n h it ...wi ml iT i :itl nnnla

nf hVioul ! v far :iw MV . .Hid

fiMI mljell se-eludt'd fit M :l I W 1 uiMr.e-x to apl"al tr t!i-' lihiuforined. They have N-en ..illed tiie inn.er li. -Hint's f -iiee-fnl pe.pie .Hid many meii f.Hit'ig in i!i; cMte'rv v,ke them out

C. A. McINUTT, Pass. Agt.

X

Pliotu: Boll 93. Home :093

fre gre.t iiil !!"-". ni l hur

evpense. h a ;i ! i-i p s. l.-ovrtor .ieh ;ire it -t u r - .r leaving S.oitli Rend in the -vr!-ing y n are Mt T-'ronjo :, rvt tiiornlr;;: hu i;kek.i Whirf and oth'T . ix'int'J f e;n rk v t f.r tle jirnrr.i',d hnd" th ime ftetno-ni. m. rtn:i'i Trunk service foo all the war.

Kveryone knows whit '... j In tin n it

n- iiiii ii iii'" ii t.i- ..... 1 f dining car. sleeping

)r vervie,. etc. r

Ha i., 'ire. .- nsrt

if the pre gram me. If " I W ITlt M Tell v.-o ;;ti.ri ret n genuine nii:iTi.rj rind r(v-r"i-ti":i. try the Highlands

of MnTari'. Kight hrre in mr .f.-. Ii.ivp h vt-rittde little lihr.ary ef free 1m-V" rp-ci the vii'-ie. t "hi'-h I win ! rnre tlian !ol Tm Mipjd.r any r:e who is vnfh-Meptiy interested to make theip :)nis Ln.un

G. T. Ry. Station. So. Bend

A Skirt Sale

at

NEWMANS

A fortunate purchase of very clever and beautifully made skirts, the like of which never here before at the prices.

Alterations Free of Charge

LOT 1 $7.50 to $8.75 Skirts at $4.95

Our Show Window tells the story best

LOT 2 $5.75 to $6.50 SIdrt3 at $3.95

7Z7 STYLE SHOP Zom WOMEff

Whether you do your own laundry work or whether someone ie doe It and you merely rub out the llht thinxTS." you will w&nt &U the aid

to comfort you can get during the summer xnonthi. u can get these with the Electric Fan and Iron k thev are "the modern comforts for tha-summer laundry. It concentrates the heat on the vorfc without heating- the worker. It is ready at a turntf a switch. There is no better way to appreciatou'hat these will do than to have a demonstration any number of various sizes and styles.

INDIANA, MICHIGAN ELECTRIC CO. 220-227 W. COLFAX AV. RpII 4fi2. Home 5462.

Si

m

f

1 1

1 Mr. Real Estate Purchaser:

You are going to take somebody's word for the title to the property you buv. Why not require the Title to be guaranteed. You will then have sioo,ooo.0o between you and trouble with a bad title.

Indiana Title and Loan Company

TITLE BUILDING

COR. MAIN AND CENTER STS.

Unemployed men to the number

corntr and lemarnled v(rk or rden Lister, one of the city contractors. The men were addre.c5id l-y a num-

shift f

WaTie

yet who felt that they had reputations , make some puldir improvements

Mirirs proves it is possible.

of thf "hoV" ,r pet hap it 11 ls rj"y to reaa Ina Berlin news-j Two menU.ers or a ahini;ton m. e. Dzman. Mrs. R. T. Miller. Mrs. i 1 n'r. ' ' l i t -1 n t ; r - t,. a ' V&?er that Mayor Harrison is out of ' chess club stopped Sen. Shafroth. of i Munroe. Miss Bradley. Miss Alice d m.i. .AALAntUr v u,e a . rhica.. whn the ! Colorado, on the street one afternoon ; Teichf and Dr. Charles Stoltz con-, rc.ion.tt rr.rnmittee for illustra- tunp sltn n4ii -mcago nen ",e recently and invited him to drop , tributed to the program.

t-ay to acquiif distorted ie. Take, fr.r example, our council com

mittee of th: "hol ". or pethap it

woul

congrc

ton. The ai.i.rot.riAtion.s mnimitiM Harrison family nas ieen the nis ' around to their club rooms for

fr instance. To this commits nf iu thal cily for tvs generations, j informal little series at chess

xnv MPUP TIRrO UfnMT AnC

to n I IVDVVO" I lrIC.O VVMIil I HUO

to sustain as professional crossips. To sive the unemployed work.

thi dy they wonder how he man- The Wrrth club closed its third ; azed it. -year with a social evening at the. home f Mrs. Allen Munroe. Mr, j

v

Sanitation is More Beneficial Than Drugs, on th" same principle that pr ver.tion : better than cur Therfor Kt rid of druss and medicines and have your home fitted with sanitary plumMnr. Spring U a cood time to make the chanir. n at to ready for Summer' heat THOS. WILLIAMS 122 K. JITFFin?ON HL,VI. FVU C26. Home

an' Mli O i? ravxie ha? returned to

i St. Mary's after a tk's vacation. renli'

Thursday Girls Day Ellsworth's

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