South Bend News-Times, Volume 31, Number 241, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 22 August 1914 — Page 4

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s.vrmn.w. .rr.rsT 22, ii 1 THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH BEXD NEWS-TIMES THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY. 110 Vt Cotn Av-niiP. .-'outh nnd. Indiana Entered a record c!a-r matter at t h I'ostoJIlcr at .South lhn.1, Indian!

hy c.viiiiinn. Dally nr.d Sunday !n advance, per I).ily and Sunday by the -eek. . . 12c year $.-.f0 lat!;-. -Ingle oj.y 20 Sunday, single copv Cc liV MAIL. rcJl-r and S;un!ay In advan:e, per year J 4.00 PcUy, In advance, per year i 3.00

If your usiAt arrears In the telephone Oir-ct( ry you can telephone rour r ant "ad" to The.W.vs-Tirr.ea ol?1co and a bill will be mailed after Ita Insertion. Honw phono 11 II Hell phone 2100.

conk. :.c.iienzi:; Vcrcljk-n Advertisin g Avenue, Ncv. York. 125 Fifth SOfTH !u:NI. IM)I T!tO( I'.IJ.S not w.wrr.n. ."-f! Appl;, " is the ;a lb' Mat'- depart enoaeh ti ou i-h y of "No 1' rou'.jb ari a.:ng :it er.t. Uc hav 'ir wn to fully engage our ;tttn.on. "jr s v 1 1 i i ul ri s' ;ir.d aul v.'ill contiLue ( !tow out t th unfortunate, but .e are steering ( W ar of r -omplh .-ation. We h;e told Klti;h' that if we can i'i anything to a ist it i.i obtaining a j .Veaeeful mlution o f its proi.u .n.-; to ; . . . t V-ornrr.and us. Huro e .Kenned nun i hanks. That rl:- tl the in Merit ;uul could take exie'itions. Our, liohody neutrality, our honor and our virtue ! sere preserved and our Rood intent as manifested. That is as far as we an go. We cannot offer 'advice to me nation as opposed to another nor o on" nation p'ae. d between the tires f two others, t'hina should undertand that we are not in position to hell her what to do. She must takf V-aro of her own troubh s. If the anagonists lighting over territory taken I from China invites US to a conference; that is another matter. As between ' combatants we could act. hut as heiween one romhatant ami an outsider 1 to.t u r.r.,,,,,,1 .jii.-i. -,r h n,i('ht fe.ir to tread rin' JIurope-in nations the t'nited I States must tread a straight and nar,,i, w ...... r...t iriri..t.n.i-

ent in all thinKs. neutral in nothing." j carr' Just al)OUt PO much of an overtw .ost reverse it as to neutral but. ! Ioa1 a"d no more beyond that limit.

' w - -- - - f by all the powers, preserve our independence. We do not want a row with anybody and will do everything; in our power to avoid it. Xor do we beliee th.ii any of the foolish nations now enzai;ed in war want trouble with us. They need us as commissariats, and yet the t'nited States could not forg"t its neutrality without gjetting; a slap. l'rovidence must Kuide us in relations with other nations. We our ln'1 t help ourselves to the debris of war in all legitimate ways, hut we must no, presume to pass any of it to the neighbors. None of the advantages we may uain by the producing countries of Kurope forsaking the path of peace can be Jenied us. and, though it miht appear selfish, this is the prrpose to which we must devote ours Ives. stopping tiii: i. i:ivs. Abuses of the printing and franking privileges of the general government are so obvious that congress should not hesitate to pass Kep. Barnhart's reform bill or some modification of it. The waste baskets of the country bear witness to the useless , expenditure of public funds in this department of government. Itcp. Barnhait speaks advisedly of conditions in tiie government printing; cilice in support of his bill. As a newspaper man and the former owner of a printir.1-, ottice his inspection of affairs in the department of printing was intelligently conducted, and as a member of congress he is a daily witness to the waste going on under the authority of law and precedent. Helving on his capacity for fairly stating the conditions and tluir own knowlnlue of the ;.:cts he presents other 1 members of congress will have the confidence to vote for a bill which infring.es on nobody's rights, curtails no one's legitimate privileges and i IS . solely intended to cut off useless xpen.e. We may anticipate, however, that there will be opposition to the bill criKiriMtm; in the government printing ottice ivhere hundreds of employes more thai the government needs are drawing salaries for doing work that j is worse than usel.-ss. Thee surplus j salary drawers may be expected to ; appeal to the representatives from j their ditrbts f.r protection and to brirg intluen. e to bear from back : home to keep them in their places. ' Thus an element of politics will be injected into the ficht on the bill. It ie to be hoped, however, that the ppirit of business economy which pervades the present admim-ir at ;.n. will i'tcvail and that Kep. P.arnharfs bill Of some effective mod iiii at ioji of it may become l b'w. om:.vi;.m: i:m.iiaii:.t Some time ao tli'1 M-ri.tr ! wa ca u g: en!; .11 to be introduced m con- t l ,,f I j r.-d i ing to a v car the pen. ut :i i n ;n ! ;r le-jinur . but it arm . sh "aid b d. At a i;..t :.- o:j c i; s n t. :n p i:.,:nt Cms bill i r;-:ht iv.. In a ear a raw ro r :.t v an b n-ade o-r into an etticient "liMii-li r.- .-vso'i!d then return to c life, lie u o.ild still be a train, d res.' in Ci -f u e '. vil' rv e j ! In t de t. -a litle r.ot n. r (n.-t of our military machim : r. . lic it would come preify effect iv r-s c!o e ii mm; iiu in. ; us t bv :e, should v sud- j denly have to face a hi-: war. it wnuM permit the training of : - tim.s as many m n in soldiery as we can n w train under :ive-var enlistments. The lull also provides that as each man shall receive an honoraMe iischtroe from the. army he will agrte

& woodman lterre? entatives. AdvertUln? Buildln?, Chicago

ANA. AlCilsT 22. Kill. to k-M had'irn rters informed of his future whereahouts, so that he can " .ont for ouiekly if needed. ur near .-n ap" from haing to inv;uje Mexico, .mi swiftly followed by the upMnro in Kurope, need not make os warlike, l;.t it should teach us to he readv. (;n;ssiN(; at tin: waii's i.i:;tii. An enthusiastic American of German hirth. Just home from a isit to the fatherl:nd, was so impressed hy tne ize an,l readiness of the German military machine that he predicted the kaiser's army would he In Paris and the allies suing for peace within 10 days. Iord Kitchener, a more experienced authority, on the other hand, is quoted as having: douhted that the end would corne within 18 months. One neutral 'lllf limit at e y?ur. '"-.. each. Take your choice. T... I. !..! . lJl '"fit- one nooouy can kci aw; - fr,,m- n its Present scale the War is posting, directly, not far from .t ou. .uu Hiu.irtUj no one knows how much more I'ifty millions a day for 20 days makes a billion, and for a hundred days makes a tfreat deal more than any other war ever cost. The world's crippled productive machinery can productive something must give way. The limit is probably higher than most of us realize; but we can't see how it could possibly carry such a strain much longer than a year, if, indeed, it could bear it that long. Maeterlinck, marooned in Normamryi is eager to get back to Helgium and enlist in the home guards, but as he is helping the women and children with the harvest he is probably doing the most good where he is. Fortunately Canada has few Pacific coast towns where the reported experience of Prince Rupert may be repeated. Otherwise Canada is about as secure from disturbance as the Cnited States. This man H. G. Wells is asking a great ileal of the United States. lie says it rests with this country to secure the permanent peace of the world. No more diuicult task was ever assigned. The treasury department is receiving advices from all parts of the country indicating a return of business to normal conditions. The good old V S. A. is sailing on an even keel. Brussels is said to be of no military value to the Germans, but its occupancy by a hostile army must have an adverse moral effect and be productive of hardships and heavy loss. Great Britain has coopered the suuar product in Jamaica by forbidding its exportation. With the canning season about over we are not so much worried. Kich tourists iu Kurope compelled to live on a dollar a day may gain a clearer comprehension of how the poor are sympathie living and broaden their Lillian Russell's daughter having eloped with a Pittsburgher the fair Lillian might tell us how the girl expects to preserve her complexion in Pittsburgh. Holland has the prospect of belnj? reduced to a rice diet by the exhaustion of the wheat supply. Thus do the innocent suffer for the sin of the guilty. A Chicago shoe manufacturer has set a patriotic example by refusing to export shoes to Kurope until the demands of his own country are met. It should be sufficient to know thai armies are fighting in Kurope without knowing th horrible details, but huI man natui - isn't built that way. Austrian outrages in Bohemia do not tend to elevate the civilized character of the war in Europe. This should nt le a war of extermination. Huerta. marooned in London, is see-i!i-the smhis of the city, but thev are tame to w hat he might have seen had he remained in 'Mexico. J There is nothing so wild as rumor r.o;- so tame as a Belgian hare, yet rumor may come true and the Belgian I. are will fight. Carrr.na has possession of the Mexican, irovernment. but. as Goldhere would say. "What is he gonna to to with it"? The hammer the Germans are using on BeUium sounded like the one orant used at Kiehmond. The preliminaries in the European Ftnmgle h ive made a neat little war of themselves. China has our sympathy, but we are not giving advice in international affairs.

SEVEN MINUTE SERMON

ON THE GOLDEN TEXT 11Y OLIt OWN" PKIIACIIKIl beoii: The We!lliig I'en.t. .Matt. 2:1:1-11. Golden Text: O Jerusalem, (hat killctii the prophets and Moneth tliem that art sent unto lier! How often would I hate pithortMl thy children togetluT. on us a lion gathered lic-r ovmi Iiol under lier ing, and e would not! Luke 13:31. CH JUSTS INVITATION AND ITS ItKJKCTIOX. 1. Tho Jews rejected Christ's sra-clou.-Invitation. The greatest tragedy in the world's history is the crucifixion of Jesus Christ, and the greatest blunder ever made by any nation was vviien the Jews rejected him. The teaching which states that the rejection of Jeslus was recording to the original plans of God, seems to me to be quite contrary to the truth. Jesus would never have uttered the pathetic words of the text, and have suffered the great grief of which these yearning words were born if the Jews ir. rejecting him were carrying out the plan of his heavenly Father. But knowing that the Jews could have accepted him, and that through their wickedness they were cruelly rejecting him, is what grieved his loving heart and made him utter this heart rending cry. Jesus had done his best to win them, to convince them that he was their friend, the long looked for Messiah, and that he had come as their deliverer from sin, but they would not listen to his council nor accept of his offered friendship. If the leaders of the Jews had been truly good men and the priests were what they ought to have been they would have gladly received Jesus, but Instead of this they were bad men and as Peter states they, "by wicked hands have crucified and slain" him. 2. Hie rejection of Jesus Is always disastrous. If the many who are living in sin through rejecting Jesus, only knew what a blunder they are making and realized its dire results, they would Immediately turn from their wicked ways and accept of Christ at his loving offer. The trouble is there is such a fascination and delusion in living in sin, that men cry peace, peace, when there is no peace. They think they are well fed while they are starving, that they are clothed when they are naked, that they are in health when they are stricken with a dreadful malady. If you will but convince yourselves of the facts, and of the disastrous consequence of rejecting Christ you will, while T speak, accept him. and it will be to the joy and gladness of your soul. The rejection of Jesus means the rejection of all that is noble and good: it means trading gold for dross, missing the substance and grasping at the shadow of life. Great peace have they who love Jesus Christ and lasting misery have they who turn their back upon hinv It Is therefore the highest wisdom to accept of Christ. You need to give up only the things that are harmful in any event, and if you will do this, and surrender to Jesus, it will be the happiest day of your life. 3. Christs hoart still yoarns over hi liners. Whoever depicts God our heavenlj' Father, or Jesus our Saviour, as unloving, or stern, or unjust, or demanding the impossible, or being unsympathetic, are greatly mis leading those who believe their words. The best explanation of God ever given are in the words of scripture. "God is love", and this too is .a definition, of the character of Jesus, for he so loved sinners that he gave his life that they may not perish but receive everlasting life. The love of Jesus is frequently compared to a mother's love, but while a mother's love is the purest and noblest of all human love, it does not begin to compare with the strength or purity of the love of Jesus for sinners. Think of his matchless words which are echoing down the centuries and which is heard in every sinner's heart, "Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and T will give you rest. Take my yoke upon you. and learn of me; for I am meek and lowly in heart: and ye shall find rest unto your soul. For my yoke is easy, and my burden Is light." 1. Come to Jesus. There are no words in the English language fraught with so much Importance as the words. "Come to Jesus". We may paraphrase them as come to the light: come to happiness: enter into peace and Joy: take possession of tho vast estate which has been bequeathed to you. quit your sins and take on the holiness of Christ: give up your failures and enter into life long success. In fact come to Jesus Is an invitation to everything that Is good. The acceptance of this Invitation stands for the eternal friendship of God and tho eternal welfare of your soul in heaven. The ncreptanc of this invitation Is all important because the time find the opportunity for acceptance are fast passing away. Behold now is the accepted time, and today is the day of salvation. Delays are always dangerous, and he who hesitates is Kf"rally lost even to human or temporal opportunities. The business maxim "Do it now", is just the thing to do in accepting this advice to come to Jesus. I beg of you whether you are youns or oil, or rich or poor, great sinner, or little sinner, that you now accept of the loving invitation to Jesus your Saviour, "Corne unto me all e that labor and are heavy laden and I w lil give you rest. wiiKiti: sm: was at. Margaret How does your friend Mrs. Brown stand on the suffrage 'question ? Anna She's doing picket duty. Margaret Doing picket duty ; v hat. for suffrage? Ann Oh. no: she's on the fence. Christian Register. When a Chinese iadv approaches a rnuddy place, sh boy drops on hi he beckons a boy. The s hands and knees in the mud. and th lady uses him as a stepping stone, for which services she gives him a small coin. A German profef.ro r has Invented a process of silver-pi vting dead bodies, so as to convert them into metallic images of the individuals as they were when in life. Twenty-four driving wheels, each r:i inches in diameter, are part of a locomotive recently completed at Philadelphia, the most powerful yet built. A New York youth has gone into the business of furnishing- his blood for transfusion purposes, and at $30 a quart. He has earned 5120 in the last four months. Florida and Georgia together contributed 97 per cent, of the quantity and value of the fuller's earth marketed In 1913.

THE

COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

SIX MONTHS WITH POLTS AND iiiii.osoiiii:ks. I breathed a mjiii: into the air, It fell to tlie eartli. I know not where; I'or who has sight so keen ami strong That It can follow the flight of song? Ixmgfcllow. Do not sjoak lightly; your wort Is are .your omi. Do not say, this is of little hiiortanco: no one can hold my tongue for mo: words aro not to le cast away. Kvcry word finds Its answer: eery gtKxl deed has Its rccoinien.se. Chinese Maxims. DON'T THAT T.I'AT TILH DUTCH? There's a slaughter In Kurope from Russia to France. For the Breat God of war, has awoke from his trance; He's decreed that the nations shall pil lage ana prance, tell me, don't that beat the Dutch? Now The Germans are marching with force on to Brussels; We assume on arrival they'll pull off the tussels; While the business of Kurope to America hustles Now tell me, don't that beat the Dutch? Now Japan and poor Russia together will pull. While the French and the Belgians will be there in full; And add to these nations the strength of John Bull, Now tell me, don't that beat the Dutch? K. N. C. OLD settlers are not so scarce in South Bend. Passing the Oliver hotel corner yesterday afternoon we observed "Bunty" Gorsuch. Hank Boys and Walt Derr standing in a group while Martin Cole occupied a chair near by. There was only one chair or there would have been more chairs occupied. It took us back to the old South Bend to ee these well preserved relics of the past. THE spectacle of the heathen Chinee imploring the christian nations of

ACTUAL FIGHTING IN EUROPE How It Looks to An American

BY H. P. 1U KTOX. LONDON. Aug. 22. What is the actual lighting like in the very heart of tho great European war? "What is there to be seen in the villages, along the roads, in the fields? How do the people in the homes, in the streets, in the country places take it? I am just a plain American citizen who has never seen war! I have always lived in the peace of Cleveland, O., mostl:', and in Chicago and NewYork. Could I not go to this scene of horror and devastation and tell the folks at home, my country people, something definite, something of human interest, something that would interest them more than the dull, heavy mass of cable dispatches about lighting, skirmishes, troop movements, and the like? Could I. who had always lived where there was peace, not tell them just how terrible this w;ir is? 1 said I'd try. (iocs Over to Belgium to See. So I went to Belgium and now I am Just back in London tu cable exactly what I saw. In performing my task I succeeded In penetrating to within a dozen miles of Liege, to a point where the sky was alight with lire, the air acrid with powder and the whole arch of the heavens reverberating with the thunderclap of cannoti. It had been easy to reach Brussels. I sailed from Folkestone. England, to Ostend, the famous resort on the Belgian coast. The trip to Brussels through the marshlands was uneventful, the train but ten nlinutes late. But in Brussels I began to notice the first active signs of war raging so terribly from Liege westward. The great Palace hotel at Brussels had already been turned into an immense hospital and big Bed Cross srigns were painted in every window. I wo:- at once sent to the bureau of ! the Gendarmerie, on Boulevard Water loo, to declare myself, and there I requested a pass to Liege. "How shall 1 get to the front?" T asked a sergeant. "Automobiles are fiftv dollars a day." "The trains are still running," he laughed. "The Germans can't hurt us; Belgium is still tho greatest summer resort In the world!" Setting Hrc to TTielr Own Wheat. .'o I bought a second-class ticket to Iouvain, fifteen miles away, then still ! tho sat of the Belgian army. The ride to Lou vain began to tell me how very terrible this European war is .going to be. Everywhere 1 saw farmers setting fire to their ripening wheat fiields so the fated Germans could get no food could cet not even j a dry kernel of hunger-satisfying wheat. Along the roads motors tuieu witn armed soldiers were pa-ssing this way and that, and armed messengers on bicycles rushed back and forth t the forts between Brussels and Louvaln. with dispatches from the government to the army. Belgian, French and English flags decorated all houses, and groups of Belgian peasants stood at every corner discussing "the terrible war". Just outside Louvain the train suddenly came to a standstill and a squad of Belgian cavalry came along guarding several Uhlans, German cavalrymen, who were laughing and joking with their captors while cigarets hung impudently from their lips. The Uhlan's uniform is a dusty green so that they melt into the landscape and are bad targets for the en emy. Gay Soldiers. Playimx Children. At Louvain the streets were fairly choked with soldiers. They marched along the sidewalks, drank before the cafes, played checkers on the curbs or dashed about in automobiles, but everywhere children were running and playing as usual, and pretty milliners stood in doorways waiting for som one to buy the hats they had intended to sell to the American tourists this summer. In front of the hotel De Yille, which the Belgians had taken over as an army barracks, stood ten stacks cf rifles, fifteen feet high, and in the quaint courtyard were two ureat military field wagons which were being personally guarded by Belgian oiticers.

LTING POT

J J the world to be spared from the com- ; plications and horrors of war will go . down In historv as the most startling i anomaly of the 20th century. Don't Bo I!ar.-1 Jo-h. Sir: Where ignorance is self-conec.t 'tis follv to inform. JOSH. MOVING the previous question we i are trying to think to what good pur-j pose Mr. Carnegie's well known peace! fund can be put. j A CHICAGO firm advertises that it j is compelled to withdraw all prices oa brushes as its supply of bristles has ! been cut off. Considering the price of meats it should be no trouble to rrct all tho bristles they want right in Chicago. A Symphony In Gastronomies. (Cor. Burr Oak Acorn.) Next Saturday is the time set for the Fennell reunion at Honey lake and if weather permits there will be something doiig. Good athletic sport'i are on the program. There will also be re citations on fried chicken, a quartet on sandwiches and lemonade, and finally the whole congregation will join in on the Ice cream. SPEAKING of chicken they do say that when Dick Genge sits down to a mess of it he takes off the limit. For early morning callings she wora her lightest gown; But she couldn't return home until tho sun went down. H. S. F. TCcvivaJ In ComJo Opera. (Cor. Battlo Creek Journal.) A largo number of broilers have been marketed from this section during the past week. IF we were not so infernally modes we might speak of the correspondent who signs herself as "One who turns to the Melting Pot as a hungry man turns to a well filled table." Influence of the War on Orthography. (Kalamazoo Telegraph-Press. ) There Is a lot of watchful waiting; Just now, but it is for news of the big batjtlo that seems inevitable. Wo serve meat for the mental, Where others serve rice; And no war in Europe Can boost up the price. C. N. F. These wagons were filled with valuable records ready to fly north to the capital or Antwerp on an instant's notice. While waiting for my passport to be examined before proceeding to Tirlemont, I noticed a black speck in the sky. It slowly grew into a giant aeroplane. There was a general rush into the streets and cries: "Cest un aeroplane allemand!" (It is a German aeroplane.) Then followed a subdued hush as the winged cruiser hung over the citj" hall. But the expected bomb did not fall, and soon checker games wero resumed and milliners came back to the doorways smiling, but still doubtful smiles, and with many a pretty, anxious peek upward. The cafes alone were doing -business? in Louvain. They were crowded and cries, "Un grand bock" (a big beer), filled the air and the fumes of liquor hung heavily. Everywhere the less seriously wounded Belgian soldiers lay, awaiting aid. The train for Tirlemont. filled with these soldiers, was held five minutes? while a body of boy scouts passed the water to them. Scouts Serve Wounded Soldiers. The boy scouts (Belgian pronunciation "scots") range from one end of the train to the other, for every wounded soldier wants all the water he can get. At tho front they got only two drinks daily. At the. front, from Tirlemont on. I realized T was truly in the heart of the most embattled country the world ha.s seen. Devastation is on every hand. Most of this devastation is Belgium was carefully prepared by the Belgians themselves. This country is all flat, and each wood where the Germans might take refuge In future? charges was cut down. I saw soldiers? everywhere burning underbrush that might servo. the Germans ns bulwarks. It was sickening1 to see the beautiful golden grain, all ready for the reaper, going down before the flames. Deep trencher, filled with boughs? and covered lightly with dirt, were being prepared as traps. Autos Stained With Blood. Bridges were being undermined to fall when the weight of the German troops came upon them. The roads here swarmed with commandeered automobiles. I saw satinlined limousines", stained with Mood, as often as little Fords. Each contained a contingent of fresh soldiers rushing to the front or of wounded being brought back, each always guarded by carbineers standing There were scores upon scores of captured German Uhlans ;n evidence at this point and they always seemec". very gay, unless badly wounded. Their tents, thatched with straw, aro everywhere. The fields every which way I look are one series of trenches thrown v.p as defenses against the enemy. Trec.q are thrown across roads, and barb wire entanglements reach across the land for miles. One whole stretch of enchanter! woo, is tilled with horrible traps and barbs that will strike back Teutonic invasion. But the most noticeable thing is tho gaiety. The Belgian troops hive the perfect confidence in their prowess. All sorts of messages are chalked on trains and houses. The favorite one is "A Berlin'." meaning "On to Berlin." An equally popular menage, because it is chalked everywhere, is: "The kaisrr has mobilized God, but he can't make Him march!" From Iwnden to Waremme the train scarcely moved, and here we found that the Germtn outposts were only a half hour ahead of us. Indeed, they had once taken the town Waremme, but lost it back to Belgium. Cook I Aery Meal to Music of Cannon. The peasants were .main in their homes peacefully cooking the evening! meal as though a deafenng connonade were a common thing. So I tool: heart tnvsplf nn.l went into the c:f. IJon O'or for sunner. I There I met the burgomaster of Liege, himself on parole fro mthe Germans. I tried to draw him into conversation, but he was too sad. "I cannot speak," he taid, "it is too

sad. My citizens are hems harassed by the Germans. It is terrible! But we shall have revenue." and he smiled a little. "The Knelish will help us now. When they get here we shall seel" As the train started back to Brussels and safety, nitrht came on and the sky in the caM glowed with the German eampfires. But through the air. mixing with revelry, were Belgian Yoir-es- sinking" the national hymn! Utaff cable dispatch, copyright. 1314, by tho Newspaper Knterprise association.)

TWENTY YEARS AGO Reminders From tho Columns of The Daily Times. Joseph Livingston, of Moses. S. and J. Livingston, started a branch clothing house in St. Joseph. Miss Nellie Stanfield is visiting Miss Misier in Edwardsburg. G. M. Fountain of the New Carlisle Gazette and fajvtlly aro visiting South Bend friends. Miss Paulino Ambos and Miss Anna I'reeli of the Crfissman store begin their vacations today. Airs. E. E. Carr and son are vislttng in Buchanan. Mr. and Mrs. DoWltt Sedgwick and son returne-d from Macatawa. Mr. and Mrs. E. S. Reynolds returned from a tour of Canada. There is only one automobile factor.v in Ireland; it employs 110 persons. For Hent

many houses not wirecl. anirj few that aro wired. Houses wired are much easier aold or rented than those not wired. Peoplo cf today are demanding modern convenience which can not bo had with a house not wired for Elcctris

n

Service. What class is your house in?

Our special wiring prices low-cost of fixtures and the one year time we give you to pay, is an opportunity you cannot afford to miss. Calbon cither phone for information. Out representative will gladly call day or evening and explain proposition, prices and show you fixtures. The "Do it Electrically age is here "Do it now." ,-; Indiana & Michigan Electric Company 220-222 W. COLFAX AV. Home 5462. Bell-462.

JL 0 o o o c o o o o o o 0o o o o o o o o o o o ois brewed the most

TTTT o ihl0)SlF

and bottled up-to-date .i

and bottl enes m It's the home.

South Bend Brewing Association Servants to Lovers of Good Beer Both Phones.

THE LONG, HOT, WEARY DAY is sure to have a pleasant and re"freshlng close for those who have awaiting them at home that luxury which only a properly appointed bath room can give. And modern Sanitary Plumbing has placed them at the disposal of rich and poor alike, for few purses nowadays are so limited as not to be able to afforrt what was a few years ago an almost priceless luxury. If you desire to know all about th nn-to-date bath and for what h. moderate sum they can be installed, call up the Real Sanitary Plumbers, Thomas Williams 122 i:. JelTcrson. Homo 5994. Rell 62G. ZS1

SPECIALIST Successor to United Doctors. Nervous and Chronic Diseases of Men and Women. ROOM 12, TOEPP BLDC Office Hours 9 to 12 A. M.t 2 to 5 P. Yi.; 7 to S P. M., and 10 to 12 A. M. Sunday.

I

FAMILY FIGHT IS FATAL John Hollis, i Former IuitlUc Po. liooman H KilPM. LOFISVILLE. K. Aug. John Mollis, a former policeman, la dead. and his brother-in-law. Dennis Atkins, suffered from serinus injuries Friday as a result of a family fignt. Hollis was knocked down and trampled to death. Atkins was arrested and charped with murder and Mr. MacKie Hollls and Mrs. L!z7.ie Shannon were charged with he ins? nccessorics to the murder.

REJECT CRIMINAL CLAUSE IN ANTI-TRUST BILL WASHINGTON. Aug. 2. By a tie vote of i'6 to 2'. the senate today rejected the Kenyon amendment to the Clayton nnti-trust bill, making criminally llabl oiHcera and directors nf common carriers "who intentionally or negligently suffer" funds of th corporation to bJ cmberrled or misapplied. MUNCIE. Women iLnd girls of the Jackson St. Christian church Biblrt school took prominent art In tho athletic events staged at the ichool pJcnic today. Thero was a ladles' eyy race, a fifty-yard rocs for girls, another fifty-yarj. race for women and a throwing1 contest opea only to tho feminine picnickers. A large number of American saddles havo been imported by Oreeco fur use In Its army. or Sale o o o o o o o o o o o o o 5 0 0 o 0 o o ? o o o 0 o o in one of breweries Id. tne wor er for Your -I t-.--:ir till