South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 90, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 31 March 1915 — Page 8
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vi:ixi:si.y, MAiini si, iois. THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMEa
SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES THL: MiWS-TIMES PRINTING CO., PUBLISHERS. j:r vi:st c(,r:ix av.
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AOI !li;i: REPUBLICAN PRECE- one person that will Parn something HL I. I about a given store hy word of mouth, Oar cont enti-Mi that no sir. T nis-a hundred learn about it through tdon or eomrni n-n f w hb h th. Imli- j " u spape r notie.s. an;. de raocraey mi-ht b- guilty, mild j The advertising columns of a nev.s-pcs.-ibly exist, f . . r whb h a rc puM.ean I l-ap r are read jti.-t as- attentively as precedent fin not 1 found, has ag.iin'any sensation that may appear in th be II LOhlirim i. The l it t of th :; j liews rnluiin:Re-'.: d sins, of vhi h t!o i iu ili .in.- j Tiu- rt-sults f thr two ioIii.-s nre lu'. e in ii n . : i nic to ina'.o- bLUfh cap- I ( bvious. In one ca-e a ;n( reliant iUtl. uher fortli in the naturo of j dr;Ks 'Poitr, with only :t small jart f criticism of the stat" admirii-: t ation J ttw comniuiiity knowing anything
for ita f ill nooP- M.tf b 1 ", for ad- j about what is hapjx-nin in his sU re. j Viir.c.!;i:c!ib from county treasurers, on j In tin th( r case, practically eery-; the stu't' ta and 1 ;; .1 n t i nst 1 1 u- j on knows when that merchant has j tier..; f'.iid. :ie would ih;nk it -. ere M'eeia! i'arains, and wliat can !e j ora thin'-r -ry new th.at had hap-j done in his .-tore at any uiven time, j rcntd; that i. . that it wa- row u hen!1 'an there be the Past question In j
6Uch caiN b'-aii bein is . t; -d tindei- ; which kind of merchant et.s the busiGov. Tiion. as K. Mais'nall, l ilt a reply j n '. that has b, n hamkd out b State i
Tr as. i;oir. l;ittb r, t -1 1 a differ-j CUt tab-. Th- .- late treaMirer -;i'es his I I
r ply in to nature .f a r quested b t- j mu h wh-at is stored away in Kussia t r to Carl .1. Weber, of Ft. Wayne, : but there is doubtless enough t( send and souk- of the more salient points' the prior in America down, nm-c the ere, indeed, ii.ter stin. ; Iardanelles are open. Quotim: s! a i.- r-aords. prese;:f in the J That the allies ar- really dete-rm-trr-. U ' r's oit'a-e. ii appears that in j ined to force th" 1 urdanclles is now fact tb adan-e calls for tax . n OIa r.'llt for v.e if oonlv- tlin-nt
, , . . i rii a t -!.. l..t tr.it.r jj.-.twit ,o ...ols o.o.o,-
ly stoce is'.:, lepui. Means anl demo- ! battleships. Talk of the defences becrats alike ind:'!;;itm in them, only ; inu impr Knable is idle. The Fnulisii-r.t-uv nr. til b.. Ma is ball's nd minis-I French lleet is ojnjs' through, eventration, a 1 e tiny le.;ali-d. The foi- ! uall, as surely as the sun ris s. The
lo'..ini; 1. ;!. ( ts 5h' am. tints realized ' close, relations between the Dardal.y th- thr i publican administra- J nelles ami the price of wheat has boon
torn-: pi- diimr the Ala. r.-h.a.q regime, ind everyone f them in idation of t-iate l.iw, i. in literal oases of temporary misappropriation. Follow it: e.;ii;:: Io. Mount's administration. I 1 tool, adanc' eahs on the eoanty treasurrs brought r turns a-cgregatiiiL- .'. 1 s, y s.'. ... bun.Mu' (bo. Durbin's alministratiot;. 1 P o l - i :mi t. the aggregate returns weie . .','2, 7 :;'...",.". During C. llanly's administration. r.o.'.-l ie v. they v rc 51.Since l'.'es each h'ishsture has em-j powered the state- board of finance to
iiiaUe advance calls ui county trcas-jtion of the last crop out. It will be nrers. covering the period for which rushed to market at the very earliest rucli legislature makes its nppropria- moment for another big crop is torntions. It m rely mpowors ;hc trcas-Jing on. The war will probably not orer of state to draw on the county j cause a lo per cent decrease, if any at treasurers for the state money in their ! all, in Russia's wheat acreage. Amer-
hand-', as Pa- need state the Us. . instead of allowing it to lie idle in tin bank accounts of the counties until June or November. This id exactly as it should be. We would not een presume to criticise the republican governors, .Mount.
Durbin ami Ilanly. for the enormous j do worse than make Col. Charles Area lis made by ih m, hut for the pros-jthur Carlisle its candidate for gover1 r.t republican hypocrisy in seeking to j nor in iir,. South Rend, most surely l.'--mir.h C,..s. Marshall and Ralston j would welcome such a nomination. He with sunt" sort of scandal, for follow- 'is of the sort of man that the lepu'o-tn-ueh a v ell-rstablisho.l though il-J lican party needs, furthermore, to cele .l pr celcnt after tirst having it! ment the party tg ther. While a re-lo-rali d. Monthly remittances hy , jniblican he has always been considiho ciMinty treasurers. rath r tlinn j ( nilo of the progressive movement, Foini-anp.ual settlements, in fact, is j and it was he who. perhaps more than what the law should be. without the j any other one person, served so well rice ssitv of any special calls. : last roar to encourage lots of bull
It would he a spiendid tribute to the intelligence of the people of Indiana
if the republicans would hut cease j still he has been faithful. After presuming that no such intelligence j being defeated for the nomination at 'xlsts. True, the public, as a rub- is j the republican convention in 1112, he thert memeried. and it would be com- eame back homer and became the reparativ'Iy asy to mislead it were it j publican goat in a race for congress, not ' ..v-uble now and then for cither anl then took up the work of reunit1
interested r right-minded individuals . prone to di.lv e into tli' past, to run across the truth and "xpos-a it. The republican party has boon guilty of j too much rottenness in Indiana to justify it in scandalizing any other party, r.te when the purpose is to oneoar- j si go luiKrllliii:. .i 01 u: t. 1 : . io- i.i.utor of ( ills for advancements of tax inopcvs is nlo an instance, thouuh in I this ease, it go s ev.-n farther and -o ks to make scandal out of something that is no longer scandalous. r.tv ithstanding that it was. front a P'gal viewpoint at least, when the republicans were indulging it. Watch the g. o. p. spell-himlcrs and -amp I'mn matet iul-mukors. ami vou will hnd that oa.it'4 every wh-re. when they take to iiargm maladmini.-t rati. etc.. jis is th ir wont, it N a sort of cross
Petwcn exaggeration and h v p. .-r isy. j cb ar ly proved that Austin was in ig- . pending upon tho shot tra ss of thenorancc of the regulation forbidding
public memory to 1. : tlie iu g t with lt by I I ! ! r.iTit ii:T iTiibii rn l.I' M :s n! rtahied bv a -me i.f i tho elder t pe of tu roha r.ts. th.at the is sar.ad ! d reathelr ,r:n ire;a mouth to mouth :n conversation, . . . . and th.at thev b not ncd to advertise in the w spa rs. T.v at e-ondition may have prevailed rr a'.y ears ago. w hen p- ople had la-thing i !.- to .! but gossip a. -out ti.;r n lghbois. )n th(-se times . aryone disci.-.--d all of his home pur-cha- - with all his m ighhors. Vi.'.a y a mm who d-a.ntis upon oi" rsat a.n and go.-sjp to sp:a ad th" i.v.s of h.s store, will not :';n,l that hi-; ; lace i f bu-dm.-s i-; much fiefiu r.toi. IN o;de do ! o t cxciiang inf.rmati..;i ab.--;t tloir domestic habit .is tiny a.-ed to. Vou have little idea v. hthr oa.r neighbors l-tiy their i;o..d i f Smith. Jam-- or ihown. Tliworld i- full of wide :i:tt :s:s. and the argun- om- may t:nd in a -crtain store- ae- ordinarily U:av. n a.ly t.thx- th it :.:.d th .n. Th : ra v. 1 j.-r is th- ot.l -::".oi nt '.ean of a u-i inting tiio pal'iic with T?i9 bu-!I.vs r.e .vs of the town. For
- Iktoffi. at FoutL P:iJ, I :i 1 1 .1 1. a
Bally :inI Sunday for tla vr?k hy p: I n i 1 r . 1 ra c 1 copy uri(!ay, Mnie ropy r il I ref r v v.-ti -:! f If'ih'fi vi.nr v:ir.t i a wooiiman A-Jv.TtiIrig KnlMlnz. CMcaffS r WIIMAT AMI IUIA. It is inios.-;bl'' to tell just how .i , , , . . . !,.. '....1.1 .. . i ...... . ....... I ......... i : uin oaai noi nave .-.oaiiaeti se.eiai xcpeatedly shown. In is. ,4, when the I'rench and British Meet jass'.l the Dardanelles, avow edly with th purpose of cutting off liussian exports, American what jumpetl to $-.:'.0 per hushed. In 177, when the IIussian-Turkish war broke out, wheat again soared. Just a few days since, when the present operai tion commenced, the Chicago market dropped ::0 cents in a fer days. Russia has a vast amount of wheat in reserve, unquestionably, for she has had no opportunity to et any por-
it. affording thejica also has premise of another bum
per crop ami now conns Argentina with reports of heavy European exports of wheat. cakusli: roii ; i:i:oi:. Indeed, the republican party might moosers hack to the g. o. p., in the i::th district. ng the old partv as perhaps no one else in these parts. Of course, vo are not ultra-desirous of the republican j party making itself too strong with bull moose vote-getting candidates, hut if wo were we know of no one whom we would most surely suggest to ra ad toe repunwean iickci in cue ' state, than Col. Charles Arthur Carlisle We are glad to observe th:it he has expressed his willingness to make the race for the gubernatorial nomination once more. i.ovr. Oil WAK. .See'y of the Navy Daniels merits a little applause for his action in reinstating Ensign Austin, who was dis missed from the navy, a few years ago. 1 for marrying a girl he loved. It was marriage of midshipmen and. apparently. his immediate superiors were also, for they were present at the wed- 1 di?i- -irid siid never a word. I "-"-- - Heaven that fool regulat ion ! Thank is a thing of the pas Tlu dii'iouliy f keeping the navy up to its full com- ! 1 . ... . : . 1 ... 1. . - - tt'.ll....L . ... V .. ........ - - . 1 1 1' . 1 1 ii t t or-ii'.Ts iir eniiTMi men n.ts , , caused I nolo am to lately aw awe to ; the fact that the average American ; youth doesn't hanker for a job that deprives him ot most 01 ms inrui t 1 ights. IP iloosn't object to service 1 but he does to servility. An oecup.i- 1 tion that arbitrarily prevents a man j !rom marrying isn t one to appeal 10 the kind of men we need in our navy. 'See'y Daniels struck t he popular chord 1 w he n he said: i "When regulations interfere w ith ...
.ine -.cars - 01 true love caeae-s mi..uxt to that. f Russia.
' oue thing to d- hve. ' I William Loritm r. former F. S. se nator, has again pleaded not guilty to the LaSalle St. bank wrecking e harg He has done that so often that he now probably believes it himself. lf Italy is ging to join in the war. I in order to share in the division of the ; . . t spoils. he had better get busy P.fore the six weeks' pel tod set Py upatches
expires. It begins to look as if by that time she would not be wanted In as Austria s ems to No about ready to do
her own honor." dickc rir.g for "peace with Bread dropped to live cents in Chicago yesterday. Keep those l.'-inch guns buy. Elizabeth! You are scaring a Chicago stock gambler into tits ' every time you s.'.oot at a Tur! . A Long Re.i'h judge sentenced two j 1 .".-year-old eulprits to a thrashing in I court by their mothers in lieu of a ! - 1,1 ' mt'm ' They were well spankcd. Hail to that judge: French and German slulls are knocking people down in Switzerland. The president of Switzerland inisht ask the president of the United .States what to do about it. Cost you $r.0'. line if jmi aren't cuKenie and marry in Vermont, says her legislature. Terrible blow to people who want to run away to Vermont to ma rry. Seeing America First Hy I red Kelly. Direct from Diary to Consumer: This diary tiling is, of course, all a bluff. If I really were keeping a diary, though, I -vould make a note of the man I in a Chicago lestaurant. He ordered a meal that tame to an even dollar. Then he asked for a little pitcher of cream, which was 10 cents more. When the waiter came around with the slip, the man discovered that he had just $1.0") in change, or five cents less than he re quired, aside from the tip. I saw him open up a wallet and pull out one 1)int ,,5, whicn happened to he a lifty. He seemed to shrink from the idea of breaking that fifty just for 1 in .-cim. wi 1 111.. no. 1 1. iu;ni.ii at, the slip and then at his $1.03. Then his face suddenly showed the light of inspiration. "Here's a dollar live," he told the waiter in a breezy tone full of good cheer, "but you want a nickel more, don't you? Well, I'll give you hack half of this cream." And before the waiter had recovered his composure the diner had shoved the half tilled little cream pitcher toward him, seized his hat and blandly departed. A few minutes ago I went into the lavatory to try out my new safety razor. Three other men were there shaving. This makes nine men 1 have seen shaving today on the train. Ami every one ot the nine without a single exception made one or moro remarks boasting of the peculiar toughness of his beard, the peculiar way his heard grows, or the dilliculty barbe.-s have shaving him. 1 am trying to recall if I have ever known a man so modest that he would not brag about the wiry, manly quality of his daily growth of heard. We just stopped brielly tit Emporia, Kan., the town definitely atllxed to The map by Willir.m Allan White. The first time 1 ever heard of Emporia was when I read an article by William Allan White, entitled "New York and Emporia," in which the author sharply contrasted the advantages of Emporia over the well-known ( astern metropolis as a place of reV,denee. Now, the average town of the size of Emporia docs not necessarily size up as an idyllic dream city when viewed from the railway station. This is true of Emporia, and it occurred to me that, little as I like New York, if 1 lived in Emporia, and had to move to New York. 1 might in time be able to reconcile myscif to the change. Having this in mind 1 went out on the station platform and engaged an innocent bystander in conversation. I spoke to him about his fellow townsrnan's article, and asked him if the average emporian would take the same view as White. "Well. I don't know," he replied, wrinkling his brow and seeming to wciuh the proposition with judicial impartiality; "1 was in New York for the hist time year before last, and in some respects it wasn't so bad. The subway had a fnny smell to it, a smell that I never noticed anything quite like anywhere else. Rut that, of eonrse was a small matter. The thing that struct, me " ' "l .. .. . . . . ..11 ....... where a woman vvomw ui ouuh.-j and where a man would go in the e ening to loaf." One is impressed in going through iv-, s with the hieness of the farms tho sma liiu ss of the barns. Judi v, just by what one can see froi rom the Santa Fe railroad a Kansas farm-er huilds his barn in indirect rath to the size of his farm. It must be difficult, one imagines, to be neighborly in Kansas. Folks live far apart in Kansas and the roads look black ami sqashy. Hut I am assured that after trawling through New Mexico. Kansas will seem fairlv gregarious and comparative lv conge steel. Ityekty years ago Reminder- From the Columns of Tne Daily Times. The receipts of the South Rend Ptoffico for the rjcal year ending March "1 were $.".v.jyl The Northern Indiana Teachers' as- j iit.iation 0 ma its annual meotlnS in! .... rt. . .1. .. ; ...TF1 .(..Till 111.. .lfTUTIII'iril-.. I . . " I --0..10 4...... . cmo.wv. p,H-te d to reach l.uOu. j ! rm- . . 1' fl The County Sunday School association decided on a canvass ef the city p''' r"ul-","i omv i-u'i''' - '1- 0 BITS OF INFORMATION ' The Irtish river in Siberia is 2.00 (miles long, and drains 'OcOoO miles ; ,,f territory. ... , Peruvian petroh-um is. saul to rank m its suit- . ability for producing lubricants. high grade j Riley Rradtord of Friendship. Me., j has the" oldest continuous subscrip- ' titdi to a Portland paper. This sub- j seription hn- b-en in the Bradford family ever sii.ee the japer was first issued in let. I The Cnited States agricultural elepartment is endeavoring t acclimat-I thv ja ..dicab.-i tree from Brazil. which, unlike anv other tree, bears fruit ,KnVf.rs un lm. ,jark The fruit is like a yrape.
THE MELTING POT COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.
If the llitel lYiederioh should make a !ali for the in van irolahly that is all that would Ik; left to tell the tale. TO. Y. A. H. O Double U Aye Ree, You've cast a, slur on me It's made me soreLy anxious to Return the compliment to you. Hut what I want to tell Would not listen very well So you needn't worry Double U Aye Ree! 0 Double U Aye Ree, What's wrong in the top story? 1 often wonDer why you're Always criticism' me by thunder: If you don't like my wit. You never have to read it. So vou needn't worry, Double U Aye Bee! R. M. IT. Till-' last best sign of returning rpring the reappearance of Heine Tieman and Eddie Coffey. GREETINGS to Grandpa Heane, the venerable editor of the Goshen Democrat! May his gray hair, if he ever gets any, never he brought in sorrow to the trave. Kooeivcd ly a Music House. Dear Sir: I will not bo able to make a payment for a couple of weeks because we have a 8 1-2 pound boy. Hoping this will bo satisfactory I remain V.VIIEN Hon Johnson wrote, "Drink to Me Only With Thine Eyes," the finest little love song we know came out. As the M. P. is specializing on snatches of good things to counteract our doggerel, we suppose why not give that just as a "hint to rentiers ?" F. S. F. SINCE you mention it we will look up the old song and read it again. The Ranks of Honey Drew Swarms. (Burr Oak Acorn.) The Swarms family of Orland spent i BREAKS PRISi; ESGAPES MM V Jules Liaudat Walks FiftySeven Days, Covering 750 Miles to Get Into France by Way of Italy. Hy Franklin I Merrick. PARIS, March 21). After a most daring escape from a prison camp in Germany and an adventurous trip through Germany, Switzerland and Italy, Jules Liaudat. lii! years old. has rejoined the Relgian tlfth line regiment, in which he fought at Kerschot last August. With r0 of his comrades he was captured in the German attack on Malines. They were placed in a wooden compound at Aix-la-Chappellc, fed on soup and potatoes, forced to sleep on straw and worked very hard at road repairing. Their guards were live landsturmers. The prisoners had noticed that they were left unguarded by the sentinels for a few minutes each day while the guards went to get the soup. On DeTc. 1, the Relgians lay in wait for the return of the sentinels at the entrance to the compound. As one of the Germans came back with the customary cauldron of soup he was set upon and strangled. He was able to utttr a cry, however, and his comrades corne running to see what was wrong. One after the other they were shot down hy one of the Relgians who hael picked up the revolver of the strangled soldier. Makes for (Jcrinany. Then began a wild dash for liberty under the bullets of a company of Landsturm, brought to the scene by the sounds of the shots. The Relgians ran in zigzags to avoid lreing hit. Almost all of them made toward the Dutch frontier. Not so with Liaudat, who did not wish to be interned in Holland until the end of the war. lie had conceived the more desperate plan of crossing Germany and reaching Italy. To this boldness he probably owes his life, as the landsturm men. feeling confident that he would be caught later, llred only a few shots
One lot of beautiful trimmed pattern hats made to sell for S5.00; "dreams of loveliness." Wonderful assortment to choose from. For three davs at
WE TRIM Shepherdess poke bonnets, tri-corns, etc., in tine quality Milan Hemp, Hemp", etc. 5o styles to choose from "at $1.69, $1.95, .$2.69 and $2.95
Thousands of pretty flower trimmings, worth to 75c. In all designs and colors
imaginable, choice . . .
Sunday with Mr. ami Mrs. Jones, on the banks of Honey lake.
TIED to their Art Russell Fisher Gillioni Fishel. Hubbard Raker Sch:llingcr EASTF.R heing a movable feast why not shift it to harmonize with the Easter bonnet? Our Meanest Man. Worse than he who steals the wash Hung out on lines on Monday, Is the guy who says, "I'll buy a drink." When he knows full well it's Sunday. S. H. C. IF that picture "The .Spirit of '76, wherein only one of the soldiers has a headache typifies war as it whs in those days, just how many medicated cotton bandages will the heroes of the present war have to he swathed in bv the artist who would adequately pic ture "The Spirit of '1.V? c. w. c. Her mouth when she smiled was spread a mile; There was chagrin with every smile. ne smiled sne tnougnt to make a dimple. Rut others knew 'twas hut a pimple. H. S. F. "WHAT." asks E. L. C, "is clergyman's knee and what is the cause of it?" On inquiry we respectfully refer to a joint committee from the Min isterial association and the St. Jos eph Medical society. PRECEDENTS like promises are often made to be broken, cr if not made for the purpose are so constructed they can he broken. Rut the remarkable thing is that the breaking of a precedent has never caused a list in the grand old ship of state. Query: What Was the Price of Votes? (Terre Haute Case.) Lewis Watklns. colored, testilied that he earned $47 by voting and shooting craps with other repeaters on election day. He said he voted about 13 times. LAST call for March lions. C. N. F. after hhn. whereas in the opposite direction almost all the runaways were brought down. Once well on his way, Liaudat gained In confidence and succeeded in walking to Merestret without being cpiestioned. He went round the outskirts of the town and on to Limburg, where he found some old clothes in an abandoned house. This allowed him to discard his Belgian uniform, now all tattered and torn. Thus disguised he continued his journey as a tramp, without papers of any sort and with no money. He was obliged to pose as a deaf mute when he met people and beg food hy signs. He slept in ditches, behind hedges and in old timble-down barns. The weather was extremely had and his sufferings were great, but the brave Belgian kept on and with the aid of signposts along the roads he found his way through Coblentz, Mayence, Mannheim. Carlsruhc, Strassburg and Erstein, llnally crossing the Swiss-German frontier and reaching Rasel. Ioscs as Swiss. While in German territory he was often stopped and questioned by police ami military patrols, hut he alwavs signalled that he could neither hear nor sneak, and when paper and 1 a pen were offered to him he would write, "Ich bin Schweiz" ((I am Swiss). This was his passport. Not content with reaching Switzerland, Liaudat continued his tramp hy Thun and Briga over the Simplon pass to Domodossola. He succeeded in reaching Genoa on Jan. 27. Since his escape, from Aix-la-Chapelle he had been walking for 71 days and had covered a distance of roughly 7..0 miles. The latter part of his j journey was less difficult, for in both ' Cift nr in1 nriil Ttlh- h f found tmmilii on n,ii mum uii.i luuj i i vj i"uuu ! v. fairly generous in giving him food and shelter. The Belgian consul in Genoa kept Liaudat housed and fed for some days until he receivetl his passport allowing him to enter France. what sm: i)iu:.di:d. A story is told by a Paris newspaper of a young woman. The newspapers said "that if the Zeppelins came all persons must go down in the cellars. She told her friends she would not go down into the cellar. "I do not care a lig for the Zeppelins," she said. "It is no use asking me. I will not go down into the cellar." "But why?" asked her friends. "Because," she replied. "I am afraid of spiders." George Drumheller, whose? ranch covers thousands of acres near Walla "Walla, Wash., received a check for $200.1161: for his wheat crop of 200,262 bushels. To move this crop required 1?0 cars, or four solid trains. Linen. coated with ca?ein to strengthen it and make it smooth, has proved available for aeroplare wings. ECONOMY DEPARTMENTS JHJ-221 S. Michigan St. In Conjunct Ion With the IiuIcKiident rc-10c-25c Store. SENSATIONAL MILLINERY BARGAINS FOR THURSDAY HATS FREE Just arrived! Another lot of best quality French chip shapes, all styles colors 68C 25g
Trees and Shrubs For Private Grounds and School Yards Shade Trees and Ornamental Shrubs Are Reeowmended for Different Sectionsof the United States.
WASHINGTON, March What kind of trees shall we plant to beautify our grounds? What shrubs would be suited to our school yards? These are questions which are frequently asked the United States department of agriculture. Soil and climatic conditions differ o greatly in tho different sections of the United Statea that in answering such ouostions special consideration has to be given each section. The department's specialists have prepared a special list ot trees and shrugs suite'd for general use on private grounds. streets, private parka and school yards for each of live general divi sions of uie Lnited states. 1 he live divisions are as follows: 1. New Kngland states. New Yirk. Pennsylvania, New Jersey, Ohio, West Virginia, Kentucky, Indiana, Michigan, Illinois. Missouri, Iowa. 2. Delaware, Maryland, Virginia. North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Tennessee, Florida, Alabama, Mississippi, Louisiana, Arkansas, Oklahoma and Texas. 3. Wisconsin. Minnesota. North Dakota, South Dakota. Nebraska, Kansas. Colorado, Wyoming, Montana and Idaho. 4. New Mexico, Alizona, Utah and Nevada. 5. California, Oregon and Washington. These lists are merely suggestive, but they include such trees and shrubs as seem well adapted to the particular locality, and they may be of assistance to those who are interested in the beautitication of towns and cities. Hero is a list: District 1. DECIDUOUS TIIEES Sugar maple, Norway maple, silver maple, green ash, white ash, American white elm, red oak, white oak, pin oak, American linden. EVERGREEN TREES Norway spruce, white spruce, Colorado blue spruce, white pine, Scotch pine, bal sam nr. SHRUBS Lilac, golden hell, oxochorda, snowball, mock orange, hydrangea. Japan (piince, flowering1 currant, ealycanthus, cornus, deutzia, spiraea, weigela. District '2. DECIDUOUS TREES Tulip, sycamore, pin oak, white oak, black oak, live oak, red oak, white ash, bald cypress, Norway maple, silver maple, reel elm, American white elm, Kentucky coffee, American linden, catalpa, liquidambar, Carolina poplar, hackherry, sour gum. EVERGREEN TREES White pine, long-leaf pine, magnolia, live oak, cedar of Lebanon. SHRUBS Golden bell, hydrangea, lilac, Eloeagnus longipes. lonieeras, hibiscus, hardy roses. Japan quince, ealycanthus, smoke? tree. South of Charleston, S. C Camel lia, japonica. Southern Florida and Texas Oleander, privet. District ::. DECIDUOUS TREES Rur oak, linden, silver maple. Norway maple, cottonwood, green ash, box elder, wild cherry, larch. American elm. catalpa speciosa, black walnut, hackberry. EVERGREEN TREES Scotch pine, Austrian pine, white pine, Norway spruce, Colorado blue spruce, white spruce, red cedar, arbor yitae. SHRUBS Lilac, barberry, cornus, tamarix armurensis. Japan quince, rosa rugosa, Crataegus, Kloeagnus hortensis, snowdrop. hephcrelia argent ea. District f. DECIDUOUS TREES Valley cottonwood (populus fremontii wizlizenia), mountain cottonwood (populus anustifolia), mountain ash (fraxinus velutina). box elder (acer negundo). EVERGREEN TREES Arbor vitae, cedrus deodara, bjx euonymus. SHRUBS Althea snowball, mock
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Rfflc (SILL'S FXTBN ITUItE SOUTH MICHGIAN ST. Opposite Auditorium. roi; ji:ffiui automobiles see Frazier and Frazier. General re- j pairing. Distributing agents for Bosh magneto ana mromoerg carburetor. 11S-120 Lincoln way E. Adv.
orange, wild rose, crape mvrtle. raea, l'.owering currant, eider, lil
spj1C. District DECIDUOUS TREES (Coast Region) Large-leaved maple, tu'.ip tree, mountain ;ush. European linden, sycamore, weeping willow. SHRUBS (Coast Region Roeweigela, European holly. iii.ir, laburnum, deutzia. hydrangea panioulata. mock orange, Japan quince. TREES (Columbia Basin) S.-ot. h elm. American elm. Norway manl iiuiujit-au iiiiut a, ! cainore, pre ash. silver poplar, Russian p;. ar, wnue wuiow. SHRUBS (Columbia Basin Lil.u . hardy roses. Philadelphus. ehM.tiznus hortensis, laburnum, spiraea, taman amure-nsis, rosa rugosa, barberry. Some riantin Suggestion. The be auty of a shade tree depend upon its normal ami symctrieal growth. In order to Insure this, before planting cut off the ends of all broken or mutilated roots; remove all side branches save upon evergreens, so that a straight whip-like stalk alone remains. Dig holes at least two feet in diameter and one foot deep in good soil, and make them four fret across in poor soil. The eidea of holes should be perpendicular and the bettom Hat. Break up soil in tho bottom of the hole to the depth of the length of a spade blade. Place two or thrc inches of fine top soil, free from sod or other decomposing organic matter, in the bottom of the hole. On top of this place the roots of tho tree, spread them as evenly a.s possible over the bottom of the hole, nnd cover with two or three inches of tine, top scil as before. Tramp lirmly with the feet and nil the hole with good earth, leaving: tho surface loose and a little higher tha ntho surface of the. surrounding soil. When the work of planting is completed, the tree should stand about two inches deeper than it ftood in the nursery. In order to insure Kymnetry of growth, trees must be allowed unrestricted area for development. At least 40 feet should be allowed between trees intended to occupy tho ground permanently. Quick-growing temporary trees may be planted between tho long-lived ones to produco immediate results, but these ehould be removed as toon as they interfere with tho development of the permanent plantations. The lists of trees and shrubs contained in this publication arc merely suggestive, but in all eases they Include such eorts as arc well adapted to tho regions. SCRAPS. Emperor Francis Joseph of Austria is a considerable real estate owner in France, with which country ho is at war. Ho owns ono of the grand old buildings of Nancy, which ho has enriched with gifts, and kept in good restoration by his money. Ho ulso owns the church of th Franciscans at Nancy, wherein are the tomb3 of the Dukes Lorraine, from whom he was descended. Ho gave Nancy cathedral the beautiful Htained glass windows. Do gave Nancy museum the life-size oil portraits of himself and his empress. Elizabeth, which still hang in a place of honor. And his donations of valuable historical and art objects, during a half century, have won him the title of "benefactor of the museum." Baron Erland Nordensk jold, the Swedisli explorer, who has Just returned to Stockholm after two years spent among cannibal tribes on the frontiers of Brazil and Bolivia, reports that he discovered there Important ruins of stone-aco civilization. Ho brought home with him 60 chests of scientific material, notes and photographs. His Swedish companion in the expedition was munlered by tho natives, but Baron Norden.'-Ujold made the trip, accompanied by his wife-, without mishap to cither. There arc records of dwarfs who have lived almost to the century mark, while piants generally die young. PA TENTS And Trade Marks Obtained in all Countries. AdUee Free CHX). J. OITSCH, Registered Talent Atty.. 7H712 .Studebaker Bldg.. South Bend Ir.d. L VV. McGANN 333 N Michigan St. FUNERAL DIRECTOR Iidjr Asitant. Bell Phone 9.. Home Phone 5211
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