South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 99, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 9 April 1915 — Page 12
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ITU PAY, APKIL D, iwio. THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES White Collar With Touch of Black Isdoire Ribbon Has Air of Distinction tests Real Friendship Some of the Virtues Which Differentiate the True from the False Friend Come and Sec Us-
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i: I Mix Wlinl.r ViIo. Ilil f r i c rul h i t r s'llts i r a s t:s" of frt.I:u in a. -wci.it ion. l.ut it iln-s net I'crinit. of li -f N t'ri:il cm ! s int;m;it. th.it th- ti 1 !' 1 liI ..--; ii.t x:m. 1 ri r.r:r I so .-urt; f)f frl rnl tint unn cis-b-.try .'inI uru-vll. I -f r li (' lwm f .My true l r i ri i tiiwr conns to me v.ith thf bc-!lttln) :in.l faus-l .s -i I wJiif'h hf-ars about me. II' r,-rr s.iys, "I kno'.v ymj w 111 not ar ." anI tM-n r lat s Mmo vicious li.- itirit tl l.y the mi ml "f envy. Ho ii. r t.-lls rut' anything !i-:i'-:rr aMo unle.-v, it is to warn m- r pet me on rriy K'laril aainM n H-rp-t . nemy or jiicnir t iny .vn i m I rul n Iff tells in.", the kir.il ami pl-a;mt words lie In ars ."-poken of rn anil takes as jniich I'lt .urp iri arim; tin m as I '. Arul he f nils me in my ah-yr-icp even atriiat an army of ar- !! will say thinfTS t my fa-e whi'h v.o-ild iiot sir or i-ermit t. 1; .-ai.l la iiiml my ha' k. 1 rieri'lhii of the hiirh ;-t frI r fhould .l.-'ini.h all wc-arisome re.-tric-tions anl f ormalitu s. If I liapprn to drop in on my nearest frieml as is preparing to .' "it with no i a,r that I w ill he hurt or tVl frlii;htf-d. The momen' this fV.tr of wounding our friends in such matters treej.s in it is no longer or not 'et tin ah.-olute f rur.ti.ship. We ran hear with the tyrannies and anxieties, ftars and turmoils of love, last trm calmer pleasures or friendship ;iro Jeopardized if wo permit these other emotions to mar them. Love is like the mid-or rin trrand. lieautitnl and terrihp-. full of 1 lP-cht find d-imrer. and friendship should he iko tho -alm hay where v rest, and do nut fear; it cannot ivo us the- xliilaratlon of love and it must not tvo us the anxieties. Wo feel rested and strengthened lifter an Interview with a real friend, never irritated or worried. The worthy and worth-while friend nev r chides or for mt loving fcirn enough nor hes to he loved more: ho makes himself so des-rim; find f-o unohtru.sive that we needs must Kivo him gratitude and alTectlon. The wise friend never weighs us "with his friendship never hurdens lis with feelintrs that he nnnot live Without our constant devotion. It is the privilege of love alone to do that. Iove may learn and clin" forever. And forever row more dear. Hut friendship must sometimes Ft.uid upon Us own fect or we tire of it. If my friendship Is absolute I will st.uid by my friend In trouble, danKer nnd disgrace not upholding him In the latter. If he resents my restraint, however, and is determined to sink, I do not prove my friendship by sinking with him. I only prove my own moral weakness. 1'etter let uf my hold and savo my strensrth to assist another who wants my help. If ho will not heed my advice or Counsel, but Insists upon associations nnd actions which injure him. I only blacken my own record and weaken mv power to aid others if 1 stand by him. Friendship to one's higher self should nt be sacrificed in a mistaken sense of devotion to another. Neither should I ask my friend to down into the valley of despair with liu- he will he a truer friend if he
IT RUINS HAIR TO WASH IT WITH SOAP
Snap r-houhl be used very sparingly, if at all. if you want to keep your hair looking its best. .Most snaps and prepared shampoos contain too mueh alkali. Tins dries the scalp, nuil.es the hair brittle, and ruins it. The best thine for s;ealy use is just ordinary mulsitied cocnanut oil r.vliii h i-5 pure ami reaseh ss ) , is cheaper and better than soap or anything elc you can use. One or two teaspontisful will cleanse the hair and scalp thoroughly. Simply moisten the hair with water and rub it in. It makes an abundance of rk-h. creamy lather, which rinses nut easilv. removing every particle of dust, dirt, dandruff and excessive nil. The hair dries iiub'kly and evenly, and it b-aves the -cnlp soft, and the hair tine and silky, bright, lustmus. :lulf" and easy to manage. You can tret mulsiMed cocnanut oil at any pharmacy, and a few oumes will supply every member of the familv fT months.
Effect of Great Kidney Remedy is Soon Realized I ifl it my duty let you know v.hat Swamp-Koot did for me. 1 was bothered with my back for over .twenty years and at tinns I could iHrdly Ket out ef bed. I read your advertise-r.ent antl derided to trv
S'.V amp-Ib-nt. L'sed live- 1. lilt s, aial u.i.s be n live years since 1 uel it. itlK. I b.ave never bt n bot!o r.-.l a Iay .since 1 took tie- last bottb- of it. I am thoroughly cor.vinced that I'r. Kil-Tii'-r's Swamp-Ib)t cured me ami WouM recoitim-n,j it to eth r sa::" rinc as I ditl. My huhar.d was trtuhh d ir!l Icidm y ai.d i . 1 a 1 1 ! r troubles ami la- tn..k yniir Swamp-Hont and it i uta d hiui. TJ.'.s was hve ars a-. Vto: may publish this htur ir u ('llt'iist', Vt-rv tru.lv .:irs MRS. "MATTIi: I'AMFII!!.!'. :. i. No. ; '.obicvii;.-. M.eh Sabst rihed and .-".(.rn t bt !'re tathis i;th of Jul v. r.o... A II V IN W. MVKKS. N"tary I;,-. f r V.in lejixa Co., Mich.
stands above in the sunlight and strives to lift me up iKsride him. I do not want my friend to constantly urKo me to accept favors, but when, in my hour of need, I ask a favor. I want him to grant it with the air of one who is the recipient rather than the Liver. Neither do I want him to refuse favors on thf trround of being unable to repay me, sineo real friendship finds payments In the bestowing" of favors. And always I want him loyal, trusting and sincere in word and act; as liberal, as lovini?. as free from jealousy as he is full of Justice, ready to praise and not afraid to reprove. i Copyright, lir., Star Company.)
! Cheaper Bread by
Scientific Farming lly Kov. Madison IVters.
To lower the living cost vc must increase the yfeld by scientific farming. The Muropean farmer makes the American blush, with double the average yield for about all grain. Is there any cause for the facts these figures show ?
Average bushels per acre Wheat.
United States 1G kus-'ia D Germany liS Austria IS Hungary 17 Franco 110 I'n i ted Kingdom . . . . :Z If American farmers
Potatoes.
y - yy no') u:; i VJ2 would raise
.'.rtter to Dr. Klliwr Co. ningh.tniton. '. V.
Jroc What .svuimp-Iloot Will Do Tor
l on.
Her.d teri cent" to lr. Kilmer riir.ghariitnn. N. Y.. for a sanipb- si.re bottle. It v ill ooivliu-t anvnxie. Vnii Aill al-- r-'ctle a booklet of valuable Information, telling about the kidneys
iinij' i , ! urn : l iili.k, ,i it; L!nl meid!tn the South Ib-ral It.iily .'t-vvs-Times. i'.-rul.tr Ilft.v-ceut ariil tne-dolbir tizo bottles for sabj at all cli a si rtori i.
food crops as Huropeans do we would mt have to pay as much for our living. Kven Russia beats us seven bushels on potatoes. Tiie empire of Germany, with a total acreage less than the state of Texas, produce;-, annually seven times more potatoes than are produced in all the states of the Union. Yet these Kuropean fields were under cultivation for centuries before the ships were built which landed Columbus on our shores. According to the reports of the United States department of agriculture, the average yield of cotton to the acre for the 10 years ending with the season of UMiy was 1S4.7 pounds. Under the instruction of the (Jetton Culture department of the S etn railway in many eases the yi 4 of seed cotton was 1,42 5 pounds t the acre, as compared with 4S4 pounus on f imilar lands w here such instruc tion Was not followed. This was equivalent to nearly one bale of lint cotton to the acre as compared with a little more than one-third of a bale produced by the old methods of farming. Wheat is the most important staple of the white man SOO.OuO.UOO people, or about 50 per cent of the population of the globe are sustained mainly by wheat and its products; 62 per cent of the cereal products milled in the United states is derived fn m wheat; 2 s per cent of the total acreage (leva. ted to raising cereals in the United States is devoted to wheat alone. Russia (72 governments;, with yCL.asT.OOO bushels is the world's largest wheat producing country. Next in order, outside of the United States, comes Hritish India with :;jl.571,O0O; Canada, 321.717.000; France, :;21.j51.000; Argentina. l'.s.4 1 4.0UO; Hungary. proper), 151,348,000; Germany, 171,075.000; Spain. 112,401.000; Roumania, S3.S3C.O00; Australia, 91.SGS,eoo; Rulgaria. 45,000.000; Algeria, ;;C,r.sy.otio; Egypt, 31.000,000. Strange to say, wo only raised last year 4::,x00.o00 bushels of rye. while Germany, which has shown the world the value of rye bread, raised 4S1,1 0 '.t.ooo bushels of rye. Our home consumption of Hour is about lioj.oo0.00o ' arrels a year. In lyl3 wo exported only 40.000,000 busheN of wheat against 21 5,000.000 in KG 5. livery man, woman and child in the United States consumes 4.7 bushels of wheat a year, or about a barrel (if Hour a year. Canada beats us by neatly a bushel of wheat consumed cnnually by each person. The 2.5io) bakeshops in New York city consume .about 4,000,000 barrels td ilour every year; the lower Uast Side, about three miles square in exlent, consumes about 40.000 barrels a week. That the masses among the .".. mo.ooo jM-ople in New York city are underfed is shown by the comparison afforded by London, whose 0,000,000 Inhabitants consume every years ,7 5o. noo barrels of Hour. Iuring the last decade, while our population increased 21 per cent, to me t this largely increased power of consumption there was an increase of only 3.5 per cent in the acreage devoted to cereal crops, and the aggregate production of cereals in ll0y lnt re:. seil only 1.7 nor cent over that of ivy. These figures partly explain the high cost of living. A woman's cry. "Bread, bread," brought on the French revclutb n. Tin- hUh cost of living brought on the American revolution. Hlstorv has been defned as philosophy teaching by example. To prevent further advance in the cost of bread and the rising prices of all farm products, which will mean suffering for many and a great danger to our free institutions; to maintain a level, if we cannot possibly lower the price of farm crops somewhere near the pr sent level and prevent a further advance this is the utmost that i an be hoped for. As the producer Is nulv making a moderate profit, the only hope for cheeking the rising j. rices is a vigorous, earnest, continupersevering campaign for sciential, o-c.l selection, more Intelligent fertilization that will put back into the so-.i what the growing crops take out. am! nmre extensive and intensive farming with modern methods.
for in
the the
(There are thic reasons smalb r wheat production
l":u:. d States: Ui!t. ScicntiMe farming is a comparativtly new thing in this country. Agricultural colleges have been at work but a few years. Second. The government itself has net tb-ne anything like as much as Germany or Urania to inform the farmers how to gtt the biggest crops out t.f the soil. Third. The very bad banking systtm whhh forbade loans to fanners by natinnal, banks. The farmers had been left to outside loan agencies and have been forced to pay eight and 10 pt r rent for money to buy fertilizer for their farms, whereas Germany and Urance liav? organized loan companies to flnanrt farmers at four to live per cent. Editor.)
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(Saturday) ARTIFICIAL FERNS 49c each An attractive table decoration in silver tinted box or may be placed in a fern dish. Regular 75c kind.
SATURDAY -Choice of any 50c Neckwear at 39c Any 50c vestee, or collar fancy in our Neckwear Section Saturday 39c.
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lly I-'i K acuiteiiM. There is always "an air" of distin ction to a fine white collar with a touch of black moire ribbon. In thia instance the hiph standing collar, with llare at the top of the double frill in o rsandy, with its val trimming and clusters of crochet buttons. Is set off b y a moire ribbon tie with a smart flat how.
FATHER CAVANAU6H 10 SPEAK lil WASHINGTON
President of Notre Dame Will Take Part iri Silver Jubilee Celebration.
Iter. John Cayanaugh, C. C, president of Xotre Dame university. will speak in the name of catholic institutions of learning at the silver jubilee exercises of the Catholic University of America, Washington. I). The exercises will be held April 1T, and will open with services ia St. Patrick's church. jushington, and the academic exercises which will take place in the afternoon will bo held on the university campuH. Prominent Catholic clergy and laity from all over the 1'nited States will be present. Pres't Hall of Clark university will be another prominent speaker and he will represent the Association of American universities. The three American cardinals will honor the event with their presence, this being the first time that they have assisted simultaneously in a great ceremony in this country Cardinal Farley" of Xcw York will celebrate the pontifical mass. Cardinal Gibbons of Baltimore, chancellor of the university, will preach the sermon. Cardinal O'Connell of Iloston will deliver the opening discourse of the academic exercises. The apostolic delegate. Archbishop Honzano, will conclude the exercises in the afternoon with benediction. Novitiates of seven religious communities have been built around the university and among these the I Inly Cross Fathers of Notre Dame have one of the largest. The university proper has seven large buildings and over 1,300 .students. The teaching staff numbers so. The university site In Washington covers over i0 .acres, adjacent to the National Soldiers'
home. Among the other priests who will go from Notre I-ame for the exercises will be Father Morrisey, provincial of the Holy Cross order in America. iu:.Mi:Mi$i:it Philadelphia luncheons are homo cooked, of the best (piallt.v of foods ami an infinite variety to choose from. Advt.
(Saturday) FRIENDSHIP BRACELETS 39c each In old or silver filled, plain or engraved. Regular 50c.
(Saturday) LEATHER BAG 1.25 each In pin seal. Silk lined. Toilet accessories. 1.75 value.
TK
Suite
aih 12.50
aiad
Show
mart
Tailored Liinies
A more complete showing of the representative style features for Spring, could not be asked for than is shown in our 12.00 to 15.00 Suits. The Styles: Norfolk and short jacket styles with belted backs. Skirts with yoke tops and flare effects. The Materials: Serge, Poplins,, and Crepe Poplins. The Colors: Navy, Belgian Blue, Black and Green.
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Men's Shoes-Oxfords Made in all leathers; patent colt, p;un metal vici kid or Russia calf; Goodyear welts; in latest nobby styles, S3.00 to S3. 50 values; your choice from thousands of pairs at only WHY PAY MORE? KINNEY'S BIG 98c AND $1.98 SHOE STORE 116-122 E. Wayne St.
Pi ACT
EftRWELL W
FORMErM'OflEU ahd Little Folks 26SABHR-
Th Boot 20s Mm W earn secwup firoinni anuy mraairikefc Our No. 222 Children's lxl line rib l.isle Hose 25c Our No. 333 Boys' lxl heavy rib Cotton Hose 25c. Our No. 444 Ladies' Medium Cotton Hose 25c Our 445 Ladies' Medium weight Silk Lisle- 25c. Our 555 Mens Silk Lisle Hose 25c Our No. 556 Men's Silk (Mailed Hose 25c
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Soc4bwca4 Curucr Michigan St. aad JcCfervon Blv.
OUR GIGANTIC BLUE TAG SALE Brings a Tremendous Special Purchase Women's Suits and Coats at to Under Value Inclining the very newest and most wanted fabrics, colors and styles in both suits and coats. Here are series, silks," gabardines, coverts, checks, poplins, white chinchillas, etc. $10 and $12.50 Coats $7.95 $15 to $20 Coats at $10 To $18.50 Suits at $12.50 $19.75 and $25 Suits at $15 WILL BE ON SALE EARLY SATURDAY MORNING si:c.ni 1-i.oon xortii room.
1H l!M90tHG
An yi)Dorranit You lannot Miord to Miss
Be sore and see these Beds Saturday The Beds are all steel Beds with Vernis Martin Gilt Finish and Brass Mountings even more beautiful than you would expect to see at these prices.
LDS for . . $14.25
...$11.00 ...$8.75
BEDS
$22.00 BEDS for $17.50 BEDS for $11.00 BEDS for $8.50 BEDS for
S5.50
$27.50 BEDS for . $20.00 BEDS for . $14.00 BEDS for . $10.00 BEDS for . .4.25
$13.75 $10.00 37.00 . $5.00 $7.00 BEDS for .
$26.00 BEDS for $18.00 BEDS for $13.50 BEDS for $9.00 BEDS for
..$13.00 ..$9.00
$6.75
..$4.50 ..$3.50
St
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122 SOUTH MICHIGAN STREET
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