South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 99, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 9 April 1915 — Page 4

J-IUOAY. Al'lllL 9, I!)ir.

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIME5

11 NOW

READY TO TAKE Gov. Ralston Issues Proclamation Declaring New State Institution Will Receive Prisoners Under Jail Sentences. INDIANAPOLIS, April 'J. (Jv. t'amuel M. Ilalston lriJay issued a proclamation, in wh'ch h' proclaimed the new Mato icii;i" farm, near I'utnamvillo, Ind., open for th rtceitlon of i-hort-term ir;oners from Indian.'i counties. The f(irm;il opening of this new state institution marks the farthest step of Indiana aloisjr the path of progressive treatment of criminals. The governor's lroclumation in lull, follows: "Whereas, tho !o;ml of trustees of the Indiana state farm lias notified me that such farm has been equipped with buildings and other facilities sufficient, in the opinion of the board oi trustee (,f s.ii j institution, to receive prisoners on and after the Uth uay cf April. l'Jl; ".Vow, therefore, I, amud M. Haleton, governor of Indiana, do hereby prclalm that raid Indiana state farm will be ready on and after the 1-th day of April. 1'j17,, in so far aa the capacity of th institution will permit, capacity of the institution will permit, nro contemplated by the act of the general assvmhly of the state of Indiana, approved March 11, l'Jlo, establishing such farm." Capacity Unknown. The capacity of the farm with lis: present facilities is a. question that cannot bo answered just now. For many months a force of convicts, "trusties" in the state prison at Michigan City and the ttate reformatory ft J'-ffcrsonville, has heen employed constructing cheap, but durable buildings on the penal farm that It might be ready for the reception of prisoners as soor. as possible and at the lowest possib:o cost. Charles 11. Talkington of Columbus was named superintendf nt of the institution several months ago by the board of trustees. The farm is intended to "harbor" prisoners, sentenced for short terms from Indiana courts. The problem of employment for this class of prisoners long has been one that has taken the best thinking of students of prison problems. The farm idea has taken root throughout this country and Canit da and the Indiana farm is an exemplification of the new idea. NVtv Method of (Guarding. Thero will be no wall around the farm. Prisoners will bo guarded in a new fashion, and the old regime of prison surveillance will be lacking. If prisoners escape they are amenable, when raptured, to a long term in the state prison, the last legislature having passed a law, introduced by Hep. llickam. whose father was a member of the original commission appointed to plan the penal farm, which provides such a. penalty for an escaped prisoner. Hereafter, if th plans for the farm work out as they have been laid, the jails of Indiana will be far more, free of the Fhort term prisoners, who eat up the county funds, do their families no good and do not benefit themseles, during their incarceration. Kor-oiircs Aro CixI. The resources of the new penal farm in an aurieultural and manufacturing way, are all that can be desired. Limestcno, of good quality for building or pulverizing purposes, exists in bounteous quantity on the 1,500 acres, purchased by the Ftate for approximately $r7.00n down near Tamedalo find Putnatnville. The agricultural resources of the place are reported as te very best. Here the unfortunates oi Indiana, who formerly have ro-pos-d in rounfy jails, will hereafter turn their formerly idle hands to real work here, it is hoped, thev will bernmo producing, integral parts of sclety. instead of the drags of former years. The moral, physical and mental nenetits that they will receive will more than compensate the state for its big expenditure for the farm, it is confidently predicted. NTAV YORK. Ten out of every hundred persons walking on 4 2nd st. are insane, according to Supt. K. R. Johnstone of the Vineland. X. J., inf.uio asylum, but he stated they were harmless, belonging to the "abnormal" class. CUT THIS OUT oli i:;ijsh ukcipi: rou caTAlllUIAIi DIil'Xls AND IN'Al) NOISI-X If you know someone who is troubled with head noises, or Catarrhal leafness. cut out t hi formula, and hand it to them, and you will have been the means of saving some poor sufferer perhaps from total deafness, wcptit experiments have proved cont'luxively that Catarrhal Deafness, he ail noises, etc., were the direct cause of constitutional disease, and thnt salves, sprays, inhalers, etc.. merely temporize with the complaint and seldom, if ever, effect a permanent cure. This bring so. much time and money is been spent of late h,y a noted specialist in perfecting a pure, gentle, yet effective tonic that would quickly dispel all traces of the catarrhal poison from the system. The effective prescription which was eventually formulated, ami which has roused the belief that dtafneo will 6o'n be extinct, is given below in understandable form, so that anyone can treat themselves in their own home at little expense. Secure from your druggist 1 oz. Parmint (Double Strength), about 75c worth. Take this home and add to it 1-4 pint of hot water and -I oz. of granulated sugar; stir until dissolved Take one tabb spoonf ul four times a day. The first dose should begin to relieve the distressing head noises, headache, dullness, cloud thinking, etc., while, the hearings rapildy returns as th system is invigorated by the tonic action of the treatment. 1as of smell and mucus dropping in the br.ck of the throat, are other symptoms that show the presence of catarrhal poison, and which are often entirely overcome by this eftb-uelous treatment. Nearly ninety per -eru. of all car troubles are directly caused by catarrh; therefore, there must be many people whoso hearing can be restored bj this simple home treat-Kit-nt. 1-'ery person v. ho is troubled with Uatl nois;:, catarrhal deafness, or catarrh in any form, should give this prescription a trial. There is nothing Vctter,

SHORT-TERM MEL

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SIX MILLION DOLLAR CORPORATION IS GIVEN INTO EMPLOYES' CONTROL HOSTOX. April 9. The six million dollar corporation of the Dennison Mfg. Co. with a huge factory; in South Framingham, and offices in other cities, has been turned over to the control of its 2,400 employes, it was announced today in the details of the most radical profit-sharing plan ever undertaken by a big corporation. The full control of the concern is turned over to the employes. Only the preferred stock with a more or less fixed income, is retained by the even the colossal distribution of original owners of the company. Not even the colossal distribution of promts by the Ford automobile company equals the Dennison move in the complete surrender of business control and profits to employes. Garibaldi, Slain in Battle, Kindles Italian War Spirit Uy Arthur Moore. Now and then some incident far removed from embattled armies and death-searching fleets comes to pass that has more true effect upon the destinies of the struggling nations than have weeks of hard lighting along the battle lines. One of these truly fate-tilled moments was the return of young (laribaldi, dead, to Rome. On Jan. 6, a day of gold after weeks of sunless skies and rain, the funeral train brought from the French hills of Argonne young Garibaldi, a cold and silent corpse, yet more fiery to kindle men's souls than all the living kings of Christendom at war, because of what his name and the manner of his death symbolized to all men. A few weeks before Prince Von Hue-low hod arrived at this same Roman railroad station, an envoy from the most powerful of living emperors, bearing that emperor's offer to the Italians. And there he had been met, as it were, by the Capitoline Geese hissing to save the honor of new Rome. Rut the wise, clear-thinking ambassador, during the days that he had had for his work, had most surely and strongly moved the opinion of the statesmen of Italy over more and more to the side of his heroic nation. His diplomacy of the head, of its kind perfect and complete, each day had its new victories for his ifnperial master. German brains and ability were progressing irresistibly, as such superior intellectual qualities usually do when not opposed by fate. The hisses were like tobe warmed into cheers and warm names of good will for Prince Von Duelow and his emperor. Rut then fate slew a young man, not over wise, not too experienced. In the French hills of Argonne, where he was leading a handful of unwise Italians to their death before German guns. And of this dead man, bearing a name that is one of the bugle calls summoning humanity to light for human freedom, fate made an ambassador to speak to Rome and to Italy, as no living prince, envoy of a living king, could speak. That wise and forethinking diplomacy, so skilfully played by Prince Von Ruelow, disappeared as the precepts of a schoolmaster written on a blackboard disappear under a few quick strokes of a damp cloth. A Garibaldi dead, killed for the cause of a republic at death grips with the eompletest monarchism of history, killed while leading Italians against the soldiers of an emperor! What an ambassador to the soul, not to the head, of Italy! What a stroke of fate against the "wisdom" of the human sort! On foot, behind the bier, before all Rome, come to see, marched tho French, tho Rritish, tho Russian and tho Greek ambassadors and their staffs. Iuly Rodd. the wife of the Rritish ambassador, herself going on foot in the procession. The poor few red shirts of the lat grizzled Garibaldlans who had made the meaning of that name in the days of a past generation were the diplomatic staff of that silent ambassador of the people against kings, soin now so greatly to his rest, accomplishing so much in the destinies of living human beings as he lay peaceful on his bier. And those Romans on the streets, in the packed square before the railroad station, the lighting men of Italy in war, what a message, not to be rubbed but, did that dead man from the Argonne bring to them! Many fateful momenta have struck since the war fell so stormlly upon the world. Rut even in the forefront of battle have been few so important and tilled with true destiny as that of the coming of the dead ambassador of democracy to Rome. PERSISTENT IN ARRESTS, WOMAN PRESENTS PUZZLE City Judge Warner faced a problem in citv court Friday morning when Kmily Moestart, a woman of the west end, who is the mother of six children, was arraigned for vagrancy. Mrs. Moestart has been sentenced any number of times by Judge Warner for offenses ranping from intoxication to assault and battery. Upon a former arraignment she was given several months in the Indiana woman's nrison at Indianapolis, but was released be fore her sentence expired upon promise of good behavior. Mrs. Moestart is said to have slept in the alleys and rear porches of families in her neighborhood. Her children are being cared for by the coui.ty nd relatives and friends. Her case is a puzzle to authorities who have ' expressed reluctance to recommit her to the Indianapolis prison. Relatives claims that her craze for intoxicants has become so great that she is powerless to resist. She will again face Judge Warner Monday morning. YOUTHS DRAW SENTENCES Mllford Cainplxdl Gets SO Days in fail Companion is SuHinIetl. Alfred Kahlmorgan. 2531 W. Washington a v.. was given a suspended sentence of (JO days and Mllford Campbell of the Jackson addition, was sentenced to no days in the county jail for the theft of a bicycle belonging to C. D. Lonzo. 2007 Michigan St.. in city court Friday morning. Campbell upon arraignment Thursday pleaded guilty, but the other denied the crime. Faoh is IS years old. ITAM'T MTri'II. Saturday. 2 lbs. 23c. The Phila. Advt.

BEGIN IN JUNE

ON I

fiLffl RAIL Congress at Recent Session! Makes $2,000,000 Available For Work ChitinaFairbanks Route Most Likely. WASHINGTON, APril 9. Work on the government railroad in Alaska i will begin early in -uly. The congress at its recent session made available $2, 000,000 f'r construction work luring the next fiscal year. The total amount that may be expended in the road building in the territory is $3",000.000. The president is now awaiting the return of Sec'y bane of the interior department before announcing the route by which the government will reach Fairbanks, the interior territorial city which promises to be to Alaska what Chicago Is to the United States. The place is named for Charles W. Fairbanks of Indiana. There are excellent reasons for believing that the president has selected the route which leads from Cordova by way of Chitina to Fairbanks. A road built over this route would connect tidewater on the Pacitic ocean with the two great inland waterways, the Yukon and the Kuskokwim rivers, and as well as with the Tana river, a tributary of the Yukon, which Hows through a wonderful valley awaiting development. The president has had to choose between this route and a second proposed route which leads from Seward around Cook inlet to the Iditarod and thence to Fairbanks. The llrst named route would connect with the Rering coal field and the second j with the Matanuska coal lields. Recently an argument put forth m support of the second route is that new and rich gold deposits have been found near the hose of Mt. McKinley not far distant from the proposed Cook inlet route. May Follow Hccominendations. If it shall turn out that the president has determined on the Cordova-Chlt-ina-Fairbanks route he will have followed the recommendation made by a commission appointed during the latter part of the Taft administration to conduct an examination into the transportation questions in the territory. That commission, which was made up of MaJ. Jay J. Morrow, corps of engineers, U. S. A.; Alfred H. brooks, geologist in charge of division of Alaskan mineral resources,, geological survey; Leonard M. Cox, civil engineer in the United States navy, and Colin M. Ingersoll, a consulting railroad engineer from New York, found that the Cor-dova-Chitina-Fairbanks route would provide the best trunk line to the Yukon and Tanana waters; (1) Recauso Cordova has distinct advantages as a habor: (2) because this route requires the shortest actual amount of construction, but chiefly (2) because the better grades possibly on this route would give the lowest freight rates to the Tanana valley. This commission made the so-called Cook inlet route a second choice, but held that it was not comparable with the other route. Must Hoy Another Road. A decision that the government's road shall go by way of Cordova and Chitina to Fairbanks will involve the purchase by tho government of the Copper River and Northwestern railroad, which is now constructed from Cordova to Chitina and thence up the Chitina river. This road is about 100 miles in length. It is what is known as the Morgon-Guggenheim road. Its owners some two months ago made to the government a formal proposal to sell it. Its purchase by tho government would leave 313 miles of road to be constructed in order to connect Cordova with Fairbanks. Thus the total length of the government road would be a little over f00 miles. The Morgan-Guggenheim syndicate has been anxious to get rid of this road for several years, and the understanding is the syndicate has made what is looked upon as a reasonable proposition to the secretary of the interior. The object of building a road will be the same whether the Cordova-Chitina-Fairhanks route is selected or the Cook inlet-Fairbanks route the opening up for interior Alaska with its untold riches. The greatest coal held in Alaska is in the Tanana val- j ley some 50 miles south of Fairbanks. The explorers of the geological survey relate that the coal veins in this field are exposed and are from 50 to 100 feet thick, six or seven successive veins one upon another. A road to Fairbanks, it is asserted, will also open up the rich copper deposits, and agents of the agricultural department, who have studied the soil and the climate in the interior of the ter ritory, predict wonderful things in an agricultural way. It may turn out, of course, that the amount of natural resources in the interior country of which Fairbanks is the center has been overestimated, but in any event the storehouse, whatever it may turn out to be, is naturally to be unlocked. To Begin Work Soon. Tho interior department has already made tentative arrangements to begin the work of railroad construction just as soon as the money appropriated by the congress is available. Just what these arrangements are have not as yet been announced, because the president in picking the route must also decide whether the road is to be built by contract or whether it will be constructed under the direct eye of the government, the supervising being left to army engineers, as was the case with the Panama canal. During recent weeks the president has listened to arguments in favor of each plan. It" has been suggested that a great deal of the machinery used in the construction of the Panama canal might be employed on this railroad job, but so far as known no plans looking to the transfer of the machinery from Panama to the territory have been worked out. The road is to remain the property of the government after its completion, but under the legislation the president may lease it for operation if he shall deem that to be the better way. Predict Alaskan Room. Interior department oiiicials, who have supervision of the Alaskan territory, predict a great AlaskKn boom after the first railroad into the interior shall have been completed. They look for a great rush for the gold fields, some of which. It is asserted. hae never been fully developed. Placer mining, it is pointed out. has been held back because of "the inability to transport to the interior of the territory modern placer mining machinery. With the completion of the road o Fairbanks, it will be pospjun: H' nil'' 1 1 i . 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 -1 M liil' Hicalities where placer mining is good. I

WAT

CIAS

fy y : o

Hats at $3,95 and $4,95 instead of $2 to $5 higher Which, as you know, is the usual price at most stores. We sell hundreds of hats each week at these prices; the reason is very plain: Firstly, the assortment you have to choose from is most extensive. Secondly, the styles are copies from high-priced model hats. Thirdly, the values are unquestionably the best in South Bend. You'll give up the idea that it's necessary to pay $10 or $15 for your Spring Hat when you see this great line. They are trimmed with newest ideas in flowers, wings, quills, ribbons, pom pons Choice $4.95 and $3.95 Ostrich Plumes, new and perfect, with broad, heavy, drooping heads. In black, white and six new shacjes $1.49.

Seen those dainty t it.

TWi f i 1

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V2

New Combinations and Gowns

Envelope Chemises, now firmly established in women's favor, of soft mate rials, one style trimmed in organdy em broidery and three rows lace and ribbon Lace edged at bottom. Another is trim

med in lace forming a novel design with f?

ribbon drawn and rosette ornamented medallion; choice 98c Pretty Nightgowns, the pictures do not adequately represent the 15 or more elaborate and varied styles, at 98c

W. Bo Nuform

ft 3 r 4'feJJ

MICHIGANr-COR. WAYNE

Tomorrow i

A remarkable collection of new Coats to select from; the smartest model of the season are well represented throughout, models that attract through excellent styles and beautiful workmanship. In styles, lit and materials, these coats rival the usual coats at higher prices. AT $10 A Covert Coat, with that luxury of men's attire four b:g patch pockets, Empire belted back. AT $10 One. of those fashionable White Coats in knit effect that does not easily soil and wears so well. Plain tailored and has four big patch pockets which are indispensable in the new "sports" garments pearl buttons. Among Other Coats at $10 are those of black and white cord stripe, with blue moire ball buttons from chin to waist and both sides in back, two pockets and turn cuffs. Also attractive large blue check on tan mixture coat, has nautch collar, broad box pleated back, two pockets and plenty of simpler but fashionable gabardine and serge coats, as well as black silk coats. Black and White Coats, various styles and materials, at $5.00, $7.50, $9.95 and $15.00. The $15 Coats in wonderful variety are a real sensation, we are told by all women who have investigated that in point of fine materials, handsome styles and workmanship these are unequalled.

White Dresses?

For Girls 6 to 14 At $2.95 Three flounce skirt is scalloped and hemstitched; front .rimmed in lace and embroidery. At $2.95 A dainty dress is trim:1 in tatting design lace. At $1.49 is a dress made entirely of embroidery, tucked belt. At $1.00 Charming little school irPs dress trimmed in embroidery and tucks; square neck;-pleated skirt. Juniors, sizes 13, 15, 17. To picture here the many beauties of even one of the lovely white dresses at $3.49 would be out of. the question, and there are three styles besides those at $4.95, $2.98 and $3.98. .

I

Corsets for Spring

No. 710 at $3.00 the famous W. B. Elastine Reduso Corset; style, grace and poise belonging to the large woman if she will wear these corsets. No. 1457 at. $1.00 a popular V. B. Corset for medium and stout figures in sizes 21 to 30. No. 51 at $1.00 is a new low bust and long hip W. B. Corset, with two pair hose supporters; sizes 19 to 30. New A combination net and coutil Corset. Top, front gores and reinforced band at bottom of Coutil, balance of cool net. Thus affording maximum hot weather comfort and service $1.50.

17" STREET. SOUTH 3 Saturday Sale

Burson Hose for women, the one stocking knit to lit without the ugly seam; fine lisle, fast black, per pair 25c. SPECIAL Co dozen women's goo ' quality gauze hose, full fashioned black and white (3 pair for 55c) pal 19c. Silk Hose for women, black, white and tan; new colors, per pair 49c. Out size Silk Hose, "avserV in black and white 98c. Children's fine ribbed black Stockings, double knees, good stout, wearresisting kind 12y2c.

Tri 14ca 1- 1 1 -1' i i -J 4 o .-i . . good quality, pair 12y2c. . . m j wuui iiuu ia.il z J for 25c.

Marvels of Beauty are the $1.98 Silk Blouses ..Blouses for every occasion; evening, afternoon and street wear. Made of fashionable Georgette crepe, crepe de chine, radium silk, tub silk shantungs and dainty lingeries. In white, flesh pink, sand, gray, black and other colors. One of the six or eight new styles will be sure to please you, choice $1.98. At $1.00 Although the price is small these blouses have a daintiness that stops every woman who pasies the tables where they are displayed. They have the latest fashions in collars, sleeves and other points that discerning women will appreciate. Materials are soft, fine voiles, sheer lawns. And tub silks, embroidered or adorned with pretty iaces and embroideries.

BEND.

Coat Day

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of Hosiery - - fJ " Q & yjixii

i -mi yM Miffed egg c&pZitds