South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 114, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 24 April 1915 — Page 6
6
SATniPAY, .MMCIIj 21, 19ir. THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO., PUBLISHERS. 210 WEST COLFAX AV.
Knterxl na ioiiJ clas niitter at tte PojKofflce at South IJend, Irili:i
RUPofRIITION UATKS.
r11r end Sunday In ndvann. In Mtr. rr yir f.voo Dally HDvJ Puml.ij In flracre, by mall. rr jpsr 13 00
Daily and Sunday for carrier
I'aiir, inpie coy
ti.? week
by 12
siderably worse off in 1 C 1 3 than ho was in i:0 7. The sr. r nri' li;s;(.ns arc based on all the wairo reports isyj'd by the bureau of la! f i j- statist ir-s, an.! covt hoth the general w.r.-c and the union wage
Sunday, winirle opy 3o
If yoir nac 7Tparg in tie telephone dlre'-tory you rcn teltb'te ycur want "ad" to Tte Newi-Tinc. office and a bill will be mailed uftT Iti insertion. Homo
CONE. LCQENZHN A WOODMAN Foreign Adtert-iina representative. 225 Fifth ATenue. New York AJvertlginjr Building, Chicago
SOtTH INDIANA, AI'ICIL 2 f, 1 11 1 .".
riKJiiuc.Tivi: i:i ticiiincy and ya;j:n. A stiM to the suggestions advanrM by Rev. J. McGinn, C, of the fociolngy department of Notre Dame university, addressing the Asseriated Charities, Wednesday i. i ir h t. promise to materialize- late this month when th hoard of arbitration haing to do vith 'h" V ste-rn railroad wm'p cas's, hand. down It .s decision. If the exported happens a new ru in railway wage rating will res;:lt. Tho caso invtdvrs a di.-pute; between 'J S Western railroads and thMr S 1,000 cnginre-rB and firemen. I i-u.sing th: "fundamental principles of Meioloiry," Kv. Mcdinn makes the statement that the maladjustment of o::r ecurioinir system in the cans' of much ff our poverty and that h prevention of poverty demands social intervention, which id
fundamental hoe-iolngy mott hurely lb adds t fi.it com peni.it ion lawn har be-conu e -r nt htl to a modern industrial Jn-rice; that the wear and tear of the human machine i.s just as important a factor as the wear and t- rir of other ma hinory; that it i.s time to give- wme attention to this factor of industry, instead of all to the eapit.-'li.-ti'- faetor: that labor should not be left to shift under old rule-- of e.unpr tlti'ui. which capital for itself
concedes to be ruinous. We may not
no gnmg it in exactly Rev. McGinn's words, but v think we hao his id a. There is nothing oss-min in modern w.'Ko determination .., prevent toilers rc- ' ivirg ;m 'onnmi'-ally just reward for their servb-cs. Laborers in the past hae be n forced to bargain for work ur.de r unfa orable conditions, as studf n's of economic distinction hav long reci.u'j.ied. Tim workers of the Western railroads, h"eer.
from one-fifth to one-half time. In view of these conditions, union oiiiciais are not inclined to ascribe any very high motives to the Western I'nion and the Pennsylvania railroad otf.eials in their effort at uplift" work among the convicts. A convict
who learns telegraphy and after hia
prison term is employed by one of these corporations, is apt, they say, to be a rather servile employe, since hi employer would have it in his power at any time to ruin his career by exposing his prison record. Taken in connection with the admis
sion before the industrial relations commission made by the president of tho Western Union that his company opposes unionism anions their employes, the efforts of this company to utilize prisoners as telegraphers may well be considered very significant.
Auu.Ts iliente dispatches report Villa on the verge of a nervous breakdown. He is having much trouble w ith his o:!i rs. and has executed four within the last four days, for alleged criminal actions. Tii? Mexicans have an efticacb'Us irr.oiy fer self-made leader? suffering with diseased nerves, which is gene r. illy administered just at sunrise. If the Agua Caliente story is true, f'.on. Villa may be about to take the cure.
THE MELTING POT COME! TAKE POT LUCK WITH US.
So far the? colonel Iuls fattrnrel his hattlmr average, but a pamc is iuor out until it is played out.
Although ea'di conr .--man .s sending euit -.'o. o jark;u'rs of garden seeds, many of the recipients thereof, will ungratefully and treacherously decline to de for these beneficent statesmen.
Th
n a time a nf-wspajcr editor ran his paper te jdease everyliody, but that he was deported. Meire likely he went into bankruptcy because no one re-ad the paper.
THi; rr,H the medium of Clarence Rail t!v hicu'ePt fish stor- of the season h;t,s reached the city. Clarence
says that a man told him (Clarence)
tnat he (the man) caughc a bass
w eighincr 13 1-2 pounds in the Lake of
the Woods, and Clarence says that he (Clarence saw the fish, it mav be
true. We would not for the world cast a doubt on the word of a fisher
man, but we may lie pardoned for
i" im: surprised. We never saw a
1 '! 1-2 pound bass.
THE loving swain who has been accustomed in the past to buying one glass of ice cream soda with two
Peoria Journal savs that once straws will lie up against It this year.
l'K(iIN; PUiLIC IMPJtOVr.MIINTS.
The death of so prominent a newspaper man as William Uockhill Nelson, publisher of the Kansas City Star, always raises the question among the newspaper workers and readers, as to how such a Krat journalistic success had been achieved. One reason why the Star has had so deep a hold in its home constituency, has been the fact that it was such a persistent worker for local improvements. Street paving, parks, art gallery, thes were enly a few of tho things for which the Star labored in and emt ef season. Public improvements come slowly. Th majority of the people in the average community would naturally be contented with rather slovenly surroundings. They enjoy sprucem ss, neatness, ami handsome architecture, if provided ready made. Put as to improving their own properties er pay-
seem to luvo hit upon a new and ! ing taxes for public improvements,
People arc urired to display the national colors more patriotically and many respond by hanging out red waists, blue shirts, and white underclothing en the iine Monday morning. If Philadelphia sends the Liberty Dell to California, it will ho depriving itself of the only adequate way of celebrating when Connie Mack's ball team wins a victory.
Who says that Pres't Wilson is not performing the duties of his otfice, when lie was en hand to thnw out the first ball of the season for the Washington team.
The list of deadly weapons used by the Germans ought perhaps to be extended te take in sauer kraut.
noel idea, and if the arbitration board In control of their case, should decide? according to the possibilities, a new precedent will have been established that will me.ke Henry Cord's philanthropy appear comparatively superfluous, save as an experiment. In this case, which is the second brought under the revised Kidman arbitration act. now known as tho Newlands act, the workers have injected the principle t hat they are entitled to wage increases on the basis of "pro
ductive cdheienov
in other words.
they are loth to help. Hut everv place has its men with a vision. They see the defects in a town's appearance and realize what more adequate surroundings would mean. In the fore front of these men with large hopes is almost always the home newspaper. It usually is not a heavy taxpayer. Put it pays its fair share-, either directly, or indirectly in rental; which enable real estate owners to pay the taxes. Agitation for public improvements would not get far without the news-
Seeing America First Djr Fred Kellj.
i he state board of health will not permit two persons to drink out of the same glass simultaneously nor successively unless the glass is sterilized with hot water. While the sanitary regulations will take the romance out of that sweet communion which attend3 sucking soda water through the same or c ompanion straws we must all sacrifice something to the common good. li:m Krpni:its!irs saciuficc In Two llccLs. ki:i:l i. In 'sixty-four. The civil war. Was well wore out and so Lom Iiubbcrside
Swelled up with pride, " Twks time." said he, "to go.' He bid adieu To all he knew, lTp at the village store; Then started out
Amid the shout Seemed rand to go to war. Kntrained did he. Like company H, Three years before had done; A rusty sword, Some braided cord. An ancient flint lock gun. "Were what Lem took Reside a book. O'er which he'd always pour 'Twas a history. Of company R, And of the civil war. Ir just a week. The wheels a squeak. The train stopped in the south; Lem got out And looked about. For word ef hand or mouth.
IF wo have our way we wouldn't he around here much from now on until the frost kills the flics in the fall. But our way, it has been impressed upon us, is not the wav of providence. The probability is" we will stick around all summer. THE colonel, it seems, could stand for Jekyll, hut not for Hyde. That is almost human. WAR bulletin: The French cut the German wedge at (deleted) and gained seven-eights of an inch. AT SI Chauncey Dcpew says he is Mil lahle to work 13 hours a day if he wants to, but doesn't want to. How human nature persists! i:thies of Politics.
(Cor. Burr Oak Acorn.) There are sun, moon and stars, All for our own detection. And many were the cigars Won on the spring election. There's always some anticipation
And someone must take the 'choke,"
So really we were under oblipation
To gracefully set up the smoke.
But we are all just human.
And to our votes have a right.
So let us all keep a hoomin' Friendly acts with great delight. Don't sho.v your disposition
By looking across the fence
Let's walk in a position
Which shows the best of sense.
ome think it really wicked
But oft the trick is done
To "split up" your ticket
And beat t'other follow's run.
And when the votes are counted And telhow things do stand, fome sav "I'll be confounded, Don't that beat the band?" THE Zeppelin3 to the contrary the Fnglish cannot forego the f;port of kings. The Epom races are drawing big crowds despite the counter attraction across the channel. WE are carrying around in our pocket a diagram of the way John Woolverton cuts a pork rind. It is an ingenious and complicated pattern and John says a bass can't get it without taking the hook with it. Which, all will admit, is greatly to be desired. VF are aching to get a chance to try it. C. X. F.
that their compensation should bear papers. While the majority of th3
mine relation to tne increased earnings which corn1 to the roads by reason of increased efficiency on the part of machinery and labor. During r c nt years the Western roads have made ( x 1 1 a i r. i r.a ry gains in operating :!'c i r.e . Tluy have used more powerful buomotives, larger cars, b-ngir trains, ami by eliminating curves and reducing grades, have increased to a tremendous extent freight-tram bol-; all of these changes bringing a marked increase m th- lil-nr.s and r -specsi tilth s of engircmen and firemen. Tne Rrotlierhioes claim fli.it th-"- incr as d prolu tiv i!y ef the raili " i . I plants was acc r : ; i I i 1 1 I ! a decrease in the
t fie roads of engineers and
no a n.s that t he rew 11 below tile in-.-fs of running the
people of most towns are indifferent to civic: beauty, or loth to give up a few dollars extra tax. the newspaper has faith in the future and a discontent with what is sordid or primitive. only rarely is tho field big enough to win any such reward as came to the distinguished publisher of the Kansas City .Star. Rut the newspapers should be able, and usually are able, to look about to thL' and that permanent possession, and feel that they had a largo' share in winning it.
I S to f i ! r : . n . e ? ; t ' a g
M! C.i.W ( I e
rl'i o t h r c -
railroad.'. If the a r 'it ra i'-n board
a
i e. .
'aid
..... I . . . : . .
ten ims ormcii'ie o i?;h unlive e l
ok ney." it mi that a ii n era in the hing of raihoad wages has begun. This principle amounts to establishing the right of workers to a proportionate share in the profits of
tin: iiaskiiall m:ys. A visitor from a foreign land who buvs a newspaper in any city having a major league ball team, must be surprised to see the amount of space given to baseball. The European war is tailed the most sensational and tragic event of purely human origin since the world began. Vet the metropolitan newspaper, with all its facilities for reporting this epochal news, usually gives more space day by day to the ball games. To the average man, the big; figures of the diamond, Johnson, Connie Mack, Mathewson. etc., seem quite as
Out of Diary into Here: One of the unfortunate circumstances of this life is the undue importance of little things. You get eve rv thing nicely arranged and then some minor detail goes awry and musses up everything else. Suppose, for example, one Marts on a Ions journey, and one's pajamas But let us not anticipate. Here is what happened: When I was about to start across our highly interesting continent, there were two important purchases that at once occurred to me, to wit: Railroad tickets and pajamas only in reverse order. Now. as a general proposition, I do not make the item of pajamas a paramount issue. But with the thought of a procession of nights on a Pullman sleeper, it seemed to me that I owetl it to myself not to try to minimize the momentousnes of a vital detail. In one's own home, one's pajamas are, of course, largely a personal matter. As I look at it, the man who stays at home, is entitled to have all the simplicity in nightwear that he may desire. But living in a sleeping car is something else again. One must contribute his mite toward the scenic environment. So I set out for the marts in search of something especially attractive and
modish in pajamas. I had not been Saturday was one of the biggest
io moie man live or six stores bctore business days in Monesscn in several
All the mills paid and the pay-
SIGNS OF PROSPERITY
Reports on business conditions in f Crop prospects are flattering over the United States made to Pres't Wil-J the state. The winter wheat is re-
poneu a i jei. ji uvic-i, nm the snow has made ample moisture for an excellent crop start. A fewdays of spring weather has changed the appearanco materially. Eet's all pull at once and in the right direction. Democrat, Wayne, Xeb., April S, 1915.
son show a steady improvement. He told callers that business was becoming less "spotty" and more uniform in its improvement. Bradstreet and Dun corroborate this sentiment and the fact that mines and mills are opening now which had been idle for months, certainly gives assurance that optimistic hopes aro not to be blasted. Sec'y Redlield made his usual report on business conditions at the cabinet meeting. It was raid by white house otlicials that there was every indication that business was better than it has been in many months. Sec'y Redlield laid before the cabinet figures showing a trade balance in favor of the United .States of $22,000,000 for last week. The tratle balance in favor of the United
.States for the entire month ef March was S14r..000.000 against a balance of
$173,000,000 in February. Democrat
DePere, Wis., April , 1915.
business; thtt wagisshill hiara i at io i interesting heroes as liens. Jolfio
to the earning pnwar of the industry. Under this principle, v.agis. of coui;c, would rot n cessarily rise; the workers would, throw in their lot with the business in which they are en;agtd, and in dull times there v.ubl be wau-e cuts; but rot. however, below- a minimum subsistence b'el. Such a l..n moans a direct ir.?rsf of the worker in the cfdieii ney ,.f the industry a.; a whole, ht'-.tus i means direct results to him i:i increased wages. Compare! to rd:n.r ''proht-sharmg" schemt s even the Henry Ford -rheme, this plan oes much further nd is calculated t sef ; precedent of great importance, in industry. And it is sociology at rock bottom. Under such a system, such a thing as
or
Hindenburg. He will read the headlines to get the war news. But the exploits of his favorite batters and
I found a bright, young clerk who
seemed to catch the carnival spirit of my wishes. He was an earnest young clerk who gave fox trtt lessons by night and sold pajamas by day, and one could tcjl at a glance that he, if any one, wytild be in touch with the very late '. He tapped mo on the chest confi
dentially with his index linger and promised to show me something that was exactly what he himself wore in his hours of slumber. Thus reassured and placed at my ease, I soon found myself gazing at a dazzling outfit with broad pink stripes and mother of pearl buttons. They were wonderful. I explained to him that 1 wanted at least two pair, and we then took up the question of a suitable color to supplement the pink. I personally leaned toward a robin-egg blue that my young friend had taken from his files, but I could see that his judgment lay in favor of a plain, light, purple garment with white silk fastenings. R was indeed a regal looking outfit that I carried from the store.
aUi Was Mos!i..f rrith i . . f
... .... i ...i; i i.. v ...m c .-.u.-.- ui nt-
i'111"1" ""'tl "u 'Mia"ni uuung uy ( umph as I hastened.
inning. The moralist may say that this absorption in a game tends to dull the intere.-t of nun in the more serious concerns of life, ami that.the man who spends his l ine poring over box scores is Usually not well informed on matters of human progress and public affairs. Rut a keen interest of this kind is the solace for many troubUs. The man who follows the ball scores
intently is rarely an anarchist or a '
homeward to
place the bundl of treasure in the little old alligator satchel. The appioach of darkness on the first night of our journey meant more to me than it ever had before. Soon I should bo in intimate association with the grandeur of my recent purchase's. Abstra. tedly I looked out of the window at the hills beyond. Anyene might have guessed that I was studying th" seen-, but I was trvin
elect the
vears
roll was heavy. Our mills are now
running full and tho old time pros-
oeritv seems to bo with us. jsusinesj
tnon are iubilant over the business
last week and the prospects for the
sorinir and summer. In fact our en
terprising merchants haven't been panic stricken at any time. They have been planning and enlarging for
the future, and it seems tneir nopes are being realized. The industries of Monesscn seem to have passed through the worst of the slump and the outlook is now very' promising. The pay of Saturday practically loosened up things here and caused thousands of dollars to pass through mercantile circles. Independent, Monesscn, Pa., April 12. 191 :. With the end of the long winter and the approach of spring things in the business and commercial world are looking better especially right here at home. Roads are getting better and there has been a marked increase in buying in many lines. Seeds, hardware implements, groceries and summer dry goods have all come in for a share. . . The lumber business is snow in-, wigns of activity, carpenters and builders are busy, and one was heard to sav the other day that the outlook for building in and around Wayne was the beM for several years, and that means that its xrood. for it has not been very Mow here.
Now that the scare is over the people are coming to realize that this country is in a very prosperous condition at. the present time. For a number of years speculation was running rife and there was a fictitious condition in regard to our business condition, but we are now on a safe and conservative basis in a condition where men aro investing their money only upon certainties and are not running after "get rich quick" schemes and to many this reflects a condition of a stagnation but it is dirvctly tho reverse and the country has not been in so prosperous a con
dition for years. The outcome will be that in time the people will come to recognize? this fact and it will result in much good for the entire country. Plaindealcr, Chat worth, 111., April 9, 1915.
The most remarkable change since the Napoleonic wars has come suddenly to the American shipbuilding industry. Tho last day of December, 114, closed one of the poorest years the American ship yards have had in a decade. Today every shipbuilding concern from Bath, Me., down to New-port News, in Virginia, i;? working to Its fullest capacity says the New Republic. One of the largest companies has orders sufficient to keep 6,000 men employed full time for two or three years. Contracts have been closed for 4 8 ocean vessels and negotiations aro pending for 60 more. Prices have been advanced IT. per cent, although this fact is not significant. A British company has placed an order for the hnildlncr of two ships in an American
vanl. a thintr never heard of before,
and is likely to order two more.
Annarentlv the American mercnani
marine has entered upon another pe
riod of expansion. Ihe snips oracreq
and those for which marine architects are now drawing plans embrace not
only passenger vessels ior uie coastwise trade, but freighters for the Pacific and South American service, big cargo carriers for the trans-Atlantic
holiness and oil tankers to po any
where and everywhere. Press, West Chicaco. 111.. April S, 19 K.
to determine whether to pink outf.i or the purple.
A'i. hew sb.wlv the hours o.isso.i ! 1 hud in mind.
eiween oarknss
,
him the humiliating proposition that
iblc-bodie 1 pov rty
uld be elitficuU
to cemprehe:. I. If it sh c c r. to :io 1 it h r t r
tficr o o
fere nce
uld. it would u m nt than
o'Uiii-s. law or social inte reeid!:t. sicklies-, laziness
and bedtime' t
misantnrope, and he firms diversion j f ist. imwevor. I found myself in low -for many otherwise eiull hours. 'r s v,ith th pink stripe's clutch-d to -. . - - .. !i-V ' ' V"U1. We We -re a. on,.. !V He .V , laiiok's ki:al loss. ; ?n'1 L ,n"w 1,rirht ;in, luveThe condition of workirmeu in the ' In, m. ,,alUCd hlt" United States, with respect tei the im- i Hut s'r.in-'clv enough I had a feel
ing that, having
... V. . . , CI . I 1 l ; - - i
I in u ill I 11 1 1 ll IO
r c
a p
s t,
uly pos.
-i ;
t'V'
a (,m ixnoN or 'he announced p
.MOTIVES. irpose of
Western I'm Pen:;s lv.ini.
:r.ii:i oniei'
Tt 1. craph C.
Railroad company to in Sm.r Sing prison as
od con-ld,-raf b-
provemem. eiuring recent years, ap- j
r. i r o 1 1 o jt t Vt o a.j-lCr. i :t . - .1 ..f
4 . ' V- wvv 'l T. JJ- j,, th
tncrease. sa iur as concern real wages, i did not wish to w hie h is, economically, at least, their rude, unfeolir.g
purchasing capacity The "real wages" ! ' h-iMro a . . - -..... ... , . ... i I mad
i'i i.oee. '.'" woirwers ueciineii sieauuv: ,,
lli.i r,,m 1 lj l'l T t , 1 'I C ,w'i',ir,Hi,i In tl . I
iii; ! i I o i 14 v I i n a . ' . luvriuu.s k J I i e a SSI IU i la I il 111
f la!"r statistics. According none e-x-. pt mM
that p eke d ir
:ot into ill em. I if any desire to
narrow sleeping car aisle ! between a eirah
i.n.. Uf i iioricH mvseil. as ii iui
a t old plunge, and asked him if perchance iie too. wore pajamas, it he i an ic -1 with him an extra pa.r. and it he would be willing to entertain an otter fur them. Ho Ltd. and would. They were freshly laundered and neat, and he would not accept payment for them. But thev were of a dull color a cross
lr.d a dun. ana on.
i rid t lie ! bure au
;elegraphrs. has a
.nterest among c!;c:.i!s of the v, -aphers unpen. Intimations that the Veste-rn Ur.P-.n. w hich is inte t.s ly h ;
U'e to unionism
:aph rs. ;s tra!
breaking pur; . s. -on.e from the .f -leg rap he rs' rr-t nir.it ions. It is po::.t.-d out ! v u:.:on e:!ici.ils
among Its tee,
,g era icts for striio
, to the :.rst tabulation of "real wages' i i i-r mad by this bureau, and now ; be mg shown by means of a graph:? 'electric chart at the Pan.ima-Pacitic i 'expedition, th? bureau concludes that i where' a dollar in l'o)7 yould buy 121 I food units, in 1 f 1 0 it would buy enly i "7. and in 1 91 ". emly Iom. 1
j This startling decrease in the I chasing power ed! the elollar was
-uhject them to the! how inferior they were to uic llt 4a" comme nts of tho ' ure pajamas in my grip. .Mill, taere
pi untance. Then and there 'was nothing else to do but return co covenant with m.vself that i my gloom-iaden lower and put them
hould s.e how- attr.e tiv, h- we on Then I lav down and pondered
adlv over what might have been. Soon I heard c mtented snores all about. But contentment knew not me. Mv journev se-e-med botched bevond all hope. Kvery time 1 opened . . t l 1 .
rip and saw the useless uunuie
TWENTY YEARS AGO
Reminders From the Columns
of The Dally TUues.
pajamas
we I
Uld
m.. and the stars
:m u ir now and them through
the' half raised curtain. I low m-.-dl.-ss tlie covenant' How little j knew what w as in st.re! Timidly 1 ht my If int.. iherii. -d thv were to,, small. Th.-v did not ft. They did n.d h-hi-hi-hi-hihi-it me at all!
my
of
that there ar- at thi.SGO absolutely i lie t.
eomphshed bv a slight el. r a
pr rit time ( .,.nrs f labor, ami a somewl:.t -,raph'rs out j m. irked increase in rate f w.ige.-
pura c -
rr -re i , ,
1 : CO
Ami it w oul I e
. . I M I
llllulll i
Id buv red re s
ru I eluvs
fore
n a r
In
' ore
w here I , in.
arid went to the
smok-
. -iv - lT-no-nts v. limn. m ueaiw
-an'.-:. Melancholy clutched me. xoward morning I e:alled the porter and paid him a sum el money to throw them overboard. After that I became
re cheerful. But I shall never al
low myself to become attached to a -et of Y.Camas again. Henceforth I
i ennpurtmer.t where I picked out shall cast my lot with the plain, un-
tall gaunt str
g.r who
uit mv
lied
' n
him
i .r. cfsat f ut
A 2C,0eu in the I'mted .-tatcs. 1 :v tip rise in fooii prices wiped out t'ksc
r.undred others, they .say
si, ncs. i up rise ni iooi , ale working advantages, an
J left the labr con-
hour b. for I f, it
w 11
Plight
to
and ngace d If was two f 1 kne-w him
adorned, old-fashioned nightie.
enough to lay be fore him mv sad home cooked foods. Th.i t ur iart of it and make to meals are always popuh.
HAT AT THi : PHI LA. You'll find a variety of delicious
That's why their
ir. Advt
The high school alumni decided on May U for reunion day. The Finishers' union held its annual ball at Turner hall. The committee on arrangements was composed of Joseph liauger, Frank Wanders ypt, G. F. Haslr nger, James Slocum. H. M. Fritzer and James McCafferty. Mr. and Mrs. C. J. Taylor entertained the Pottawatomie club.
Tin: sucuirr.
"Pop, how do the people in the i weather bureau find out what kind of' weather we're going to have?" "They don't son." Philadelphia! Public Be-dger.
COATS' TimilU). All numbers, blacJc and whites, alo all colors, i 4(Uy IVr Dozen. 4c Per S?ooL CILS. B. 8AX & CO.
Li
Troubles?
m tr. - f a ak n
B B H J a II c a H
i t 2 &41 C if U li VI a
Are you worrying about the paying of your TAXES or PERSONAL OBLIGATIONS? THIS INSTITUTION was organized to SERVE THE MAN OF SMALL MEANS TO GIVE HIM A FINANCIAL BACKING AT A SMALL COST. We will LOAN YOU MONEY AT REASONABLE RATES (we take no CHATTEL MORTGAGES) and receive SMALL WEEKLY PAYMENTS ON THE PRINCIPAL. Come to THE MORRIS PLAN COMPANY YOUR FRIEND and LET US HELP YOU.
P
4
iviorr s nan bomoanv
OF SOUTH BEND CHARLES R. HUFF, Manager. Corner Main and Jefferson St. Opposite Postoffice
Iff) O n rinitt
Week
M
ay sm m
May 8ih
Look for the large page and half page advertisements in the Ladies' Home Journal and Saturday Evening Post. Thousands of persons throughout the United States took advantage of the sale last year Many more will be added to the Hot Point users this year. Will you be one of them? You cannot make a mistake on any of these appliances. The large production of the Hot Point Factories makes it possible for these low prices, for 6tandard and well made appliances They have no equal for the price and are equally as good as many higher priced appliances. Appliances can be purchased at the following stores: Electric Service Co., 115 W. Colfax Av. Electric Construction Co., 119 E. Jeff. Blvd. Central Electric Co., 128 S. Main St. Colip Bros., 114 W. Wayne St. Wheelock & Co., 113 W. Washington Av. S. D. Moran, 421 S. Michigan St. Williams Electric Co., 121 E. Jeff. Blvd.
Ho
m.m&m
n D:7
13
i
"ft
iaai
fl o
leciTic
Company
220-222 W. COLFAX AV. Bell 462. Home 5462
r0U PAJLESS FORITT
Hi.
actioro u
OR.
Guaranteed
MOVY R. FUN DEC
.tiij; iini'i; (i om: tihx am tvm,
NEW AND CHARMING FOOTWEAR FOR DAINTY WOMEN
1
9
Mi
;-.! v .n c -
b
r.-:;l:;:c
ev e ry
' ii ir Slices h'Te.
t v 1LH Li
I
e, li' iSe- and M.Os sIjcm'
Store.
yoi:i.i
116-122 East Wayne Street.
WORLD'S LARGEST EXCLUSIVE SHOE RETAILERS.
