South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 119, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 29 April 1915 — Page 8
8
Tiimsnw. apimi, 20. THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO., PUBLISHERS.
21 a WEST COLFAX AV.
Entered a .. r! Can mtt-r at tia I'ostoffle at South He:id, Ir.Uaaa
sitiscriition uati:s.
D.iIIy anl Sunday la adranc, in ty. per year J 00 I!I.t and Sund.iy In advance?, bj rraill. per j-r Z 00
Dally and Sunday fof rnrrU-r Pally, jln?!1 copy ... Sunday, inff!e copy .
wee Jt
Seeing America
r irst
IJy IYctl Kelly.
THE MELTING POT come rAzcs potluck with us.
If your dsbio rps'f.irs In the trlephor.- directory you .n tlc-pti -'ne your wart "id- to i he News-iin.ts . ffir and a bill will b Dialled after Ub Inrtton. Honw ptoa 1151; Iiell jibone :OJ ' cone. Loi;n.x:znN a woodman Foreign Adtertfsing Iieprtsentatlvt.
VUih ATenue. New York Advtrtlilng Building. CUcaffo
.SOtTU INDI ANA, APRIL 19L.
miadi: 010111 iormur c;i:.i uoitv with k ailro i. Shade of those grand old days when the rutlroad.s run th gov rn men? and the KOverrmn nt paid the railroads fr the privilege f I . i n run y them such is tho present suit pending hefore the Cnited States supreme court involving an attempt to recover lands valued at 1 iK,,(,h'i,' frnm the Oregon S: California Railn-ad Co. and others. It is perhaps one of the most important povernment suits institute d in recent years, sifcuitie-ant just now hccausf the nil-roads are having a desperate time informing the puldic as to how I.adly the are hoing ahuseel, and, because thee western railroads have hcen but a trifle more supremely blessed than many railroads in the cast. It was a, i.a'dt r.omc years ago, not only with the federal Kin-ernnunt but the states, to make railroads happy with land grants. Free land was more plentiful then than now. The particular lands in question, incident lo tho suit pending, comprise more than two million acres, are- part of the "land grants" wtiich were made with lavish hand to the transcontinental railroads in the period after th close of the Civil war. If the government wins its case, these lands will be thrown open to settlement and development, and in addition the railroad will have to pay the government for .".20,000 acres which the government claims have been disposed of contrary to law. To quote from the Kovernment brief: The defendant company has I lagrantly vioiafed the congressional .lets, and now seems to think the government harsh In calling upon it to suffer the consequences of its misconduct. There is not a single equity in the company's favor; for every dollar in alue given to the government in the form of free transportation, it has received about from the proceeds of the lands; for fvery dollar in taxes paid it has received more than $: out of the lands. For' upwards of a quarter of a century the eompanv bas. for its own selfish purposes, and in contempt of the laws of the oountrj', withheld these lands from home .seekers, ami thwarted the industrial development of a large section of a great state, and at this moment demands the ri'ht to continue in its icioiis work of obstruction. Unless it be reprehensible for the government to enforce the laws and there are some who think it is there is no room for the claim that its action in demanding a forfeiture of the lands in question is inequitable ami should be condemned. The decree of the lower court is right and we respectfully nsk that it be affirmed. The government's brief declares that between 1 1 T and 11U-, at least 10,000 individuals made application to the railroad company for purchase of plots of these lands for ho m est ea ding", but the railroad claimed that these applications were not made in good faith. The Cnitcd States answered this argument in this way: If the railroad ci fi'any had put these lands upon the market for sale according to the terms of the grants, it would have been demonstrated within a short time that there were thousands of people wilhng to take them and establish their abodes thereon. If that had been done, what is now a wilderness would be a land of bonus filled with happy and prosperous citizens. What the government's suit amounts to is a charge that this railroad company has monopolized these lands, unlawfully withholding them from settlement and entry to secure for itself the increment In land value which it has capitalized and upon which it is now earning di idends. The history of the ure.-it railroad grants is probably the rotteiu-st in the economic and legislative history of the United States. Vast areas of the public lands were given outright to the railroads, t ne C. .v:. senator declared in the senate during the last congress that the F. s". government could have built every mile of track and furnished the equipment f'r the transcontinental land-grant railroads and presented the whole outfit to the companies and would still hae been better off bad it retained these public lands. One important result of winning this suit (if the governnu nt should win it) Is the effect it mav have on railroad
capitalization, rate-making and disputes. The western railroads in the present wage arbitration case now being considered by the board of artdtration in t'hi.airo (an 1 due for early decision), are claiming that they cannot afford t grant wag.- increases to their employ, s. The railroad brotht rhood:; nthe other hand are claiming that: The increment in land value of these goernmnt lan.i grants has been capitalized by the roads and has prevented a participation of
cm p!oy s tinea rned
and ;:o in ere::
cut
ent
lie of
in the a 1 u e
arising from the retention of this land and In revenuts pro due, d from strictly rail operations. Furthermore, dividend and interest pavment.s on s-ie capitalization issued in this enn c-tb-n have to be not With revenue gains produced in part by Increased work ami productive efficiency of bio:riotie engineers and lirrmen and ut!u r railroad em ployes. Whit h leads back to hat ofh.-r point l more ten e. ml interest. It serves arf
a reminder to the public that while perhaps the railroads are not being allow d to run things as generally for a subsidy as they did years auo, perhaps it is not because they should, but because they should not, ami the world is growing somewhat wiser.
From diary: In obb n times the train butcher passe. 1 down the aisle shouting his wares papers, magazines or fruits in a singsong voice, and that let him out. He did not tarry long, and if one did not care for what he had to
j s y or had to sell only a scant amouui i of harm was don.
Almost anybody could he a tram but. her in the good, old-fashioned way. F.ut now in the west or at any rate in those putts of the west where the scenery abounds the train butcher must be not only a salesman l-ut a lecturer, a cross between a book agent ami I.yman II. Howe. lie gives a travel talk on the- scenery and then undertakes to sell a book of views confirming all that he lias said. He slides into the scat h--side the guileIt ss passeng r and takes the passenger's attention from the scenery to look at a souvenir J aper weight. He will talk confidentially for 10 minutes about the merits of a pair of penny postcards for which he asks a dime. Throughout the wast practically everything that one can think of is now offered for sale on trains Xavajo blankets. Indian jewelry, staple and lane- groceru s, and all manner of artk b s for which one care s little or nothing. In the course ef a elay's journey through a mountainous region, we earn' to a patch of snow. Simultaneously with our coming upon the
snow entered a tram salesman wait
.f I ow-grade
amber- spectacles .v r his arm. lie xplained that from then on we would 1 e in snow almost e-oi.tinuou.-ly. and that to save the passengers eyesight the railroad company had thoughtfully provided colored glasses at the absurdly low price of T.u cents each. When no one offered to buy he
VXCO.N I'll IA II I N I-AY S. If newspapers printed only the things that some public men think they should print, they would havelittle else but real estate transfers, marriages ami deaths. At the same time, whatever the- convictions of the newspaper men who heard Pres't 'Wilson speak at New Ye.rk the other night, they all seemed to applaud his plea for caution in printing unconfirmed news. At the he ight of the ye llow journal-
ism movement, a host ef papers never i about eight eloen pair
made efforts to distinguish between rumor and fact. If there was a elispatch that the- Japs had landed troops on the Philippines, they chucked it in and denied it ne;t day in small type. More ofte-n they did net bother to
insert any denial unless it had a j started his l. e ture all over again with
There an- some days when tlio nuttiest fan woulel not to a. ball game, but I be j" all conic in the winter month-.
DIPPY' DlTTins. VIII. On Taking Myers. "News item With a little capital. Miss Gertrude MrCoffory of Brooklyn took a flyer in Bethlehem Steel stock two rnenths ago anel is today worth $100,000. Her investment netted her 1.000 per 'cent."
When Samjny Jones read that account He withilrew all his savings And salted down the whole amount In pond old "Preferred Pavings." Sing high, sing low. That was the end of Sammy's dough. When Nellie Bugge did read the same, She hoarded all her kale. And just to get into the game, Invested in "Ohio Hail." Sing high, sing low, That was the end of Nellie's dough. When Jennie Hicks did read the i:ews, She planked down all her million. On "Quick Refunding Vera Cruz," And waited for her billion. Sing high, sing low, That was the end of Jennie's dough. When Casey Pratt did read the fact, He gathered all his bones, And with a most engaging knacK, Stockeel up on "Canal Zones." Sing high, sing low. That was the end of Casev's dough. R. M. I J. A STORK is a place where they sell things. That is what a store is for, and when we visited one the other day that was all we expected. Rut we got what we expecteel anel then
string in the form e.f a possible libel j ramifications and variations, quoting j some. One e.f the men in the store
suit. Tho war news is full ef fakes. Some of these are- feelers, se nt out by porno government anxious to try out a certain idea on public sentiment. The confusion ef war sets afloat daily a thousand rumors that are merely some erne's surmises. It eften seems as if the big metropolitan papers fail to estimate high enough the intelligence ef the publi:-. The hustling dwellers in New York, Chicago, and San Francisco may be too busy to red anything but headlines. Cut thcr'- are millions of e.thers. who read intelligently and form opinie.ns. When the editor puts a. headline em a story she. wing that he accepts it as a fact, his audience may read it through and pronounce it a fake. A newspaper that does that may sell on street cars and railroad trains, but it will never get any hold on homes where thoughtful people rend, estimate, and weigh.
various learned me-die-al autnorr.ies em the deplorable number of persons vhos; eye sight had been wree ked and whose lives had been made' one con-tinuous-performance headache simply beeause they persisted in staring emt into the sunlight re llee-tcel by the great white mantle ef snow. F.y the' time he had finished his elis-e-ussion the train hail pulled out of tho little? patch e.f snow. And we saw little more snow that day.
I noticed one passenger buying a number of rather expensive souvenir booklets, showing wild, mountain seines. "These will be a great help when I get home and start telling lie's," he saiel, thumbing his purchases tenderly. "I'll show these pictures to my friends and toll them I went all over this country on a mule."
who sell things met us with a friendlv
greeting which we atrributeel to his elesiro to turn some of his things Into our cash. Apparently this was a delusion. The man conducteel us to a latticed bewer in the center of the store. Trailing vines clung to the lattice and within a fountain played. The voLes of singing birds mingled with the musical tintinnabulation of the falling water. Inviting seats occupieel cosy nooks. Tim man conducteel us to one ami we sat down anel talked with the music of the birds and the
water in our ears. Wc forgot it was a Ftore. There was nothing in our surroundings to suggest the sordid conception of business, yet beyond the lattice there was a ceaseless hum of voices and people were buying things. IF you get the impression we received it must please you. "KURDS Massacre 7,000 Christians." Headline. Truly blood kurdIhng. j. AKR. SUCH a time ast the birds are having. We are at a less to know whether they are happy or miserable. They act like human beings in love, now in the seventn Tieaven of ecstatic bliss, now plungeel into the dark abyss of despair. This mating business is hard on the constitution and by-Laws. AFTER having had em off several days a fall in temperature will seem to bo in the nature of a calamity. HAVING manifested our love of country by shutting down and going to the ball game our chest swells with patriotic pride, regardless of the score. VYliat Is a Truism? (Essays of Elia,) If we must naturalize that portentlous phrase, a truism, it were well that wo limited the use of it. Every commonplace or trite observation is not a truism. For example: A good name helps a man on in tho world. This is nothing but a simple truth, however hackneyed. It has a distinct subject and predicate. Rut when the thing predicted is Involved in the term of the subject, and so necessarily involved that by no possible cemeeption they can be separated, then it becomes a truism; as to say, "A geod name is a proof of a man's estimation of the worlel." We seem to be saying something w hen we say nothing. T was describing to F some knavish tricks of a mutual friend of ours. "If he elid so anel so," was the reply, "he cannot he an honest man." Here was a genuine truism, truth upon truth, inference anel proposition identical; or rather a dictionary definition usurping the place of an inference. ONE of our desires is to save up enough money so that when we get old we can see the game and not have to read the bulletins. C. N. F.
SIGNS OF PROSPERITY
The charming feature e.f the average train salesman is his optimism. I randy saw one of them sell any souvenirs. Yet all talkeel as if with a confidence of being em the eerke ef closing out the entire' stock. After work
ing at his trail for a few vears. one
Could some newspaper man act 3ii j ,,f the se train boys would make an i
the suggestie.ns maele by Pre s't Wilson, j ide al fishrman in. the Areiii ondaeks.
not merely would this country be in i
better pe.sition to maintain advan tageous neuitrality, but seme news papers would command wider respect
wher the fish are searce. He could
sit all elay without getting a nibble j and yet be e-e-rtain e ve ry moment that
he- woubl get a big strike the following moment.
IT SURF PAY." . The Santa Fe railmad h.s become a great system, anel largely because its management injects the human element that makes the wlu 'o werld kin, into the comluct ef its affairs.
Moccasins are' offend for sale in great assertment all through the west.
; 1 presume some body must bu,v mocca
sins, r.ut who wears them after they are benight? Anel why? Do you, urse If. foolish reaeler, know anybody who ever actually wore a pair e.f souvenir moccasins?
In Texas a freight cemductor was
emt on his rui when the word was! The literary hero of the train , , ce. i butchers throughout California is flashed that his wife was dying. Sim- j , farlM ,.,. Wri.ht who liv(s in Cai. ultaneously came an oreb'r freun heael- j f(,rnia. I must have asked 1." diftYr-
quarters to b-tach the' engine anil
cabeose and "run special" te the city where' she was. Right of way was given the speeial over all trains. The ce.neluctor reached his wife's siele in time to see' her alive once ag,'in. Don't vou think that kind ef 'busi
ness"
pays
i Nci.i: Tin: ;ri:t ti; di:k. The bargaiti Uncle Samuel picked up when he benight Alaska from Russia for $7.2i,ooo is beginning to stiek out s everybody can see it. That country has already adeled more than $200,000,000 nearly thirty times its ce.st price in gold bullion to the wealth ed" this country, anel its resources in furs anel fisheries. lumber and minerals, pred.ably e xcee-d $,".0 0,e 0 0,0 00 today. Rut the most striking eomparlson is that the government is spemling five times as mue h en the new raUreuiel as it paiel fer the whole territory.
edit boys whom they regarded as the greatest living writer. Without exception they told me Harold Rell Wright, and all see rned surprised that I found it necessary to ask such a (iir-tion. 1 flew te) the eb l-nso of Be rtha M. Clay, anel e.ne or tun e.f the salesmen .admitted that she has a vve.nderful style, but that was as far as they would go! They avoel the-ir superlavles fed Harold Rell Wright. As one lad expressed it: "You can't reallv know literature
i until you have sold it on trains. Then
you see- what the people really want. 1 reckon Handel Bell Wright is the most popular author since William Culb'ti Bryant."
TVEKTY YEARS AGO Reminders From the Columns of The Daily Times.
The question is askcl what has be-j come of the hoy w ho used lo he aw-j fully pleased by tho gift of a whee lharrow? Well, he has grown up and !
The contract for the public library was awarded to George Frevcrmuth lor $2 .",r. s:f. H. II. Swaim reports a rainfall of 1.0". inches Tor April. The South Bend Musical club elise tisseel Schubert. The llacdel eratori societv elect-
e d I
his bov might i.ossiblv be i ontent.d ! ' " u- Jl- 1'11 picsnieni; .Miss Sher-
... ... , , . , i uian and .Miss Kirby. vite presidents; with the latest caster brake Nu ycle. , yv. Parker, treasurer; Harrv Rllibut nothing but a motorcycle will ott. secretary. It was decided to give make him trulv happv. ' ;t -May festival. ' ! -Miss SuMe Teel has returned from
... I a isit t Niles.
" v oumie iiv v ill M. ills :
We violate
that uneasy lie s the head f the king ; of Crceee. His subjects want to light !
and his wife swears she'll go baek to her brother, the kaiser, if they b light. Life's just ne blamed riot af;-r ane'ther for his kingship.
estate for April. $17i.7S.$.T0.
Why is it that when you touch .ff the kitchen steve kindling with a
m:ii pRim; toi cm:i. .V tae-hers meeting was in progress, and it was decided that the more- elitfiMil subjects should e-ome in the morning, ami thoe thai n-quind ks applie-ation later in the dny. Histeuy was last on the list, and Miss Wheekr, the young teaelur. prote sf d. "But it e'ertainly is e asir than se i-
Almost inelignantly, anel with the worried air of a hen whose ducklings have taken to the water, many of the line old re.ck-ribbeel, dyed-in-the-wool, inm-benind and ceipper-riveted republican organs, like the Kansas City Journal, fretfully protest that it's a shame te say that geod times are approaching during a elemocratic administration. They say that it is plain to any ce.nscie ntious standpatter that tho elemocratic party is to blame fer war cemdittions; the tariff causes the falling edi" in revenue from impejrts and t he1- high ee.st.e.f living; that fact that William Jennings Bryan prefers grape juice to booze is responsible for the Mexiean mess and for the invasion oZ Belgium and the English blockade ot German ports. They de clare that it is a species vt trease.n to leok for better times until the patriots of the grand obi party have again been led up to the leeel trough. There are still a few who insist on discounting the return of prosperity; w he) refuse to see the signs that are so plain to the majority; who have he-Iel that the country has gone to hell anel is bemnd t keep on that way. The political standpatters honestly believe that the ee.untry can not be preisperous unless the stalwart wing e.f the icpublican party is drawing the salaries. Because in the most prospennis perioel the country has enjoyed the republican party happened to be in pewer they attribute to this coincielence the country's prosperity. Unthinkingly, they permit themselves to believe1 that tariffs and acts of congress make and unmake the prosperity e.f a nation. They forget that if the cemntry was in any way badly prepared te meet war conditions, it was the fault of the party that had been in pewer 10 years, net of the party that hael been in power a scant year and a half. But the era of prosperity that is approaching will depend on no political party. It will be' helped very little and it will be hindereel not at all because me party is in petwer or because another party has its feet outside the swill trough. Prosperity may be postPnel until the end ef the war, but the gre.umi swell that precedes the big" wind is now apparent. The fcelins is in the air. It is showing in all tno ig business activities. It is not demo-
jcrati- prosperity nor repuuiican pros- ! oerity. but national prosperity. Rut
it's not going to do the party in power anv harm if it arrives before a year
NOT "I O. The motor-bus stopt, and the con-
j ductor looked earnestly up the steps, ! but no one descended, and at last he stalked up impatiently. j " 'Ere you." he sail to a man on
tp. "elon t you want Westminster Abbey?" "Yes." was the reply. "Well." retorted the conductor, "come elown for it. I cun't bring It on the bus fur vou." Tit-Bits.
from next November, which now seems certain. Enterprise, Beaumont, Texas, April 14, 115.
If anybody should ask the question: "Is Arkansas progressing?" cite them to the fact that $605,000 cf school bonds have been purchased in ono year by Arkansas bond firm, the entire proceeds going into substantial buildings in which the rising generation in Arkansas will lit themselves for tho future. Gunter and Sawyers, the bond purchasers referreel to, are authority for a statement that will come as glael tidings to all. That is that Arkansas boneVtire now finding a readj' market. There is no reason why improvement elistricts should not be organized, bonds sold and improvements made, since the adverse conditions which a few months agc made it almost impossible to sell improvement securities, have passed. Southern Construction News, April 9, 1915.
e n e or mathematics." the orinciiiol
match u have t put on kerosene tei insisted. make it burn, while if you drop a "As 1 to,'th replied the young, ..... . . . .teacher. "n. subject could be morel match in the woods you hao to put ; (UftWllh ail(1 ( (,nfusit;g ." Lippmcott's. !
ONLY A NEUTRAL. Why don't you erganize with ua Turks and Bulgarians anel Servians to demanel your rights in the United States?" '1 haven't any special rights in the United Stales," responded the other quietly. "I was born here." Louisville Courie r-Jurnal.
em a pan or water setting a fire?
to keep if from
AS of Your..
The l;rst man that Billy Sunday convcrteel in Puterson. N. J:. was arrestee! for elrunkenm ss two heurs later. Rilly
maele' him so he went and lightning.
rosTI'ONi; MEETING. i lo 'locoiint of tho Inwnbnll fnme nt
' 1 M...I , ..f ., . ! ' " '- ' " "
' -woiiiii. i u.. e omc here. ' Snrinirhrool: oark Wednesday
blue over h!
put in a lol ed Jersey
;i ftor.
I hava something awfullv nice to t. 11 ' , .,.. .,.hn,i,iimi .t th
' . ,. .'Joseph County Medor club was post- ; Bobbie (age mx). "Aw T don't none el ,care. I know what it is. Big brother's . '
s j'.jis that ' bom' fnon e-olkg " '
lntl,,r-Vlu- Ta; i 1 lAKDOl 1II..KS.
b J. Stough. a substantial citizen id San Die-ut, Calif., ecle! rateel his 7 1 h anniversary. April by taking a plunge in the Pacific an and then p sing for some moving picture s.
FeUlel
! eam Id VOU gm SS
j Bobbie. "My bank bn't rattle anv more." University of Nebraska Aw;'. ! w an.
Monday is the faveiritt day fr hav- 1 ing bonfires, as your ik i.-hl ors will! perhaps then hae sotm 'bah Radius!
huiio' uut to jjet smoked up.
TMR MM: sM0. First c-'t.-.ge Rami. "What was the row eut front eluring the fust scene B.n?" S.'cond Stage Hand. 'The understudy nursemaiel got e . ;t d anel carried ia the- li't dh (' baby when it wa.-n't h;e to appear until three years 1 a t r i M tho ?i!:' fh r.A-1 " 1 .if" I'l.nn-
lshania Punch Bowl.
To the neighbe.rs and friends for their kindness eluring the illness and death of our bereaved wife and mother. JOHN MKKK AND FAMILY. Adt. :'2l Bertrand st.
In a few words the Evening Ledger of Philadelphia, sums up a situation that is facing the country at the present time. It says: Sec'y of Labor Wilson has a remedy for-wiping out unemployment. "Put the jobless to work," he siys, "on land reclamation, government buildings and river harbor improvements. Let federal, state and municipal authorities do the same, and there will be work all the year round lor those who want It." Good! It is a splendid tim-3 for the beginning of great public enterprises that woubl be undertaken anyhow. Rut this idea of a paternal government that will always furnish work and wages for the people is elecidedly awkward. No people ever got rich by taking money out of one paeket and putting it into another. There can '.ever be any permanent prosperity achieved by piling on taxes for the purpose of eioling them back to the people in wages. That, nevertheless, is the principle on which many of our statesmen base their conclusions. They are convinceel that business is something to be whacked and government something to be fed with pap.
Tho sooner Washington understands
that there will always he unemploy
ment ur.less business is encouraged in
stead of discourageel the soemer the
cemntry will be back on a bread and
butter instead of a soup diet. Rristol, Pa., Courier, April S, 1913.
1
SooocASoni to JL, 3L Joaea PnrnUore Store Around on M&3 6 trod.
Pbone us your name 'and adcress today and get a LifSaver free by mail. ROGERS DAIRY CO.
Home Phone 7793. Bel! Phone 760. Pure Pasteurized Milk.
LO-TFS I.INI.MF.NT tops Rheumatism. Neuralgia, aches, and pains, lb st. and cb auet Liniment made. 2Cc
c at Co - dih" s.
Advt.
1 Mr?. Austin's delicious Rolled Oats. Ra.-kage a third lardgcr. Re thrifty.
U4 5T. tS'AJBIXIXCTOrT A'TZU
li e rm a si 9 s 139 S. MICHIGAN ST.
Lad.
9
Hill
L Da
siys
TT7 O rn.
Sat.
YOUR CHOICE OF ANY Cloth Suit in our store. Regular price $20.00 to $40.00. Sale price
op) 1 ' " I
y 1
in
Come early and get your pick. $20.00 to $40.00 SUITS
300 New Summer Dresses. Regular $4.50 to $6.00 Dresses, at $2.95 each. One Hundred $5.00 and $6.00 Trimmed Hats at $2.95. Any $15.00 Coat at $10.00.
CD r 71 TT Vf"
May 3rd to May 8tln 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 standard 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.
Electric Company 220-222 VV. COLFAX AV. Bell 462. Home 5462
& FlicMgai
ECONOMY DEPARTMENTS SOUTH BEND'S FOREMOST ECONOMY GIVERS. 219-221 S. MICHIGAN ST. ENTRANCE IN INDEPENDENT 5 AND 10 CENT STORES.
Stock Reducing Sale Starts Saturday AT
