South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 148, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 28 May 1915 — Page 18
lb
riSIDAV, MAY .0!.-. THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TlMLa WOMAN GOLFER WHO WON AT TOURNAMENT flUEER TALES TOLD n
lift ClliL
1, LIKE 10 LIKES - Ail Tf Ti 71 o
' ABOUT WM CENSORS One Wants Father Officially Informed Before Publishing His Son's Death.
i!
n
Everything Seems to Happen By Magic Culebra Cut is Still Difficult of Passage Says Gilson Gardner.
Ily (iiNon (Jiinlncr. On t.oarl S. Pinl irvl. mro-ito r.in.irna to rt.in IifKO. May IS. .- in? through the r;ui:im;i canal 1 liko sailing through uvu :uo-i-rat" j-izM beautiful artilkial lakes. n- is aSout IS miles Ions;: the othr aUut n i n miles. The waters ar- vlachl. the shore arc indented anl over 1 with wonderfully varifat-d tropical t'rowtli. riomttiiri'-s they arc di.-tant and t-ornetime a few feet from the steamer. When clou: a ,r!i elx-rus, as of hundreds of little canaries, is heard. Theie are . v. am py lookill;.; llatf, and later quite res;. tal le hill all very picturesque, ai;d pl-asirii,'. SnaKi and tlie hare skeletons of dead trees, killed Iy the ri!n waters, mar tho beauty In jIaes; hut these are rapidly rotting and dropping into the wator. Of coum- then are lwks, like stairways at each end oi' the lakeat liit three steps to Ktt into the lirst hii; lake, bo ff't above the Atlantic; then two teps down to Ket into tiio smaller lake; ami then three steps down to the sea level canal. Orderliness is th keystone of the locks. All moves like clothwork. The , ship slips Into the cement tank: the Kates close behinil without a jolt or a .'ar, the water veils up mysteriously from beneath, und the happy looking Negroes carrying the hawser line luck tip and smile. Nobody i'l'tmn to he doln.'.? anything. K t rythin happens by mas ic, of its own accord. The mother whose husband is a canal employe, tomes down with the baby in her arms and watches the ship through, much as the country dweller ors to the station to see the eveniir-r accommodation arrive and depart. The baby wave- at the passengers and the pas-senders think of babies at home and wave back. The Culebra cut is still difficult of passage. The drcdi;crs and blasters were at work when we went through ;;nd there were live minutes when the Finland was on the bottom and .passensers wondered whether it would pet off. The captain's one idea alter leaving New York was to iret past the point of a possible block by slides. at Panama (Balboa and Ancon) we anchored for a niht and a day, anil the pasenKers went ashore and bought Panama hats. ponuee silk. Palm Peach suits, ami things to eat. Some stopped at the government hotel, the Tivoli, and are willinu to irive
a testimonial to Fncle Sam as hotel keeper. It was (lean, cool, comfortable, well appointed with i;ood food at reasonable rates. The heat at the canal zone was actually Icsh than before arriving and after leaving there. Soon after leaving New York blankets and wraps are discarded and for many days the weather is tropical, otf the milf the ocean water wa S Fahrenheit and the air much hotter. Hefore these trips are a complete Fucce;s from the point of view of the pleasure-seeker (a majority of our passengers were such) several things will have to be done. There must be more stops and more time at the -topping' places. A stop at .Inmaiea will no doubt be found to be desirable and at least a day and nU'ht In the canal zone, giving time to see the interesting city of Panama and the ruins of old Panama. Opportunity to have laundry done should be included. The journey up the Pari lie coast would well bo broken by a stop somewhere, or at least it might be made near enough to land to perrc.1t the passengers to see shore, (me of the earlier boats did take the shore route and passengers booked for the Finland were shown an enthusiastic letter from one of the passengers on that ship tellinc of the attractions of the coast. Fy some coincidence the same letter was read at the steamship offices in F.oston. New York and Washington. Put the Finland never got closer than uO miles to this interesting shore and most of the time no land was visible. Shortly before leaving- Panama Saturday afternoon word came that the laisitania had been torpedoed. Whether or not the report was true, or what was the loss of life was unknown until the following Friday morning when the wireles brought an answer to a message sent to the Port Arthur (Texas) station. For nearly a week while sailing up the pacific coats of Central America and Mexico the wireless had no land stations with which to work. The wireless apparatus is less effective in the tropics. What is called 'statio" fettles down in the hot moist air and seems to inutile the ether waves A machine which under favoring conditions will send and receive ?.000 miles, can reach hardly more than r0. The hUh volcanic mountain? such as those along- the Mexican and Central American eMst. also act ns a banter against stations on the other- side of them. So the operators say. "What the ancients would have recarded ns a "portent" was viewed by the passengers of the Finland Sunday evening. May Suddenly the eastern heavens were lighted up with a glow as If a rocket, n hundred times brighter then any human rocket, had burst behind a thin tropical cloud. Tnen from behind the cloud a ribbon of t'.re seemed to be let down toward the earth and at the end a glowing 1 til, r.s of molten metal, hung suspend .1 for what seemed a full second and then fell to the sea. In the Southern Pacific waters the phlp encounters many sei-i:o!r.g turtles, big brown fellows, swimming nlong" T.O miles from shore, with backs and heads out of water. Some are three and four feet In I'nrrth. There are occasional schools of porpoNrs and dolphin?, and a i-mall TVh which looks like the herring but leaps from the writer l:k the dolphin. Little riving rh. blue nr.l resembling hum
ming birds, are aroused by the prow and i'o skimming " avs. One evening in s
. -., ' v" Y - 1 - v' ,- - , V' '- ' . " 4 t - '"''.''.". 1 r - ' ' . A ' : I . .f : " J - t - .,. . - ' . I N V, , ... i v i " , ; ' i -' ' ' ' ' - ' ' ' ' ' ' . ' A s- '.' .; i ' -. . v . . - - l ' " , '. ' ' 2 - "" . ? i ' -? ' y t . '. ' . i I' - : - i - -: . .f ; ' . .' . jr.-- ., i ' . " . i - : : - . -; v ' ' ' . '. . ,' . J ' , ' ; t i . . . ,:- - : - -t l v . a i - ., - - ., 3 ' ';. ' "1 i - .. - - ft-'--;';-;,'' '(' ' ' r ' ' ; .-. , . '. - . .' ' . , r. . .. . ' : .,-'..... v , .. i -.. -J f - ' " , , . - '
v'-t -( ':
? !
t " i t m
Seventy women golfer?, unmindful of the rain and the soggy course, started in on the Metropolitan Championship race Tuesday, at the Sleepy Hollow Country club course. Honors in the qualifying rounds, in which high scores predominated, went to Miss .Marion Hollins of Wcstbrook, who turned in a card of in, two better than Miss .Lillian Hyde, her nearest competitor.
WANTKD Counter mar at the Oliver Iairv Iainch. Advt.
LONDON, May 2v The 1013 edition of Sell's World's Press issued today tells three stories of the idiosyncrasies of the war censors. One of the "appeal" advertisements from the Morning- Post was submitted for ;:ppioal parted on an cilice slip bearing the words, "with the managers . oniplimonts." The censor who had that day entered on his duties imagined it an appeal to himself, and in returning the proof appended a polite note stating that his uvSn regiment needed all his spare cash, and he must regretfully decline. Shortly alter the cable censors were removed from the general postoltice building to Whatehall. the representative of an English news agency with a branch in New York was hurriedly summoned by the chief cable censor, who .seemed shocked beyond measure. A cable for New York has been handed in simple containing' the words "Oliver Goldsmith, Protherstone, Aboukir." This he pointed out was a clear case of attempting to send a c ipher message. With serious mien the reporter entered the 'phone box and rang up the ollice and tremblingly a.-ked the sub what it meant. "Ilin (.IT." was the laconic reply. "Result of the Uncoln handicap." There is a rule which forbids the publication of unauthorized , casualty announcements-. When, the news of the death of "Ian MaclarenV son reached Fngland, an agency submitted the following "par" for censorship: "It is announced that Capt. Matson, the son of lan Maclarcn, lias died as the result of wounds." In passing the news for publication the assistant censor wrote: "The bureau has no objection to the publication of the news if the father has been ottieially informed." The censor's acquaintance with fiction evidently did not extend to a biographical knowledge of the late Itev. John Watson.
i : x ci : i ti ( ). i i Mil a as i : u v RAIKJAINS. Friday and Saturday we will have on sale 100 trimmed hats at $1.00 each. Formerly priced up to $9.00. See them and you will buy. Mrs. M. A. Fralick, lr.l N. Main st. Advt.
Try NEWS-TIMES Want Ads
1 (Y'll?A
lji. TiTarrggff-x riry-TiMT.7i-.n;
Misuse
.viisiiap
The Only Clouds That Ever Dim The Giory of Fortified Tires
Goodyear tires, like other tires, meet with ill-luck at times. No doubt some men ere judging them by some such rare exception. To them we say this: Remember that men have tested nearly five million Goodyear tires. The tests have covered 15 years. Long ago those tests placed Goodyears at the top, and they've kept there ever since. Last year men bought about one Goodyear tire for every car in vie. Doesn't that show that men in gencraLhave proved these tires the best? In Five Ways
Vjoodycar FortifiedTires have five exclusive features. We spendonthem millionsof dol-
(Hood
lars to reduce your tire upkeep and trouble. One combats rim-cuts, one blowouts, one loose treads. One makes the tire secure. And one combats punctures and skidding by our doublethick All-Weather tread. In those ways, at least. Fortified Tires excel all others. Lower Prices Now these super-tires offer still greater value. On Feb. 1st we made another big price reduction. That's the third in two years, totaling 45 per cent. We do you a kindness when we urge you to try them.
They mean to you the utmost in a tire. They mean content Any dealer will supply you.
. i - )
It
AS
YEAR
AKRON. OHIO
Fortified Tires NVRimXTut Tire-MOn-Alr" Cured Vith All-Ve&thrTred or Smooth
ri M
3
shi:' - t h (
en
of
wafers. v.hilc th.e 1 'i r-1. ?. r: . 1 was c:t
slht of 1 n 1 1 . two rliimney swallows came al oard. T!.'-y -,m r- id. mi!.. A .y the srrctary of t h o Aud!i!n sciety who i hfinc i! to ) amor thpasser. re r.-". II- .!id y w,re iri-
jrratlnt: north ar.ij
ouli!
r.d.
M:
take a ride on th" ),.. it 'ir-til ti- rnir.-. Ho alo I 1 it ? i '. 1 .. ., tt. l fr'n: tlo llaJJiChusctti' c..o-t.
Goodyear Service Stations Tires in Stock
SOUTH BEND
CRUMSTOVN
GRANGER LAKEV1LLE
.
. Cadillac Motor Sales Co. Hagedorn & Webster Hinckle Motor Car Co. Auto Inn Supply Store. South Bend Rubber Co. . C. Beringer. F. E. Lowry. . Lakeville Garage.
v. i
NILES. MICH CM. Montague. NORTH LIBERTY. . .Price & Hauser. OSCEOLA Crull Bros. VALKERT0N W. B. Apple. Modern Garage. WOODLAND G. E. Pecher.
I t
i 4
i 1 ' 1
! I
1
i 4
i i
Xf J.U, Vis?
v.
I UK il iU ( 1
3 C
In Our
Sensational
o
i-Tv.
mi
i
1 ) ; ; !
35
LivVoOO
i
I!
Starts Tomorrow, Satiard
We have purchased and will close out the entire stock of j Butler's Cloak and Suit Co. of Chicago, at 35c on the dollar, and will throw it on the market tomorrow at these unheard of jj prices. This is one of the very finest stocks of women's ready-to- j
wear that was ever seen m Chicago.
0 ii .1
Sale Starts Saturday
4
. vv - Jt
i
u
.V i
I
mm
v-i.' -r .
i. 'J
Sale Start: Saturday
I FI A
U
IJhe Greatest
geterieg
of Prices
Lver irieard oir
$20 coats in best styles, serges, pop
lins, garbardines, coverts, etc., in the newest-colors, at only
end
$20 suits, norfolks, piping rook and
country club models, newest and best colors and fabrics, at , . . f
$ 1 8 silk dresses, beautifully trimmed,
with fine laces and ribbons in many new shades at . .
$5 skirts in men V wear, serges, gabar
dines, cicilians, etc, m wide
I..VO
mm m r
$2 waists and blouses; in fine new styles. Latest collar and sleeve effects, A)c many colors, special ....
$3.50 waists and blouses, lingerie, silk, voiles, etc., in new and convert- Qi able collars, all colors, at . .
$2 house dresses, in good full sizes, both light and dark patterns, AC extra special, at
$1 .75 and $2 petticoats, wide flaring, bottoms for wear with new dresses, ?fp come in many shades at . . . j
$1.50 and $2.98 women s kimonos
in a host of pretty light and dark patterns, special
$2.50 wash skirts in new wide bottoms, some have pockets and ( f belts, very special at . . y)liU
$4.50 and $5 wash dresses in fine
voiles, lawns and challics, new figures and some plain at . $
lyo
ri U
$30 silk coals in beautiful fabrics, ripple, flare and stylish loose fitting (j?Jj QQ coats, all sizes, special . .
J
S10
$30 silk suits in the season's most pop
ular creations, and the very best colors, special
$4.50 and $5 children's coats m a
great array of fine new styles, (?J Q all sizes at only
Take Elevator to SECOND FLOOR, 219-221 S. Mich. St.
(lDE
t -1 t- 1
P(Epfio
In Conjunction with the Independent 5c, 10c, 25c Store
s
r
I I i ! j (1 0 Ii! i! j : M ii M H ti Ii j I ji I I! V1
i
