South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 152, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 1 June 1915 — Page 3

Ti rsn.w, jrxi: i. m . I WEDNESDAY "And Jesus said unto her, Woman, hath no man condemned o thee? -k Neither do I condemn thee: go, and sin no more. Governor Ralston, Senator Kern and Several Congressmen Will Be in Party Will Be Banqueted. This text inspired the writing of David Graham Phillips' greatest novel, 1 tit !

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

II ED TORS

n i

o

O o

Plans foi tho entertainment of the r.O mcnilcr.s of the Indiana Democritic Jditori.'.l association, who will ! visit South I'.cvA Wednesday n their : four day tour of northern Indiana, Chicago and i-o-jtlu rn Michigan, arc ( prore.ins rapidly, according to ' "William A. Mclnerny, chairman of the local committee. The party, which will include about 210 mcml'trs of the ;i5:-.ociation, (lov. ;ind Mrs. Ilal.-ton, 'on. Kern, democratic mcmhers of congress and other prominent mcrni.rs of the party, will reach Eolith I.cnd about 0:30 Wednesday evening. They will be escorted to the Oliver hotel, where an informal banquet will

Ve served, speeches by a number of visitors and local democrats, and other entertainment will occupy the time 11 ntil 9 o'clock, when tho party will iUtcnd the second performance at the orpheum theater. Thursday morning the visitors will bo taken on an automobile tour of Fotith ltnd and Mihavaka, including n visit to several of the local manufacturing plants. At o'clock, the jiarty will leave lor Hammond, where they -will sper.l Thursday niht. Friday will be ppent in Chicago, where, tho entertainment will be in charge of Hon. Jtogcr ('. Sullivan. Mr. Sullivan will be the host at a tanquet at the College inn. Hotel Sheridan. Friday nirht. Assisting him in the entertainment will bo the most well known, members of Uie jarty in Illinois. A boat trip across Take Michigan to St. Joseph is on the program for Saturday. The party will ho taken on an automobile tour of the fruit Kelt, nfter which they will be carried back to Indianapolis in special cars, arriving1 in the capital late Saturday nig"ht. DECORATE GRAVES OF FORMER POLICEMEN rTuo .Men Wert- Killed While in Service Send Flown b to Other ' Titles. The Foutli r.end polite department 3':ild respects .Monday to the members nvlio died in trie service ly decorating the Kraves in local cemeteries and KfiidltiK f lowers for the graves of rthose buried in other cities. Two of the policemen honored were billed while in the service, they beini? Fam Cooper, who h buried in the Iowjnan eemetery. and ( ).c:ir Christendom whose grave is in the city cemetery. Tho others are: (Just Worrell, VBattlo Creek. .Mich.: Steve Trbanski. t. Joseph. Mich.; Sam Kine, HiverRiew lenn'trry: Alex. Tlodkin. s'wun Itrom, A. Cordtz and Lew Keller, k ity cemetery: Ieorge Haer. Bowman "emetery, anil Lew an Du.sen. New t Carlisle. Sergt. Zgodzinski. Detective Sergt. fHarnhart ;iml ottic-or Isaacson had khargc of decorating the. graves. NEW SCHEDULE STARTED 'Cars Arrhe From and Lea to for Xiles lAcry Half Hour. Crftwds of people from Xiles on (Monday availed themselves of the half linur serviie started by the Southern fMichiscan Railway company Sunday - t, rt n ifnt 'i ml Vint ti I ? f t w 1 n nil H Inull . iihi i'"in il ijviiw, niit tame to this city to witness the Me morial day Cf lebration and the double Reader staged at Spriimbrook park. Sunday also marked the passing of phe St. Mary's line, the cars of this fcoute lcing taken off. The Niles cars viil accommodato those who formerly lised the St. Mary's line. C.KOFFKV STOKKS AM) MAIN Kins n.osi:i i:vi:itv wi:dm;sIUY AITFi;C)OX. I WOMEN HAVE TO SMILE In a great many case" and try to make those around them happy, while they fire racked with the pain of organic trouble. Few men realize how comjnon such heroism is. The remedy for this condition is Lydi.i I-:. Finkham's .Vegetable Compound a simple remedy made, from roots and herbs. Which for forty years has been overcoming the most obstinate ills of womrn. Kvery women suffering from feJuale ills owes it to herself and family to give it a fair trial. PRESERVE the characlcr of your ne furniture and woodwork; the beauty of grain and finish, ly the use of famous shop formula cf the Tobey Furniture Company (Chicago and New York) A simple, easy, perfect cleaner, and a very efficient preservative for all line surface f varnish, sdi'-llac and enamel. Hot tics 25c and ."0c Recommended and for sole by Leading Hardware, Drug, Grocery, Auto Supply and Paint Dealers. I

TOEEy 'Polish,

T . t- " ' -T ' ' , 1 T rr

V i

DAVID GRAHAM PHILLIPS author vf "Old Wice end Nw, " "77ie Groin of Dust," "The Price She Paid," Etc, Etc.

To thss most startling

written, David Graham Phillips devoted six years of his life. Today, four years after his death by assassination, this, his greatest work is given to the public in Hearst's Magazine. A million fathers and mothers will sec this story and read the lessons in it, 4 Deeply they will sympathize with the child unhappily born, and rejoice that they can protect as she was not protected, those within their care. In Susan Lenox, David Graham Phillips shows with all of his courage and power the story of life as it is. A girl beautiful, intelligent, unhappily born,' cursed with the cruel stigma of illegitimacy, lights against the world. Phillips tells of her journeys down the hill, the cruel sclfishjicss of relations, pushing their own daughter ahead of her. The marriage forced upon an inexperienced child. The horrible revelations of what false marriage really is.' The curse of a union without love on the woman's part, without refinement or kindness on the part of the husband. J The flight of the girl hating immoral marriage more than any risk in life. , , Then the story that the public will read with breathless interest, the hard struggle, against hunger, cold, anxiety, and the last, worse dangcrjthat threatens every helpless woman. It is indeed as Dr. Parkhurst says, fiction "that has a meaning the ONLY KIND OF FICTION THAT MORAL INTELLIGENT PEOPLE SHOULD READ." With his extraordinary power fully developed, David Graham Phillips tells of the fall that could not be avoided, and then of the spirit conquering,-of the rise of the soul, the end of a struggle. The story of Susan Lenox, is the story of cruelty inflicted by

cold civilization upon helpless girls.

It is a story of beauty as well

It is a lesson in powerful literary work, a lesson of true moral teaching. Many a man who reads it, many a man who feels within himself part of the guilt that pushed Susan Lenox down the road, will feel as those men felt in the ancient days, when "Jesus stooped down, and with his finger wrote upon the ground, as though he heard them not,M Many realizing in Phillips' powerful, vivid teaching, how defenceless is woman cursed by man's brutality will wish that they might slink away from their own past, as "they which heard it, being convicted by their own conscience, went out one by one, beginning at the eldest, even unto the last.'' No story but this wonderful narrative of the fall and the rise of a beautiful, unhappy spirit, will be discussed in this country, as long ;s the reading of the story lasts.

Order from your dealer WOW! r

C

it. 1 ' - v mk-i . "v.j-if i .' ( i

U UUto and chorishod thinK tho vorst 7 American novel ever 1 as of horror.' ? 1

il 1

IBw PAW

p Beggars

V'(P J p5) TXiiT n 2.

, iei

lily i ill idii

n n rm!i n n n rr n

injao iraiii aniici

h r -v Ml

Li U U j Li U LJ

Dr. CHARLES H. PARICHURST, the famous clergyman; says: "This great novel, having read it in manuscript, its spirit and purpose have not passed from my memory. "The heroino is depicted as an illegitimate child, and the purpose of the fiction is to show the blight that attaches to innocent illegitimacy.

Tho treatment accorded her by her kindred, who

her, illustrates in a graphic way the of pooplo rather than the best.

St is one of those fictions that has a meaning, the only kind of fiction that moral and intoiligent pcoplo have any right to spend their time over or give their thought to.'V

A bad start illegitimately i.f .Si,-.; i . . - - - J?'" - .Vi" vtfS.-2-.':- -i ""v,..4S v vrTTiis is SUSAN LENOX the heroine of David Graham Phillips9 great American novel. It Today I v,

itV'l V ' '-r :-x - ' J yy, , .. .... -4 ' - - ' ... i

- V:- " ArrA?

X. a V . y r' - , ' , ; .. , 'w : - . 2 ' ' r - " - ' . - - .

..... -v- ' .k

J 9

33 n n n n 0 U-'LnJUL

by ordination of nature ought to have protected

vicious tendency imminent in human nature to

v .- ' ..' ... ' . ( ' - : :....

r3 r:-;;-

f 1 'I

4 - i . r " -- x ' ,,vViv l'-' v'- ... .

' 1 .4 it- ' 4 ? "

V ' " V'- v . v . , .t . . I -?- ' . . Ir s- .

1

If your dealer can't supply you 'phone

Agency ' 216 N. Michigan SL

1

1 na)( Li ii -Cr

Second, The relations jealous and

unkind. 1 y -i i Third, A fell to the depths, but the power of the spirit raised her. 8

1