South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 201, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 20 July 1915 — Page 8

TTKSDAY, JCI.Y 20, 1013.

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO., PUBLISHERS.

210 iVF.ST Entered urn ocond c!f matter at the

srnscniiTioN hates.

Dally and Sunday In ndranr, la r!tr, i pT year $.. oo I Pally and Surjf'iy in advance, by trill. pr yrar fa no

If your cim cprars In tie hur-Lone dlrptorj" tou ran t-!pph' na your mant to The N'oafi.'iiws efflce and a bill will he mal'led after It IsseitUn. llota4 pUoam Ile.l phone 21 00 CONE. LORENZHN & WOOn.HN Forelgia Advertising Kepresenta t Ires. J Fifth Artnuc, New York A4rert!!cff nulldln. Chlcr

SO I T 1 1 HUM. I M H i.. i; ii.mx iii:;riATicNs am tiii: (Tim; or casti:. To pass a elam e r -filiation ordinanro in South lhnd. a pplit able- only to the public ilanct. without taking the private Jan'j into similar account, would mTcly i-' re to rrfatc a 1 ar.cinr aristo ra y and to hrand tni'iy man or woman. I.oy or ulrl, attendim? a "public daric', as cither a 1 1 ! r t i 1 1 or a Kiwi. I-rorn the moment MH'ii an ordinance wtro passed no r spec-table person ould feel at homo in a. "public dance hall. If .'hk-c of the class distinction created by the- law, and the espionage attendant upon it.s -nforce-mT. It the purpose of the: propo.se. 1 measure is to convert all public dances in'.o private dances, likely to be the result tf it pusses in it.s present for, th'-n it miirht recreate an quality, but too without accomplishing any of the rcform.s at which it is aimed. The tendency would only serve to make a bad conditio!; worse. Invitations to a private dame, were the latter exempted by the law as respectable, miht bunu some very imod people into them umler misapprehensions, and a condition of promiscuous association be created even worse than the worst of public dances have been. I?eside.s it would shut off from the public K.'izc, at Kast to an extentmuch as the present private dancer-; of the "smart set" are, and what mi;;ht bp piini; on would to a like exton be none of the public's business. If there is wickedness in the public daree, better to supervise it by public insistence upon as much decency as possible, than to drive, it behind closed doors to escape the curse ? n "aste, created by special license. Ani thai decency too, can be maintained without such license. Merely make it to cover ail phases of the dim e question and cut the creation (if cas";,e out of it. There should be no distinction between the public and the private dance outside the home. Hold boi.il down to the same rules, or if the more "eclat" deciims to stand for it, n.r.d the administration lacks the nerv? to make the application, then neither should it lie ayplitd to the ' prolet.riat." It is fundamental Americanism that all men arc equal before the law, meaning within particular scopes, and on particular subjects, and these subjects do not contemplate any such division of standards as we understand the ordinance before the council is htted to establish. It reminds one of the old days, incident to the organization of the citizens' party that put .Mayor Keller into ot!ice, when the question was up whether the morality plank ought, not to be so framed aa not to compel enforcement against the "silk-.stoeking" brigade. Is that spirit now trying to work it.s way into the administration with respect to public dancim;".' If not, the private dance will be :p:jected to the same regulations, and evasion by the public fiance due to such general applbation, he rendered the more ditticult. r.vnnoiisM and politics. The New York Tribune is a republican paper which will hardly be accused e-f umlue f rienelline'ss tor a democratic president. It has consistently eppesed Pres't Wilson in nearly all fundamental matters of domestic pedilics. Hut with the Tribune, ;.s with all genuinely American newspapers, questions of partisan politii's "end at the water's edge." The Tribut e therefore prints the following remarkable editorial, headed "An Appeal to Americans." by way of comment on fcuch paDert; as are now cunfusirg American politics with Kuropean quarrels: German propagandist journals are already printing t,bulatiens ef the loss of tlemocraih' votes incident t Mr. Wilson's pcrfrmance ef his duty. This is an impudent anel intolerable assertion of the doctrine that the president of tht- I'nite i Statts must think e.f the v-des ed t!teio frankly deve.tt. d to alien interests when national honor ami natpqivl? interest are at stake. In this situation there i ju.M. one thing for republicans to do. Their support of a preside nt 1 1 -fending American live s and rights must be complete- and unfaltering. American republicans must repine German elenioerats in the national alignment. The president must know and feel that at the- water's dge all jizestieins e-f partisan p.ditics end. It wuid hetttr for the re-pub'.-e an pai tv t indorse We 1rw Wilse.j-i in l'.'' than to permit the j-rmcipi. to p.. estaldished that t eiefemi Ameraan interfS'S is to ce.mmit po!itii".tl SUie-ieJe-. Let rai Aincri' .in, let no feputuican. be iecn.-d by the far rcn hirig a To! industrial manipulatien r. o w in p r o g i e . W'e emmend thi eaunment t" som of the pro-' ie rman sv-mj-atliiors, elemoerats. and rej.ubhcan.- alike, here in South Lend, ami a would incourase fwry true American to sto to it that such pro-Grm iti sympathizers be made to tee 1 tile' spirit of it every time partisanship or -hances of r b ctiem. enters inte a war disoussion. s'v iu pa t h v- wfr ir side or the other in th F.ire.pean war is ene (hing. but sympathy vith German In the American-German controversy

COLFAX AV

l!ftffli at South r)d, Indiana Daily md Sunday for tta wek ny carrier J-' PMIr ulntr'e rrmT fc'is'fty, il&irl ropy ...30 A N A. J1LV 11MT,. is quite another thin-. The American sentiment on this side of the pond is for "America firs'." I N I s 1 1 U A : S I 1 i M A K I I . While the navy department Ls trying to rim-re out a submarine that will make "twenty-live knots an hour, or better" and will therefore be able to catch any vessel of peace or war except the fastest cruisers and torpedo bo;its civilian inventors ate laboring with the problem of making the submarine Invisible. It's a fascinating subject. It reminds one of the weird story by Jack London, of the two tivals and bitter enemies nch of whom sought by scientific experiment to make hints If invisiblo to the other. Itoth succeeded, one by swallowing a chemical substance that male his body as transparent as air, and the other by painting his body with a pignun f such pe rfe t blackness that it reflected absolutely no light. They met. and fought to the death, each unseen by thu other. A l)on er man named Patrick Keenan, has applied for a patent on an invention which consists in covering a submarine, particularly the periscope, with silvered glass or some othe r mirror-like substance, which, he declares, will turn whatever part of the craft Is above water into a mere reflector of wavc.s. making it indistinguishable from the surrounding sea. Lieut. Joseph Fisher of the U. iS. submarine K- has a different scheme, lie paints the periscope in thin, vertical stripes, consisting of all the colors of the spectrum. The effect, in theory, at least. Ls precisely the opposite of that attained by a prism. The prism breaks up "white light" into the various colors; these same colors, arranged according to his method, when seen at a distance merge again into white light, so that the periscope is not discernible. If the government works out a last submarine that can be rendered invisible to the enemy by one of these processes, and can also be steered and fired by a wireless operator on land according to the method of John Hays Hammond, jr., there need be no worry about the adequate protection of our coasts, v MAKING OUH OWN DYItS. A few months ago many Americans industries were fearing ruin because of the threatened deprivatiem of German dyestuffs. German importationshave faileei, as they feared, but our predicament isn't nearly so bad as everybody expected. American manufacturers are rising nobly te the occasion. The Mtuuiion is ery serious, but is rapidly improving. Some industries using large quantities of color have created their own substitutes. A still more satist actetry feature is the sudden expansion of the ebnne'stie aniline vlye industry. It has already grewn to respectable proportions, anel if the war lasts fer two years more the end of it may lind us indepemlent eif foreign nations in a branch of trade in which Germany fermerly hael a world moneipedy. Assurance has. been given that the American cedeir makers will he protected when Germany is again free te enter our markets. er chooses te do so. Heretofoie the Germans have frustrateel every attempt t tstablish the' industry here, Hy Hooding the market with their dyes, ami with the aniline oil which ks the basis eif them, at a price that no American firm eamld possibly meet. 'ur business men are now protceteel freun sue h cut-throat competition fmm rival American firms under the anti-trust laws, anel the department eif commcne has promised that they shall have similar protection from foreigner. The result will be not only the envelopment of a preditablc industry anel the extension of our industrial independence, but the utilization of vast amounts if gas and other coal-tar products that we have be-on wasting. A LALLYC (tOU'll. Sometimes even a fake has a splenhr that ee impels admiration. From the largo ctep e-r foreign war yarns, we pick the latest by the Lnebyi Times, whieh proclaims that Berlin htnkets havev, waited upon the kaise r, and warneel him of (icrmany'. bad hnancial ceuidltion. and the kaiser said that the- war would t at an end bv Octeiber. Vnu can iucture the I Times' F.erlin corte'spondent attendJ ing a mee ting of ilhelm and his bankers, cant vou.' Britishers who can stand this sort of gas ought t.i be right cut in the Flanders trenches where the Germans are- firing the asphv xiat::-.g stuff. "v.Mi.i. i m7V ".n m: - It's really t. ii.t-1 a-ut t; ;:li-,-cril'or who wrote to the 'amil-ei:s-villf. Ky.. News Journal the following letter: "Please veinl me4 a few eojiir-: of the j.apr c.-entaininc the t;tnarv c" my aunt. Alo ptiShsh the enclosed clip pin of the marriage e.f my nice, ,vho hts in Lebanon. And I you

would mention in your local column, if it doei n.-t cost anything, that I have two bu'.i Calves for &ale. As my subscription is out. phase stop my pap r. Tinier arP too had to waste moi.ey on newspapers." f course, t n i -; newspaper hasn't any suhs'-rihers like that. TIILY'Ki: I'KOVIMi IT. It. would eern that the people of (Jeorcia are d'tenmned to prove t" the whop- world that ejov. .-"baton was entirely right in saving that th" state of tbe public mind in (leorgia precluded the po.v-ibility of a fair trial for Frank. That state ef mind seems even to have- broken into the.- prison iu. If. .-litem's successor. 'Jov. Harris, ordered the Mate militia in barracks to protect the prisoner from another io-' reported forming to attack the state prison. I n! there was also a "devil" on the- iliMdo. If the e old-hloode d. persistent and malignant lawb-sMuss i. n't mob spirit run riot, then it must be mob spirit ineliv iduali.ed.

coi.ri it somi: rnin:. 'scar Ihaneh Fedquitt, ,jy grace of eircumMa n e tw ice go--rn.r f Texas, ha.s annoum d his candid cv for the Fnited States senate1, in eppoMtien to Fharh s A. Fulbe r.-nn, senior senator from Texas, who.-c term expires in Fedquitl has purchased the Woodman Journal, official organ of the . W. in Texas. The order boast:: If'.". fori members in that state, who were largely instrumental in electing F. S. Sen. MorrLs- She-ppanl, the idol ef Texas woodcraft. Whether the e-goernor can also put it over remain to br seen. The head of the order in Te xas; sas nav. The leading alienist of the United States, so claimed, accuses the man he styles a "pure paranoiac" with attempting to hypnoti.-e him whiK em the witness .stand. No wonder Tha'-v laughed. Huerta is quoted as saying that it isn't imprtant which faction holds Mexico City. The re's been suspiei m that .Mr. Huerta cleaned that city up pretty considerably when lm held it. Morgan is reported able to give himself a "close shave." If w c were in his hoots, the very word would throw u. into a spasm. Dr. Cook is off to climb Mt. Lverett. Anyhow, he can bring part of the mountain back with him fen proof, which beats that pole stunt. that $io.(f hi : al. (Ne-vv Fasth- Times.) The general eipiniem seems to be that if Mr. Taggart, Mayor Ik 11 ami a number eif others wlu were indictee! are guilty of conspiracy them half the coun y political organizations in Indiana, both demoeratic and republican sheuild be indie teei ten- the satroi offense. It was emly a fe-w years ago that a republican e-eimmitteoman openly stated that more than $H,ooO was used the week before the election in Indianapolis by the? republican committee. Anel we might aeld that il o.eiMi brought results in the way eif a big republican plurality. In Indianapolis there are more than ."ifHii.i cedoreel vdcrs and ever since' that $Hooo deal mentioned above it has taken a lot of influence" of arious kinds to contred the very large per cent ed those- .Mmmj vedes. The results of the election last fall in theeadored section lookel like some other party than the elemecrat- exerted that in tlu en ce. When that $10.Vui was dumpe-d into "Marion oount.v it was ;i matter of common report. Vet we fail to re-call that senile eif the' hdier than thou newspapers, that profe.-s heuror ati ree'ent allegee" 'violations eve r opene d their heaels at what were- cone-e 1 c- 1 to be the most corrupt elections ever held in Imliana. i mo violation ef the law epics not justify another but the people do not hae much e-ontide nee in the sincerity ef a newspaper or edher agency that oreiffsses horror at i-onnia ra t iv el V i small edTenses- aiul blandly winks at the greatest crime s ever committed in Indiana against the ballot. Tin: kight to cnnw toipxcco. Trenton State Gazette.) The other e!ay Judge Mark A. Sullivan of Jersey City sent a witness te jail because he refuse ii to stop chewing tobaoce) at the jmlgos command. He was held for contempt of conn, fined $-" and went t a prison cell happy, detiant and v igerously chewing his quid. We eb-n't quite umlerMand why Juelge Sullivan should bo edt'e-nded by the habit ed ehe-wing toba'-eei to theextent ef s riding a man to jail fer ineiulging it. It is a noiseless operation nut calculated to elisturb t.'ie peace ed" mind eif anyone so bmg as the eiperateir swallows the- juice-. Anel th .re-- is mi evide-nce te slmw that the euve'ntli:ig witi.e ss was eloing anv thmg else with it in this instance-. Had h'- irs.M'.d upen d it ri a t i u - u with wautn ai-ait-lon around the c-otirt roem Judge Sullivan might reasonably have- s' nl tio- e.fl'tnder away t.e a elungeeui cell. This is not an argume nt in far of tol acce chrwir.tr. It is only a j ua -won! to the- lMe-s:nn eif the eini'n that a man ha th i i -r 1 1 1 t hew tilaer' if ho wants ti ami that rirht oinjht to he r s;-eetel inMe anl eutiile th(uMirt i''!u ju: a lonu as the ehewcr k e i'.- the I'tMiit eif his chewing :" himself. Tin: i:m or mi: ti:oli.i:vs? t Watorhury Kcpwi-h an.' s"om- ti"ll'.' manaLcrs iew the jit-j nt w it,h alarm ami lo not rou'in! it j as a pas-".nc phase. .Tame s I-!. He e-j f the Al! any Scathe rn s.-te-m will r-ail a paper .hitly l.- fore the .' w j V'-rk State Kit f'rir Kaiiv a as"ciatjoT in which he frankly nres the) trolley companies to run th.eir ewn jit- J nf y hu.s. T:.'- jitne y has the- -,lan-; t.tqe ;v. the t;yhr he ricurs. Its ojn-ra-j lion a Till :n m iu eo-ts a. re y h j a s ."ml even w!;-n its maate-r h-i're-e lation eh trce-j are allowed for the j trolley (.if eatmo comp' te with it. ! He h;.ss hi eem'eitat ions upo:; the I use ot tmst's ;t n yi;u' 1- i t.--' !:C rs such as is running now hetween here and New Haven, "such a car he says

WfJAT THE PAPERS SAY I ! I

THE

COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

Ki;vi:.(.ii In your.- of the 15th A poem I read. Written by riera ( f Fassopedis. which said. That Ke na.s an insect Tl. it e titers your fQ i got stung by that insert. Now lm minus a wife. I know 'tis a sin to Hut fin bent on th-4 notion I'll thro.v myself into The' deeqi briny ocem. Where mud-eeLs and cat-fish n my body shall riot; And flounders and flat-fish S h ct me for diet. There; soundly I'll slumber F.entath the rou-zh billow. And crabs without number Shall crawl o'er my pillow; Hut my spirit shall wander Through the wet. salty sea, And flirt with the mermaids It shall, believe me. AUT1IUU hi-ar. Fity, lnel. L. KASKR. Mi V. are not disposed lei believe that the president's vacation was harder than the avetage, though his energies wer-' expended to more purpose. The average vacationist returns, like the ralley slave, worn and wearied, to his task. His outing is the hardest two v e ek.s of t he year. He has slept in po(,r beds, eaten doubtful food and suffered the iii'-nm fnience s eif community life. Yet Solomon in all his glory was hues with outing are not arrayed whieh the painted. in the reiseate delights of an TIN difference between the presiele nt's outing and the average lies in the imagination. In their practical aspects; they are not unlike. IF it were not fer the war in Hurope what a uood time we weiuhl be having. As Chip chapin would say, not a wave ef trouble would roll a-ress our pe ace ful breast. The' rumpus in Mexico wemld be only a little irritant, er servo to show by comparison how fortunate v. e are a.s citizens ef a sane', peaco-hiving country. Our crops are abundant, mir money is worth loo e e'nts on the dollar at home and more' in some foreign lands. Our friendship is sought by all nations and we are' regarded as the pinch hitter when it e-omes to feeding the world. Let's give another round for the flag" that niaeb" us free. 1 L. T. Comes Hack With the fiooels. 1M. M. P.: Hecau.se yetur lament e eine hides with the 'juery, "Shall we admit that man has destroyed the idol if the ages?" (referring to "What It Is!" Issue' July l.'th) I feel compelled to reply. Long, long a-es ago man courted we. man with a (dub. It is no joke that some still deserve that method of can be opcratcel for a cent and a half a mile considering the most of gasoline alone-. He e-ucstions if a trolley car can be run at so low a cost fer jeovver. The tredley companies must transform their capital he says to prevent enganix.eel eannpetition from e nte ring thj. jitney fiebl an i taking their luisine ss away from them. He points iut that in London the buses carry more passe ngers than the tramways ami that their service is just as good ami as regular. SAYINGS AND PKOSI'ITUTY. ( Frio Dispatch.) There is mro or les.- prominent in the mind ef the average e-itizen the i'le-a that eloposits in savings banks ineiicate a gee,d de greo ef prosperity aiming tlmsc v.eirking for wages. Yet it is a well e stablished fact that hank deposits are liable to bo greater eluring periods eif depression than when business is booming. Take' the' case eif the- man buying a home. He ha.s no iiimu.v in t ho bank; indeed, he eleios tied see the inside of a bank exe opt w hen he goes there to pay interest on heirrovved money. er to reelueo the principal. Still, he may bo much more- prosperous than the one whei is sptwly accumulating a little in :-einie savings bank against a rainy day. A eu -porat ion which is borrowing money with which to expr.nd its busine ss may bo more prospernus than one which is allowing its surplus to pile up in banks and remain idle. Money must be put to work before it will return interest er help the owner to see-ure profits. ver in Korea, now a elependency j en japan, tne postal savings bank is a government institution. A report rece ntly published says that the- number eif elepe.sitors there- ware ?. f . t v I' , which :s an imreaso of the previous) month. This looks like presperity. ' But the' fact is also stated that there' w as a lb-crease of i' 7, 4 4 7 yon in the; amount oi etep.isits. 1 his loeeks like adversity. So we can tell from the fact ef in-errase-eif jiestal sair.gs depositors in til is adjunct te Japan, and a de-crease in the nmoiin! of ehq-.osjts. whether th-- pe eph are prosjie lams i r edherw is. They might be jeuting the money to umr,' profitable use than 1 ttirig it stay in the bank. what corvrnrTFs t ut:? Tra nt":i State Po. tie. W1-..U really constitutes life'.' Ts it action or is it merely existcr.ee? Whic his the nmst nsr'ful. the man ,vllM uives .ill liis energy to service or him who eon.scrves his fore.es and there;. y pr'e-r.y:s his dtys? He- lis most who accomplishes m.et: aetiity in useful, productive r or..-tri:cti . effort is the :aal tr.-t nf life. I a nut h in yca.rs may e-ontcnt sonu- l-;u r:l(s- er.cr-rt:e youls will prt s onward re "i::tnll'ss nf time strivimr for a u'o.il they may never attain hut ahas striv-nc and th..se only are really li Life insurance pr-sidf nts 1-einc: int r st- d in the proloncatifri of existe ot" rtsk-, he ml their e fforts to the ttachmi; i i-h m. nt- e)f living. t:m aoa! tra .it e.vi.t-ses. exposures or "ni" "--"'v r:ks 'of n'nv kind and in this way fn. v reallv serve the world he - a t . r As rea 11 i- r. to :., he im rcase the productive of 'n. n.y. i t'-ult of modern methods man h'- s :.i;;-(-t ,nd httcr ha: this T;'" all-in-all e f lif'e-. To he is ;' ""vt . to have- a part in the cre1 1 e . W h t ht r t ha 'I Munkir.ii. re -:ai lli ss oi span he lon r shtU't, so l.'-i.: 't i.-isv for an end is an nd W he ; n r '"jin-s on tlie winded heels ef a 'Ai c tury. or the dull fctrctch of u ccn-

MELTING POT

treatment. "Men ;;ie Mill u under different guises as ng a cluh i lonwncnig argument. For many, manv yrar.s we-man being" btTii blind and foolish ;:rtd still not seeing all things h-ar'y tell in love under this pe: suas: measure. The n Middenly he ojuned t're eve that wasn't batted shut and licqi re d a few things; among them a weapon of defense. When again urte,i with the old familiar, she knocked tiu du! from her lover's hand.- with the tip f he r tongue. and eurc linu. it returned with a boome rang thud, whi' h hurt him so much ue.rso than his primal weapon hael hr, that la abandor.e-e; the club fen mre uni'i-ie weapons of ttirture ( i. e. court sliip i, ad.iitig t his collections as the exigencies of the case see ine 1 to require. Naming a few f his choices they are Specious lying suedi a eK light to fe.ol her Making love to six nf us at the same time using the- full battery of his armament in th s engugem e n t . Deceit where honest dealing wemld have made her a 1'rie-nd anc. pal. Infidelity His commonest a ml moM brutal weapon be fore and : fter marriage. His two-edged Damascus blade winch lie. l.as learned from- bmg practice to use with infinite skill. The Hum-dum ei'f his many methods ef killing by slow degrees that many-live-d thing, a woman's lov That's "What It Is," and whv maybe. I L. T. The Jit" is working overtime. And all may ride who wil"; They fill the seats and stand outside Tiegardless of a spill; Their smls are filled with rrpture As they swiftly glide' about. Hut the frost '11 git the Jitney Lf it de.n't watch, out. THAT prisons are not Impervious to pt'blic sentiment is illustrated by the Frank case. The spirit ef the ineb seeped through the vails and gave Croon his inspiration for his aed. He may hang for it. hut the citizens of Atlanta who mobbed their governor will give him the halo of a hero. THAW has; promise"! to submerge himself, ami wo trust Count Heni will have' equal considerat ien for a long suffering porioel. These elisturbers disposer! ef wo may look ferward te the mineir annoyances of life v.itn great ceim pi aeency. TILL this can bo said for Mr. Hryan grapejuico is a might;- refreshing summer drink. RUT pep. it necels fizz water to give it c. x. r. The Original HALTED MILK Unless you say "KOnilGirs" you may get a Substitute HARRY LYERRICK Funeral Di rector Home 07i3 UW1 Chanel Ajubulauce Carriage 1 1 ) Eyes Examined Glar Properly Fittfel. Dr. J. Burke il Co. Optometrist anel Manufacturing Optician 230 South Mlrhlxan tM. lJtlSiiUa DLT11CATLI). Suits for Men and Women $15, $18 and $20. Easy Payments, GATELY'S 112 K. JefTersem Blvd. BIG BARGAINS Every Day (;ki:atj:st hahgaixs i.v town Economy Cloak Dept. Economy Dept. Second Jloor. S. Michigan In Conjunction With the Imlt-pendent Stores SELLING OUT SALE HANS SHOE CO. 125 North Michigan St. Four Doors North Ellsworth wh is runni: all his nii-ht t--asked one audiwarti the di -aster?'' tor of a e-mpa ni-.n. I am not sure rep'kd tl-o othci.j hut 1 11 1 't a cookie it is a dai

BIOOSLB

c t i

1 1 JlLl). ,

i r MjW Ercrythlru: For Yonr Hotta : ' , y .

rVora Best There la Lado 1 s To Cheaxest llu L Coo-L !fl

The m.ovm' Tiict-ar. of o tr:-. in ' it tLnL . t V 'nT

vro'k were startlirr-ly rea.istic. "Wl.o do s :ppoo that man is'

with

suit lawyer." Jud.e.

v5t -

1

You're particular about the coffee you drink ; you buy it without realizing that it takes many years' experience to blend various grades into the 'right foundation for a delicious drink. Always get McLaughlin's Critic Coffee and you'll be sure of a perfect blend; that means a rich, full flavor. The name "McLaughlin" stands for o;ood corree; the name "Critic' stands for the best cortee you can buy for 30 cents a pound.

Get it from 30 cents So, for a limited time, we

Critic

1 (f li Cents Starts You Off i. mi

H

I Bend Watches on a wonderfully liberal new plan.

Mayr's Movie Watch Club FIRST PAYMENT 10 CENTS. Part of your usual Movie, cigar or candy money will quickly buy you a High Grade South Bend Watch.

1st Week. ..10 cents Mh Week 2n Wt f k. .Jm cnts Olh Wr-'-k .",rd Week..;;o cents l"th Week 4th Wek..n eonts 11th Wee k ."th Vci'k..:.0 t'-nts Uih Week U h '( v k . . t o e e n t s 1 - t h Y r k 7th Week.. 70 cents 14th Week

We expect to be swamped with applications on this

plan. We may have to withdraw the offer any day. So i make sure of beimr one of the fortunate ones bv calling

today.

ti . mmamm mm

ri tr rank

Maw

113 SOUTH MICHIGAN STREET South Bend, Indiana.

U II I ,:: " ; Pie Goo-lrick Soo CruIt. J f . " hi,.. ''"' j

i l : a ii

t - r W - .SB

ml

1 mms k

n

X"h

" mmti "I i -

your

grocer Coffee a Coffee lasiest Way Yet To Own ot5Jm'RencF, r Our South Bend Watch Club, recently completed, was a bi success, but we want to make it even easier for everv resident of South Bend to own a Hih Grade Watch with the home town mark on its dial. have decided to offer South

ows: 1 .".th Wek . . . J i..v e'th We-k . . .ll.Cn 1 7th Ve.-k 1.7ft Wre-k . . . $ l.cr, l!'th Wef k . . . l.?r' 20th Week . . . $1-00 Total J 2 0.0 u

SO 0 0 cents Cent S tl.f'f) $ 1.1 ft 1 . J 0 i 1 . -1 0 ? 1.40 n Does

Goodrich-"Soo" Cruise

This year rr.tlce your vacation a uonWu vacationl Tietk famous Go. -dnch-Soo Cruise See the rr.arvel-igle r.f Mack it ac wih its Indian batt'eerounds pinneer t ort'.f.cati-r.s. scer.ic wonderlasl see beauufui Beaver Is.ad See the world fanoui "Soo" :3

j-..-. irjcs. -several r.ours fcr 6lht ieeirj at XcllziZ. Turday 1:33 p. n. ta Tuesday 2:JD p. n. GOODRICH -MACJCINAC 3-Day Cruise M,,;c,:J.5rth S20 The beautiful r.:ino:Vi-coniln.Mie!;!raa hore-l:e. de'.fghtft-J Oreea Bay. St"rse on Bay's irov"r.rr.rt !;:p ca-jaJs a a-e-:c trait pcran:a Iilkizs three days. Tuesday 1 p. ni. to Friday 4 JO p. tn. - Great Week-End Harbor

Springs Trip 4 Days $22.50 M!and ZtrXh lrxtudtl The r!crturrs-:ue Gren Bay ar.i Little Traverse hay rei.-nj-jte Washington Islasd. Slurpe-n Bay Canal, etc Leave Chicago Stt. trdayj 1.33 p.m. return Vedreevday J:X p. m. Make th!4 tr p tseveral t:mes th summer it Is a wonderf ul rr-nrsurr CruiseBookFree Send for it today A pst curd trtar the Go-inch 'Cn:ii V'O 'V desenbfr..: these Create: of SumrtM acati-rs th'y cc:t that cry etksr vacation you can tJU P V nte today ta Hill . w r k Robbina. (L P. Chicago I fr iJXS i iK'kA 1 ciot Mieliiaii A. L dO I . . X 1 ilflll;,) PO P lock

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