South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 236, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 24 August 1915 — Page 4

Tn:si)AY. Al'GfST 21. 191."..

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO., PUBLISHERS. 2T0 WEST COLFAX AV. Entered as if - mj cWf ir.atte nt tt.e Pontofa-v at Sruta Ilrrd, Indian

SUIiJSCIII ITION KATLS.

Dally and Suntfaj la ndrnncr, la :ity. Ir7 JtHT $iM Dallj nn.l .Sunday In si'Irar.'?, bj im!l. pr jeir J .'10-7 Lf your nrm rppc.ir !a tte tphor.e 4- to Tlie News-Time r.f4ice r,tl a bill COM:. LOIIENZEN riv:ja AdTcrtils 3 Fifth Atraca. ,w York Will i 1 . ii . -m j- -f SOI TII IILM). I N DIAN A, cast not von: pi;.kls nr.. loin; swim:." Cinada's invitation to thf jwojiir of tho I'nlted Statr to r:rid thfir mjiiimrr vacations in th I oininion. no'.v that thoy hav 1 " m .-hut off from a fnfe sojourn to Eitn". is Mddirr.; fair to aprri.s tho American j ojU- suii.f. what of tho n.itun- of Canadian a;rr. h'.linn of tho Aim 1 ie n a 1 1 it ud to'vud that Kuroix.wi ; : t f i i r which is now Canada's chief cunccm. While otHclally. Canada ajtprars to ' receive us witii open arms, and her resort keeper am railroads s -m reasonably hospitabU for revenue, yet, the conversation of the anadian people, quite invariably oxpn.ive of the ral public opinion of that land, shovs pretty much everything yavc a flfvent re.p--rt. While it may b( that Co!. William Jennings I'.rv'tn., by his resignation from Pres't Wilson's cabinet, and fur the reasons given, served to give Germany something of an idea that the government and people of this land 3?e divided on the subject of the Lusitanla and our internationally li-gal right to the use of the seas, it is quite1 rvidrnt that tho railings of one T. Koose-volt and one Augustus P. Gardner, the National Defense league and ot!ir railers against the inadequacy of our army and navy, have been accepted abroad and not so very f .? r abroad either, with sutlicient seriousness, that ny demands that the United states may see lit to make upon Great Hritain. are received at least by her people with a brand of contempt. They even have It in Canada, and a Minllar opinion is reputed to prevail on the British Isles, tint the reason we have not interfered in Mexico 1 because of the inadequacy of our army inid navy, and our being afraid to. Wo get no credit whatever for our disposition toward peace. Like the bar barians In tne Philippines, when after the .Spanisli-Americ an war, wc under- j took to establish among them a limited self-government, they charge our humanitariunism up as an inherent "weakness," and would spat in our very faces for treating them with a degree of kindness. We have anticipated this from the British and from the Canadians direclty from the start. Their consummate egotism is no Jess unbearablo than that of the Germans. The main difference in their basic ego lies In tho fait that while William Hohcnzollern pleads "Myself and God," at least admitting a sort of dualism, George (V) Frederick Finest Albert Somethlngorother transcends even the theory of the trinity and presumes to he tho whole thing, or. at bast, that Britain is. Like the late C. W. Post In his on mental healing published home years before he became, a millionaire food magnate, Fngland says, "1 am God at his work." and accordingly tile world is expected to bow to His Bullship. addressing him as Mr. Ctod. and succumbing to hid will "dontcherknaw-:" Whatever of anti-German sentiment trur may be in the United States that Is jt the same time pro-British, is as truly easting one's pearls before swine as though it had a direct Biblical apidic.ition and the smi is true with respect to our governmental attitude toward I'.ritain and Germany. Wc want Germany to respect our international rights, but as a people, at bast, we want Fngland to be just as conhiderate of us. It isn't necessary to declare war against cither to get b:Mh. Germany's methods to which we object, are unquestionably employed largely as 1 club over our head with which to rieh Britain, and. if Britain wish to insult us w hile we uro resenting s;ch methods, as she has both in her diplomatic notes ami the attitude of her people, it is absolutely within our power to teach her a lesson that would render Germany's program no longer nec sary. If Fngland wish s to consider herelf Kafe, relying upon the Gardm-r-Kcosevelt declarations of our unpieparedncss, and to look upon us as, "r.cakltngs" afraid to tackle Mexico,! i'loceru 10 enn.mee our . . 1 yi ei'ai eoness !y cominanih -ring all . I. . . - r 11. e ammunition, arms, and otl lit r war ii pplie: . now ing manui .i, turcd. lili'iuestior-.aM.v f r the al!h s. and add them to our ov. n militarv and naval equipment. W,. i;ae an unqualified bK.il right to do this and it would a t ba !a fo are m ie4Ue io s;i in-ju; IlUit IS. We lui'.'-t not refuse to them that which w e have in ex-. es of ot;r own ne-ds. But. you know, in k. w of the English actfptance of tin- i a n! n t r-Bo. - 1 1 brand f "unprepar tines.-."' wt need them all ill advancing o r might 'prop arations." This countr.v owes la.thir.g to dn.it Fritain absolutely nothing. Tr.i" we mp!oy the English toig-a. with various improvements, lit we p..bl f,r i ? v t'.r.ar.eing j.-iuj-er dukes with American hcire.-ts. and 2:avc evn turned oer to them. .Mr. Henry James. Never

,e- ,m the .-.urn, . , i'".ir. j was :-i lime then, according to the - -f - - - ' tUl Uu , irM MS "t an em-. .... ,J,lM1h,,in for th,. T.n- t i. ,iru-..n mor. wonderful than that contrm-,

r-' nttlxiut . .t.i ihn L- ...... !.... . ..t.. . .... . .. . .. . t-oroneonjiy .provided at Kin I ran-

,,. " , wurk .ic- mil of tim .iiK.ivln uf titles -lT;-.V, 11 't ' . u i t-K-c. ""' ;m"' h-r "" 'i,M ', i M,xi,o. ' nl;,"y '!""V; n?S:i, J,"3' V'u7 Our n.,rth,r Conltn,,,rari(s . ill

erv much in need, ami uli',1. i.J 1 . ' . . "'"iful'.e of the nroofs- afforded that the

.,. ,,, ' I nt rco-m-ed any .Mexican govern- j some day moe- nis capital froin on- ' f ...-naclbatton va aint.tln our neutrality we must not! , , , Ur--nMuiide to Joru ilem Ivniel 1-1 ! 1 ruL n.at.0 n or t mac ,mu u v,.

D.i'ly nsd Sunday for te br carrier 1Pa'. j. !r.! 0077 C Suodlj, tingld copy .3c

dlrvrtory you rtia tn'.eplnr.n y, will be mahed alier It ir.scilira. ar ant Uoem A wo on MAN Itepreacntathm. Advrti!:i Jlulldlaj. Cfcfe 1 . -. - AlCl ST J I, 191.1. sinco the df.ys of George III and his M?otrI advisors. hav we undergone anything from the British but insult. and tin: ner-.ity of guarding our selves airiinM her attempts at prund larceny; 1 1 1 i up to as- r rcntly as ('ana da's gr.J al Alaska. n the other hand, we do owe something in a national way to France, and we o.vo something to Uusia; een to little Servia and Belgium, if for no other reason, as to the.-e latter, than because . f thf ir suiallnf :- Fliminatc Kngland's allies from the war in Kuiope, and there is no question whatever as. to where American sympathy should lie; namely with Germany and Aus-tria-i lungary. If it wrre a war be tween the entente and Knirtand alone' v.ell, i;n:;land would hae taken u sound thrashing long ago, for she would not have had Fiance, and Russia, and Italy, to bear the brunt of the lighting for her, and we half opine that the average American citizen would not have been so very considerably abashed. Bui this war did not start between Germany and Fngland. It started between Austria-Hungary and s'er ia, th(n between Austria-Hungary and ikW-Sia, ne.i in'iweujl ueiiuan iiiiu Bussla, then between Germany and France, and Germany and Belgium, I'ngland being succeeded in the rear only by Japan. Turkey and Italy. Tho idea that this is in the main a war between Germany and Fngland is utter nonsense. England'. allies are doing the lighting, i-die is contenting herself on the sea, seeking to "starve Germany out" by blockading neutral potts and hindering American trade, while at the same time feeding herself J from it and making faces at us; because, of the Gardner-Boosevelt mind, she feels assured that we cannot help ourselves. Fngland Is merely the "big noise" on the side of the allies the same "old hog' vvhole credit if ready to take the the allies win, and seeking to save herself a loop-hide through which .to crawl out, in case the allies fail. The United States government is rigiit in maintaining a strict neutrality toward all the belligerent nations, and to be sure, the rules of international law must ride In doing so. Germany ought not to blame us if such neutrality, per force of circumstance, works a hardship upon her, or if it makes matters easier for her enemies. As long as the equal opportunity ia hers, she cannot blame us if she is too weak to employ it. We have enough to do to bear the burden of our own ., 1 u 11 1 l-' 1 1 en 1 1 ps. iiii, 11 i.nsiaiiu, because of her superior power over Germany, and relying upon our "1111preparcdness," wishes to abuse the opportunity that is open to her, and which !ho alone can employ, tmdertaking in the midst of such abuse to impose undue hardship upon us, she cannot very consistently blame ua either if we should decide to do a littb "preparing," and commandeering the opportunities that are now hers should appropriate them all io ourselves. Maybe then. His English Bullship, and perhaps His Canadian Calves might reach the conclusion, aftej- short order, that we are not such a "weakling nation" "afraid to tackle .Mexico," as Messrs. Roosevelt and (Jardner, very et cetera, have led them to suppose. OIK MEXICAN INTEIIIISTS. Perhaps we are very much mistaken; we w ill assume that Pres't Wilson and See'y Lansing know their business, but if we have any inkling of the underlvlng facts of the case, those American interests to be protected, upon which recognition of Prov isional Pres't Carranza hinges, means the Interests of the Guggenheim, Harriman. Otis, Hearst and other Mexico-American capitalists. At this writing. Carranza hadn't done any assuring, nnd von can't well blame him. Many of the Mexico-American grants," "interest," "concessions," lootings. Holdings, etc.. wt re

cured under the old Diaz svstem ofil,'ua V ' 1 1 lV r V Yen we must look to Russia for a fulfill-

lannly gratt; some irom Madero; some fro in Huerta; and probably some from such as Garranza. Villa and Za- ; pata. Determining the legality of such I "giants." after pi ace comes to Mexi- . co. is going to be a pigs-in-the-chn er problem that will strain U-gal minds that can be the biggest brought to certain just what our .Mex:eo-.-m r can capitalists oaim. before he docs any assuring of protection to their i elaims. would be aumi'.iating. even lO i grain man i ,1 to long whiski. rs. to hav pi ott tit!' grunt d 1 Vilia. for ::;-lai:ci A TO SL TO. Hovvcvt-r tru it may v. tin j.u! lie statement of the may. ,r of Atla nta. principal eitv ami tapital of Georgia th.i it would be un-ife for , k r ,V ,hat It would U un afe fr ,x-(4oV. Slaten to return to Georgia within a

1 . 1 ' " " . . . 'itc -in vrrtiirn ri some resnCctS

year, if ever, is in fjue.tionable taste, to iut it mildly. But reinemhf rinu' that the mob which threatened Slaton in hi.- homo, and s't the example for another mob to follow. i-rUinated in the Georgia capital, we f.rd a possible explanation of the Atlanta mayor'. amazing speech. 'in lMvotisratinff the lynching of Frank it might be well for Gov. Harris to be-in at Atlanta and work out. WHAT SO I IT. A sentry in the sixth nsimcnt camp in Majar-hu-etts held up the auto of Gov. Walsh and refused to permit u to pass until the governor went hack to headquarters and secured the countersign. Gov. Walsh, it is said, magnanimously "refused to let the sentry be reprimanded," which startling tatc-

! mcnt I'rovo.r a natural curiosity as to w hat kind of a supt rior othcer it was who wanted to reprimand that soldier. woiisi: than m:civi:i:. They haven't hung enough of the Xew York city police. In a case of raiding drug fiends that has just come up in Justice O'Keefe's court it is shown that New York officers made a drug fiend of a 17-year-old boy, that he might act as their stool pigeon. "It is one of the most horrible cases this couft has had to deal with," said the justice. Itight! .Much more horrible than hiring one bloody gunman to rid society of another. what Tin; smm .i)()v. showed f course, you noticed the fizzle of that bluff made by the Pacific Mail Steamship Co. It didn't haul down the American flag and go into foreign registry because of the seaman's law. It .-old out for $7,000,000, to an Atlantic steamship company that will have to comply with that same law. Fvery time a bluff is called on one of Fncle Sam's new progressive laws, there has to be a show-down, and Uncle takes the nice red, white and blue chips. Now that the mobilization camp at Texas City has been completely destroyed by the storm, Uncle .am is provided with an excellent excuse for sending those troops to the Mexican border. England and France are expected to issue a proclamation shortly, declaring cotton to be contraband of war. which rather eminds us of the way Japan declared war on Russia in 1 1 0 4 . Letters of the People I lUHLICAL. LIGHT ON WAH. Editor News-Times:-For more than 1,000 years Itussia has been wanting Constantinople. In this time she has made several attempts to gain it. Once she practically had it. but a brilliant move of Britain with other powers prevented her from keeping it; and thus arose the eastern question in fact. Itussia made her first attempt to take Constantinople in SG3 A. I. "This was repeated in l04, in 9 41. in ; 9 5 5-9 7." and again in 1041k Though for centuries she made no other attempt to take Constantinople by force of arms. Itussia was always dreaded by that city. An inscription hidden in the boot of one of the equestrian statues of Byzantium announce! that the day would come when the capital of the empire would fail a prey to the man of the north a bequest to them by the legacy of Peter the Great. The great nations that are to land troops eventually in the holy land are mentioned by name in the thirtyeightin chapter of Ezekiel. It is plain, from these Scriptures, that all the nations of the earth will be represented; yet certain ones are called bv name, such as "Gog. of the land of Magog, the chief prince of. Meshech ami Tubal;" "Corner, and all his hordes; the house of Tegarmah in tho uttermost part3 of the earth. and all his hordes; even many peoples with thee." The language is spoken particularly to Gog. and commands: "Bo thou prepared, yea. prepare thyself, thou, and all thy companies that areJ assembled unto the?, and be thou a commander unto them." Who, then, is "Cog. of the land of Magog, the chief prince of Meshech and Tubal," who is to be the commander of the hordes that besiege Jerusalem? Rawlinson In his "Origin of Nations," tells us that Magog, or Gog-, represents the European , Scythians. Their location in Bible times was in the tract between the Caucasus and Mesopotamia. Tubal and Meshech were on the northern coast of Asia Minor. Comer was in the region between Syria on the one hand and the Black sea and the Caucasus ton the other, w'.iile Togarmah is rep resented today by the Armenians. If we are to take this prophecy rem Ezokie! to represent the nations ment of the prediction. Russia is to bo the commander, to have the first rank, in that confederacy of nations that sweeps down from the north and drivo the Turks out of Asia. Into ..... ... Tito concert r..,-. .).,rm i Russia's possesion of the ( Utoman I euipirt vw but ihf r.-'viiiif of t)i. ir.vit i ....m,..., ..f th.. Ptrmi f.,r- it pill I'V'."". ' AwvJ' ' U v. . W t. lis us that at that time Michael H'hrist) snal! "stand up;" that is. 'take HN kingdom. Therefore, when th- Turl: : driven out of Furope and

xtruorui-uilviint0 A'1;l lh'lt UU1 1"' hv s!cn f Xh0 ' 1 - , s";i iour's early r- tura to this earth.

it does md fol! -w. however, that

tojtb.e Turk ni"Vcs air'etly to Jerusalem.

v Huerta. orM"0 moment he le.,v, s Asia. The re , may intervene some vaars of vicissi-,

i Uide of fortune before he takes up

his capital in i" n n . i ne prepnesy 1 4-iajm ,-,f the negro was accordea in is :b !U ;garding any othe r move-jtno norh. But southern sentiment mints. Rut we are told detinitely by,,. :(; (;..ni,..i ( voression in law bv the

th-,the word of (Jod what nation or .na-

tions will urlve the i urk out of Asia, i j.rorit in tin- slave trade the record yhuX lum lU) in Jeru-iU antl "jannot be denied the south would ty hUu , tho h)),y ,an( tmancipaliua hy lhc !aw, S. A. ST. AMANT. 'but the north save it only in contTd-

THE

MEL

COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

MISS sUMMEK. You've handed us 'bout all there is, of frost and ills and rheumatiz And other things that's not your biz Miss Summer. You've been a freaky guest no doubt, of changing skies and sullen pout. Till you have worn our patience out. Miss Summer. We've entertainer, you at our best. With due politeness amj the rest; V -j've come and gone at your behest. Miss Summer. We've tangoed you at cabaret Fox-trotted you in royal way. And still you've sulked the livelong day. Miss .Summer. But now your visit's most expired. And we. your hosts, are very tired. And mighty glad to see you fired, MLss Summer. The mourning friends arc far and few Who'll shed a single tear for you. Except of joy to say "Adieu." Miss Summer. So like the Nomads Allah-Blest We'll speed you with an Arab's zest. And watch you fade into the west. Miss Summer. And fondly hope and fervent pray That freaks like you will stay away. And keep your doll-rags home and play. Miss .Summer. F. U T. Ol'II iceman told the female person who hands him his tickets and asks him impertinent questions touching the honesty of his weights, that he was dry only one day last week. And I yet, we do not recall that there was a legal holiday during the period named. THE alleged revelation that a mysterious person, marked "Exhibit M. P.. ' lias established a route for the conveyance of state secrets from the white house, and, presumably, vice versa, taxes our credulity to tho vanishing point. Granting that said alleged revelation makes interesting: reading we find our limit of concession. A LOST opportunity. (J. B. n. reminds us. when we failed to remark that the treatment accorded the German fleet by the Russians was Rigarous. KHHiaII,v by Xwlyiu!. (Cor. Ft. Wayne Journal-Gazette.) As a token of their friendship, the visitors presented the newly weds a beautiful rocking chair, a gift highly

Whatl The Papers Say

BLURBS." (Portland Oregonian.) A "blurb" is defined by the knowing to be the little paragraph which magazine editors are wont nowadays to prefix to a story or article that they think well of. It glorifies tho author and trumpets the beauty of his work. If this were all it did, tho blurb might be silly, but it would be comparatively innocent. Rut the. truth is that it is a sinner of the worst sort inasmuch as it always contrives to give away the 'best points in the author's article or blab the secret of his j)l ot. It is said by some that the word blurb is derived from blab. Anybody can see for himself that there Is a great resemblance between the two. Some magazine editors are not satislied with putting a blurb at the head of an article. They scatter them all through it in big type. There i one magazine whose articles, though they are usually instructive, are never read. We only read the big- fat blurbs that shou all their good points at us from tho middle of the page. Who would go to the trouble of wading through an author's prosy preachments when all he really has to sails proclaimed in half a dozen highly capitalized paragraphs? The blurb is like condensed food served in a capsule. It satisfies the literary appetite, but ruins the digestion. Wisdom causes a surfeit if it Is taken ir. doses too concentrated. For wholesome use it needs) dilution. We foresee a dreadful day when the magazines will print nothing but blurbs. It will be a great saving of time and expense, and. as far as mere information goes, readers will lose nothing. The longest novel ever written can all be told in three or four pages of well-devised blurbs. The most sapient scientific article can he condensed Into a couple of paragmphs. By compressing their literary contents in this way the magazines would save a great deal of space for pictures and advertisements, but they would destroy the minds of their readers. For a mind stuffed with facts and nothing else is pretty sure to perish of malnutrition in a short time. Till: TROGKUSS or Till: NKGRO. ( Florida Times-Union. in lilrhmond. the oai.ital of the

state of Virginia, the celebration of masterpiece or netion neea on. setho1 Glorlou. Fourth this year was ac- j cure a coupon from nda s is-.

t HHHllilv k V v iiv- in in the Declaration of Independence a note struck in a collection of historical facts and quotations by the librarian of congress, proving conclusively that in writing the immortal document Jefferson was guided throughout bv resolutions already adopted and enthusiastically pro j claimed Jn his own state. The week 1 r..n ! t , ..1 .V..i t lnn t.'ill 1 i L c loiiowin llir on in itii"vii in v.v. voted in the city that was the capital of the Confederacy, and is still the I . m a. . . e TAiV.H...M'.i a eamiai or a nan oi um wu m..i. to an exposition snowing me . A l made in 50 years by the piogres.s maue m o-j negro as a nu-n M noUnited a a measure of military necessity even their historians ad.nit that the, nivisu'v was extorted instead of be-) ing freely given. In this connection the south should insist on the justieol of recognizing her claims to prophetic) l , 1 I -l kt)f stait 'srr.ansri d as wen a- n w ii rueiation of another service to uumaui t vlut i,,,rn .tate Washington was or linen. o: wnom i . mo. advocated the t-mancipation of the slave before the

d-s:re of New Fngland to cuard her

TING POT

appreciated for its Intrinsic value and usefulness. A CHICAGO couple has forgotten the roul-kiss which threatened to wreck their domestic happiness and gone away on what they call their second honeymoon. It is a hard thing to do. but if more people would try to forget the soul-kiss It would go far toward putting the divorce courts on the hummer. ANY friends of the departed desiring to communicate -w ith old Hi Sibley before his return from the seat of war In Europe should addres.s him at "Direction des Sections, Sanitaires Civile. I). E. S.. Secteur Postal No. 21. Section Sanitaire Americaine No. 1, France." EVERY true American will appreciate the "warning sent out by the WIN "F. as is stated, the playing of an keep out of the war zone, whether it is a joke or a friendly tip. "IF., as is stated, the playing of an accordeon by her husband impelled a Chicago woman to kill herself and two children." asks N. A. R., "what consequences may be expected from neighboring piano practice, which Is protracted into the middle of the night?" IT was Stephen Decatur who said that about "our country, right or wrong," which was supposed to be Immensely original as well as patriotic, but Europe affords u? abundant examples of fighting for country, right or wron, and, as far as we can sec, most of them are wrong. WE are asked to say something more about the sport shirt, hut we think we have said enough. Why squander the most valuable space in the paper on a subject which interests only those who have nothing above their necks. "Japan Decides to Give Russia More Help." Newspaper headline. That would appear to be putting the iclp where it would do the most good. In other words, putting the help in helpless. THERE Is no sleeping sickness in he United States, declares an eminent authority. That which might be mistaken for it is pure constitutional laziness. COMPARED with which the tsetse fly can produce nothing worth mentioning. C. N. F. diction of the law when it became expedient. If the negro has; made wonderful progress us a citizen of the United States, he has made it preeminently, because he was also a resident of a southern state. If the progress made since IS 63 be wonderful, the progress made for the 30 years before that is miraculous nowhere else on the face of the earth has a savago been made worthy in two generations to guard the families and property of his master kept by his duties at a distance from home and denied the possibility of a return to meet an emergency. It is now proved that the negro Is capable of such advancement, the proof was made possible by thi, training given in the south in no other land and under no other training has the negro made such progress. It is doubtful whether Lincoln would have given citizenship to the negro in 1 S ' r ; it is doubtful v.'hether public opinion would have turned over a large section of the country, to the domination of the negro except as a punishment to be inflicted for the assassination of Lincoln a crime in which nobody now charges that the south had any part or knowledge. Was the negro qualified to become a citizen? Then the fact was due entirely to the training given him by the southern people he acquired such fitness under no other training. He hafc given himself such training nowhero under tho sun. FRESH SUPPLY ARRIVED Patsy for Evcrytod.v, None Need To Disappointed. Heavy inroads made into the sup-' ply of the splendid book. "Patsy," practically given away with a cou- j pon from last Sunday's News-Times, . resulted almost in a shortage, but the j arrival of a renewed supply repre-1 sentlng quick work on the part of : the publisher enables us to furnish ' the volume to all comers without any j disappointment. Thoe who failed to lwr1.1 -ruuuo! ... of the branches listed where the book will be smilingly handed out with 1 the compliment? of this newspaper. ; at less than one-fourth its usual ; price. The insistent demand made' upon the distributing points for addi-j tional books as gifts to friends or relatives nearby or at a distance attests to the popularity of the- story' among those who have had an oppor- ; tunitv to read the first few chapters. ' Act today and avoid any chances of! disappointment. i For best results use BREMEN White Rose Flour Ask Your Dealer, or Call Bell Phone, 4030. Public Drug Store 124 N. Michigan St. "The Cut Rate Drug Store"

ourc 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. Alwavs net McLaughlin's Critic Coffee and you'll be sure of a perfect blend; that means a rich, full flavor. The name "McLaughlin" stands for good coffee; the name "Critic" stands for the best coflee you can buy for 30 cents a pound. Get it from your grocer Critic Coffee 30 cents a pound

Old

work Methods Too Costly Electricity, the modern wonder worker, proves it can usually do things cheaper as well as quicker. Ironing day: Summer: What more dreaded combination than these could be imagined by the housewife a few years ago? Particularly for the housewife who did her own ironing was there much discomfort to anticipate as each unwelcome ironing day loomed up, and every woman whether she employed a laundress or maid-of-all-work to" do the ironing, knew that an overheated house and a quick tempered servant could do more to sow the seed of discontent than nearly any other cause. How different the situation is in the modern household today, no longer is there that universal "dread of ironing day. The Electric Flat Iron, washing machine, sewing machine, vacuum cleaner all run Electrically, makes life worth living. Is your home wired? If not, let us give you an estimate. Indiana and Michigan Electric Company 220-222 West Colfax Av. Bell 462. Home 5462. Use Electricity the Quality Light.

mc

DLL'S

ITKMTUKi: SOUTH 31 1 CI I If; AX ST. Opposite Auditorium. FIELD SEEDS Timothy, Clotrr, .Mkt and Alfalfa. South Bend Grain Co. Prairie Av. and L, S. fc 31. S. Tracks. PA TENTS And Trade Marks Obtained In all Countries. Advice Free. iLO. J. OLTSCH, Registered Patent Atty., 711 712 Studebaker bldsr.. South Bend. Ind.

Style Mouse-

. ' J VM I ' 1 A,o rV..TT. r(V , fcrivSDff ruft-' ' BEST FLAT HUNTERS Call Bell 2100, or Home 1151 and ask for an ad-taker.