South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 277, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 4 October 1915 — Page 4

Monday, o(Toni:u i, ioi:.

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

joca! fte Happening TV "-V-i J " "I. T 1 i

CONTINUED

ILL EXPERIENCES ARE SIGNU

BIG TASK AHEAD TO SOLVE SOCIAL PROBLEMS

Itov. Dedans T!cy Mu-t Ik At t:tckc(I Tliouixli I'ntm fiod.-. s YicuiMiint.

Rev. Monger Says Most Common place Events Evidences of Divine Being.

"Th" church must stuily the la'.vs alon'-,' whic h .society has (huelottcl ;iH'l must j-trivo to orinir all mn to cl'.sor'o tlM'.-j" laws and tinnlly the htsrch must t.K'nnio all things to all rnn that nun mav be one," said l!-v. Charles Fonl of Flora, Ind., Hwnlay morning in his sermon at the Itivr park M. I', church on th fibjft. ,S-cial Problems and Christian

ROB L01 OFFICE; SET PUCE IFIRE

Ycggmen Pass Up $10,000 in Pearls, But Flames Get Costly Jewels.

A 1ox of pearls estimated to be worth $1 0,000 were destroyed Sunday liiu'ht hy a lir that is thought to have l'en started hy yemn in the vault at the .loanl of Trade loan othoe. 110 i:. Washington a v. Aout 130 watches were ta;:en hy the robber., who were driven away hy the fire, which was probably of accidental oripin.

I'ov. tr iv.rd fhvoit nn tit- ttm-. It was evidently trie intention m im?

prohlc mis that confront the church and ! V Snien to blow the Fafc, as they had its m-rii!. is. II v.u that a chur. li ! thrir plan carefully l for a bis

with "no nroblojns to work out and no I clmi p. Th trained entrance to tne

That the i.if.st commonplace event

Of p person's lif are the evidences of j I ;if if ."

Jjivine Hein. and that thru-h

th-.uo thlnus. one may enter the race of ( iih, was the declaration of Kv. Albert K. Mon.L'r at the (Jrace M. I-:, ch'irch last nisht. His text was chosen from Jeremiah 1:1'!, whi h erse was contained in the scripture lesion, read hy Kcv. V.'. Hay of Indiana Harbor. IIpv. Mr. Monger is pastor of the Maple Cruvc M. i:. church at Terre Haute. Jr.. U'h:.t SVowt Tlimi "" w iw tlwxnr.'ik.

m-'h subj-ct, the words beir.r si.oken ! m,'M(Um1 as ;i -,,l of "on!(H:,a 5' of valuables belonging to Andrew Du

ne. s to he i e s u ort i ess bero bllldimr V romnz tne rear cruar

! is al-. ivs n probb m of 5nr kind " j door. The floor leading from the celhe said. "Social prohb ins can orily'lar to the main room upstairs was : be worked out hv the Christian pei- open, trivintr them easy access to the

room used for the transaction of 1 u sines.

pie who fc 1 that they have imt done, what they should have done." In sp'akin:-: of a -man's thoughts

of CJod. Kv. Mr. Ford s lid

A hole two feet lon and about a

A man's. f;;or tn,i a half wide was cut through

omprejieiisifei .if (Jod determines hlsja two-foot wall, which allowed them religion. It ri'.akrs a jir:it deal of liT-jto enter the vault in which was kept ference whether or iifit r:od i t-orntM-e-' ti, v.;, r 0 ;ina the irreater lart of tho

that !

Hi:-! J ,

by Ciod to Jen-miah, who had claimed himself a prophet. (Iod mixht well ask ;u;v man that," said Uev. Mr. Monger. "There will never rome a time when the experiences or our existence shall not have a sifrnilicant meaning. bd soeaks Through the everyday thin's of life, and it is our duty to observe, and obey. He tells us in a mill! n ways

of His divine love, and the fuel it is easy for us to come in'o Kingdom. Moved by (! Voice. . "Jereiiiia h saw a sethin--: pot its face to the north when the tjon was put to him, but the

irabiifd by the voice of His

nab'es him to see other and deener

tJihj's. He .aw the 11'lit, and the peace of His dit-covery settled about Him. As a thinkir. it wa-; easy ffP him to master the sinitL-am -e of his x periences." The Mory fif Jeremiali, acc(rlim,' to tlie .peakf-r, was synnymous with that of many m a in these later days. The man of P.iblical times wa.s told ?v the voiro f Cod and a seething pot, that he had been ordained a prophet, that his forecast of r-vils and stress, while Inspired by C )d. was after all a personal discovery, which is possible in any man. very sensations, emotions and experiences voice the eternal question: What seest thou?" declared the speaker. "Ao matter how slow a nation i.s to grasp its opportunities, no matt' r how rn-at tin lethargy of a peiple. the voiet? eventually comes. And it comes quietly and soothingly through an object or an event which to ai.. other kind is of the most com. monplace. localities rmulamcntaN. "So it is with Us all. Some time thoe wli liav iif)t yet taken th right path to His kitigdom will be :-et i rl glit. and the guiding voice will .rue through some unimportant event r ex perienee. "It is the ability to see and understand tho unseen things of life, to abJnrli them, to make them a part of his consciousness, that place s a man r a woman above his or her neighbor. The realities of life are the elements of our education, and they aro is much a pari of our religious side. It is the realities which form the fundamental principles of Christianity .hat cause its teachings to imprtss themselves upon, the lommon mind." The hi vocation wus said by A. '. Warner of Kochester. Ind. Special tuii.'-ic was given by a mixed ouartet.

nations, a irori or tne m.iiv luuai. a

mighty sovereign or a heavenly fath or.

"The social prrddem b)cs not con

sist in the prev;

fli-cont'-nt as discontent may be a hoprful sisrn. There are birth pains as well as death pains. The problem does not consist in the great amount of poverty. It Is not only a question of br".td but many new wants.

"Some of the apparent causes of

. m . , I

ne social nroMcms are trie breach.

between capital and labor, human v..- ts. monopolies of land, capital

withi:in' P:,ee- Monopoly ef land and ap-

snirit I niono (;bv l" ilaco takes away tho i liome of the poor. Fnderne-ath thefe .vi a i e-r, 1 , i th!nes is a deeper cause. W hen men

rfeo;:nize the possibility of each and every human life, from Cod's point of vi"v, social problems will be solved and war will cease."

shane. proprietor ef the loan oltiec

IYaru Ilumed to Powder. The 150 watches yee kept in a tin

ii, .v nn -l nnincr ne." r ioe s ic. i cv

Unco of much social! ' ,,,, trneo

n r t, t'mui nil,) iituv ii - of them was found after the lire. Another tin box containing, according to imshane. about $10,000 worth of pears, lying near the box of watches, was overlooked. They were destroyed hy the Names, being burned into a

RABBI CR0NBACH SPEAKS ON MYTHS AND FACTS Says OM Creation Stories Although rn-cientilic Are rilled With Truth.

mass worthless powder. A piece of candle wit k about a half inch in length was found hy Ollicer Archibold on t'.p of the safe after tho 'Ire had been extinguished by central company, furnishing a clue to the possible origin of the blaze. It i"? believed that the ycggmen tipped the lighted candle over, igniting some of the papers which littered the lloor and to., of tho safe. The tire must have started soon after the robbers began to ransack the room, as no attempt had yet been made to crack tho safe. The job was probably planned by someone who had consi"?rahle knowledge of the situation, as the safe contained a quantity of valuables as well as a large sum of money. I'urs Also IcstroytNl. Several hundred dollars worth of furs .vhich were stored in tho vault also went up in smoke. The lire loss was o ily partially covered by insur-

l a nee.

A hammer and tile iif.ed in cutting the hole in the wall are the only clues that the police have to work on at present. Ono of the bricks taken from the hole in the Avail will be examined today for fingcr-printe, in tho hope that the identity of the robbers may bo secureel in this way. Mr. DuShane himself discovered the fire that wrecked his place of business. With a party of friends, he was walking along Vistula av. when he saw smoke issuing from the front of thc loan oMlce. He turned in a lire alarm, but the (lames had made such headway that every indamable thing in

had gone up in smoke by

GOD USES ADVERSITY TO SHAPE CHARACTER

The I'XIOX Tlir.sT CO. will pay 1 ht cent from October 1st on all -a-ings deposited pi lor to October IJtii. J 20 S. Main St. AdV.

NEWS-TIMES WANT ADS PAY

t5 j L Lal

'it V i

a fifty v

ru rs rrn Ur

"Creation Myths .and Facts." was the subject of the sermon delivered by Rabbi Cronbaeh -juniay morning at Temple Ret h-HI in which he spoke of the biblical creation account and the stories connected therewith. "It is possil.de for us to know life's practical methods and doings without lirst knowing the origin of things. This is incalculably fortunate. If the practical needs of life had to wait for the solving of the creation problem it would be anything but well with us "We can appreciate the charm of the biblical creation account only when we understand other creation stories by contrast. As for scientifx: correctness, the biblical stories are no more acceptable than tho other stor

ies. Vet there is an important sense the vault

in which the biblical stories are really ' the time the tire was extinguished.

superior. The unbiased student ef creation myths will probably not hesitate to give the Hebrew ones the first prize for beauty, simplicity and religious smsibility. Old Mvth Hold Truths. ' "It is only iii recent times and only with a small minority that scientific views on these matters have gotten to be welcome. Wo have :iow learned that the world is not a creation but an evolution, not a manufacture but a growth. Retween chaos and man

I there elapsed not six days but count-

j less billions of years.

" i he old creation myths even though unscientific are richly fraught with truth. They seek to express the

truth that overvtme of us must barn

anew from experience the truth that reality is divine. The world i.s divine in th sense that it is ever summoning us to be our best even though tt be not divine iti the sense of supernatural manufacture. "The world i.s divine because it is a place where love is born and ideal; are born and courage and beauty are born. We agree with our ancestors that the world is divine even though we differ from them in regard si to tha particular sense in which it is divine."

So Says Itov. Iv. V. Kohhins at West.Minster Presbyterian Church Sunday.

-.; ; . fy, ' : ! ,..' '

Mrs. Baker So Weak Could Not Do Her WorkFound Relief In Novel Way. Adrian, Mich. "I sullcrcd terribly r;ith female weakness and backache and

got so weak that I could hardly do my work. W h e n 1 washed my dishes I hed to sit down and when I would sweep the lloor I would pet go weak that I would have to pet a drink every few minutes, and before I did my dusting I would have to lie down. I cot

so poorly that my foll.s thought I wa? Koin into consumption. One day I found a piece of paper blowing around the yard and I picked it up and read it. It said 'Saved from the Grave and told what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound haa done for women. I showed it to my husband end he Laid. Why don't yea try it ? ' Vol did, and after I had taken two Lotties I felt bottff r and I said to my husband, 'I don't r.eed any mere an 1 he said 4 You hud better take it a litt'o lender anyway.' Zo I took it for three months and po: well and strong. " Mrs. Alonzo L. Baker, 9 Teeumseh St., Adrian, Mich. Not AVoll Kiiotih to AVork. In these words is hidden tho trr.7edy of many a woman, oujek 'i-r-T or wacr-5 eamerwho supports herselt u;: I i ofta: helping t' runort a furr.il;". en mt:: wages. Whether in houo, ch.ee, tory, shop, sty re or l::tehnt worr.r.n Ehould rememlx-T that there iscne trie ! and true n-medy for the ill? to which n!l

women are prone, and that is. Lydia K. ,:.t

iir.khr.Ri f Vff:t'tat-je Comjound. it : fol!r rhr promotes that vior which n.f;!;iM wcr- t,, t eliev e in. Hi;

FAITH WOT CREED BASIS OF REAL CHRISTIANITY

Hex. Tilloton Says Heliioit h I'oum!Vi 1'hmi Jetis Chrit.

That Cod u.es the adversities of life to discipline man and shape his charter that "Our lisht affliction which is for the moment, works within us Kood far more exceeding than eternal weight of h'ory," was the theme of Uev. Kirk Waldo Itobbins, pastor of the First M. K- church, Lebanon. Ind., addressing the conrep:atioii of the Westminster Presbyterian church Sunday nitfht. At tho morning service the, Lord's; supper, the rite of haptUm,

and the reception of new members to the church, were administered by the pastor, Uev, II. II. Hostetter. Nine members were added to tho church, six on profession of faith and three by h iter. Kev. kohhins was assigned to West

minster by the committee or tne Northern Indiana M. K. conference. I Tlie dark experiences of life and ' their disciplinary value in the building J of character, were dwelt upon in particular. The cruelties of nature, nature's laws', and their unexplainablo j operations, were pointed to as bixnifl

cant or iou s mysterious ways. A gal rut thefco he arrayed the great

Rockefeller and Corey Head New Steel Company

4.3,

.XTr

...

v - ''' .''..I'.'f.';.;

t.

if

? . a :i . : r. . if

ft-:-.- - 6 a .y;-.J'.-;x -u i,. , .x ;nb i-t w; ; '-vw"' -i i? h V'-:- C "" ': -,-' ;. $U

NKW YOKIC, Oct. 4. Details of the greatest steel transactions in years in the sale of the Cambria and Midvale plants, reveal the fact that the liockefeller family, through Percy A. Rockefeller, son of William Rockefeller, has made a new departure by entering the steel field and that William Ellis Corey is to return to the industry to which he devoted himself from the are of sixteen and which he has only recently left. Mr. Corey is president of the new company, which proposes to enter tho business of mukiig war munitions. The present capitalization of the Cambria and Midvale plants i.s $9,750,000 and this is to be greatly increased.

beauties, bright nes.s, and exactness of nature, but asserted that the good and evil are so evenly balanced, that, but for the direct assurances of the Bible on ;he side of the beauties, brightness and exactness. God's greatness and benevolence might be lost sight of. The address was a message of faith; an appeal for devotion to Cod's word, and full confidence in hi.s teachings. Numerous examples were given of men and women, who in darkness and despair, kept close to their (Jod, maintained their faith in Him, and were finally led to glorious victories. Rev. kohhins is an eloquent and forceful speaker.

DISCUSSES PROBLEMS FACING CHURCH OF TODAY

Itov. Crfti'se lYankllii Ilonm Says There Are Three All Needing HIS Mon.

That Christianity docs not consist i of having a perfectly correct set of! beliefs, bet does mean faith in Cbiist. j was emphasized by I r. Demetrius Tillotson of Creencastle in his Sunday

morning sermon at :i: i irst v.nristian ( lu rch. Dr. Tillotson, who was at one lime pastor h re. is now th head of the coll; e church at DePauw tin i versit v. Taking for hi subject. "The T-'aet of Christ." Dr. Tillotson delivered an

WILL HEAD TROOPS

Rev. George Franklin Ream, secretary of religious work of the board of education, summed up the problems facing the church, in an address before the First M. K. church Sunday nii-b.t. The task of allowing the church to grow to its full expansion, the task of increasing the impact of

influences that bring about extension of the church within the bounds of this country, and the task of providing for the increasing progress of advancement, were the three problems, acording to Dr. Ream. "We must face the issues of the hour squarely. What we are looking for is the tomorrow, the larger hour when more serious, more perplexing problems will ho presented to us. The church must provide a leadership for tomorrow. ."There is a supreme need for tho highest type of spiritual leadership which must master the expansion of tomorrow. The pastor of the modern church now has a stupendous task. There are so many more church activities. Thus it will ever be, ever increasing. The church of Jesus Christ is rapidly relating itself to modern life. "Then again is the modern church of evangelism, which must come with a wholesome gospel. Evangelism must relate Itself to every day business men. it must likewise appeal to the youth, bringing every phase within its scope. i'There now comes the question what the educational department of Methodism is doing to bring about preparing young men for a spiritual leadership. There i.s first of all the temporal provision. Wo own colleger

and universities from coast to coast. They boast large campuses and are

srdendidlv equipped. Then we are en

deavoring to foster the Christian spirit j

in the faculty who are giving these future leaders their preliminary instructor Then, lastly, we are insisting that the Bible shall have a place in the curriculum."

SPEAKS ON GOD'S LOVE FOR HIS PEOPLE

Rev. i:. V. Dunlavcy Says it is As a Mother's Love for Her Child. Af a mother's love is for her child so is God's love for his peoplo declared Dr. E. W. Dunlavey, pastr of the Trinity Methodist church uf. Lafayette, at the evening services Sunday at the First Christian church. "What is a mother's love like?" a waif asked me a number of years a?o. He had not the faintest remembrance of such a love, his only recollections being of a foundling institution. Recently I have heard he is serving a sentence in a western prison. Could that have any connection with the fact of my being unable to tell him just what a mother's love is like? But no one can tell yet you know and I know. Just so it is with the love of Jesus Christ. "In Biblical history we do not read of God as a great orator, a philosopher or an artist, but He lived upon tho earth teaching men from day to day by his example without the slightest consciousness of tho sins of the earth. Great men even though they are acknowledged great builders of the world's work still in their hearts they are conscious of the sins of the earth. "In theso modern times a man must experience love. Often times a teacher is unable to teach a pupil to swim because he is afraid of the water but when the critical moment comes he finds he lias the ability he lacked before. The same is true of tho love of God. When we realize its need we find the power that we have not seen before."

TO DKFHXn CHARLTON. ROME. Oct. 4. By request of Porter Charlton's friends in this city. Lawyer Miceli Picardi of Cainorra trial fame, has gone to Lake Como to undertake the defense of Charlton, who is to be tried Tuesday for killing his wife. Efforts will be made to have

the trial postponed so Picardi study the case.

can

DR. PAUL'S GLASSES. Relieve headaches and eve-strain, "Shur-Ons" $.1.75. 209 J. M. S. Bldg.

i u

3E

T f il t -

interesting discourse on the correct and incorrect conceptions of true Christianity. "Creeds." he said, have but little to do with true morality. Religion i not founded upon a belief, but upon a person, Jesus Christ. S-une say that belief in the teachings of tho Bible is

the essential thlnr in Christianity: others mph:isize o:h"r principles ad-'

vocated by some grat tr.folog'an as the lns'.s of Christianity. Real Christianity is not based on creed, but on Christ.

"Would you send a poor unfortun- j ate. w ho had been steep?d it; .-:n all I of Ins life, to a theological .seminary! to accomplish his regeneration? If j you diil. it would be of no avail. Get ' sia h a person acquainted with Christ. I and you h i" aided in his reform. "The luing God is unchanging. Our hlas of Him. and oar understanding j

of Iliin, change daily. In our yoit'.i we are unaMe to fully comprelitnd His divine eharaciT. Years of t-

- -.'. ' .: k .. -S '- - . . . V - . ?. - -. ' - : x f -5 S . ' - . ; v.- s . v ' -

f

i l.i.-'-r f : i e n d . h i ; a compreiiv.:!, v v

v ii b ad iss to a with Him, and to

belief In UN power. "Cnbtdiev ers hob! that Christ is a mvth. and explatu that our conception of Him is uaituii solely thrciuh' the s'ories of His life toid in the Bible by

the disciples. Th"ir b:!hf is ir.oro

irult Id hold to

DO YOUR OWN SHOPPING!

Onyx" Cil Hosiery

I

Gives the PEST VALUE for Your Money Zrtrj K:c3 fro-a Cotton to SiH, For l!en, Women ud CLildrca

Any Color and Style From 25c to $5.00 per pair

Sol J by All Good Dealers.

Look for the Trade Mark!

wholesale Lord & Taylor

NEV YORK

Ii

T"i .. . - rr

-.!". ... .-

- J mJLl :l-v,' It

WE DO IT ALL Your family washing will he returned to you all readv for use, except a few starched pieces which need hand ironing." Send your washing this week. Escape the vork and worrv of u ashdav for Cc A POUND. Slicks Laundry 8c Dry Cleaning Co. Home 5117. 126 S. MAIN ST. Bell 117.

TP"

N

Fmilsl Your Yard The finest house must have furniture The finest grounds must have shrubs and trees THE QUEEN OF ALL ORNAMENTAL SHRUBS IS La&ewood Japanese Barberry (Berberis Thunbergu) Every yard needs more Barberry. Plant between October 10 and November 20 for best results. Book your order now Motor delivery to South Bend, Mishawaka and Elkhart free. Plants are delivered the same day they are taken out of the ground All Lakewood Barberry is guaranteed to grow as it is native grown and acclimated. We retail Barberry at wholesale price in St Joseph and Elkhart Counties, Telephone your order now Bell telephone Osceola No. 929. v r v-v

Lakewood

-aroerryrarm

The largest Barberry farm in America Jefferson Road, Opposite Osceola, Indiana. Fifteen carloads ready for Fall delivery at 15c to T.5c the plant usual 35c and 50c sizes. AH stock State inspected and guaranteed.

1 1

as:

;'. .V. ' -V .VV.Vi.UW."

czsy. ine iytna t.. i i;i-i iuuic.r Ca, Lynn, Llzzs,

toi":t

Chriatianity,

than mine. InI it. i o ( ,nly otic I U:.- v. t b uf-

ror x '.c iv ar.Jatioii of a true

fc... j . V.'. ..fc .Vk.-. .V. y

a a fir a

In lnU;:ria enter? the Kuropoan war to aid the central powers, which in view of the recent mobilization of th Hulciir forces is not unlik ly. Triiuv Uoris. son of Czar rerdiiiand, will lead the lorccs.

A

TO TAKE AWAY THE CHILL

5S.se, $S.S0 and S7.50

AT

S THE SIBLEY HARDWARE CO

Dress Up, Boys! October 1 to 8 South Bend. WHY? Because Company is coming! Dress Up! Because these are "piping: times of Prosperity" with us. Dress Up! Two billions of gold in the banks suffocating to get out into many times this amount of credits to buy things! Billions of bushels of corn, wheat and other crops ripening into more dollars, which will be spent to dress up! What is the big asset of this country, anyway? One Hundred Millions of People Unafraid, who can atTord to Dress Up! Every American is a Sovereign! Dress up and prove if. You are a sovereign whether you believe it or not. Take that cash you have hid in a "stocking" and dress up! "Start something !" Dress up, and soon every neighbor on your block will follow suit. Talk it to" everybody! Be a leader! The most remarkable thing in the world is the Law of Suggestion. Stop on a crowded street, look up at the sky and instantly everybody in sight looks up. Dress Uj ! . Whistle a cheerful tune and everybody within hearing distance will hum it! Let everybody dress up. Talk it to everybody else until we alf get the habit. Five fine young men, merchants of New York city, started to walk to the Catskills. When night overtook them they applied at a boarding-house for lodging. They were dirty, unkempt, tired, and tramps to all appearances. At this house there were a dozen tine girl boarders spending their vacation. As the "merchants" had no "change" of clothing, they couldn't be introduced. One, however, had the" foresight to carry in his "kit" a new shirt, collar and scarf. He was introduced "dressed up." He had "the time of his life," while the others sulked outside. "Right dress," says the Captain as the reviewing Major marches down the line. The regiment straightens out and up, like a plumb line. That is the test! Dress up! The "safety razor" has coined millions because it helps men dress up. "Phoebe Snou-': is loved by all because she i a sweet girl all dressed up. Don't be a "sloven." Dress Up! The wife who meets her husband neatly dressed, holds him safe. Dress Up! The "drummer" who i untidy in habit may as well stay at home. It is the "dressed up" store that win the trade. It is the best-dressed shop window that creates DESIRE and draws the customer in. Nature is ever proclaiming the Truth to man, "Dress Up!" She is ever Dresi:ir Up! In the morning the East is rosy with the Dawn. At "high noon" cool shadows invite men in the quiet caress of their charm. At evening Day passes into the twilight and to rest. Dress Up! Let us with great enthusiasm Dress Up NOW!

i

I,.

111 Y, WXS1UNGTOX AVU

A

. -