South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 63, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 3 March 1916 — Page 6

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VltlDAY i;VLMN(;, MAIUII 3. 19IG. THE SOU'l." BEND NEWS-TIMEb

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SOUTH BEND NkWS.TIMES Morning Evcnin Sunday. JoIIN HENBY ZVVVsll. Edltor. 7. rTfwAr.r iNf;u;v, . ikvin s. doljc. ClrcslM!' n M.ir. sr. ATfrtli'.'uc Mer. GAHllH.L IL .lrMMms. Publisher.

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d upon not to pay Messrs. Hupel's and (Mom's grudges. satisfy Mt.irx. Weidler's ami Keller's thirst for jiowf r through the- is, ri but ion of s''!v'i positions. It is a simple matter if Mayor Keller and his what we )fif to be mere "dummies" on the board of education, only (.ire to ee it that v.-ay. However, we eloubt very much, lest the mayor is over-c.:imating ihe public forgetfulns in this matter, or that it will "Mow over" a he is wont to assume it will whf-never opposition to him on anything arises. He suiyx he has been belittled, hut in the face of recent events, how could you belittle anything already so Iniinitesimally small? The mayor is merely proving, not his size, hut his littleness in this matter. His redemption is in his own hands.

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ADVKItTI.-lNO IIATKS: ak the vertlslnjf (Jrpartment. rorelc-3 .A'lvertlniiik' i:er,reent.itiveS : ('()Ni:, L()Ri:.NZKN & VHiL'. r-' t-.rtL A v.. York City and A'lr. Hid?.. rLiT.ar'. The Newa-Tin.- en lenv(.rn to ke'p lta advertising 'olumn free frTi frau Lut nilsn jreentnti"n. Any peroa rtefrouded thrmjb ptrori.iye of any ndvertisement in tMa j aper will eor.f r a faror ou tLe manaseaii't bj rKrtlng tte facta corcletely. DAILY CIRCULATION ALWAYS IN EXCESS OF 15,000. SUNDAY 18,00.0. BOOKS OPEN TO ADVERTISERS.

MARCH 3, 1916.

"THE WORLD HAS MOVED" EVEN IN MATTERS OP JUDGE-MA Dl: LAW. "The world has moved .since 1M2" said Supreme Court Justice Shearn of New York in a decision iuoIvinR a woman's guardianship of her child, and her rlLt t.) make a contract with her husband: "It is not to be believed that today an) enlightened court would subscribe to the statement that the very lecral exigency of a woman Is suspended during her marriage. Hy statute niul judicial decision It ' now true that a wife is permitted to contract with the freedom of a femme sole and by the express consent of the legislature she can at least contract with her husband the same as if unmarried." This sounds so reasonable as to be hromidie. And yet for many states this would be a most rrdieal decision. The facts In the case were these: Mrs. Burton Howard Iee last year sued for separation, then det idr(l to withdraw the suit, making a private aKreemerit instead. Hy this aurcf ment she was to receive $12 a week alimony and the custody of her younger child, the older remaining with the father, and both children to visit each parent alternately. Mr. Ie did not fulfil the agreement, and claimed that the father had a "paramount ri;ht to the custody of a child." It seems that in New York state the last äse in which thi;' pl'M was made as a irammint rii?ht was in 142. This was decided in favor of the father, according t the theory that when a woman married she suspended her leKal existence and became, legally, part of her husband. Not only her interests, her properly and her personality, but her very lifo was merged in that of her huhund. Said Justice shearn in his

ision: "It is claimed that the lather has a paramount ri;ht to the custody of a child. This v.-as once th- law, but we have emerged from the. dark aes during which married women had the status of slaves and chattels. ' ."The only b'jral basi- for the father's alleged superior right today is his obligation to supPQtt, hi children. This bans disappear.--, vv hen , on" considers what a mother gives to her children in suffering, self-sacrifice and devotion. On any admeasurement of rights determined ly service rendered, the right of the mother to the custody of hep children U at least equal to that of the father. The real te-t should be the welfare of the child."

AMERICA BEING REDISCOVERED AND IT IS WELL. America is being rediscovered. Because the great war in Murope has stopped the regular pilgrimage to foreign parts, and because of the California expositions, and lastly, but not least ly, because returning prosperity is providing many with travel money, more people are crossing the continent today than ever before in the history of this country. The railroads report largely increased travel and su.-nmer promises a neverending procession of -automobiles, both going to the Pacific coat .and returning tnerefron. Americans are seeing America for the first time. They have known, in a vague way. that this country boasted u (Jrand Canyon, a Yellowstone park, a petrified frörest, ami other scenic wonders, but only a few of the number realized that the whole west is a series of wonders; that scenery of the most entrancing and majestic character is so common west of the Mississippi that little of it is advertised. This year transcontinental tourists are getting acquainted with their oou; -try's bypaths. The autornobilists are making many, and charming, side journeys. The railroads, even, are giving layovers which permit rail travelers to stop otT at almost any point and take a flying motor trip to heretofore inaccessible points of interest. These will return home to tell their fri rids of the wonders they have seen. With two great transcontinental auto highways and a network of good roads branching out therefrom. America promises to become almost as well known to Anu-rica's wealthy globe trotters as is Kuropc. It is devoutly to lie wished that, even after the war ends, travel through nur own wonderful land may grow mor and more common. Anglophobia and l'uropeanitis are expensive twin diseases, with which America has been long inflicted. We should be sufficient unto oairselves fr at least more so than wo havo been.

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CLOTH FOR BELGIUM NEW LIGHT ON FOOD. "Cloth." says Horace Fletc her of the vital economies department of the commission for relief in Ibdgium, "is an economic part of the food sustenance supply, for the reason that heat produced within the body by food radiates so quickly into cool air that it is impossible sometimes to maintain healthy body-temperature, without clothing to hold it in." "1 have recently left Belgium a-id the north of France," says Mr. Fletcher, "hastening to America to tell the people that there will be more acute suffering the latter part of this cruel winter and all during the spring, even up to mid-summer, and menace of pneumonia and death, if cloth for clothing is not steadily sent forward for the women of these countries to make up into suitable covering for the conservation of the warmth necessary to life." Mr. Fletcher also states that Chief Herbert C. Hoover

I of the commission has kept the administrativ e .cost of

the work down to about one per cent (the usual percentage of philanthropic administration being a great many times that), "bringing not only sustenance but unusual good health to the population served, reducing the death-rate to nearly one-half thai of New York city." Contributions, by the way. should be made to the "Commission for Belief in Belgium." lti Broadway, New York, and not to individuals. There is a la'.' which forbids the importation of used clothing into Belgium. It is new cloth which the people need.

THE MELTING POT

FILLED BY THE EDITORIAL STAFF

incurs tiii; nLuv. All Hell let loos her minions at "Verdun." (h. Peace divine! Thou cans't come "Too soon." Th" Leil forces loaned to powermad "Kaiser," Are tilling deep within each burrowed Trench" Some sorrowing mother's son A Serb, or Turk, or "French." The saddened waiting world ask.s "WHY" and is no "Wiser" (Nor will it be till S-ataji claims the "Kaiser."' j F. 1 T.

To piove that we are neutral ve intend to write a poem as filler for tomorrow and it won't be pro-all-. After all this is being neutral lor iv en the (lerman report refers to the idlies.

"Any prizes given for the answer?'' writes F. 1 T. We haven't decided but are figuring on a sliding snrale tor prizes, the first prize getting nothing and the others less and less.

si';;cnti:i. Yes go ahead, it is due to the movies, "ihe villain curled the hairs upon his lip And vo .ed that he'd kidnap Mary Kip. lie set his net, But she's free .vet. l or he fell a victim to the deadly grip.

We observe from a news item that men may be wearing pantaloons in the near future. Unhappy will be the lot of the fat man if this corned into vogue.

The above came from one who knows.

Tin: nontLi: itoss. The double cross is popular, on find it any place; It comes without a warning Till you meet it face to face. It comes into the factory; It comes into the store; Its victims howl on every side. It has come to be a bore. Ihe ones considered as your friends Sometimes will often toss All this friendship to one side And hand you the double cross. N. B. W.

A sceptic re-marks that if all the reports of the soldiers killed in the European conflict are true, the various crowned heads may be delving into China's overpopulatecl country to get fresh recruits.

Alibis sometimes aniojnt to a double cross.

Old Man March who came in Wednesday like a sick lion recovered considerable strength during the latter part of the day. He made quite a lot of noise as he passed arounJ the corners.

"Bier Bens" are all right for young men and old bachelors, but take it lrom one who knows the best thing in thf world to get a man out of bod early in the morning is a baby.

There is a man in the back room who says it's not woman that makes the world eo round. He Is a young bachelor and Is given much to reading.

That arbitration board found it had some job.

ti:hkibu:. His wife now wears widow's weed?. He has no use for mortal needs. His home and garden spot, Are for sale by piece or lot. His widow seeks a buyer. He called a man a liar.

One of the hardest things to digest seems to be a bullet. It'fr likely to give any man Indigestion.

Speaking of bullets, no man has ever been known to write a column to describe the beauties of its singing.

But at that it's worth It. It never sings till it passes you.

"Was McCall governor of Massachusetts?" asked the political writer. The cook of the Melting Pot continued his writing with a low murmur, "I don't recall."

Hash should always be spoken of in whispers. For it's the last remains.

tional projection of novel theories' in government sociology, finance, and religion are not among the functions or privileges of those men whose profession and whose duty require them to diffuse knowledge. A few of our greatest and best universities have avoided these insiti'tional blunders, but many powerful and populous seats of learning are already culture beds of clahatred, visionary altruism and impractical scialism. There Is no need to question either the learning or the sincerity of thee proponents of new, untried and revolutionary teachings. The point !s that their special lines of activity outside of the text books and the laboratory are obtrusive, impertinent and. very probably. malefic. The so-called "free thinkers" have, we may well admit, a perfect right to their own thoughts, their own personal adventures, and their own individual atllliations, but they have no right to Inject their notions into the classroom nor to thrust their speculative vagaries into lectures delivered to student bodies. Political economy as a study probably include-? a review of anarchistic theories; jut as the study of psychology' involves much reference to hypnosis. But it would be as great an educational crime for universities to promote anarchy as a doctrine as to teach hypnotism. Such topics are wholly outside of the scope of legitimate education.

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Tell your wife and shell tell the grocer. It's the way to be sure you get the BEST cocoa you ever drank. Smooth, refreshing and really satisfying and with a "chocolaty" taste that is a wonder.

Humility seems to get nations in trouble.

. rv -i- r With Other Editors Than Ours

AND NOW THEY WANT AMERICAN WOMEN TO "WEAR SIMPLE COLORS." The- "Woman's National Made in I'. S. A. league" has sent out an appeal ursing all its members to "wear sln-.ple colors" during the coming spring and summer, to help the Ajuerkan dye-makers an' textile manufaet u rers. The purpose is an excellent one. Bur. as a matter of fact, it seer is to matter little whether the women undertake such a movement or not. No matter how they feel about it. they will probaidy have to "wear simp-e colors" just the same. For the supply of dye stuff's is runnin.g so low. and so many of the usual shades are already unobtainable, and substitutts in general are so undependabje. that the public" must necessarily rely chiefly on whitts. blacks and grays and a very fewsimple aniline tints which American manufacturers are na king successfully. Women can do a real servue, however, to tradesmen and manufacturers, by frankly- recognizing the situation fcnd rjot insisting on impossible colors.

WHAT MUST GEORGIA DO TO STOP LYNCHING? There were about 7T lynching in the I'niied States last year, anil one-third of them were committed in the state of Georgia. The full measure of Georgia's disgrace is revealed in the statement that her mob-killings equalled those of any other HI states in the Fnion combined. And as if to make a bad record still worse, Georgia started the new year Ly lynching eight more negroes in January. The state as a winde has not participated in these orgies. They have nearly all occurred in half a dozen counties. Georgia sentiment in general has condemned the lynchings. and progressive and enlightened newspapers such as the Augusta Chronicle have labored unceasingly to eliminate lawlessness and restore the good name of the state. But somehow public sentiment has not made itself effective in state administration. There is now hope that this defect may be remedied. The respect. ble majority is aroused against lynching as never 1 efore. A campaign Is on for the nomination of a go'.vrnor and other state officials,' and law-enforcement is the leading issue. Fvery other state joins in the hope that Georgia may redeem herself, and by her example help in lidding the country of a national disgrace.

ENDLESS

THE WAY OPEN IN WHICH MAYOR KELLER MAY REDEEM HIMSELF. !f Mayor K-!!'r has any ambition to redeem himself from the Mum. ful th.-.re.spe.-i that he and his appointees to the 1'O.ird of education have shown for the public will. 1 h. opportunity is open to him. now as i. ever fefore. With the elimination of Mr. A. B. Hubbard, opposib member of the board, through his res-i-rnatiop. and that i f .S ;pt. B. J. Montgomery, who had already been summarily kick ,1 out from the end of hi school year, it would be no more than meeting the public calf v . y f.r the mayor to call his appointees in and a.-,v ''or !lu ir resign aliens also. Bespect for public opinion o;:ght ? induce .U srs. Bupel and Clem to mevt It that neai'l.v , bv resigning without the mayor having to ask efforts to i..ae :li'::iM !ws believe ;hat there is no public opin " eppo-ed to the .icUo-i of the board, and That there l m lo.s of confidence in the remaining board members, will !:: pr:it them much, if it does anything. Neither a ill it profit them much to seek to make it appear th;! all of -lie opposition to the board's action his b": that of the n ew ja ;-rs. At b.-.-t. how abo.it-the j-n per tent of the feathers in So:; tit Bend. :-ml tl: MM parents of pupils who made '.heir protests known. a. far as the point where the school io.,rd i.f.is, d to receive them and ord r them des-troyed. We trust, in the f,ce of all this, insistence upon this e.:;g a pews: aper tight ab ne. will not o so f.ir ;:s to necessitate lufcrmin tbe public of the inironies that ..:, e ! . n I reughf to bear m an effort to t irn the l.io of a: has; ot.e new spa per their way. But ! ' t!..- pa-s. t . ;n p-rai ily an; how. The main ;.v!c is ., h.. :). school situation straightened out so.,;, as p. - i1 ;.- and men p! o . d on the school board .a hLoiu the p.i.iit J- !; vt s, and who can be depend-

GUARDIANS FOR JAYS?

OPPORTUNITY! An Iowa fanner, who had accumulated $10. 0 o i . wandered out farther wast and was rescued by the police from a gang of con men. just as he was signing a check for the ten thousand. Now. on the application of the police and oer the farmer's strenuous protest, the courts insist on appointing a guar.lian for him. If every sucker who bit at the fake race con game, as this man did. had a guardian appointed, the supply of guardians would be quickly exhausted. Anyway, it would appear that any man who can wring ten thousand whole dollars out of the soil of Iowa, or any other soil f,r that matter, is entitled to convert it into joywater and pour it down a rat hide if he wants to. This guardianship business sounds fishy. We do hope, though, that nobody will suspect the police force of mean and improper designs.

A New York swindler who pretended to operate a : brokerage business skipped out n avoid arrest, and the , police authorities took possession of his office. Bong ; after his disappearance, money continued to pour in by j mail at the rate of about J 15.0 Ort a day. Beallv, it sometimes seems absurd to work hard for an honest living when there are so many people eager to help a man live luxuriously without working.

The "war zones" that Germany lays out for the information of neutral nations remind us a little of Balboa, when he waded into the sea at Panama and "took possession, in the name of his sovereign, of the Pacific ocean and all the lands it might touch." onp claim is just about as effective as the other.

"Crowds fuht to verge of panic to see new archbishop" read the headlines in Chicago papers. And next day they put poison in the reverend gentleman's , soup. Uut what does one xpeci of Chua-o. anyhow?

m:ruisAiiS. (Philadelphia Record.) The advice of Ijrd Bryce is. infinitely better than that of English newspapers that call for reprisals upon Germany on account of the airship visitations. There are very few cases where reprisals are in any measure justified. If one side In the war is practicing a policy of frtghtfulness it will not be deterred by reprisals. If one side wages war brutally the adoption of that policy by the other merely doubles the brutality. It does not deter from repetitions; it stimulates them. The visit of allies' airships to Karlsruhe was justified by some as a reprisal, but the only effect upon Germany was to stimulate a counter demand for reprisals. And so the appalling race to see which side can be most savage is pretty certain to be stimulated. The threat of reprisals is occasionally effective. But. if ineffective, the commission of the reprisal merely infuriates the enemy and creates a rage for retaliation. The Germans charge that the survivors of a submarine were shot in the water from a British ship, and they threaten reprisals. The British charge that the airship raids are nothing but malicious mischief ' and wanton killing of non-combatants, and they demand reprisals. What little remains of the laws of civilized warfare should be cherished and not thrown to the winds. The reprisals demanded in England can not possibly stop the German use of airships. The only effect would be more attacks on open towns and more killing of workingmen and of women and children. Furthermore, there is a moral advantage in being right, and in the long run moral advantage counts for something, even amid arms. If the English have been more scrupulous in their methods of warfare than the Germans they will not be without their reward in the regard of the rest of the world. They will gain nothing worth while by adopting the methods they have been denouncing. If one side should slaughter its prisoners there might be some excuse fop the other side resorting to the same barbarity with the purpose of leading the former te desist. But it is extremely doubtful if reprisals would be effective even in such a case, and they would certainly lower the more humane nation to the leve- of the other. The favorable judgment of mankind during the war and after it is worth .something to any nation. Its own self respect the consciousness of its own honorable conduct, is worth a great deal to any people. It is wtrth mere than killing a few score if non-combatants or destroying considerable property. t'ndoul tedly- many acts of savagery by individuals have occurred on both sides. The governments have not been convicted of countenancing these. But reprisals as a policy would be a government measure and would be a deep stain on any ptple. Both sides should endeavor to keep military operations within the Hints of civilized warfare, and if one side fails iQ this

the other will gain nothing by imitatingit. "Vengeance is mine; I will repay, saith the Bord."

i :nr CATIOX. (Ogden. Utah, Examiner.) The great trouble with educational effort- is to draw the line between learning and practical application. A man may be top heavy vith text he may have his bonnet so full of theories that it bulges until the strings break and at the same time his purse may be as light as a feather. And the fellow who has a head full of theories is apt to want theoretical pay before he will consent to lower his dignity to practice. In other words he wants pay for what ho thinks he knows instead of what he can do. In nine cases out of ten a man gets his education in hiss chosen wrk after he takes it up and not before. The man who hires him takes a long chance and generally pays more than he Is worth in the beginning. Eater when experience has toned him down to a useful basis he is apt to forget that it cost his employer money to give him his educational opportunity. The ability to do things well, to get in the producing class and make money is the recognized basis of education regardless of all the fine theories advanced to the contrary. The man who knows seven languages and talks art but fails to make a good living is not as well educated as the man who can hit the Rime place twice in succession with a hammer and earns a little more money than he spends. And there will always be a demand for this clans of men as long as novices expect to be paid on the basis of what they are going to do instead of what they have done.

THE KEAIj WOMAN'. (Memphis Commercial Appeal, i It was on the east end car line. She was beautifully young, fragile and sweet to look upon. In her lap lay a little one so helpless, so smothered with raiment, and so interesting. "I almost died," she explained to the elder woman with her, "but here he Is and I am so happy. I wish I had a hundred more like him." Here was a real woman. A woman who was willing to wade through the shadow of death and

obey the Lord's command to marry 1

and multiply. Of late years the old-fashioned belief in motherhood seems to have fallen into disrepute. It used to be thepriele of woman to point to her children, the Jewels of her motherho d. Today there seems to be a hesitancy about bringing into the world these treasures that God gives and is willing to give every good woman. "Children are God's apostles." serenely sighed the poet Eowell. ' They are sent forth day by day to preach of love, and hope and peace." God sends children for another purpose than merely to keep up the race. They come to us to enlarge our hearts and to make us unselfish and full of kindly sympathies and affections. They come to give our souls higher aim?; to call out all of our faculties, to extend enterprise and exertion and to bring round our firesides bright faces, happy smiles and loving, tender hearts. There is an old German saying which should echo pleasantly in all human hearts. "God could not be everywhere," it declares, "and thereltre He made mothers." The mother in her office holds the key to the soul. She it is who stamps the coin of character. The dignity, the grandeur, the tenderness, the everlasting and divine significance of motherhood is but too faintly appreciated. The little mother who sat so serenely happy in the street car with the frail little bundle in her lap had fulfilled the mission of the real woman. She had suffered, she had walked with cemrage and fortitude through the valley of the shadow of death, in onler that she might add her blessed treasure to the world's riches. She had felt the unheralded throb of the little one, and had left the tender, palpitant kiss of the baby's lips on her breast. Here was a woman who had lived up to the instincts of her sex who had fulfilled her mission as a woman. - The mother should be crowned queen f the world.

Tin: cuimir: m:kki:hs. (Chicago Tribune.) One of the most pitiful things in American lif' is the eagerness with which we have sought as a people to attain culture. We have been pursuing culture more vigorously than any other nation has ever thought of doing. We have gone in droves to Europe and bored ourselves amid vast picture i galleries and stared hard at statues and consulted guide books. In colleges we have been t-;et to masticating the classics of literature, and at most only a few have succeeded in swallowing them. The rest of us hold them in our mouths, not daring to spew- them cut. And all our lives we belong to some culture association or another, whether it be a Browning circle or a Brahms society, seeking to appreciate the masterpieces, livery one does something, if it ii only to buy a set of O. Henry. The chautauquas have taken care of those who do not go to Europe or to colleges or who have no opportunity to attend the opera or the symphony concerts. And yet w know that in spite of all this money spent and this elaborate machinery of learning that we are not a:-" artistic nation. However much we strive we are scolded by those who have striven harder. We see groups of promising people breaking away into lowbrowism, a defensive cult dedicated to the cumm on place, and as deeply hypocritical as the organization of highbrows It seeks to counteract.

To The Housewives of South Bend We solicit your patronage for Runkel's Cocoa, advertised in The News-Times and beg to recommend it to you as a pure healthful food drink for every meal of the day. C. H. Baird, 904 Portage Ave. Bell & Longshore, 509 N. Cushing St. C. E. Brady, 1111 S. Michigan St Bright's Grocery, 643 Laporte Ave. Brotherhood Grocery, 230 N. Main St. Brodbeck Bros., Colfax Ave. and Main St; N. Budnick, 803 S. Chapin St C. W. Crofoot, 755 S. Michigan St. East Side Bargain Store, 518 E. Lasalle Ave. J. C. Fox, 627 E. Jefferson Blvd. Frepan, Burmeister & Frepan, 811 Lincoln Way W. D. Glasgow, 1015 Corby St L. Goebel, 1213 W. Colfax Ave. Jos. Grunwald, 1624 SJ Michigan St Gross Bros., 1320 Catalpa Ave. Gross & Gross, 435 Chapin St J. N. Hively, 241 Dubail Ave. L. Hummer, 705 Lincoln Way E. C. J. Johnson, 217 S. Chapin St A. J. Korpal, 325 S. Walnut St. E. J. McCartney, 702 E. Jefferson Blvd. H. Mrciniak, 1001 W. Division St H. J. Martin, 412 N. Lafayette St. F. W. Mueller, 136 Lincoln Way E. C. A. Muessel, 1 13 N. Main St. Mrs. J. T. Murphy, 602 Francis St. M. Newmark, 416 N. Eddy St. O. K. Cash Grocery, 325 S. Michigan St. Fred Rostiser, 731 Lincoln Way W. L. H. Schuster, 1602 Leer St. Geo. Sommerer, 534 E. Colfax Ave. H. C. Stegman, 502 E. Wenger St H. W. Striebel, 501 E. Ohio St. South End Market, 817 S. Michigan St.

SUNLIGHT AM) TUEM! AUS. (Columbus. ()., Dispatch.) It has at last been liscovered that sunlight and fresh air are as good for dumb animals as for human beings. Writin? of barn architecture, Prof. F. W. Ives, of the Ohio college of agriculture, says: "Eight is cheaper than feed and more beneficial than gallons of germicides. Every barn should have at least four square feet cf window space to each animal, and in dairy barns, this should be increased to six or eight square feet." Windows were probably left out of barns that the latter might be warm, but as that object was ach.eved, a health langer was incurred. There is a real preventive medicine in sunlight and fresh air for all living things, and it should be rationally employed. They are a free gift, but they have been too ofun rejected.

IMVERMTirs HOTIIKDS or CI, ASS 1 1 ATK.

(Minneapolis Journal.) I'erhaps the gravest mistakes! made by the American university as j an institution hav e been its toler-j ance of theoretical propKgandism among its profesor and their offi- j ial leparture from the well defined' field uf legitimate eduxatiia. Sensa-'

All Work Guarantee!. Examination Ftcc. WHITE DKXTAIj PARLOUS 111 . Washington Av. 0er llorr's Hook Stere. Both Phones. Oihmi Evenings

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The new low l2 Cent Electric rate goes into effect May 1st. This rate is 7' cents per kilowatt hour with a minimum charge of S5 cents a month. Wiring prices have been cut as closely as we can cut them with the idea of making the cost of wirjng just as low as we possibly can. We are offering every inducement we can to those not now using electric lights so that all can take advantage of the new low rate. Indiana & Michigan Electric Co.

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