South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 91, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 31 March 1916 — Page 6

-flMDAV F.Vi:.M.NT., MAIU'II III, PIC

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMEb

SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES M n r n i n 13 v c n i n S u n J ay. joiiN h:-:niiy zuvuit. i:u,r. GAin:n;i4 it. ummkks. ruhiishT.

of brains and determination, and if Miyors Keller and Gaylor with their t'Ao city attorneys, and assisted by ! special enclnerp, are afraid of that right, the honorable j thing for them to do 1 to admit it. rather than to try

i to shoulder it off on ornp outside committee.

ONLY AOriATr.I) riCKS MOItMNfi rR.NfllIK rri:n in .noktiilkn imi ana am onlt pa PK it kmpi.nMNfi tiii; inti:knationai. kh m:iivi i: in MtlTII IIIIM) No tti'-r r,enr njr la tl." f:it protected

'.v tn fllr-ilght n1 .i .r- fl'rt .-rvl.--; l only j -orj.s or.rratirR with th expedition in Mexico. Sme i li' t nn ps; r In 1 1 T o'Jt.: l:id;arsaro!iii. ru?J!.-d ; trr i!ar .f ti rear an.l twi. - uii all rlav-. c.vo i.t Surnlay aiid ' of it is probably justified. Somebody is surely to le

OUR MR SCOUTS IN MEXICO NOT SO BAD AFTER ALL. There has been much criticism of the army aviation

Hd:.i. Lntired at tLe iSoutJi cUi n iil.

llttid p stfTice as second

THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY Ol" err. '210 W. Colfax A v.

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Call at the riffle or tfp'ot; ntov. ntiru!r and aW for ipartnie;it wanted IMit rlal. A J vert iaiiijf. Circulation, or ' Art minting, t'f.r "wnt ndvs." if your iuii. 1 la th tde-r.h-.D-directory, hill nlU milled after lnrt!"i. Keport Jnatteitiori to bu-dn". tad execution. poor de'lvery of papera. tetepV-r.' M-rri-. tt. to hoal f dfpa ri cuent with ll h ton ie deahi.g. The New -Tl:-n L.n taliteen trunk liaet all of wl.irh repunj to lloin; Thor.e 1 1 . 1 au Meli -10.

ftl ll-f KIPTION HT1. Morning and Svenln T:ditl n. Mr gl :y - ; Sunday. Morulas or Kvenli.g IHItSon, U.!l, liMudinjr. Sundiy. by mill, $.'. "0 pr year lu n lvanre: I"l!verMj ; carrier in Suth H-ud aud Mialiawaka, $0.00 per j-ar Ui jvaii'e. or Uc by the wie.

AHVF.UTlMNf; It AT US : Ask th advertising drpnrfmnt 1"or!K3 AdtertMiiK Representative: OlNK, I.OltK.NIIN A; W'i xtliMAN, '.M.' 1 :fth At.. New York City and Adv. llldg.. CLI 'Jk'i). The New a-'lv in -a. endeavors to keep In advertising -ol'jtin free from fraudulent nilsrf jreo-n i.iti n. Aoj perou defrauded ttf igU pitrouajre of any .i IvcrtUerneut in tils aper will confer a favor on the management hy reporting the farta coir;tetely.

DAILV CIRCULATION ALWAYS IN EXCESS OE 15,000. SUNDAY 18,000. BOOKS OPEN TO ADVERTISERS. MARCH .11, 10 1 6.

criticised for the failure to develop this arm of the service mere effectively. There should have hen more aviators and aeroplanes ready when the critical time came. There should have hcen more powerful and dep ndable machines. Hut after admitting this, it must he granted that, with the equipment at o:!r disposal, the American aviators have done as w-dl a could he expected under extraordinarily hard conditions. It is not generally recognized that they have Keen living in a region almost as difficult as the Alps. They are obliged to start from a plateau a mile ahove sea level. Merely to rise from the ground in that altitude calls for powerful engines and the engines used seem intended rather for sea-level flying. Theydiave to go up .1.000 or l.O'.O feet higher to clear the tops of the mountains and avoid tli hullets of sniping Yillistas. Of the two perils, they say. the mountain climbing is the worse. One or two of the livers found it impossible to get over the maunt ins. for lack of horsepower. Kven for the work tr.e engines are capable of, the V conditions are far worse than those faced by most of

the European army aviators. In that rough and bar

ren country it is often impossible to lind a safe landing place, and yet the high winds and changing temperatures tax all nn axiator's skill to keep in the air. The wonder is that the air scouts have done as well

i as they have, under the circumstances.

THE MELTING POT

FILLED BY THE EDITORIAL STAFF

VILLA. Villa at the border, Villa's gone south. Whole army in disorder. Villa down in the mouth. Villa is surrounded. His capture Is near. Humor's unfounded. Is the next we hear. Villa is wounded. He's shot In the hip. People astounded. He gives them the slip. He splits up his bandits And takes to the hills. We can't understand it, Hut foot all the bills. We know that he'R there And that's all we know, Except that he's where He hasn't a foe.

Call for Mr. Villa! Call for Mr. Villa. Mister Villa. Villi. Villu, Vil

"Report is not confirmed," and "it is reported." are essentials around any newspaper otflce this present day.

COL. ROOSEVELT'S "DEVIL BIRD" OUR NEXT DIVERSION. Col. K oseelt'8 expedition to Africa gave the American people a sort of colleue course, in zoology. His

Uiazil exploration brushed up our geography and gave j i.s the celebrated Kiver of loubt. And now his visit 1

i DYSPEPSIA BREEDS PHILANTHROPY FOR

UNIVERSITY OF ROCHESTER. A wealthy man left $700,000 to the University of Hochester to endow a department of dietetics. He had suffered most of his life from dyspepsia and bequeathed his fortune to the cure of other sufferers.

Eating is one of the things which most Americans!

i. in west njui-s nas given us a new mru uou s worm I , , wu .. ,.i.,rl

oo senseiessiy. i ne iaiuu which na i.yyx ciaiuiv.

ail the trouble and expense of the trip. The colonel l.mded in New York full of enthusiasm over the ;'a'Jh.iro which, if not entirely new to tropical naturalists, was at least now to the colonel himself, and is a I'leasi!;- novelty to the rest of us. ihe gu.uc-ha.ro. it seems, is a bird that lives in a cave, has whiskers, prowls around at nigjit, eats nuts presumably locating them by the noise they make in the dark and howls like a mad dog, only more so. Ho f.-arsme aro its nocturnal warblinns that the natives at Trinidad, where Col. Uo'sevelt made the acquaintance of this oi nithologi al freak, call it the "diublotin." or "little devil." 1 his provides an agreeable diversion from prolonged ontemplation of war, nat'oial defense and politics. What a tine thing it would be if more of our statesmen and publicists gave a little serious attention to natural history! I is". P.y the way. is it possible that the devil bird is fa'ted to be the g. o. p. emblem this year?

ARE MAYORS KELLER AND GAYLOR TRYING TO SIDESTEP GAS CASE? Mayor Keller was quite i i; h t if. as reported to his "mass" meeting of "always-presents" Tuesday night, the gas company ha had the nerve to offer to reduce iates live per tent, and he turned them down. Not only that, but as his story goes, this enormously reduced rate, as proposed, was not to become elective for two years. It will be interesting, no doubt, when the time comes, to hear, if possible, what itind of comt romise proposition the gas company will make to the "mass meeteis" committee to be appointed by Mayors Keller and Jaylor, and how long it will be before their report will be available. 1 ho "mass" meting was an enormous success, with emphasis on the enormous. Twenty-five from South Pt'tid and M ifha'vak.i attended, most of them members of the two city administrations. Administration r.cor-es ray there were sixty, .'mt letting them have the'r way, evidently the public is crowing wise to the nonsensical elf-glontkit ion involved in such sessions, iwutr the mayor's auspices. Sixty is surely some "mas" from but cities of a r tnbined population of SO, 000. but now that it is over, t he m merits of what occurred is of the lar.cer importance. The public that h:is been clamoring for reduced gas rat.-, for years, is almost tertain to ask the question, why was the meeting turned into a vehicle of delay? Is this compromise committee intended to hasten matters, or to retard matters? WV remember that the lei trie company, through its benahmen, including its l.iwtr-:. were adepts at voicing about town wild stories f how easy it would have been to settle electric rates wi'hu g'-ing to the puMic service commission, and it hkiv be fhtt this committee has been thought necessary to put a heck on the di.-semination of that same line of i. unk b the same law yds, and pretty much the same lieiumen. representing the gas magnates. We do m t' know, of course, for we are very much outside the mayor's inner circle, and can only guess, but be it ;.s .t ma. the iiKivor ought to have had enough experience l this time to kn"w that in t lie end he will take exactly what the commission allows him. and 'no more, and that these invented stories of tendered reductions will go on just the same. There is no rea ui. with tlv city's petition bled hefore the commission nearly two ear.-. ago, why the case should v t, at least, be prtty nearly ready for a hearing, rathe." than just at the stage of more gallery-play "mass" meetings. It ought to have been easy to hftve n ached the agreement as to the division of expense

between the two cities a year or more ago. as well as i

now-, same a was done with Elkhart in the electric as.-. 1'or some uiYvr.e wn reason the gas case has been ili !aot. Manipulators for the gas magnates have been Able to keep the thing sidetracked until we are almost V ;md to wonder if public pressure lias not forced the mavors to rind exi use for longer delay somew here, and resorted t- the "m iss" meeing and its outcome to that '(nil. The committee, to us. at Hast, resemble nothing nearer than so many shoul lers to shift responsibility to. and excuse farther a ilelay which lias already bei orr.e quite intoU-raMe. In the electric case the mayors of South Pond and Elkhart, supported by their city attorneys and specially employed engineers, went to the bat, and results mor r les satisfai tor to the public, was a comparatively ,-arly result. Why an outside "citizen" committee in the .s case? Ordinarily vc would say to the mayor, "be not weary in uell-uoing." or. has sidestepping this )j--ue. as so lone promoted by th fra.s magnates, become such a habit with him that it is not weariness hut unv lllingness'.' South Pnd wants the gas case tried, a ad the most possible gotten out of it, and thi recardb -i of the r cent cons-dolat ions and ex parte rates permuted b the commission, winch mal. or may not. be a i : r.g this f u.-sir.g. it ::.a mean a i. glit. and probably doe-;, and that a hard one. for evrv !".! knows that the local gas compivv :- it: ' :ut ! hoji-o, wants the earth, has a good

to increase health and efficiency, instead of simply to please the palate, i.s a rare one. "Jin- Jones won't eat grapefruit for breakfast any more. He says he can't digest acids and starches at the same time. I say. eat what you like when you want it. Cd die before I'd be a food crank like Jim:" is a characteristic utterance. And yet Jim may have eliminated the suffering of years by the simple device of eating his fruit between meals instead of with them, thus separating the acids and starches without losing the benebts of either. And the man who "wouldn't be a food crank" is probably dosing himself with all sorts of nostrums and taking all sorts of expensive trips and treatments to cure what he calls his "rheumatism," which could be onti.ely thrown off and kept off by a little Intelligent "ci-nkiness." It is probable that the University of Rochester will not, even with its $700,000, be able to lind a panacea for all forms of dyspepsia. Put if It succeeds in calling attention to the advisability of keeping instead of breaking the laws of nourishment by which bodies function, it will have fulfilled the purpose of its dietetic endowment.

CLARA MORRIS STILL YOUNG ON HER SIXTY-NINTH BIRTHDAY. Clara Morris has just celebrated her sixty-ninth birthday. She and her mother live with a maid and a nurse, in an old house by the sea at Whitestone, L. I. The house was in the family of her husband who died several years ago, Frederck C. Harriott. Her mother is ninety-three, and was well enough to arrange the birthday llowers for her daughter. The famous actress has come through illness, loss, fear of poverty, danger of blindness, after a long lifetime of entertaining the public. She has lived as well as she played. She has stood up to her troubles and kept her soul serene. She has met life bravely and without bitterness. Miss Morris wrote the other day to a newspaper: "I am thinking that our old friend, Damocles has received a lot of undeserved sympathy, for the presence of the sword over one's head after the first terror simply gives a keener savor to life, intensifies its sweetness and beauty and makes us conscious of each separate joy." To turn the dangling sword into an instrument of gladness takes a fine and courageous spirit. Clara Morris deserves, what she has long had, the affection and sympathy of the American people.

You can't blame newspapers, though, since the European nations have a different system than the one in the United States. Over there they never report failures or disasters, but over here! Well, here's a sample. "We lost another aeroplane today. The machine was in apparent good condition when, the flight began, but after being up in the air for five hours and after being pierced by 17 shots, five of which went through the gasoline tank, the machine doubled up and fell to the earth. Luckily it fell within our lines and the aviator was able to Rivo Gen. Htinston information which led to the defeat of the rival forces. An in estimation of the collapse of the machine has been ordered."

if he is married he knows something of the hooks also.

Apparently the only thing the American private soldier can do is march and tight if he gets a chance to fight. They certainly don't look good till they have to do something.

With Jess Willard pulling down $45,000 in one night and Charley Chaplin getting more than $10.000 for a week's work, few of the lads today are dreaming of becoming president.

Add doeirs.

to signs of spring: Open

whom; Mi AIX. "I want a pair of hose." The modest hubby said. The pretty miss Said "how is this"? He answered. "Not those. Or I'd send my wife instead."

possibly has been a greater factor in reconstructing the modern world than any other mechanical device. And the teleprone shares the distinction of the gasoline engine in being the progenitor of other inventions. Out of it grew the phonograph in its varied forms and the

I dictaphone. Human genius has given

us few things mere intimate in their relation to Kfe than the telephone and its derivatives. Prof. Pell has lived to see his first fe wyards of wire lengthen until they

i cross a continent and enmesh w ithin j their network th. 100..000.000 people

of a nation. And now the wire, stretched to extreme attenuation, is vanishing. If he be spared a few more years he may hear the human voice borne across the ocean on ether waves. Europe and America may converse as re.idily as Kalamazoo and San Francisco. It was worth living 4 0 years for such an experierce. And it is good to know that the man who made these great achievements possible was privileged himself to unveil the tablets that commemorate their inception.

Man may -want little here below, hut he doesn't hesitate about asking" for plenty.

As an illustration. Assist. Secy IJoosevelt's idea for eight tattle-ships.

An impromptu meeting of the -t. Joe County Par association was held at the Colonial theater Wednesday night. Practically every' lawjer in town wanted to see if the movie camera caught his likeness.

This is the kind of weather that puts the eat in wheat. Handed in.

We are like the proud father who whipped his son because all he got in general average at school was 99.9 per cent.

"Eight lure for bi fellows." is popidar fiction with lots of readers at present.

"Am acquainted with the eyes," an optician advertises. The chances are

i:xil.ixi(; it. "Of course, I would have bought a big car. hut I didn't want a big car. This little car is enough for me and my wife and wo don't need a. hie; car. I could have paid So, 000for a car and never noticed it, but this little old car i.s as good as those big $5,000 cars, and they don't cost half as much to operate, and the money is as good to me as It is to them, and then this little car is the kind I wanted."

We see work ahead for Mr. Roosevelt's bird.

In fact, we would like to borrow him.

For a vear.

STATESMEN GREAT AND AND NEAR-GREAT

Hy Fred Kelly

DOMESTIC ARTS THAT COUNT IN EVERYDAY LIFE. The Woman's club of Montclair, N. J., recently conducted a domestic arts contest in which more than a hundred girls competed. These contests differed from many such in the type of domestic accomplishments emphasized. Elaborately embroidered pincushions, hand painting and other ladylike accomplishments were left out. or at least were plainly relegatetl to their proper places of minor importance. The homely art of bed-making was a source of keen competition while dressmaking and millinery came in for their share of attention. This is a new conception of what the domestic arts really are. It puts the frills and luxuries in the background, emphasizing the essentials of successful house-

j keeping and home-making. Pish washing, cleaning, I cooking as well as bed-making are domestic arts that i

are now beginning to come in for a little scientific attention. There are efficient ways to do them all, which common sense and modern methods teach. Whether a woman does these things herself or delegates them to others while she enters some business or professional field, she can profitably learn w hat present-day art and science have to teach her about them.

WASHINGTON. March 30. When things become a bit dull about his office. Congressman Mike Conry of New York amuses himself by calling various other congressmen on the telephone, representing himself to be a constituent, and asking them insulting questions in a rich Irish brogue. No congressman wants to lose the Irish vote in his district, and the members thus called up try to talk politely to Conry. Dut he threatens them with what he is going to say about them when he returns home, and has a merry little time all to himself. One day Conry called Congressman Caldwell of NewYork and asked how he intended to vote on a certain matter. Caldwell did not wish to declare himself and said that he would vote whatever way seemed to be for the best interests of the country. "What country?" demanded Conry. "The United States, of course." "Aw. what you glvin' us?" rudely respondeel Conry. "I'm talkin' about Ireland."

WITH OTHER EDITORS THAN OURS

KENTUCKY FOLLOWS TENNESSEF IN FIGHT FOR PURE SEED. We have had pure food legislation for many years. Now we are just getting around to pure seed legislation a matter which is almost as important, because of Its effect on our food supply. The Kentucky legislature has enacted a law. modeled

I on one which has been in force in Tennessee for six

years, forbidding the sale of adulterated seeds. The lack of such a law heretofore, says the Owensboro Messenger, has been responsible for the stnte being covered with inferior pastures and meadows, and as a direct result, with less profitable stock farms. Seed merchants of states more careful of the purity of their grass and crop seeds have een dun.o'ng into Kentucky the 'seeds they could not sell at hon.4. No only have Kentucky grazing lands and tilled areas deteriorated from that cause, but many farmers, discouraged with the poor results they obtained from inferior seed, and ignorant of the true cause, have "abandoned their washing soils to the gully-making rains and freezes." All that is expected to be changed by the new law. whereby the farmers and stock raisers will do their part in cooperating with nature. If there wer a similar

of its ' graft ' if it .m help -t. It is a fight, however, law. fully enforced, in every state, there would be a that cau Lc made. v:en won, with the iV;ht quality ' vast incrfc,se in the nation's crui and larvd -values.

& fe

te

:!. and th::t after its years of legislative man-

i! m! ii ::s ihr..,.-!! hir-d lobbyists, mountains of gold : i-d ii.eis of i hamp.'.gne. it not going to give tip any

At which point he abruptly hung up the receiver, leaving Caldwell in a much perplexed and discomfited state of mind all the rest of the day. Sir Cecil Arthur Spring-Rice, the

British ambassador whom Mon-1 tague Glass refers to as Sir String-1 Peans has an astonishing memory.!

If you had told him something 10 years ago, he could respeat it today almost word for word. He might not be able to recall who you were, but once he got you Identified he would recall everything you talked about. If he reads a poem he has it committed to memory without reading it through again. And having once lenrned it. the thing stays with him. He may not think of the

poem again for years, but when he eloes he can still repeat it. Here is a letter received the other day by Congressman Carter of Mas

sachusetts from a constituent, who, one gathers, was interested somewhat in matters relating to the subject of hens: "Dear sir I want to make hen. growing hens, only mak business on it. hut I don't know very well about this all. therefore I beg of you to send me about hen information book and let me know the price before or after send the lnok which I pay you the reward, hens is mostly what 1 want to know about

THOUSANDS OF ItF.PUHMCAXS. (New Castle Daily Times.) The editorial in the Sunday Star analyzing the opposition to Thomas Taggart and ending with the assertion that thousands of republicans in Indiana would vote for him if they had the opportunity, must have left a bad taste in the mouths of a lot of busybodies who have either been maligning him for years or drinking in as gospel and truth all the insinuations and unfounded attacks on his political and private character. When Fr. Gavisk, the head of the state board of charities, which oversees all our charitable and benevolent institutions, including; poor houses and jails, and is not a political place, comes oiit in bold praise of him, it makes the people wonder why all this malignity and vicious talk. And when Mrs. Albion Fellows, the author of the tenement house law, and who has been instrumental in having more laws affecting social conditions put on the books than any woman in the state, voluntarily comes forward and says that Mr. Taggart did more than any man in the state to help her, and was for every law she proposed, it is time for the good people of this state to ttop listening to gossip and to malignant liars and give ear to people who have spent years in trying to benefit their fellow men, to alleviate the conditions of the poor and to help humanity. After these listen to the he ids of the charitable and benevolent institutions in the state, of every educational institution, and hear them tell how Mr. Taggart did more for them than any other, because he had the courage and the conviction to stand the criticism of spending a few dollars, although it was for a good purpose. Mr. Taggart may not seek the nomination for United State-? senator, but it is a question whether or nor he can evade it. Rack c.f him he will have the powerful sjpport

of the schools and educational interests, the solid business men and the laboring men.

PEAIX EDUCATIOXAL XU.EDS.

(New York Press.) I What have we a right to demand j for our children of the public schools i and colleges? That is a pertinent question; it lies in the background j of most edue,tional discussions, i Some folk think the schools are doing too much. Some would widen j their scope further. !

An excellent platform of essentials to be demanded of any educational system has been outlined Vy John T. Pevine. His requirements are three. They are brief, crisp, inclusive. They are: Schools should teach etficiency so that the pupils shall not know poverty. They should teach principles of health, so that the pupils shall not know disease. They should impart respect for law, so that pupils shall not know jails and penitentiaries. Couple wdth that a remarkable paper published through the Rockefeller foundation, written hy Dr. Charles W. Kliot, president emeritus of Harvard. His remarks amplify the first point, that of efficient training. Dr. Eliot pleads for "thorough training ef the senses." More eye work and more hand work are needed, not only for those pupils who would become artisans or draftsmen, but for every on-?, because everj- one needs to use his senses more efficiently. It is a reflection upon our civilization that we should have to revert to the barbarian or to the animal kingdom for similes that express keenness of vision, acuteness of hearing, delicacy of touch. We speak of the keen eye of a hawk, the sharp ear of a stag an I the silent tread of a tiger. These things form the basis tor

i the rounding out of a man's self.

and they have been neglected in the education of most of us. If you don't believe it listen to the muddled testimony of witnesses in any court trial. Amid all the discussions of minutia about educational methods it i.3 refreshing to come out into the open and stand squarely on a few principles clearly enunciated by straight thinkers and se-curely founded in common sense.

GAMBLING. (Kokomo Dispatch.) Indianapolis is just now having its periodical struggle with violations of the gambling laws and seems to be astonished that there is so much

fof it.

The capital city ought to put that wide-eyed Innocent act on the stage or make a scenario for the movies of it, for it is about the funniest thing that this humor-loving community pulls of.' for the benefit of the uninitiated public. The great trouble lies in the fact that it is not the mere fact of the games of chance; in operation which brings on the evil; it is the fact that gambling in tho form in which it flourishes under the eyes of the police is the cowardly aspect of highway robbery and connects itself with the most contemptible and degenerate influences of society. We are accustomed to look upo gambling in the light of some of the men we know w ho have been galled "gamblers" and knowing them and some of their amiable traits we infer that all gamblers are of the same kind. Nothing is farther from the truth. The big city gambler has not the remotest relation to anything manly or decent and is as "yellow" as a painted lemon. He is a parasite and differs from the common thug only in the fact that he hasn't the courage to use a blackjack. Gambling in this sense is the deepest ooze of the underworld and the miserable wretches who live on the industry of others have struck the bottom of human society. They are not so much a cause of crime as a result of it; they are a symptom, of dishonest law enforcement, and when the time comes that executives really enforce the statutes there will be no such miserable elements of society.

IX)KTY YKARS OF TFLFPIIOXK. (Kalamazoo. Mich.. Gazette.) It is seldom an inventor enjoys the experience that lately befell to the lot of Prof. Alexander Graham Reil. On the 40th anniversary of the first intelligible word message delivered over the wire, he unveiled two memorial tablets in Ro&ton. one in a building where he brought to successful conclusion his experiments in transmitting sound; the other In a building from which, less than a year later, he talked to Thomas A. Watson throuzh the sensitive instrument that embodies his genius. The telephone must be counted with the epoch-making inventions of the 19th century. It has hoen as revolutionary in its effect on the social and business life of the world as the automobile, and as the aeroplane promises to be. Roth of thes.? latter were made possible through the inention of the gasoline eniSe, which

ITITY-IT i; PLEASK. (Washington Democrat.) South Rend is trying to get its gas rate reduced from Sl.lo to S 0 cents a thousand. It looks like the rates of gas in Indiana will have to come down. Formerly for lighting purposes the rate? did not appear so high. However, since gas Is being used so extensively for heating and cooking the old lighting prices gather In the coins mi?hty fast. Doubtless, there will be a general overhauling of gas prices in the state before long to meet new conditions. Indianarohs already as 60-cent gas.

KFEFING UI (Washington Democrat.) Indianapolis bank clearings for

last week were $10.000.000 in round j numbers, as against $7,000,C0 for j the same week "ast year. This show : Indiana i keeping up with the bi-i-l

t j

You'll be glad you did when you taste that "Chocolaty" taste that Runkel's has. Um I but it's good and not like the cocoas you usually get. It's rich and delicious and strong but the easiest thing in the world to digest. Only 24 of cocoa butter, that's why.

To The Housewives

of

outh Bend

We solicit your patronage for RunkeFs 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. Bairä, 904 Portage Ave, Bell & Longshore, 509 N. Cushing St. C. E. Brady, 1111 S. Michigan St. Blight's Grocery, 643 Laporte Ave, Brotherhood Grocery, 230 N. Main St. Brodbeck Bios., Colfax Ave. and Main St. N. Budnick, 803 S. Chapin SL 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 S. Michigan St Gross Bros., 1320 Catalpa Ave. Gross & Gross, 435 Chapin St J. N. Hively, 241 Dubail Ave, L. Hummer, 705 Lincoln Way EL C. J. Johnson, 217 S. Chapin St A. J. Korpal, 325 S. Walnut St E. J. McCartney, 702 E. Jefferson BlvdH. Marciniak, 10Ö1 W. Division St H. J. Martin, 412 N. Lafayette St. F. W. Mueller, 136 Lincoln Way E. C. A. Muessel, 113 N. Main St Mrs. J. T. Murphy, 602 FranciSt 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.

3

good many women are making a DOLLAR A NAME. This is our proposition open to women only We will give a Dollar Merchandise Check for every name given us that results in a New Customer. Call us Bell 462 or Home 5462 and we will send cards to be filled out. I. & M.

Tin (SiraMpft1m

-iHH

ne&3 procession.

i

The Standard Coffee

Solo Without Premiums

TheBourCo.

The truth of the matter is you can't buy better coffee for the same

price.

ti?

m

'I