South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 232, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 19 August 1916 — Page 4
,- !SI1KI.Y AI'I i;!CXM), AlfflM" 1, TJ1
MIL aUUIH BUNLI NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NWS.TIMES Morning Evening Sunday. JOHN HEXRT ZUVnR, Kälter. GABRIEL R. SUMMHUS. Publisher.
, olt ;.son urn PRrs mornino ritANCiiisR taper in nortiikkn Indiana and only paper ri.OYINT. TlIK INTKRNATI Ü.NAL n y. v PrilVICE in fOCTH IlKXD-No otbr ncpr In tfce tnte protctJ t7 two aJ wir? night and diy new" rrl.s; alw oTjIt iffM-roIotna pipr In state oUUMp Inillanaoolis. ruMIsfcei fewy day of tfc? ynr aii'l twice n a'l lays except Sunday ana Uioiidajs. Fntcrci at Ue boat!, licud poiUSUa icconj 'class maiL
. THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY O.ce: 210 W. Colfax A v. fjr.m. Phon 11JL U'U Thone 2100.
there as a judze. but when while there as a politician. h? conserved hi idlcnce to reserve the ermine. H? is pretf ndinj; a whole lot of non-partisanhip too. In which a p.icity. which H custom, he endeavors to cut a wide
(swath as a ritP- of the "Ins." always one of the easiest
jP fnr th "out.." It requires only a modicum of Jrairif. and in jolit icn, only casual Ioalty to fact?. His criticism of the administration fo- kicking out repuMicans and putting democrats in their Jobs sounds well and pets nowhere. They all promise one thin;? and do the other, so far as the law allows, as tc the party spoils, and everybody expects them to do thus. If Mr. Hushes, as president, sticks to his promise of continuity of service and doesn't kick out those CO, 000 democratic job-holders to whom he ref?r. he can bet all he's ?ot that he'll have CO, 000 ravenous, soreheaded republicans on his hands. However, Mr. Hushes seems to have got himself set as to his .Mexican policy. If he is elected president, he
Cail at the cfflrc tr telephone aboYe numbers and
Democrats Paid State Debts Made By Republicans
ask j says, he will see to it that American rights in Mexico
I for department wanted Kdltori.il. Advertising. Circulation, or r.Accoantlr.g. Kor "want advs." if jour nam" 1 In the te.e'ctioue directory. LIU 111 b mailed after Insertion I.eport ! inattenttoa lo buttings. Lad execution. p or delivery cr Pipers. Lad telephone pervlc. etc.. to Lead of department wltn I wLleh you dajhn. The New-riun-s La thirteen trunit Hats cU wliicL reayond to Uoiuv l'Loue llöl aud Üll -lJ
frnsCRII'TION KATES. Mrnln; and Fventne Edltlofl. F!n!? Copy. 2r; Sunday. 5c: Morning cr Kvenlnjf Kdltl a. ijily. lnludln; Sunliy. ty mail, .Tcni pr yar iu advance delivered by carrier in Soith I'.eiid iLd AluLawaka. JiOO per jtar la advance, wr U: Ly the uttk.
ADVERTISING RATES. Ask t advertlslDC dpirtment t Fr rHn Adverl4nff ltepreant itives : CONK. LOKKNZKN Si ' WuOT).LN. t-ith At.. New York City Adv. MM-. ;Ch'c3jo. The Nea-'Iiicea eoatavuia in keep its advertising rolunica fr from fraudulent uiisrerrtscnuiion. Any person 1 defrauded throjjfL patrouagc "t auy ad veniremen t In tbn paper vr.il coufer a favor ou tL lüuujgcuicut iy reporting Ue fact .oL:i:ttelj. AUGUST 1(', 1910.
are respected. He tells how he'll do it, too. He'll let the Mexicans understand, once for all. that we do not intend to meddle with their affairs, but that they must protect American lives and property in Mexico. This s just what both Taft and Wilson have tried to make the Mexicans understand. The only thins they haven't tried is war on Mexico. Both tried near-war. Mr. Hushes' remedy is evidently declaration of war. Unfortunately for Mr. Hughes' argument, at present writing", Mexico understands that we won't meddle with her affairs if she protects American lives and property and she's showing some willingness and capacity to do it, thin, too. without our resorting to his proposed bulldozing. ' What is the president's policy? Does anyone know?" shouts Mr. Hughes. ire! We all know. It is to keep us out of war. That is Pres't Wilson's main set policy and purpose and no amount of criticism, nor even failure of reelection will turn him from it. Wood row Wilson will be charged with gross inconsistencies, donwright weakness and the making of great sacrifices of national honor and rights but he will not let this nation of a hundred millions go into the business of throat-cutting, if he can help it. rut out all claims and charges, and, the crux of his
VILLA MONEY. I'nited Stat- lusi. Atty. i-Vi loonover of Los Angeles h is riilto upon thf h-gal queMion which has been vexing' the Pk.iI authorities of many cities down in the -n-ighborhon,'i of the Rio ("rand- and is fast spreading eastward. That is the manufacture and sal of Villa hat money in this country. While the Villa "cur
rency'' has practically n value at all. it still pass-.- at forei!jn policy is simply the question of war or no war. t-ome pric e in parts of Mcxi- o. and is in demand by ThJ r(eople nave a simpe task cf endorsing or repudi-
curio seekers at a ngure which manes its manuiaciure
a profitable huine.-. Hundreds of thousands of rfol-
lars worth, at .no vt-' of the Villa currency has been ; made in the I'nited ;-'n s :y private individuals and unquestionably a lo of it circulated among the peons ; and small merchants m Mexico. Holding thct there is no Villa Rovernment. United ; states I ist. Atty. .-Vhoonowr declares that the manufactur. of this money i. not cor.terfeitinu: and cannot - le : 'qqeii by law. n the other hand, t.'arrarua hav'ing been recognized by the I'nited States, the manufacture of Carran.a t:at money, which is also being : printed over here in lar-e quantities is counterfeiting 'and a violation of the federal laws.
j ating the price we pay for peace. Mr. Hughes offers
no solution of our problems, no foreign policy that hasn't been tried, gave actual war. He says he hasn't a particle of militaristic spirit in his system, however. Maybe it's only, the buzzing of the bee in his system.
"RENOUNCE 4N ABJURE." A writer in the New York Tribune has been observing the process by which we turn aliens into citizens, ile looked on one Tuesday morning recently in a large, ugly court room and siw the machinery at work. There ; were men and women of various nationalities lined up awaiting what was to them, or should have been to them, one of the mo.-t solemn occasions of their lives. And this is what the observer saw and heard: Samuel Kessler, a Russian Jew, held up his right hand as ordered, and had the oath of allegiance administered to him by a man in horn glasses, as follows: )o jou hereby declare on oath that you absolutely and entirely renounce and abjure a'.i 'legiance. mumble, mumble, for'n power or principality, mumble, mumble, mumble Patrick Jallaghr!" Patrick Gallagher, i may le guessed, was not a part ,-of the oath but a part of the waiting line. He stood jup stupidly while the same bafihng formula was j mumbled. He had two witnesses with him. They .raised their ruht hands while the man in horn glasses remarked, apropos of not h im in particular: Io yousolemnlv swearthatthe testimony subscribedby x o u l s t r u . s h e 1 p m e g o d ? " Then came Thomas Carroll, who had the dignity and worth of the obligation he was about to assume impresved on him a follows; "Do jou hereby 'elarcnoath 'tvou abs'lu'ly 'nentirely renounce 'nabjure mumble, mumble, nuimMt Vir !;ania Marzzi!" And s it went with Virginia Maroi and Jacques A'allon and Giuseppe Spolmo and 'arl Gustav Krickson üiid the rest. He compares this procedure with the ceremony used : 1 y the present secretary of tin- interior in admitting 'Indians to iti.enship. The Indian is othciallv un a white name. He is made to shoot an arrow, and then told to keep it. "It
v ill be to you a .-vmbol of your noble race and of the! pride vou mav fed that ou come ffun the lirst of all j
.merl' in-' He i. made to lay his hands on a plow r.f.iHs that o:i have ch'scn to li( the white man. The white .nan lives by work He is given a p'irc. ' It w always say the money you gain mu; be w ise!v kept." He is made to touch the American l'.u'. the crux of the whole initiation. "I jive into vour hands the tr-i of .fays the representative of the government.
lenly f!ag you v.jll ttr have. It is the llag of free men . an'l wtmen. of v:'.on; joa ;i re now one. Tint f.ai ha? a request to make of v o : th i: ou repeat these words:
VACATION WORK FOR BOYS. Jude K. K. Porterfleld of the Kansas City, Mo., juveline court is in favor of reducing the child labor aue limit from fourteen to twelve years during the summer months. ' The present law of the state is that no child less than fourteen years old may work in a factory, shop or business establishment," said Jude Porterfleld as quoted in the Kansas City Star. "As a result time hangs heavy with youngsters between twelve and fourteen years old. especially in June, July and August, when there is no school to occupy their minds. In my opinion a child's most critical period is between twelve and fourteen. By reducing the age limit for them to work, many of the troubles of the juvenile court would be lessened, as the little fellows could work and keep out of mischief." The recent parage of the federal child labor bill will prevent Judge Portertield's bill embodying his idea for the state legislature from taking form in law. And the passage of the federal bill is in no way to be regretted. It was not only wise but necessary. At the same time, there is a great deal to be said on the side represented by the juvenile judge. It is true that three months of idleness for a hoy between twelve and fourteen and for a girl as well are in many cases the worst possible thing for the youngsters. In pleasant homes where the vacation means wholesome play, with perhaps the addition of a few equally wholesome household tasks, the vacation may be useful. For the children of homes where the mother is obliged to go out to work, or is too busy at home to see what the children are up to, it is a calamity. Put the solution of the problem is not to r ? found in painful work. Twelve years is far too soon for that. The solution is in vacation schools, where for several hours every day the child is given useful, pleasant' training, preferably at studies and occupations different from those of the school year. Stories, games, tasks requiring the acquisition of manual dexterity all under friendly supervision these are the ways of passing the vacation days in the building of health and good citizenship.
"BURNING ITSELF OUT." The infantile paralysis epidemic, lamentable and alarming as it is, appears appalling only when the total number of cases is considered without regard to the
! rw-.T.nliti.n n f'.t.H Thn linn V, - r l! f A A
I'.'l'.i.iiviuii fi ii v. v vj. v ii.i'i. itttii iuui c i nan y t j y u cases in Greater New York. In a community of 100.000 people, or even of 1.000,000, that would be an overwhelming calamity. But in New York it means only
, I a little worse than one case to everv 1,000. If children to v ou i n.ii !
ire rated at about one-half the community, the pro-
"Tlus act life vt the
Then v omes '
j portion of children infected so far is seen to be one to
ir i ountry. ' This is the
'Kcrasmikh as t;
president has said that 1
am
worthv ta
a i;!i.-.ci; of the United States. I row
promise the- !'..u'' that I will line my hands, my head
of all that will make me a
'and my heart to the du true American mzen .'"
An AoHTkv.n ta-'lc, with tlw r.aUor. il colors, is tr.cn j I'inrif '1 on the new citize n's rat. toi the iiovenimeiit : rtprvMi.'.;ti e says:
"Antl now, beneath this r'.i 1 jdaee upon your t.reast
every 4P0 cr 500. Hven that ratio of infection, which would be considered low for many other communicable diseases, is said to be near the record for poliomyelitis. It seldom attacks more than one child per 1.000 population. And the reports of the last few days support the hopeful view of New York physicians that the plague is "burning itself out." Not only in cooler weather having its effect in re
tarding the progress of the epidemic, but it is believed
that the great majority of children in New York city and neighboring communities throughout the east have
already been exposed and proved their immunity that. to put it crudely, ne.irly all the available material for j the disease to work on has now been used up. and the j
INDIANAPOLIS, Aug. 1 The republicans made the state debt. The democrats paid the state debt. Under the last several years of republican rule in Indiana, with the tax levy of 12 cents on each hundred dollars of taxable property for the general expense of the state government, a special levy of 3 cents on each hundred dollars was levied as a sinking fund to be applied to liquidating the state debt. Instead of using this U cent levy for the purposes specified, the money which
it produced was transferred from the sinking fund to meet general current expenses. This mr.de a total of 15 cents actually collected and expended by the republicans for general current expenses. When the democrats elected a majority legislature under Gov. Marshall, at the same time electing: a democratic auditor and treasurer of state, the tax levy for peneral purposes was reduced from 1- cents to 9 cent.. Tp; sinking fund was reduced from 3 cents to 1 1-2 cents, and the money was used in reducing the state debt, the thing for which it was collected. Itcducxxl General Levy. The legislature of 1913 under Gov. Ualston, ha1ng a democratic majority, reduced the peneral fund levy to 7 cents and it remains at this amount at the present time. The sinking fund remained at 1 1-2 cents, and the state debt, together with several hundred thousand dollars of current expenses left behind by the republicans has been entirely wiped out. When the next democratic legislature meets in January. 1&1T. this 1 1-2 cent sinking fund levy will be entirely wiped out, there being no debt remaining to be paid. The democratic platform of 1912 promised that a sufficient levy would be made to properly care for the state educational institutions, and that the state benevolent, penal and correctional institutions would also be properly provided for two things which the republicans had never done. The democratic legislature in January, 1!U3, kept the pledges made by the party platform and since that time the three great educational institutions at Purdue. Bloomington and Terre Haute have been unhampered in the work of educating the young men and young women of Indiana. Fund Well Handled. The other state institutions were also amply provided for in a levy meeting their legitimate needs and no one wdll question that the money collected and expended in caring for the state's unfortunates is not ecoFor instance, taking one institunomically and judiciously hr.ndled. tion as an example: At the Central hospital for the insane located at Indianapolis, the whole expense for housing, attendance, medicines, food, clothing and all items of maintenance and care amounts to an average of 62 cents a day for each patient. George F. Kdenharter, makes this comment: "Insanity is lialde to occur in any family, no matter what their social or financial position. There were 13 cf these institutions under the last republican administration which ended in 110S. Today there are 10 of these, for which the state must make provision. The buildings for some of these additional institutions were started before the republicans retired, but a:J. the bills for such construction, including the purchase of land, furnishings and equipment, were left for the democrats to pay. Others which have been under contract for and constructed since that time have also beer, paid for. The number of patients and inmates has also been largely increased and all this has had to be provided for. Democrats Paid IMIN. While republican orators and press agents have had much to say about the expenditure of the money necessary in providing for all of these things they are very careful not to specify for what the money was used. They do not. tell you anthing concerning the karge state debt which the republicans made and the democrats paid. They do not tell you that the state educational institutions were never properly provided for until a democratic administration came into power. They do not tell you that today there are 19 other state institutions where there were only 13 when the republicans were in authority They do not tell you that the democrats have had to pay for the construction of these six additional institutions and produce the revenue with which to proper'y and decently sustain them. They do not tell you that there has been a large increase in the number of inmates in these institutions.
THE MELTING POT
FILLED BY THE EDITORIAL STAFF
PJLATITCDI;. The world is fall of orators who vigorously state What cannot be subjected to inquiry or debate. Tney say that two times two are four! in phrases large and round, As though it were a novel truth which they had newly found; They spak rts though they placed us in their everlasting debt By telling us that fire is warm'and water's often wtt. The man who wants to wae and stir the passior.s of the mob Has no necessity to put his brain upon the job. Let him assault the ruling class, no matter who they are Employers, aristocracy, the foreman or the czar, And wildly hand it to the wronj and holler for the right. And if his lungs are good the mass is soon prepared to ficht. For thinking is a heavy job. a hard and tiring task Whose poor results are often less than one could wish or ask. When Solomon was old in sin and sorrow, joy and woe. He said: "The more a fellow thinks, the less he's apt to know." How seldom do the leaders lead with calm and thoughtful poise! How often do the winners win because they make a noise! A. F. B.
Light occupations Figuring out how many drinks that "dry fund" could buy. o We are squelched. After telling X. B. W. what Stew said about him and telhnpr Stew what X. P.. W. said about him, the two double crossed us and compared notes. Then alone: with this the fair authoress of the poetry signed "The Two", insists that she really did write the poem, so in the future we will be compelled to do our own work. We are determined to start something so will say we are a Roosevelt republican and intend to vote for Wilson. NOT Tili: KIND. "No". I said to wifie dear. As she wiped away a tear. "This is not the pie that mother used to make. For when I was just a kid. Mother's pie, it always did. Give me an awful touch of tummy ache."
lawn for the benerit of the children
of this county during Old Settlers j day Columbus Ci-.y Post. j WHAT STIIFFT? j Mr?. H. M. Showier and children f of northern Indiana are visiting at the home of Mrs. Al Fossick and ; family. i Vandalia correspondence to Cass- !
opolis Vigilant
o
WIIKIU: IT START IT.
When Cain and Ael in those earlv
days
Staged their famous fight.
Cain was the boy that was in bad,
While Abel was in right
Yet when Cain killed Abel,
Then some puy up and sprung
The one of the wncked living long.
While the good die young
Hughes, says story, pets deer
meat. Wc didn't know there was
any .her kind
Ti. chautauqua tent was crowded
yesterday by peopb? anxious to hear
Dr. No Poon Chew
Manv a man who boasts of being
a vice president of something or An advantage of war is that leg-
other, fails to mention the number.
Lare siht seeing cars are beinp advertised in one of our exchanges. Irish potatoes were used by German waiters to bombard a British Hag on an American buildinp the other day at Detroit. This might be referred to as international riot. o James R. Garfield has been named by the republicans to bring the women into the fold and now we suppose some cruel column writer will po ahead and refer to him as the ladies' man. o why bi:ni:itt? Roy Eger, son of Mrs. Ira Kessler of X. Walnut St.. fractured both bones of his left leg just above the ankle Thursday morning about 7:30 o'clock on the "American Wave" slide, placed on the court house
islative bodies am kept too busy
or are closed down and no freak laws are put on the books while war is in progress. Nations engaged in a death grapple are not much interested in the length of hotel sheets. o The correspondent who dates his stuff "With the Germans half a mile opposite the British front at Commercourt", left little to the imagination. One of our famous military critics has discovered that the object of the Germans is to kill the British. Another add to the horrors of war.
The sea's present mysteries
The Bremen and the Deutschland. E. J. M.
With Other Editors Than Ours
this tml'lem of itizen-h-p. YYtar this hple
und may the .-i.trlo tn.it is ..n it r.er u do aught !
oT whivh the .!.- will :v! ! pro:;.'.." Why .ant w e have more of that sor; of thin- in conTuction with the r.utura'bati":. of o ;r fore: -n-born"
l"c ahviv . n,-il1 abatement of the epidemic may be expected.
The Kussiar.s are doin n&ht well; but they can't
SHOWS HIS IMtlMlIUC'K. (Ft. Wayne Journal-Gazette.) If the standpat party and Mr. Huphes are able to find anv con. fort
and consolation in the publication of!
confidential correspondence of flen
Tili; F.N CI ill ITA I XTY OF CHAXCIi (Memphis Commercial Appeal.) After all it must be admitted that gambling is a child of avarice. It must also be admitted that it is the parent of prodigality. Kven among the less civilized nations the desire to risk in the hope ot winning is a pertinent characteristic. Gembling is a kind of tacit confession that those who indulge in it exceed the bounds of their respective fortunes. The church member who is morally discreet and who is earnestly religious will take a chance on the stock exchange O' will try a flier in some otfier speculative game. The ruling passion is strong even in death, and the unconscious desire to get something for nothing finds a hiding place in almost every human breast. In America blood will tell, especially on the eve of an election or in any political campaign of consequence. In this country' we are as bad as the Lloyds of Indon. We are willinp to bet on anythinr. on everything, .sometimes -vo bet, not wisely, but too eargeily. Just nowWall street is a bit agitated. The street Iuls been fluctuated between Hughes and Wilson. If a man expresses his opinion that Hughes will be elected in November he will find a man at his side asking how much he '"thinks" he will be elected. If another on the opposite curb expresses a sincere fcelinp- that Wilson v.'.U be re-elected he will find some o..e patting him on the shoulder with the trite expression "Maybe so, but how- much do you' think it?" When Col. Koosevelt accepted Hughes as leader of a supposed to be united party the street went wild and it was not dirttcult to find heavy bettors; willing to waser two to one tn the election of Hughes. Hut the street has awakened to the fact that while Roosevelt fathered the pr -eressive party, fostered ar.d made it possible, he cannot now control the following that he srather-
ry Lane Wilson bearing upon events f
' ed about him. His party is much
more important than he i- He deserted at the critical hour, but his
expect to arouse much enthusiasm in America as long , during the latter months of his srv-
.us they content themselves with capturing cities with ice a? our ambassador to Mexico they partv did rot desert with him. He
I names that Americans don't dare try to pronounce in ! conversation.
purpose before you for which to live. There is an aim in your mind, a desire in your heart for something beyond you today. To be just drifting and taking each day what the day brings without a thought for tomorrow, a thought for something better is to be merely existing. You are no better than a plant, a withered apple or a dried up potato, scarcely of as much use, for the apple or potato may still help feed a pig. If you live, you are putting forth the best that is in you dailv. Right use of the mind enlarges its powers. Year by year should find you advanced from what you were the year before. If no effort is made to advance in mind ani character you are falling behind. You are not unlike a stagnant pool that becomes tilled with undesirable life. When
you are not seeking good, it is easy J for evil to creep in. If you wish to i live, resolve when you wake in the' morning, to live that day; to learn something useful or enjoyable, to do j something worth while, to improve j mind and body. If bodily strength' cannot be increased, endeavor not to waste w hat you have. Kven in the j hardest labor, there are w ays to j conserve strength. In idleness there! is more danger to health than inj a life of labor. No circumstances' need hinder your growth of chara'"-!
ter. One may always be learning bits of wisdom, learning to be help
ful and kind, to be true. I-cidei each day to live, net merely exist. 1
HUGHES ON MEXICO AGAIN. j Yo i cannot afford to let up f..r .4 moment at following j (Mr. C. Hughes p:. his spce. j;s. throucho.a th.s wonder- I f ul "w hirl .vmd" campaign he is .!..;.nt: out now t th ( folk .f the farthest we-t. Aftr t h d.is of am- ( ... ..... . I
j..tigr.ir;g. "v toi.owirv.: nim b-eiv , trie o ;ntry nowst where he .s at ainK.-t as debntcly a.-, i; d.d v hep. he wa. Not every man who itlU at the political rally votes ;oa U iuprtmc bench, and, thiö net only while ho w;ujior the candidate.
The death of former Senicor Thurston of Nebraska recalls the fact that he lest his ser.atorship and his popularity by composing a tine sentimental poem. Nebraska just co'ibln't stand for a statesman writing poetry.
are welcome to it. Throughout the J lhoilcht that he wa greater than his
letter? runs an undercurrent of prej
udice against the Madero administration and a sympathy with the elements that wanted Marter removed. And this prejudice and sympathy are by no means wholly an undercurrent. In spots they are definite enough and clear enough. It has been asserted that Henry I-ane Wilson was strongly hostile to Mader. If bis letters to the state lepartmei.t prove anything they prove that.
party. He now rinds w hat a mistfe-ke he made. netting in the street has changed within the last Id days. At rare intervals six or five can be
(obtained, but according to the curb
stone broker it is a ease of even money, take your choice.
myim; oh i:istig. (Milwaukee Journal.) Are you living or are jou s-implv existing? If living, jou have some
YOUR TOWN. (New Canaan. Conn.. Advertiser.) No town, county or community
will ever prosper to any great ex-'
tent, w here there is a div ision or ; strife of any nature. People in towns should strive to help each other, fori in helping others you invariably ; help yourself. Tr ere s no man 1 that cannot assist in the growth, prosperity and development of his town. However small his influence. it has lt.s effect. Opposition is the life of trade and merit wins. No town will prosper and jttow w here a 1 lxtck ft enterprize and push on the part of its citizens as felt. The true
motto of ach and every citizen of : a town is and should he to assist, and help your neighbors, encourage; ousixiess of all kind (don't fear any danger in gorging the market in this line), do all you can and en-1 courage all in the matter of im-,' provemer.t in making the tow n at-j tractive and giving it a homelike ; appearance. Wher this is done ; people from a distance will form a ; good opinion of the place, and it vill be an inducement for them to! locate with us and kcome permu.n-1
J ent and subtantiaJ jatizeis.
.' w v. '
d,v
WWW
1
7
P Ar ,
l. "- L ' .
hvery'
Head
"Oi-tiie-Honse
in South Bend dourt.es knows that HIcctrie Lights have hcon for years steadily dropping in price. Hvery Head-of-the-House doubtless knows that Electric Lights are the best litrhts. We wonder sometimes, though, it every Head-of-the-House knows that Electric Lights are the cheapest lights, everything considered. Investigate.
L&M.
Wanted:-Machine moulders, Foundry and yard laborers. Apply Employment Dep L Dodge Mfg. Co., Mishawaka. Night employment office open from 7 to 8:30 o'clock Tuesday and Friday nights, located in the Dodge Club rooms over Temple Theater.
MYERS BROS. "South Bend's only Custom Shirt makers." Summer' Shirts in the season's most exclusive patterns. "MYERS MADE" Our salesman will call on request. Room 8, Myers BWg.f Michigan and Wayne St3. Phone Bell 2718.
46 YEARS OLD 46
The Farmers Securities Co. The Farmers Securities Company oilers the wage earner a plan of savings that pays 4 interest while savinv and 67o interest for a year following. Call and inveat. tho r.ewt and let vavinvs p'an. 3 5 3359 Farmers' Trust Building.
Directors: Marvin Campbell Myron Campbell Arthur L. Hubbard Haven Hubbard Fred H. Badet Jav C. Bowsher
A, L. HOLLOWELL Dentist Orthodontist Open Imlnf;s. GOfl J. M. K. Rldg
! "
t
C rnph te Home Funn-herv
WATCH US GROW!-
jj i.'iimnjWw 7
ADLER BROS. On Michigan at V&&bJnfrton Sine 1SH4. TUE STORC FOR MIT 2LYD BOYS.
..!-: V ... ,
".Mi
ILriidj for Ituslnr. Jl." I "armors Trut BMj. Ppwxl and aroiM-s.- In nb tracts.
