South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 245, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 1 September 1916 — Page 8
s
l'Kin.W EWJ.MNG. M:i'J I MRKK I, 191 IHK 5ÜUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
a'
SOUTH BEND NEWSTIMES Morning Evening Sunday. JOHN HENRY ZUVEIt. Editoi. GABRIEL It. SUMMKI13. Publisher.
ont.t ...soriATn rKr.so morjono francim PAl'KIl IN NOKTIIFKN INDIANA AM ONLY PAPTR TLOVIN4; Till: LNTLIt.NATIONAL NEWS SERVICE IN MUxii BKNU-No otbr napaper In tlie täte protected bj two leaned wire nlgLt and dy neu rr1-ee; lt',5 eifht-olumn paper In täte oUUMe IndlanaDolii. luMlanei T day of th yar an. 1 twice all daya except Sunday na Holiday. Ittered at tLe Soutii Uol tKtoffic tecon,! Uc mall.
THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY OUce: 210 W. Colfax Av. .'lorn I'hone 1131. BH Tbone tlOOCall at tie ofTl-e cr tejpbone abore confers and for department atted IMltorlal. Advertitlng. Circulation, or Accounting, i'or 'ant adf." If your came 1 la tbe teiph.ioe directory, till will be nrniicl after Insertion. Ueport loattfntloa :o tulaee. Lad exetutioa. poor delivery or Ppra. bad telephone service, etc.. to bead of department wlta wLicb jou are vlyailD. The Newa-rimea Las Ulrtn trun Mnt-a ail or wfcW:X reason J to U-jtue l'bone aud liell 1W
C71SCHIPTI0N KATES. Momlr-;; and Ienlni? Editions. Finjrle Copv. 2c; Sunday. 5c; Morning .T Eventa Edltna. üsilj. Inrudlag Sunday, by mail, iuJ per year la adrance. Dellrered by carrier in Souta IJeod ai.d Misbawala. J(W ?r Jfcür li. advance, ui by Ue week.
ADVERTISING RTK. Ask tfc advertising department. Fore'n AdverMaSn,: Kep-reaeaMtlve: CU.NE. LOKKNZEN A WOOuMAN. 14fth At, New York City and Adf. Hid?, Cblcajjo. Tbe News-Times endeavoia to keep its advertising coluüja free from fraudulent iwisrcpresentatlon. Any peraou dcTrau led through patronage of auy advertlttrceat lu tn:i papr iil confer a favor ou tL management by reportiog tu facta completely. SEPTEMBER 1, 1916.
NAILING A RUMOR. We ha.ve all heard the report, which h.is been going the rounds for sotnn time, that the Panama canal is doomed; that the real tmubl with the canal lies not in earth .slides, hut that the Culebra cut i. one gigantic lo and that the more dredging done the more there will he to do. The persistency of the rumor and the fact that Washington chne to ignore it has been more or les disturbing. Now Kay L. Smith, assistant to tho chief of the Panama canal otlicv in Washington, has issued an ollicial and tmphitio denial that there is the slighte.st foundation in fact for the report. "There is no tn.ih in the 'hog' story," he says. "It is merely a question of dredging the canal every time there Is a bad slide in the Culebra cut. until the proper equilibrium is reached, when the slides will cease. The largest ships of the American navy could go through the canal today." Thanks, .Mr. Smith, for your really cheering information.
ARBITRATION AND SUDDENNESS. Congress is at work on a compulsory arbitration law, as recommended by Tres't Wilson, and this the proiMinciamcnto of Xcti. Albert Ii. Cummins of the unconstitutionality of the principle, and the declaration of iriudusabttty of Congressman Will 11. Wood, notwithrtanding. We are told by these disciples of "coppert.uid" republicanism, of which there are several others In congress and out. that the undertai.ig is all wrong, "too sudden." and a number of things; that the 1 resident should have settled the controversy without the aid of congress, and of course, whatever is done is bound to be wrong from their way of thinking or pretending to. Ia s. than a week aco. Sen. Cummins was yelling from Lie house top for toe president to preserve the "principle of arbitration." He seemed to think the president had such power. Now, whether the president has that power or no, the senator has climbed from the house top to the chimney top, to tell us that to give him the power would transcend the constitution of the United States. "Consistency, thou art a jewel." else maybe, it is Just in evidence of the accumulation of pestiferous demagogues In congress that needs to be cured. And the suddenness .f it. One would scarcely expect Congressman Wood to have any conception of a problem that is less than a century obi. Doubtful if he ever heard of such a thing as compulsory arbitration" before; somebody in Washington, indeed, has said that there isn't any such thing say nothing of the long standing examples of Australia and New Zealand. From Associated Press and International News dispatches. outlining republican comment at the capital, anent the proposed legislation, ore might suspect that our republican statesmen were ignorant as bats; this, too, without excuse. We say "without excuse." because hasn't our republican contemporary in a series of articles ly Haskin. told them all about this arbitration business long ago. Why, a our contemporary puts it, it isn't even "original with Wilson," but of course, must have been with Haskin. thouch it has been a debated principle, in the schools, in the colleges, from the lecture platform, and even from the pulpit and stump, for a quarter of a century. We hadn't noticed that Pres't Wilson, or anyone els' sie our contemporary's Haskin. had ever made any claims of originality, in advancing such a
program, then it is
but of course, if Haskin is the originator.
different. That miuht excuse Congressman
Wood, cwn if it doesn't excuse the president, for undoubtedly Haskin is a man. whom Wood, and lots of other people r.ever heard of; wherefore their ignorance is bound to . grMt. The president needs to be con. frratiilated upon hiving stumbled somehow onto the TIaskin clue; th- H.i-km widom. Such remarkable "trig;r.alit ." and the tohsequent influence, is not to be
Just as plutocracy, and its pandering dupes are wont to say of the bill before congress today. The present bill, however, takes the public Into consideration, and enables the public to say that a labor dispute within the Jurisdiction of the federal government shall be arbitrated. The public becomes a party in interest in every such content. It js the public against the both the employer and employe, and that is what neither of these want. Constitutional nnth'ng! It all depends upon whether or not, y u have a j'utocratic supreme court. Th public ran protect itself against strikes and lockouts, a party in interest, the wme as it can protect itself against murderers, burglars etc.
Memory Hints for Ex-Bull Mooscrs to Consistencyize B y
UP TO THE MOVIES. The sentiment of the country has pretty well crystalized in favor of free and uncensored motion picture Minis. Hut it is up to th" big movie directors to exercise a voluntary censorship, else there may he a sudden and unwelcome reversal of that sentiment. Up in Twin Falls, Idaho, the other day two boys, brothers, aged 11 and 12, respectively, brutally murdered Tho?. Hamill
the vice principal of the ("arson, Nevada, hih school at ! his country homestead. Then they loaded Homill's
wagon with bedding, supplies and a regular arsenal and 1
started out on the strenuous life. They actually travelled li'O miles before being apprehended, stealing guns and other things from the ranchers along the way. Mfieers s.v their ride was about the wildest and most hazardous on record in that section of the country. A generation ago, h pulrid dime novel came under
the ban because of its effect upon the mind and imagi-j
nation of childhood. We reckon a good many of our male readers were licked for hiding the yellow-backs in the garret and stealing up to pore over them when they should have been at Sunday school. We were, on clivers occasions. Put we didn't succumb to triMes like that. Our imaginations properly tired by the blood and thunder thrillers, we would have started out on a care free life of brigandage most any time, only we didn't know just how to go about it. The dime novel of yore was sadly lacking in illustrations. The movies supply the deficiency, they provide the modus operandi. Any twelve-year-old boy. with Jesse James inclinations and a talent that way. can learn just how to achieve- his ambition by studying the feature films of the side street movies. The boy-mind is receptive and the surest way to reach the mind is through the eye. Let the adults feast on their vampire and social-problem films If you will, but let's diet the youngsters.
BUILDING A LAKE. Nature is being made over at a rapid rate these days. Soon she may have to look to her laurels in the competition with modern engineering. The Ohio superintendent of public works has recommended a great water conservation plan which includes tue building of a lake covering seven square miles in area, with water from two to tifty feet deep. Twelve farmhouses are in the area which .upt. Kauver hopes to submerge, together with hundreds of acres of trees. The object of the plan is to insure a sufficient water supply for manufacturing plants in the valley of the upper Cuyahoga river. Canals, spillways, concrete dams and inverted siphons, with other details less intelligible to laymen, are involved in the project. The canals would be used as distributors of water which would be sold by the state. And then, to complete the mystification of the average reader, Supt. Fauvor, probably with some of the great western engineering feats in mind, concludes by saying that the plan can be carried out with "only trifling problems in engineering." When this piffling little lake of seen square miles has been laid down over the erstwhile farms, with its canals, spillways, siphons, etc.. just turned off as a little appetizer before breakfast so to speak, perhaps there is reason to hope that some of the engineering gentlemen may turn out an occasional real day's work in the way of Mississippi Mood prevention, keeping real estate where it belongs in the Imperial valley, and a few other such matters which now catfre quite a little bother from time to time.
'efore
co:i:r"ss is as old as the Knights of'; in words, but not in principle. It
o e r bi k The 1 ill
Lalor; different
should hav- bet n t n.o !e,l into lavs and plaeed on thestatute l ooks decad- auo. hut congress has been ' cowardly m the face of capital: serving the special inte rests first, and b'tttnc tb public welfare co. Now i cigar.ized labor has reached the point w here it thinks :t can db täte, and oir.srf-ss threatened from both ; s;d -; as old Paud Harum avs 'there is as much hu- , jr.ari nature in some folks as there is in others, nnd sc metiznes more." The idea of a court of arbitration;
THE RETURNING SHIRTWAIST. Shirtwaists, it appears, are coming back. This will be a surprising statement, to many who have not been conscious that they had ever been away. The fact is. however, according to the dress expert, that the emphasis for the past two seasons has been on the onepiece dress. Shirtwaists have been reserved for extremely informal wear. Now, after a vacation, they are coming back into all sorts of popularity. They will be made of lace and georgette crepe whatever that may be and they will be girlish in design, even those for portly matrons. The latter sort, however, are characterised by n. it row strips of ribbon running from shoulder to waist line, which, take it from the authorities, "take pounds from a too-piump woman." The early fall colors, says the same expert, will be pink, white and maize. As autumn deepens in tho woods, the colors will be purple, golden-brown, deep gold and dark, rich reds. This is all very poetic and lovely, and reminds one of a sons often sung at a famous woman's college "We take our colors from the dwvn. The rose and silver gray " And doubtless, as the authority continues, the shirtwaist is "the most sensible and serviceable kind of garment for women." Put a word of advice from a man who has been writing editorials for a year on the dye situation. When you et Into those olden-browns and leafy maroons, ladies, be just a little careful about
jthe washing process. Something even more unexpected , than the new styles in shoes might just possibly hapi pen.
for labor do
wiili an inv e.-t :-atory board, and the
power to c r.fur e its awards, probably originated in the I ram of T. Y. Powderlv. sometime president of the
Knights of I-tb
a-o as the seventies. ri4t the question. The ;r;p-
lnality nothing. That
Mtion is a obi as the hills; older than the most of us. uv.fi for 'c!.;rf.-iii.i!i Wood. S n. Cummins or an.vor.a
el.-r. to t.:k .o o ;t tl.
ha
HOW COMES IT? YE EDITORS! We would like to discover by what underground lire of communication standpat organs of the western states suddenly rind it necessary to boom .Myron T. Herrick for I. S. senator for Ohio, on the ground that the firm loan act is poorly made and that it will be re-made, if
; the next congress is republican.
Mr. Herrick is a banker. He is one of Mark Manna's ; old "boys." Py breeding and s hoohn- apolitical) he belongs in the gang of rabid, merciless sttndpatters who think they have an opportunity to check progressiv ism ; and again take the nation by the throat. ' It would be well to ask .Mr. Herrick if he is party to ' a scheme to destroy or emasculate the only hit of financial legislation farmers have got. after decades of skinning by the banks.
I . 1 1 e s i .
that th
it only required Candidate Hughes and a cross-coun-
s ;d denr.e. " of it is a mere try speech-making tour, to make it conclusive that m i an unr.tr.ess for the jobs r.ot a :-mgie honest issue tan be raised against the re
election of Wood row Wilson and the continuation of v. a; italists, fc.-uj i'uwütrb 'a.j crazy; democracy in power.
u:. !.;.
The republican organization of Indiana, the individual members of which are exceeding well, if not favorably known in thf people, are using most strenuous efforts to induce former progressives to "come to the aid of the party." The visit of Candidate Hughes to California, his affiliation there with none but the bosses of the Keal-ing-Hemenway - Watson - New-Fair-banks-Goodrich school, snubbing the ."06,000 California progressive upon his arrival and being In turn snubbed and ignored by those same "60,000 registered voters, has therefore been a source of great annoyance to Kealing and Hemenvy and Tobe Hert and their candidates of the ticket in Indiana, where the progressive and independent political spirit has also been very pronounced. In this campaign the Indiana leaders would probably be most thankful if their names had not been so conspicuously injected into the political history of 1912 and 191. They were proud of it in 1912. For instance, there is an interesting chapter starting with the primaries and conventions of March, 1912, leading through the state and national conventions and culminating in the awful republican catastrophe of November of the same year. Hack in PH2 Campaign. In the Indianapolis News under date of March 1."). i:12. from F.vansvil'e, we read that "the republicans of the tirst district had their convention here this afternoon and elected James A. Hemenway of Koonville, former United States senator, a delegate to the Chicago convention. Anticipating trouble at the convention in Germania hall two police captains and a squad of fifteen uniformed men and live detectives wvre detailed to preserve order." On the 26th of March. 1912. we lead that the reRular republican organization "won a signal victory ever its enemies when the Indiana iepublican Mate convention at Tom linson hall. Indianapolis. elected Charles W. Fairbanks. Harry S. New, James K. Watson and Joseph I. Oliver as delegates at large to the National convention at Chicago." This action, we are further told by a newspaper friendly to the organization, "followed a hot and disgraceful scene in the convention, made by the enemies of the organization". And still further we are informed that the regular forces "were in control, with the power to organize and arrange the program for the convention", but that the opposition "made noise enough to cause an uniformed person to think otherwise". The printed record as it will always stand, also tells us that these progressive republicans "broke loose first when the announcement of Will P Wood of Iafayette, as the choice of the state committee for chairman of the convention was made, and it was a long time before he could finish his speech, which was interrupted by yells and hisses". IeiogaUs Slcani-Itollenl. Then the printed history airaln tells us "how the delegates who were being steam-rolled tried to reach some amicable settlement after th committee on credentials had arranged all the delegates to suit ita own purposes". The record says "Horace Stillwell, while the convention was in session, brought the compromise proposal to Harry S. New, national committeemen, but New refused to enter into any such arrangement. Charles H. Campbell also tried to get James P. Goodrich to enter; into an agreement to split the delegation at large, but Goodrich also turned it down." Another interesting paragraph in the printed page of that convention, tells how Stillwell tried to halt the steam roller in crushing the delegates who had been honestly, elected, whereupon. "James K. Watson moved to lay his notion on the table." Watson said he "wished to bring the questions squarely before the house". After the completion of the roll call "Horace Stillwell insisted that the vote was wrong and asked for a recount. Chairman Will R. Wood held that it was too late to question the accuracy of the vote". And then James K. Hemenway who had been elected a delegate to the national convention by the power of the police and detective forces of Kvansville, is reported -to have "placed in nomination for delegates at large to the Chicago convention Charles W. Fairbanks. Harry S. New. James E. Watson and Joseph Oliver." How Itrxwnelt StlcI It. Two days after the Indiana convention Col. Roosevelt made a speech in Chicago. Among other things which the colonel had to say was this: "Against all the money, all the patronage and all the efforts of the Kealing machine in Indiana, with nothing but the plain people of the state to rely upon, we carried the state convention unanimously, and then .y fraudulent action, which can only he called brutal In its utter defiance, fully two hundred delegates were thrown out and the will of the people reversed. The Kealing machine state delegation in Indiana does not represent the people at all. Now the fundamental issue in this fight is an issue of honesty, business and fair play. Have the rank and tile of the plain people, in whom Abraham Lincoln trusted, the right to express their free will? Or ar they to be bullied and defrauded of that riizht by the representatives of political and financial pillage? 'The representatives of the powers of pillage, with the backing of hig crooked business, work through the lowest kind of political machinery with the support of the.-e grat financial powers that work in th darkness. The issue is whether the American people are fitted and able to i:oern themselves or whether they are to be governed by thes machine politician huc r.loe aJ-
THE MELTING POT FILLED BY THE EDITORIAL STAFF
DISAGKCII.MKNT. The man who lives in sontuCe, unwedded .nd alone. Is apt to have a lengthy list of troubles of his ownRut when by annexation he acquires a helpful mate. He sets the scenery for much connubial debate. He's often castigated by the lady's verbal lish In disagreements raised on haberdashery or hash. And when he joins in club or lodge or church or politics. F.ndeavoring with other men to fraternize and mix, Pehold what raucous discords rend the sweet and balmy air! How willingly they lay each other's faults and failings bare! What wild recriminations on each other's foul intents! What language unbecoming the society of gents! Alas, athough we strive in every honest way we can. How few of us keep the peace with friend and fellow man! We doubt his mind and motives while he's busy doubting us; We never miss occasion to incite a fray or f iss; Rut If we did not disagree there'd be a lack of zest And most of us would find the game of lagging interest. A. p..
R.
-o
News Item: Marion county justices have announced that their wedding fee in the future would be J3. Personally, Wo Don't Care, Hut When they raised the tax on collars From "two for" to 15 straight. All the men indulged in hollers. Still we've got to pay the freight. Then the milkmen got together And they boosted milk again. Blaming it upon the weather, (What is milk without the rain?) We have seen these measure. carried. But we never thought to see, Higher prices to be married. And a bigger wedding fee! Chorus. So wp complain. c do complain, And do not think It nicv, sir, To thus diM-ourajrc s.ome younr swain Who may not hate the price, sir!
When the barbers in convention Raised hair cut. to thirty-fives. We just smiled and didn't mention That WE cut OURS all our lives. Then the bakers followed quickly, "Knead the dough" they said, "to mix," So they made the bread look sickly, Raising it from five to six. And it costs more to be buried. But we never thought there'd be Higher prices to get married. Or a bigger wedding fee! Chorus. Oh. we do kick, yes, wo do kick. Ant! do not think if nice, sir,
To make some young man look mi sick Who's seeking shoos and rice. sir. Headline in local paper: HOOSIKR LAUDS G. O. P. AS TRUST KD PARTY With the accent on the Trust, we presume. o Tas SOMi: Oil. dig. And did ya see where Mrs. Little won the fat ladies' race at electric company outing? Some little fat lady, we bet! And Mr?. Strieker won the nail-driving contest, Mr. Rowley won the swimming and would have captured the rowing prize had there been one. The cracker race was won by Miss Rush, who evidently did so during the mastication process. And who could be more natural than for Carl Lighthall to take the 100 yard clash, I0o yards being such a hsht haul. o vi : city i:d. fin Spanish Tempo. Poke Him a Poke Him). Ho used to hate one hig moustachio. Ami proudly lie wore it, and well. He would not exchange it for casliio. He would not for millions it sell. Hut now he has lost Ids moustachio. His face is as ground newly
cleared, And now ho may even oat hashio Without leaving some on his heard.
TT
investigate
Ask us about wiring your home. Let us show jxru how small the cost will he. Lei us show you how low the monthly hills will he, under the new low rate.
I I. & M. f - i; - 1 wuaui
: I iCvä t .1 A
liance with the worst forms of bip business has produced nine-tenths of the corruption and scandal in American public life. The republican party fortunes are now committed to these political machines in the various states, which are led by men
like Tawney In Minnesota, Kealing
in Indiana, Penrose in Pennsylvania, Ballinger in Washington, Barnes and Koenig in New York, Gallinger in New Hamsphire. Guggenheim and Evans in Colorado. Aldrich in Rhode Island. Cox in Ohio and Lorimer in Illinois".. What Happened i. Chicago. In the newspapers of the same date. Joe Kealing assuming: to speak for the republican party in Indiana said, "it amuses me very much, but Col. Roosevelt has been grossly misinformed. Tne republican party in Indiana is not now and never has been controlled by any interests". Joe Kealing is what Artemus Ward would call an "amoosin Kuss". When the credentials committee at Chicago got busy with the road roller arranging the roll call of the convention. Alabama being first on the alphabetical list of contests, the regulars were speedily seated, whereupon Harry S. New. Indiana member of the national committee and general manager of the steam roller, is quoted in the records as saying, "there is absolutely nothing in these contests. This case is a fair sample of all and they will all be settled as this was". Results prove that one Harry . New was an excellent guesser. Harry had advance information. On June 8th the newspaper dispatches from Chicago tell how Horace Stillwell, opposed to the Indiana machine, made certain compromise proposals looking to party harmony. The newspaper report advises us that "the proposal was turned down fat". Whereupon. Jim Hemenway declared. "I was elected legally and properly and so were all the other delegates from Indiana, and I do not purpose to consider any proposals to deprive any of us of the full rights and duties in the convention which have been placed on us by the republicans In Indiana.' Was Innrx-ent as Limb. Two days later at the Chicago convention Hemenway was still talking. He could not understand how anybody could go to the national convention and charge that there had heen gross repeating in the Indiana primaries and "not present evidence as to the identity of the repeaters. How any one; can come to this committee and talk about road rolling when our majority is more than sixty-one is more than T can see", declared Mr. Hemenway in childlike innocence. At one time in the proceedings Harry S. New became greatly perturbed and he found it recessary to issue a statement in which he said, "this is a national convention, but not a prizefight or a beer garden". The delegates and the folks back home r illy thought it was a riot. On the nth of June, standing in the Congress hotel lobbv and mopping the prespiration from his classic features, the newspaper reporter described him as "Mr. Joseph R. Kealing. republican leader of Indiana", and they quoted him after this manner: "Believe me. I am feeling pretty good. Everything was. decided the way it should have been against the colonel. His method?, of graft have been fittingly rebuked. No man can fool all of the people all of th" time." Hooray for "our Joe". And je; in comta Joe Keel
ing with his friends Jim Hemenway, Jim Watson, Charlie Fairbanks, Harry New, Will Wood and Jim Goodrich, all dressed in outward robes of purity, proclaiming that they have always been the advocates of progressiveism and good honest representative government. This is but a brief chapter from much that was written in 1912 and a sra in in 1M4, and which is most interesting to the people of Indiana tn 191. All this, say nothing of Warsawor calling for a poll of Fulton county, where the district was lorded over by Archibald CI. Graham, F. Henry Wurzer. and last but not least, by the very Honorable Andrew Jackson Hickey, of Laporte, republican candidate for congress. Kverybody in these parts knows thnt the Warsawconvention was a no less disgraceful affair than the state convention at Indianapolis.
Preserve the leather and make your ahoea wear longer. The? contain no acid and will not Crack the leather. Easieattouae and their shine La.it a longer.
BLACK-WHITE -TAN
iO ?
p yook mm
THE F.F.DALLEY CO., LTD.
BUFFALO. M.Y.
The Public Pulse
Commnmcatlona for this colnran may be signed anonymously but niuet be aecTain1ed by tlie name of the writer to Insure good faith. No re1X31 a1 Mty for fact or entlruents expressed will be assumed. Booeflt dtecnpslon of pubrllc nueation la. inTlfced. bot with the rijrht reserred to eliminate virion and objectionable matter. The column is free. But, be reasonable.
iii-mi-ys oxk rem him. South Bend, Ind., Aug. 30, l'slh. Kditor News-Times: This really intended as an open letter to T. R. Say, Mr. Roosevelt, do you tret on to the way the stand patters out in California are tramping on your old side-partner. Hiram V Don't you remember, Mr. Roosevelt, how Hiram stood shoulder to shoulder with you at Chicago and promptly followed you out onto the bloody field of Armageddon? Ion't you recall that he stumped the effete east for you and swuns whole states for you? Have you forgotten that he was right on your hed., when you came out for Hujrhes? Isn't it fact that he has whooped it up for you on even- possible occasion, and s"me impossible ones, dur
ing the last four years? Who spent j many of the Lest years or his puh- j lie career basting the standpatters I who were lambasting you? This! same Hira-n. And nov the same old standpat i enemy is knifing Hiram and pilin- j upon him disgrace and contumely. : Thev won't let him preside at I
Hughes' meetings. They cuss him for being a progressive, and charge
him with being a noxious, super-l odorous goat, seeking association ', with and office among th perfumed j
regular sneep. ne was one of your tirst and strongest followers into progressiv ism. Mr. Roosevelt. ami they're 'mist stumped for mean
enough things to say about him for j following and righting under your)
banner. It is one thins to gag, hog tie. bag and deliver your loyat follower. Mr. Roosevelt, but what are you goin to do about it when they jump on the bag with their hot. nailed shoes." It is said that they're going to honor you highly it Hughes' meetings, down east, Mr. Roo-eeit. How can you accept such honors, when they're brutally in-inhdndhtu yur good old runningmate ? Will iou not vLat Cahtornia. Mr.
PREPARE FOR THE FAMINE OF THE STRIKETAKE ADVANTAGE WHILE YOU CAN PROCURE A GOOD SELECTION
ÜEMLEM IBM
319 S. MICHIGAN ST.
SIKLOIN sti:.k itur.M sti;k SHORT sti:k FLANK m i: k rib roiling ni:i:r bi:i:i- pot ROAST RIB IU I I ROAST I Rlll II AM IM lU.LR . SHOrLhFR POI ROAST li:g of LAMB LAMB chops LAMB IOK M l AYI N G cokm:i bi:i:f
:k
17c 18c 16c 16c 10c 14c 15c 12c 16c 18c 18c 12;c
s.M.T roitii whom: iohk siioi lii:r . FORK LOIN
ROAT ..
IDIMv SACSAGF. I "IIA XK TOUTS. POC.NI BOLOGNA A VI livi:k satsagi: prisi:i HAM MINCim ham YKXL LOAT rooKi;n (oiim:i) bi;i:t riCKLKD TIGS I KIT SCMMIIK sAt'S AGT GI'ILMAN
J SAIVMI
15c
15c 18c
....12kl
....mc
lie 16c 16c
17c i 25c
9c 20c 22c
Fresh Churned Butterine
BFFIILFK BROS. I'RIVAIi: BRAN I bti:hli:h ruos. hk.m GRABT ( OCNTKY ROLLS ..
MOXLTY'S siii:hioii
19c
in jswiiT-s 1 VKj I LINCOLN
17c
20c 15c
$Q Gold Crowm Q O Bridgework 9
In South Bend 15 Yrars. Beautiful Gold Omtwtls jx1 Bridge work, 22k, for only ZJDO. Why pay more? SOME OTHKIt TRICKS: 8ct or Trth ( worth $L5)...$5.O0 Gold Crowns $3.00 BrUtgr Work . . . .- .... . SS.OO Tnanie! Crowns ..$3.00 rilUnca IOo Cleaning SOc Hours; 8:30 to S; Pund.y?j 9 to 12 UNION DENTISTS 113 S. MICHIGAN ST.
The Farmers Securities Co. The Farmers' Securities Company offers the wage earner a plan of savings that pays 4 interest while saving and 6 interest for a year following. Call and invetJga.te tlw nrwrt and be?t saviruTs plan. Ill 11 Farmers' Trust Building.
ciAvjim
tb Ca mt Oi
by
H. LEMONTREE V4'a I41a OptmrOUCr aaaf
Roi scvelt. and s o what the re-united republican prty. a now ho.ed. will do to vow'.' r. ire you afraid tor vour!f. as ;v-!l a- afraid to stak up tor ijijr friends".' Sincerely , Vox Humana.
All Work Guaranteed. Kiamlnmtlon Tree WHITE DENTAL PARLOUS 111 W. CTa&hlngion At. Or er Hrrr's Book Store. Both Phone. Open Evening
fcTTtinnirii & stein ltm PUBLIC DRUG STORE CCT RATES 124 NORTH MICHIGAN Homo &600 Ile.'l fiOO
c3
V r i
I
i
