South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 327, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 22 November 1916 — Page 6
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TrMES
SOUTH ßEND JSJEWS -TIMES Mornin Evening Sunday. JOHN HENRY ZUVER. Editor. CARRIEL Tl. SUMMERS, Publisher.
preme court Jutt.ce. They have bfen rehashed r hun-
vlred times during the recent campaign, but lest doubts j may have titon iitertained an to the truth of the contruction ilacfl upon the law then, becauM? of the heat
of the raiiiaii;n, here, in brief. i. a repetition of it. The Adamson law provides for an eight-hour day as
; the )clmm of wanes for all men employed in the operajtion of trains encased In interstate commerce. That J was as far as congress could po. Its Jurisdiction stop
with Interstate commerce.
ONLT aocmtkh l'KKSi mo UN IN O "f.r, t ?. After establishing the ein'ht-hour day. as a basis or FAP EU IN NOKTÜIKV IMHINA AM ONL1 IA I T.K LM Iri,YINi Tili: IM Kl'.N ATIONAL. N K f SEK WLE I?J wu'os, n.ind you. the president wan empowered to ap-MH-TII Iif'.M No . t!. r cewapaper In tfcs tat V : fiir,t r.,mmawin , .hrt. n, invr-tieate "the onera-
;jht od dy ci in:. u .......v . .
md'irJ
' .. -0'.....-.v -..'.. f. I
by t- wir- night od d-iy new - . "3 - IsM-o.Tamn pi;-r in Ub? out!dp indianapoii. "f i Uon and effects of the eight-hour eta e. ry Hj of U, tat avl twl'e on al! dnji ncrpt SanJaj in
liiKi-ij. tutt-rKi at ti.e South lien! p4tomce um wat worKaay .... ana ire lacis ana Couuii'uu aurwill. jir,l' th" relations between .such common carriers and
j employes during a perio.j of not less than six nor more , tfvin nine mon'hs and within thirty days
THE NEWS-TIM IIS PRINTING COMPANY !: ''if) W. t'olfajt Av.
neu mow , thereafter to report -its findings to the president and
congress." That investigation is now under way, notwithstanding thit the eU'ht-hour principle does not become effective until the first of.next year is upon us. And meanwhile, while '.lie ix or nine months of investigation is proceeding, the law establishes a mtn. mum wase for those trainmen, beginning January firs, of the same money for eipht hours that is now paid for
Em 1'honr 111
Call at tlie - rrie r r t'"p!-ti aboTe norabert and tik fof de;ortrr:nt w au .1 E ! If ;-.:. (lT-rtlinc. Circulation, or Ae-tc-ntiDir. Kt 'nl nly" f -ur nan." 1" tfce telepboD din-fiery. b;; will be üiuilfd :Jtr lr.s-rtinn. neprt lDatUratloo to bula'--s. y.nA cih ';ti--n. P or !.iTery of paper, bafl t::-phor iK-rvi-e. r-.. t h-.i'i 'f iT'artment wtUi wM"-h yoa re de,!!;;. The Nev,s-Ti:r-s i:ri th.Tteeeo trunk ILne, all ol wtkb ri-.r.d tu Uoue i'Lou? 1LJL acd Bell 21U.
ar ixt aJTAcce. cr Uc Lj tie vk-
sCn-TKirTION ir.TKSj f'rnlnp and Krenintf Ddltiona, F.r.g.f '-py. 1; Si:D'Jay. Gr; V-.rnins or Kveulng tlitloa.
tla.lj. In-Pidir.i; nuy. by ma.l. '.-W rr ie:ir. lu Aa,: i,.B .. it, rn.u.rtinn:,! .res- n.n- for time worked each
lber-d y '?irri'-r tn Souti IJenn ana iiiaaawa. pwr'-" '
day in excess of eUht hours. This scale maintains only for one month after the filing of the report of the commission, when it expires by limitation, the apparent presumption being that during that month, congress, acting upon the report, will make other provisions con-
Ä f nM8Vw U ! h -"ht-hour day ha, Xacia . oitUtcij. j produced. ! That is all there is to the law ; a declaration of peace
pending an investigation into the operations of the act; but evidently egged on by a semi-public hatred for the
A!vr.r;TIlN; itATKdr Auk tfte dTertlsln; rpartment. T r' U:n Adver:in;i-c lie i reuen u tl vt-s : .CD Nil. 7JltKNZnN Tt WOoiMiN. 'JL l'ifth A.. New Yoa City ana AdT. Bag.. 'Ite Newn-Tlirifii enJrarorj'fo keep Its adTertiaLoa: t-'i'.u.i: 're from fr:uiulent mlareprtscntatlon. Any person
NOVEMBER 22, 1 9 1 6.
A MUNICIPAL THANKSGIVING. A muni lpal Thanksgiving festival independent of the churches, conducted along f-cular lines, and im-bu.-d only with the religion of the individual as it cnU r into ilia cii: lif- aside from ctarian association; thi-' as ;m incident to tho local Americanization movement, recently launched we suggest it as an occasion f- the cone Titration t f attentifn. and a good ytart. The rnov iu"nt i not new locally. It was attempted on July 1th. two years ago, the occasion being celebrated a naturalizition day, hut why not Thanksgiving day a. .i new rallying point? The new-American and the 11; the nation, the state. South r.end, and her people, no,i.- of them are without things to be thankful for, this too from a partly secular standpoint, though it may he. nnl no .loul-t is to the Most Hih as the Author of All C.ood t h it those thank must ascend. The purpose of such a proposal Is to et the people together, all the people, native and naturalized, there to rub each others elbow. s in thanksgiving and prayer Most of the churches will have their own Thanksgiving srriros. and these need not be dispensed with. The municipal Thanksgh ing would he additional. It would be a Thanksgiving festival for all the people. And w hy not? f course, the time for it may be pretty clohc at hand for it is .something new, and tho public mind do s not absoih new things over night. As a general thing !t takes so long to stir up sentiment in faor of a new movement that, on frequent occasions, they wear themselves out being born. The" pineers grew weary and ha.e found new worlds to try' to conquer, by the time the mass really hits their trail and gets ready to do something. Progress as it is actually made is mere proof that those who bring up the rear hae finally arrived. We would like to ?ee the municipal Thanksgiving festival, celebration, oj whatever you may wish to call it, tried out. We regard the occasion as fully as appropriate as the municipal Christmas tree. It might be even more conducive of a higher civic life, though we would not detract for a moment from the beauty of the Christmas tree idea. We merely suggest It to the Chamber of Commerce Americanization committee, or anyone, that they hrlng it perhaps to the attention of the mayor, ajuite essential to municipal cooperation. It would never do. you know, for us to go farther. We are sott of persona non grata about the city hali since proposing such a practical Americanization program an better housing conditions.
PLUNGING US INTO SOCIALISM. America the land of the free, of opportunity, of .jual chance. is confronted today as never before in her history, with a threatened outbreak of quick internal eopjtion. the like of which hr.s not been wit-no.-cl in the world s history since the French revolution and revolution is merely evolution running riot. Capital and hi bor those two mighty forces in American life that have been contesting comparative advancement for ears, l id fair to come to a show-down. Cipital resisting the demands of labor; labor encroaching upon the so-called vested rights of capital, are facing ach other Just now with exhibitions of typical Ilocsevcltian teeth, minus nothing but the smile, the line of attacK being centered about one of the most ital forces in American life. liscardmg qultt? to the full, the old. antequated lav of "supply and demand," alive only in name for more than a decade, industry and commerce today recognizes as the hisis of their rewards only "the most that the trat!'- will bear." and beneath an overhanging warcloud, visible only in the distance, the masses are being üeeced with hiph cost of liing, until a popular demand for the sinews of consumption, has well-nigh reach, d the breaking point. And the crash bids fair to come too. in a most vital Fpot. tnoHu;c that one great factor of distribution that connect.-, the vast. Ae-i, north and soath. and whi:h, under ra;'.iry circumstances, make- the nation as much one n production and use, a does the federal constitution with rti'ec: to law and government. A great railroad strike, such as is threatened with the Coming f t b.e new t .;r in ca-e the Adamson eight-hour and minimum w.ie .;v i- repealed by the federal courts under suits : eng m-tituted b tho railroads, means a crippling of mdnstry, i -t ; i: ti ui of commerce, and such hardship for a hur.dred million people many of
rh ; .-. of starvation. that nothing type nf statesmanship, and broad- ! rate : ist of the American people.
and of t he rai.r- -aus .is-.d striners onlv secondarily, can
save us from a close a, i -roach to se! f-Mexicanizaticn. The Adamson as i ms-, d lv the 1 ..st congress
nif.n.ate adjustment of the dif-
thf m to the i u, short of tue high'
minded j as! ice. ia
measure, engendered by a demogogic and brainless political campaign that run itself amuck, in part, at least, by employing the issue, the railroads seemingly do not care for peace as the result of such an invest!gation. Maybe they fear it, in the light of last year. net earnings, and 'eel that they niU5;t defeat their trainmen's demands by ether processes. Possibly they think the courts, for the sake of old friendships, will reverse frequent previous decisions approving of rninlmum-wage and eight-hour laws, in a "special case" made of this order, or Is it that, realizing that public opinion is half the battle in a strike, the bitterness engendered in the campaign and still entertained by the defeated ones who find it so hard to give up. is being counted upon to render the strike nugatory ? To be frank about it, we are half Inclined to fear that this latter possibility is w ell-nigh a probability, an ' that is exactly where, as suggested in the outset, a near revolution lurks In the background. It will be a sorry day for America when partisanship enters into such controversies as this. it should be a sorry day for the institution that attempts to appropriate it in time of crisis. The brotherhoods of trainmen have, or ought to have, all the best of it with the public, in that they are willing to take the consequences of a duly enacted statute, both pending the investisatlon and what results from it, though there be some things In the administration program which they are opposed to having enacted into law. We do not presume to know how the public will stapd if the crisis tomes, as between the parties in contest, but unless we mi our guess it means the relegation of private ownership of the factors of transportation to the limbo of antiquity and a corresponding further plunge Into the adoption of socialism. For doubtful if the government of the United States will allow that strike to proceed for long to the impoverishment of the people, and Just now, it happens, that th? government Is in the hands of men who will not wield it exclusively to the aid and comfort of those who have plenty and against those who have not. Nothing under the sun could be plainer by way of excuse for the Wall st. millions poured Into the campaign fund of th-j "minority party" during the recent presidential canvass, with a seeming determination, at all hazards, to make it the majority party. Capital sees the direction in which Its arrogance is hurling it. American financiers are not fools. Without control of the government they are fearful, for they hate to give up. U is the grip of greed the magnate's "love of power and ease." They woefully mistake the temper of the American people, if they think they can visit upon them in these times, when plenty might as well abound, anything that savors of impoverishment or starvation. It need not be a case of siding with labor against capital In such a crisis as is threatening. It need not be a case of siding with capital against labor. It In a cate of the American people against both capital and labor. Neither capital nor labor, when It comes to a showdown, have any rights which the public is bound to respect. "We, the people," are pretty nearly the whole thing, something like sovereigns, when we take the notion to be, and every principle ot Americanism reverts back to that, when the lnetncienc'.es of government tend toward popular disaster. Candidly we do not like the atmosphere. It is somewhat stifling. We are optimistic of the outcome, but less so of the process. We are at peace with the world, a thing to be thankful 'for with this approaching Thanksgiving day but how about being at peace with ourselves?
WHAT A IIA II Y COSTS. "Now much do babies cost?" said he The other night upon my knee; And then I said: "They cost u lot; A lot of watching by a cot. A lot of sleepless hours and care. A lot of heart-ache and despair. A lot of fear and trying dread. And sunietimes many tears are shed In payment for our babies small. Hut every one is worth it all.
"For babies people have to pay A heavy price from day to day There is no way to get one cheap. Why. sometimes when they're last asleep You have to get up in the night And go and see that they're all right. IJut what they cost in constant care And worry, does not half compare With what they bring of joy and bliss You'd pay much more for just a kiss. "Who buys a baby has to pay A portion of the bill each day; He has to give his time and thought Unto the little one he's bought. He has to stand a lot of pain Inside his heart and not complain; And pay with lonely days and sad For all the happy hours he's had. All this a bftby costs, and yet His .smile is worth it all. you bet." (Copyright. 1916, by The Reilly & Britton Co.)
THE MELTING POT
Conducted by Stuart H. Carroll
Gravity Pulls Speeding Shell Toward Earth
CKOWNS AM) KINGS. The crown's n greatly coveted and gorgeous decoration On the hereditary head of him w ho heads a nation. It marks a man among the men as extra A selected. Of whom some superhuman stuff is properly exp?cted. It points him out to all the re?t as sovereign and reib'ner. A taller man, a bigger man. a better and a saner. The crown alleges that the guy who ports it on his cocoa Is not a simple monkey from Ceylon or Orinoco, Hut owns a brain of breadth and weight, whose justly famous function Can be performed with matchless tkill and unexampled unction. Whose cerebration dissipates all error and confusion. And reaches by the shortest route the very hest conclusion. Kut all these glad surmises may le honestly mistaken. The tallest crowns on hardest heads are often badly shaken. The people who have put their trust in caliph, king or kaiser, .May tind their action would have been immeasurably wiser If they placed the royal robes upon a rural bumpkin or set the brightly polished crown upon a solemn pumpkin. Arthur Brooks Paker.
lty (iarrctt I. Soniss. "Will you describe the trajectory of a projectile from a rille or cannon? It is my impression that the projectile travels perfectly straight for a certain distance and then begins to curve, but "W" claims that, according to gravity, the curve commences immediately on leaving tho muzzle. Which is right? H. It." "W" is right. The curve begins the instant the projectile leaves the m lzzle. It is impossible to shoot a projectile in a straight line unless the line corresponds exactly with the direction of gravity. Thus you could, theoretically, shoot straight down or straight up, and gravity would not interfere with the direction of the projectile because its force would be exerted In the same line, pimply retarding the projectile if it moved upward and accelerating it if it moved downward.
t IV s
fe re! et ; . i a. i s- I e "
i 1
way for .. !
i etw - n the railroads and the trainmen by;
?.:t-ui.s. ..nd in a'.l probabiliti . t alaruimr the
I ro jsi'-ns ar siuipe-. Ttu v rto'iire the con-
atructioa of r.o supreme court Justi "v-- .r former su-
AMERICAN TOOLS FOR ARGENTINA. Argentina is buing tools from the United States at a rapidly increasing rate, -according to a report from the bureau of foreign and domestic commerce. The increase is partly due to the fact that Germany and England have been too busy to keep up their former competition. Hut chiefly it is because Argentina is learning the difference between cheap tools and well-made tools. Formerly when foreign countries competed successfully with the United States in this line It was by sel'ing a cheaper grade of tool. In the long run the American tools have been found to be better, and Argentina has a growing preference for quality regardless of price. This is as it should be. Competition ought to be based on quality. Just as buvers of hardware and tools in Argentina have chosen the better grades of goods, other buyers will do the same. If the American name comes to mean quality and dependable goods to fon.n countries the price competition will shrink to its proper place of lesser importance.
Gravity acts instantaneously and continuously, imparting a velocity, in round numbers, of thirty-two feet per second during each second that the' moving body is subjected to Its action. The motion of the projectile does not impede gravity, but is combined with the motion that gravity independently produces. If the projectile is tired horizontally gravity pulls it down from the horizontal line from the start to the linish of its course, the amount of deflection arying as the square of the time that the fight continues. Thus, if the projectile is fired horizontally from a height of 14 4 feet. with a velocity of 1,200 feet per second, It will drop !6 feet in the first second, 6 4 feet in two seconds, and 141 feet in three seconds. Hut a drop of 144 feet will bring it to the ground, so that, starting with the velocity mentioned, it could not remain in the air more than three seconds, during which, jf we neglect the effect of air resistance, It would travel ahead 3.60Q feet.
The trajectory, or path, of the projectile can be made straighter by increasing its velocity, but can never be made perfectly straight. For Instance, suppose it started from the same height, 144 feet, with a horizontal velocity of 2,300 feet per second; gravity would act. upon it exactly as before, and bring it to the ground at the end of three seconds, but in that space of time it would have travelled 7,500 feet instead of 3,600 feet from the muzzle of the gun. This Is one of the reasons why as reat a velocity as possible is Imparted to modern projectiles. The gunner knows that he can by no means cheat gravity of its full due. It will allow him Just so many seconds and not an instant more to keep his projectile above ground, and so he tries to send it as far aa possible within the time limit.
And mm cigars have Joined the "higher price" precession and are going up. Which Is the first Ume on record where the poor man coppers a bet. Corn cob pipe- are still selling for a nickel per.
Of course, this limit can be extended, and the range of the projectile can be increased, by delating the place from which the gun is tired. and still more by inclining the line of lire upward. If in the last example the elevation of the gun above ground were l,72i feet instead of 14 4 feet, the projectile, starting horizontally, would remain In the air about 10.4 second.-, during which it would go ahead 2 6,000 ft et, or nearly he miles. Fut the best way to increase the range is to elevate the line of tire. With a muzzle velocity of the projectile of 2.30 0 feet per second, which is somewhere near the actual velocity attainable with the powder charges now used, suppose the gun to be plated on level ground and tired at an angle of 20 degrees above the horizontal. Then, as before, neglecting the air resistance, the range of the projectile would be increased to about a 2 miles, and it would ascend to a height of some 23,000 feet before beginning to fall cgain. The time to fight would be 68 seconds. But these figures, be-
YOl'i: WIFK OK A LADY.
News from the Paper That Does
Things:
"Friday night, the brotherhood of
the Fim Kvangelieal Church will
be entertained at the home cf Mrs.
Charles Matteson. 411 S. Lafayette
st.
MKMIIKKS ARK INVITKt TO
BRING TH13IH WIVES OK A 1ADY. An interesting program will be provided. NOYllMBKIL (Tuno. "No One To Loic") N o one to love, no one -lall. O niy a cat and a yellow head
oil.
V orrily life N all nnldcn ami Slum, l 'j yen the weather Is all on the bum. M irth MTiiis add tleatl, hoic .uro
has fieri. It right skies are, frowning: wi-h I was le-ra-oa-uri. I vor alone sadly I muse: II eully I think I must ju-t feel like HTGIIIX r. I, t. 4T1k 1 1 itches That's Cioing ItolUKL, An anonymous friend sends the following clipping: "The president laughed heartily at the following telegram from Los Angeles by Fred Mace to fr-ecy Tumulty: " 'Oh, Joseph dear, and did you hear the Nuuhes that's uoing round? They counted lots of ballots, but enoush could not be found. They counted once, they counted twice, they'll count a whole lot more, but when they all have finished 'twill be Wilson four years more." o DID You lAcr See Her? The shades of ee. were falling fast As through our So. ik-ml Ullage asscl A nuiid who wore, mid snow and ice. The latest skirt, 'twas made of nice llxcelsior. V. I. It. THirY DO IT IN THK BES-5T OF FAMILIES. Sir: He is a strange fellow-creature w ho will buy his simoleon-surround-ed uncle a Xmas present for $50 and not leave the price mark on it. B. J. A. He's Jealous. And at this Juncture J. J. W. Flips us another clipping in which a noted health expert (not Doc. Evans) con
tends that kissinsr is dangerous, our correspondent aIds him to those w ho are "always talcing the joy out of life." We would rkwssify him with that mythical minority who have never Been loied in the vtonricrful moonlight Hy a starry -eyed, mystical miss Whose smile is the sunshine of summer. The fragrance of .prin:; in her kis:
'TWOULD BE ALL .SMOKE. WE PRESUME. Sir: I think I knew why Teddy R. is making all this din; he'd like to have a dime cigar called Teddy, after
him. R. O. Who Wants To Cheer Up Ilachacl? Rachael sends us the following pessimistic effort which ?he says was induced by perusing the Melting Pot. We knew that this department made lots of persons feel bad but
didn't think it caused any such gloom as the following:
A Timely Warning. Look here! fiorne day you'll have to die. Defy it, if you dare
Go now, put on your Sunday clothes,
'Tie better to prepare!
A falling star might strike. Fome day.
Just where you stand, beware!
You'd better put on a coat of mail, 'Tis wisest to prepare. The world is coming to an end. The Bible tells us so. Give up this struggle for your bread
And be prepared o
Coffees peddled from door to door are never twice the same and seldom of good quality. Buy Golden Sun Coffee. You are sure of Petting a high-grade coffee at a reasonable price. The Golden Sun steel-cut process removes all chaff. Remember So PremiumsAll Coffer
run i rvv. ""Vv i '.
My God! What are we living for If Life's one constant scare? You may as well go dig your grave; "Tis better to prepare! o 15 race up, Rachael, Thankpgiving is coming and 'tis hetter to prepare for it, you know, by having the Turkey all ready. Those other questions in your letter cannot be answered in this colyum. Send a self-addressed envelope and we'll give you the information. o TKMI'CS FTGIT. My qi La train lias a point for you If you're a Lcap Year (iirllcr Tis tliis. That you hail better do Your Christ ma shopping: early. S. II. C.
Inklings and Thinkings
By Wex Jones
Women's styles never change in Sardinia Headline. What do they do without anything to talk about? Kansas City Star. Some of 'em have husband.
We've heard a lot about the saltatory powers of the Kansas jack rabbit, but the biggest jump it ever made was from six cents to 10. Movie theater in Waukegan, 111., charges two potatoes admission. Profitable, and also saves the bum films.
Natural history' note: Even the most fashionable chickens have no regard for Maryland style. Roumania is going In for a straight front. What she needs is one laced up the back.
With a woman In congress, we may soon hear speeches beginning, "Miss Speaker." The strange thing about it is that they found enough horses to make a show.
Virginia having gone absolutely dry, each resident is allowed to import only one gallon of whbkey a month. This is cruel: a Virginian would have to save up his 12 months' allowance for a Christmas day celebration. To a genuine spy an order for 10 tons of coal or a pound of pork chops looks like the log of a U-boat. Billy Sunday is giving Boston beans. Brief as is this western campaign song, it puts in a punch both for suffrage and prohibition: We can't vote. Neither can ma. If Missouri goes wet. Shame on pa.
ing all calculated without allowance for atmospheric resistance, would all be considerably reduced in practice.
The wholesale, scientific manslayers who are fighting the longranse battles in Europe have elaborate tables fchowing the effects of atmospheric resistance on projectiles, ba-sed on very careful experiments, which were mad? for the purpose of substituting practical for purely theoretical estimates of the effective ranee of guns. There is one curious result that might, theoretically, le attained by enormously inrreasin the s, . of a projectile hred horizontally at a height above the earth's surface sufficient to avoid hitting its mountain tocu Such A
projectile, if :t started with a velocity of about five miles per second, and were not impeded by air resistance, would po round the earth like a little moon. Gravity, pulling upon It in the same manner that It pulls upon the moon, would keep it at a constant distance from the; earth, because in the same ratio of distance that it approached tho earth the rounded surface of the globe would recede from it.
CAXPER'.S CANDIEJs pnre sugar and syrup. Healthiest candy made. All flavors. lc to 30c; bags and boxes, at Coor ley's. Advt.
Mary Pickford. Lasalle, Friday. All seats 10c Advt.
ff W
A Remarkable Sale of Inexpensive Millinery
All Trimmed Hats Greatly Reduced. Beautiful showing of New Gold and Silver combinations at very reasonable prices. All Pattern Hats at Half Price. Select your hat tor the Thanksgiving festivities Party Hats, Dress Hats, Tailored Hats, Street Hats, ranging in price from $1.45 to $25.00. Special selection at $3.50, $5.00, $7.50, $10.00. The Popular Hat Shop.
th7 STYLc SHOP FZi WOiEtf
TT
is more than Shoa Polish
It Is composed of wax and oils so combined as to give a brilliant, lasting shine and to soften and preserve tho leather. The ShiroiA HoriiE Sn The handiest, most efficient shoe shining set you
4can ouy at any price. Sold at a nominal cost to ShdwiA users. FOR HOME, GRIP OR AUTOMOBILE
BLACK TAN WH 1TE
At aU Dealers Take no substitute
Kr
THE HOME SET
FLOUR, FEED AND POULTRY SUPPLIES THE CASH FLOUR & FEED STORE has them at 223 SOUTH MAIN ST. Deliveries made to all parts of city. Home 6571. Bell 3871
All Work GuarauU-ed. Examination Freo. wnxn: diixtal parlous 111 W. Washington At. Over IrT'n Hook Store. Doth rbone. Open Ereninx
The C. W. Copp Music Shop ixpen Krcrj Kre-nire:. 228 fcoath Mlciran 5H.
HARRY L. YERRICK
Funeral "T?
Director
Ambulance
EDWIN E. DILL, Assistant
MAX ADLER COMPANY World's Best Clothes Cor. Mich. and Wash. Sts.
Don't Pay Cash for Your Clothing Your Credit is Good at GATELY'S 321 S. Michigan St.
