South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 2, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 2 January 1917 — Page 8

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ti i:si).v i;vrNiN;, janiwuv z. 1917. THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morninc: Evening Sun Jay. JOHN" Hr:.VHY ZUVint. IMitor. gai;hii:l p.. sd'MML'ius. publisher.

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THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY

ii:--: ''P H'. r.Ifix Av. Horn? I'Uov.r 111.

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i'nl at til. i ff ! ' t-l.-yd"n" n-v humeri r ri -1 f-r fW-Piirtn -'it v, it.f-! - JMit-.ri.il. A-h'. rt!b:g. '!r ulat'.-.p. or A--minfint. 1't "u .i-;t .. IvV If y.jr name i In t- t - !ir' f.-r. . J.'.!: '-xi'l ! m -:d ifo-r t u.-;t i- n lb-r..rt i::'tt"iti .11 t ' ui: bid . - i.f. r. ' -r il. livery .f p;i; r. l t-op:;-.n- ..-' i . r . t . I. . a. I ..f .U : l rt:n-:it with v 2. vou r.vf d-alir.g 'I . N "a - 'f". ! .1! M.lrf""n trunk lii.. all of wLIh rr.4"r.'l t- II . -i- I'l'. r..- 11. Van 1 l'-'l -1. I ISC ft I lT ION ICTi:: M'.rna-.jr ;i nl lining fl I f tor? Sir.ir'..' rpv. - . S':n J-tj. . : M-riili L' r Evening I'.iitlon, ..-ihr, In hiding S'ire: iv.' .v :-.ai'. ..'Joo per r in .-i:r:in-e. I t : r.- 1 by firMr In S.u:, I'.-t) i and .llhawafc. 00 per j far in adv. mi -, -jV IL' I.v tl.'- a

AI KKTI"! Vi ICATI: Ask t'e a.lvort iir. z !rpnrtm'nt. T'ir.-irn A'!v.Tti-i;- I: t ,Tjw. : cn:, I.oHKNZI N t 'VonhMAS'. Fifth Av . y.-r!; iv. in'' A ".v. l".lz . 'h:.-i2'. Tl.o x-!i "). -i.il-.iv.r to l. p Its m! verr isln? Ki'ufuri' fr-v fm:ii fr-iiilunt iii!i"-;ir--nti"n Any p-r-on iU U; .', ! tl.r'T;;!i 1 1 ,- I. .:;' ' f any ail v.-rti'-m. -r.t in tl.is ..per wii: !! f. .- a fa i- ü th- nn n;i j-u:i-i t by reporting: tbe f n ti .iap; t'iy .

Dinner roaht Leef with vegetables, bread, nee and raisin pudding. Supper Stewed dumplings, bread and butter, eornbread. syrup, apile sauce and tea. A "rtRular day's food supply" includes nine hundred pounds of bread, three hundred and tishty pounds of beef, eighteen pounds of butter, eighty pounds of flour, thlrty-flv pounds cf oatmeal, twenty-five gallons of milk, four bushels of potatoes, six pounds of coffee, one pound of tea. sixty pounds of sugar, euht quarts of syrup, ten pounds of onions, twelve pounds of cornstarch, ten poinds of raisin?, one hundred and twelve pounds of corr bread, and six pounds of tomatoes. That M f ins to ive enough variety, as well as quantity, even if a few of the delicacies regarded by most of us as necessaries of llf are misslns. And the achievements f the Carlisle students in athletic, not to mention their mental labors, show that 'here's nothing wrong with their diet. Tresumably it's -od enough for anybody. Certainly mon of the population of Kurope todav would be mighty glad to get anything so good. And at i-ixteen and two-thiids cents a day three wholesome, adequate meals fur about the price of a good cigar or a drink; Maybe the colleges can teach us something besides book learning, after all. It's to be observed. howeer, that no middleman gets a rake-off on thfir food supply. They buy In large quantities, and get bottom rates. Hut why couldn't other people organize and do the same thing? Why couldn't a neighborhood of ttve hundred people do it. is well as a college of live hundred students?

Clocks Not Subject To Influence of

Mysterious Subjects

JANUARY 2, tM7

MAMMOTH CAVE. ' t Sin'-c the old ht-l at .Mammoth Spring., Uy.. is do- ;

.t royer. there is hope that a hotel uy be built comparable vith tho.'T J-f Yelb.-v.-tone park, and that this great natural .vonder n.ay tnu.-: adapted properly to p il Uc u.-.e. it was hi'-;h time that that hotel disappeared. It was ! . s : 1 1 1 more than a century ago, i.: boas? the workers of the salt peter deposit, in the caes. from which a large p.u t of our gunpowder was obtained for the war of lU. It was never suited to th" purpos-e of sheltering travelers. It had no modern hotel conveniences whatever. There were no bathtubs. Quests went to bed with tandks. The food was pour. And th-- whole management of the place has long been a subject of crit-Ui-a.i. The owners of the Mammoth cave property W ould make no impro ements. One of the many unfortunatecbiets of their neglect has been the permanent bl.u kening of all the beautiful .stalactite and stalagmite deposits throughout the caes by the smoke from the oil torches always carried by guides and lsitors. F.lectric lights would not only have preserved the original freshness of the caves, but proper Illumination would hae heightened th-ir beauty, and made thevi far safer and more comfortable for visitors. The little privately-owned railroad spur by which travelers reach the caves has been another anachornism. Private ownership, in fact, has. been the bane of the mar clous Mammoth cave region. It is time t' bring the property under state or federal' control, build a good hotel, and make proper conrv.f tlon with the I.ouis;lIe v NashilIo railroad which has long been eau'er to d its part In making the place accessible to the public.

KIELES EOR WOMEN. A feminine preparedness enthusiast named Miss June Haughton has undertaken to train the women for war while (Uns. Scott, Wood and the rest are training ta men. She's going to teach them all to shoot. She is starting, as a nucleus of her Jiew movement, a rifle club with headquarters and a shooting range on the roof of the hotel Vanderbilt in New Y'ork city. Miss Haughton explains her intent thus: "I doubt if one woman out of a thousand knows how to handle a rille or a gun; yet our nurses now going out to the seat of war realize what a handicap this is. It is a knowledge that should be a part of their training. I propose to terganie at the woman's range what may prove to be the foundation of a great woman'? army. Who knows but that we may need sach a thing in time? Certainly the great conflict abroad has proved that there is such a possibility." If this young lady and her friends want to take up ritle practice on a sk scraper roof as a sport, let them go to it by all means! will probably do them no harm, and the community can stand it if the targets have a backstop big enough to keep the bullets from spattering all over town. Hut the objects that they profess o naively arc a different matter. It's probably the tirst time marksmanship has been set down as necessary for an army nurse. If a nurse on duty once picked up a rille and fired it, there would be a sudden end of her nursing career. Women are permitted at the front only with the iron-clad understanding that they shall never uiu'.er any circumstances participate in the fighting. As for defending their countrj against invaders, thee enthusiasts might do well to remember what ha-s happened to women in IJelgium and other countries when they undertook to lire on tho Invaders. Or if they hae in min J something mure dignified than sniping, say a uniformed army of a million or so women to "man" the trenches, they might remember that there are some l'.nCC.OOO men in this country tit tr,r military duty, and that mighty few of them would shirk in case of need. Also that, granting woman's superiority to man in most things, her superior fitness tor soldiering has yet to be demonstrated. We do not belong at all to that school of men which says that before women get the ballot they should be willing to go to Nvar.

STATE MARKET BUREAUS. It is recognized that the root of our cost-of-li fng problem is the clumsiness of our syste n of distribution. It is so hard for the producer who wants to sell to reach the consumer who wants to buy. And when the middlemen intervene they charge so much for their services that both producer and consumer suffer. The middlemen are not to 1 lame, necessarily. Once in the business, they must make a living. Hut there is a growing conviction that it isn't necessary for s' many of them to be in the business that society could profitably do without mo:;t of their., if it could only Und the right way to make the necessary short cuts in distribution. South Carolina has been carrying on a valuable experiment along this line. Two years ago E. J. Watson, commissioner of agriculture, persuaded live influential morning newspapers in the state to give him space every Tuesday for condensed lists of agricultural "wants" and "offerings." He detailed a clerk in his office to look after the matter. The public was informed that anybody wanting to sell or buy any sort of farm product should report to the commissioner's office. Offerings and inquiries were entered on cards by the clerk, and kept on file until the transactions were completed. No fee was charged. The expenses were paid out of contingent funds. From this simple innovation, says a South Carolina dispatch, lias grown up a valuable state marketing bureau "or farm products which "transacts a large volume of business, standardizes and stabilizes prices and is operated at nominal expenses: to the beneficiaries and the Mate." The newspapers still print the wants and offerings free. The vork has grown now to include merchants as well as producers and consumers. Hvery Wednesday a folder is issued to 1,000 firms .dealing in farm commodities. It's a plan which seems capable of indefin'te development, and "which could be adopted to advantage by every state.

THE MELTING POT

"Come Take Pot Luck With Us"

Keep your South

oney in

end

II y Cnrrott P. Senivs. There is no scientific reason why a clock should do anything cf the kind, if you meat:, as you undoubtedly do. that the death of the human being was the cause of the stopping of the clock. If clocks are

I used by mysterious intelligences te

convf-y information. science has failed to discover the 'act. Moreover, science teaches us to believe that no such thing ever occurs. There is so much of this sort of superstition abroad, and it is so effective in muddling the brains of a large number of peeqde who need enlightenment insteael of mystification, that I think no greater service can be performed than to point out semie of the sources of these twists in mental operation.

The human race bus now bee-n 1 long enough on this planet t haw accumulated a ast mass of experi-! cure concerning the operations ef

nature. Uy applying caret J 1 observation a nil reasoning to them we are able to divide the- results of experience into two great classes: First, those which show that certain occurrences are related to one another by an unbroken chain of cause and effect, which ue can clearly see and understand; and second, those which show that certain other occurrences happen coIncidently without any such connection. It is not difficult to understand that, in a world so full of events, all happening at once, many must occur simultaneously without being directly related to one another. Confusion between these two different e rders ef occurrences produces most of the superstitions that still afi'lict and haunt the human mind.

U.VTIX) I LM C OUUTKSY. "Fe courteous to customers, ye faithful employes!" Is what the rule-book issued by the corporation says. "A gentle smile, a peasant nod, a pit upon the spine Will make them love to patronize our famous railroad line." "Politeness is the best of oil for any busines gears; It wins the people's love and keeps them co.ning back for years." Hut when the operation of a swift and careless train Removes your treasured toe with much embarrassment and pain. The railroad for whose recompense you cheerfu"y apply Declares the value of ycur toe was mostly ir. your eye. With scant and frigid courtesy they tell you you may sue And see if any court sustains your biaseo. point of view. "You want five hundred dollars for that cheap and tawdry toe? We hate to name the place whereto -we recommend ou go. Your toe was only one. you know, and not a gross r peck. It's rmire than we could offer for your liver, lungs and neck, our price for toes r.s trood as yours is twenty cents an ounce. Hey, porter! Come and give this crazy customer the bounce." Arthur Hrooks Haker. ILLUSIONS. (Uy tTames J. .Montague.

TO LIGHTEN LABOR OR FARM WOMEN. The department of agriculture, working with many of the state colleges, has been making real progress in its work of lightening the work of. farm women. The work is there to be done just the same, but the girls and women are being helped to do it in more efficient and less back-breaking ways. There has grown up a four-years' course in housekeeping and outdoor activities. Cultivation of a garden and canning of products, poultry-raising, bread-making, general cooking, sewing j?r.d care of the home are among the things taught In this vocational course. Many co-operative enterprises have been organized and pushed to success. One, the "egg circle," is particularly worth while and interesting. These egg circles are composed of groups of women who "get together" in the marketing of eggs produced .n too small quantities to be profitable when marketed by each individual producer. Home economic clubs have been formed. Another novel feature to the "automobile home-makers excursion." On these excursions, a good-sized group -f farmers and their wives visit neighboring territory, stopping to examine farm ana home eejuipment, methods and results. This extension work has been going on for some time in the south and for a shorter time in north and west. All over the country marked progress has been made and success has attended most of the work. One chief aim is, of course, to have less and less of the work done by "outsiders." The promoters of the idea

The business of science is to distinguish between the- real and the. apparent, er imaginary, relations of things that are presented to our sense. Nobody ever thinks of ascribing an occult, or supernatural, cause to any event if he perceives that there is a phi in and natural erne that covers the ground. Hut so strong is the; innate conviction that nothing happens without a cause, that when the cause is not clearly seen the imagination immediately tries to furnish one. and, with an untrained and non-seientitic mind, the choice is almost certain io fail upon a move coincidence between the unexplained happening and some other striking simultaneous event. Such a mind is unable to remain in suspense, ami to patiently seek for a cause that can be reconciled with universal experience-, and that violates none of the known laws of nature. If I am in a railroad accident, and after I have got out of the wreck I find that my watch has stopped, I am logically justified in concluding that the cause of the stoppage was the shock of the collision. Hut if a frienel leaves his watch in my possession and goes away, and the watch suddenly stops, and the next day I learn that my friend has died in a distant place at about the time the watch s'o.oped, I am not justifieel i:i jumping io the conclusion that the watch stopped because my friemi died. In the first case the line of cause and effect is plain, and accords with the known forces of nature, but in the second case there is no known relationship between the two simultaneous events, and the assigned cause has no law of nature behind it.

W3a

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No silver lining you will find beneath the clouds that sail Across the stormy sunset sky, like ships before a gale. No pot of gold you'll evtr dig up beyond the rainbow's end; No money will buy happiness, however much you spenel You'll never turn to living fires the glowworm's tiny flame: Illusions lead you far astray but hold them, just the same. (Jo search the clouds that drift beneath the summer moon Or watch the vapory mists dissolve beneath the sun at noon. And watch the phatitom forms and shapes, like boats or marc hing men. That make new pictures as they pass, and change and change again. No silver lining may be there, but in the clouded dome You'll lind far greater miracles than he who stays at home. (Jo searching for the rainbow's end, you'll fine! along the way The haunts, tleep hid among the woods, where thrushes sing all day; The sparkling jewels of the rain in all the waving trees And carpets made of violets that ripple In the breeze, And though you find no gold at all and walk full many mile. You will not have a heavy heart; the seeking was worth while.

For safety and profit, keep your money at home by investing in the Indiana tax exempt preferred stocks of South Bend manufacturing- institutions, which have been examined by independent experts and pronounced thoroughly sound investments. In addition to giving you a sure and steady income, free from Indiana taxes, funds invested in sound, old established South Bend companies greatly benefit you by increasing the general prosperity of the city. Don't try to dodge Taxes, like chickens, come home to roost, though some times not until the estate is settled. The Company pays the Indiana taxes on funds invested in the preferred stock of an Indiana company. ASK US Without obligation to you we will furnish full information regarding choice Indiana tax exempt, 7Ce preferred stocks of old-established South Bend companies, which have been examined and pronounced thoroughly sound investments by independent experts. Issued in denominations of $100 or more. Marshall; Decker & Company Tax Exempt Securities 203 Citizens Bank Building

FRANK A. STOVER, Resident Manager

Bell 856

Hone 6377

It is our policy to maintain a market for securities obtained through us

7

(iroat Uritain's Now Policy. I,et George do it!

It is no answer to say that there may be an undiscovered law of nature behind the phenomenon, because what we call laws of nature are simply observed results of universal experience, and universal experience shows no relation between the stoppage of watches and clocks and the death of human beings. On the other hand, to say that th steppage was a supernatural interference with the laws of nature is a pure assumption not based on solid, provable grounds of experience. The whole difference between

Worth It. Cong. Kitchin warns us that we're spending ?:j cents of all the money collected by taxation on the army ami navy. Several European countries wish just now that they'd spent 100 per cent of their taxes for the same purpose.

Kreiling Things Up. Astor Cares for tne Poor. Headline. If this is IJaron Astor of Hever, it is only justice, for the poor of New York have been caring for him for a good many years, as the rent rolls will show.

The Luxury of Keeping in Health. We are told by an eminent authority that chopping wood is better exercise than dancing, but with wood at $17 a cord the average man and

woman will be forced to continue their exercise in the cabarets.

Wliv Hp Won't light. Maybe Je.vs Willard thinks that by this time he is strong enough to demand an indemnity from the man he licks.

(Ichh as Cold. Up to date Mr. Wilson's note has not been protested.

Too Much of a Job. The president may succeed in pacifying England and Germany but not the New York Tribune.

Incomplete Ileturns. It is estimated that $2G.OOO was paid caddies on three golf courses in a year. Which must be about 3 per cent of the money spent on the nineteenth holes.

science and superistitbm is right

realiie that for permanent value it must come as a. there; science bases itself upon end-

growth within the farm communities themselves. ' le-ss experience, testing every link m i in the chain, and the fact that it

" A""";' iii,) tiling oi tue uuiicuiue.s Ol , .

farm life can be glad that this general working out so well.

movement is

COLLEGES AND CHEAP GRUB. When the preside nt of lletev college, Kentucky, reported that his students were thriing on a diet costing twenty-or.c e ets a day, it .H eme J a if the last word in economical liwi; had been taid. Hut now comes ah institution ru v. 1 y I'r.c'e Sam, ami t e ats that record. Tbc f.in..-.; Indian ! ..ol at Caili-b . I'a.. is feeding its :wc hundred and twe nty-sow-n students at an average cot of sixteen ai d to-th:rd eer.ts a day. That is the rate of t. xper.dit u ' e the pa! Near, during which : ..!!..;.' ha cc-t more than at any other time since the t "i i ! war.

"Chicago lias the apathy of a cow. It has emotions, but it has po effective emotions." Chicago Tribune. In othr wo-ds, as one of our ex-presidents once said of another of our ex-presidents, Chicago "means well, but mean well feebly." Which is something we never expected to hear said of the city whose motto is, "I Will."

Since the beginning of the war the United States

cannot fundamentally comprehend everything that nature does makesno difference as long as experience shows that nature Invariably does thinps in that way. Hut superstition blindly trusts itself to the wings of the imagination, without stopping long enough to see whether a closer examination will not explain the phenomenon as the result of some overlooked operation of an already known natural law. You say that three clocks stopped

lipon the death of a family relative

I Go miles away.

has received from Europe $1.000.000.000 in gold. In , losely into the

Did you inquire particulars? Was

the year just ending the railroads of the United States j there anything the matter with the have made $1.000.000.000 net prorlts. It would be in- docks? Did they all stop at once? , , Did anything happen that might teresting to trace the connection between these two have topvcd them by natural laCts- s causes? Was their stoppage really J coincident with the death? Was Republican old guard of New York is organizing to ' any attempt made to determine

keep the 11' nomination from "anv man wevt of th their actual condition: was there than the feeling of the littleness of

; any predisposition on the part of cur achievement during the past persons concerned to take a super- J year. een the littleness of the sur- ! stitious. or mystical, view of thinus? j foundings in which we move, and

I hav looked into a cen.4uera!le ! w e ;tll yearn for something larger

Mississippi, son.

They must 1 e gunnin

man west

g for Hiram John-

The Public Pulse

Com rannt rfitlong fr thlg Hnmn may be signed aDonymomilj bat must be accomf-anled bj the nane of the writer V lnure jrood faith. No responsibility for facts or sentlnients exprewwrd will be assumed. IIonet d!tusslon of public queation Ii lnTited. bat with the right reserved to eliminate viclou and objectionable matter. The column Ii free. Bat, b reasonable.

Lin-: ox an i-:xlakgi-:i scalk. Psalm 18:19, He brought me forth into a large place. These are the words of a soul who has been helped in time of trouble, and se out of the depths of his gratitude he makes acknowledgment of that fact. In the preceding verse he said, " He delivered me from my strong enemy. He drew me out of many waters. He was my stay." Now we all know that in a building a ' stay " is a prop a support. As applied to a person It is a standby one who stands by as a helper in the opportune moment. In the Greek it is " Paraclete," and we translate it Comforter" or " Advocate." Thus: " If any man sin we have an Advocate la helper) with the Father, Jesus Christ the Righteous." So the Psalmist here says "The Iord was my (helper, prop or) stay." Then comes thetext, He brouuht me forth also into a large place." David r.o doubt thought of his humbler, obscurer shepherd days and how God had led him step by itep, through hardships, opposition, and battles to the throne of Israel. Few of us but desire to have the enlargement of our lives, and at times like this we are apt to adopt certain n.'solutlons which we hope will contribute to such enlargement. I feel sure there is no

meire common feeling

ling to be separated if we would attain the larger place, such as companionships, habits that dissipate.

weights that hinder us in the race, j

This is especially true if our elesire is for the higher spiritual attainments. This is one of the elements that has entered very largely into every life that has been large in the things of God. Then I would have you remember that the way into the larger place is ever throjgh hardship, suffering, and ditiicjlty. We are apt te view the roseate surroundings of those who have achieved something worth while in life and forget the roughness of the path by which they reached the-ir eminence. Joseph went through the painful path eif rejection and the Egyptian prison to the place- of ruler. If he had yieldeel to the entreaties of the sensual and passionate he would have forfeited the throne. God would have forsaken him. As it was Gejd led him into a large place. So will He lead men today. Then I would remind you of the fact that the way into the larger place Is by the path of obedience. There is only one thing that is better in the sight of God than sacrifice and that is obedience, obedience to God never contracts our powers. It enlarges them. Christ does not lead men backward but

forward, and outward, and upward

NT ED

5

Evpq' män...5fly57rieFra. i5 a dam fool for at least five minutes every day. Wisdom con5bt5 in not exceeding this limit. How does thi5 strike Jpj...Do you need HELP! ....Then UaE the HELP-D column ofilii5NeY5poper.

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Beet Clothing and Bhoej for Mtn, Women und Children at Lowest Prices. CHAIIX IIOifE DEPT. STORES. 429' and 17 8. Chaptn Be

Eye ntlic

- -VTIiTa ctel enxno das

DR. J. BURKE & CO. Specialists in Fitting: Rye si as sea.

it irf fr,., tbo tr.ii-i.r. i 230 S. Mich. St. Home Phone 2001

to the life and privileges of anl

Apostle whose writings have blessed the lives of thousands since his day. It led Peter from his fishnets to a "fisher of men." It led Paul from theological hair-splitting and

i IM at e

?! ud !.t a re ' .-tmm.i.-l.vd f'-s u

J..'.:-l .; th I"'" j ;..:. i : i t ' i : . i -. i in t h ,i s ( nt p!r v !:.:. iSrctkl-uf Oatme. a!, mill

::g Indians, members f a i;iV.iili:;u appetite. And it Sam takes udvat.lage af :..t hl if t hui!. 1 1 re a l e tt v bread and coffee.

With our own eyes, we saw eichtccn different boycotts agair.ft the high e ot .f liiiu l usted en Christmas day. And we oclped bust one of them, from sojP to walnuts.

! number of cases of similar coinci- ; That feeling characterizes the young

' deines and I have never yet found ' one where the mystery did not vani ish in smoke under the livht of a

.Wording to Yon lhsing, German governor of IJelgium. th- Uelgians are joining the 1. W. Y. by wholesale and are lit only f-r ensla vhivu nt in Gt rmanv

rigid investigation.

The small boy is becoming rapidly one of the met prized labor -.--

"I here b: i

un.ft r-.ia "s main army lias eeip-( the. trackers. Tho.-e nut-e-rackers don't seem on anything save empty shclii.

German nutable to close

se ts m Italy. i r.ere u: a smau i.y

famine in all business oiih e:. and ' the wages of the boy from 1 t 1 "

vears have inreae'ii from bond

and loeigrag and $2 or a. month to ..ratio:.. There are 1 1 ä to J"0 'faoiu which most of o

men on the farn., the young men in the home, in the positions they now Ml almost anywhere. They dream of larger Jieids. f greate- achievement, of nobler deeds. These aspirations are not to be despised but tt is well to take God into account. Let Hiiu do the leading. It is well to take into eonj-ideratior. some of the ihins that contribute to this laiger lif-. -ne e.f these i s-p-

maay things uit be. wil-

heresy-hunting to visions of the Christ and the custodian of the eleepest mysteries of the Son of God. The combined voices of Patriarchs.

mong us j Apostles and great men of all the

ages would say to us " Never say no to God. If he call:-, go. He will lead you into a larger place." We do well to impress our minds with the fcet that the distinctive spirit of Christianity is its e: panive spirit, .'-"in always narrows the life; lowers the ideals; clips the wines by which the soul flies to higher,

C. L. S. BLEND The favorite coffee of the "World Famed City."

SAM'L C LONTZ & SONS COAL AND COKE Established 1885. 127 Et Colfax Ave. Bell 74. Home 5074

Why Haven't You Wired Your Home? Have you consiJ;reJ our WirimProposition? Wj take care of lirst cost You pay us in ni o n th 1 v installmerits. Bell 4G2 Home 546:

better things. Fin binds nun in

ami mind and spirit, '"hristi-

Union Trust Company Safe Deposit Hoxe. with s;acbil facilities for the privacy of c ---torr.rs.

liberates; breaks the shack

l ody ar.ity

and sets men free-. Jesus said, " Whom the Son make s free he shall be free indeed." That i th" essence of Christianity. The- Lord ..I.. ... i ....I., t .. 1 . ;.... .. l . .'..,..

.11 ilj alio yilli lfiui nil" .i :i.-'irj

Place. HPfl IJ h WS- ! iVl rS WHIN A t n t-

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