South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 6, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 6 January 1917 — Page 4

r

oiTi:i. Ai-ii.it.oo.. j.t.M'AUY . mi;. THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morn inj Evening Sun Jay. JOHN" HKNIiy ZLVi:il. IMitor. (IaRIMKI. H. SPMMF.ILS. PuUHher.

OMA SMHITM) I'KKh M O K NINO rRN"ritIK r.lPKR IN NOItTIIIKN IN IH N A NI ONLY I'APKU KMri.OVIN(i TIIK INTERNATIONAL NKWs SKIIVK II IN MHTII Ilt:NI . oth.r r.er.irer In the Hat protzt'! lr two U-H-.-.1 u irf int''t and Jht n-wn uttI.oi; Io only rig M -ro hin in y:-r !n t n t CiUlde ludUri.ipoll PuMmhed fTrr day ef the vm: in1 Iwl"1 n nU day tx--pt Sunday add HnjMijp Lutered at the South Uend Jotof fke as second ilaa mail.

THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY

OffVe: 210 VV- C-lfax At. Horn rii or.r 1131.

Bell l'none tino.

Call at tn iffi- or telphn nli"vi num1or and nk fr department v mf d - K iitorul. A'WertNln;;. Irmlntl -n. or Ar. untlntr. For "want adv-' if voir narr. is in the tpnne 11retnrr. Mil 1U 1,- tntilM after Insertion Keprt Inattention f.- r.ujdreaa. t,cl Mf. -lti n. poor delivery of papr. I"1 tflophono Krv. . ft-. t lif n .1 r.f depart rr.'-nt with hla you are decline The New -T-! mes tMrt'-on trink line, all of wtlcb rrnpond to Horn.- n ll'l and Hdl I'l").

M'Bf RirTION KTF.: M'-rnlnc and Frenlnp Fdltlon. Finarle i'.)it. 2'-. Sunl.ir. .V; Morn ins -r fTvenln Fdltion. !.iilj. ln-liidlnr S'i:i'Iiy. '.r mall. S.ioo per ver la advance. Pellvered hy .nri'T In- South I'.-n l and Mixhawaki. .5 00 pr year In adv.ni'', or 12' tr the week.

ATVERTII:; KTf": Ak the o.lvrtUinr drpartmer. I'lrrlcn Advrf 1!nir K-pr. r i t itlve : ONI), LOKFNZFN A W('H)MAN. 22." I 1 ft I . Av . ew Vrk "Uy. und Adv. VAdg . h!.-fi(r. The Neves-1 lm n ilMvnr t ken Its ad vertisin;: olunin fr from frmilu;-nt niir,projntation. Any p-ron rtefrsurtM thrtjh patronage of any .'plTrtlenirrt In tht piper win confer a favor on tie mamgeiiient by reporting tb ficti conipletelj.

JANUARY 6, 1917

RUSSIAN PROSPERITY. Th.it the jfiir 1 1 uill k -Iowd in Kussian history a the mot !-iKiiiti'ant in th' lttt-rnient of its people m the ileclaration ' i r.mn who lias been .studying the Mibject for a ifnip t newspapers'. He says that lurlusj this j ear the ormnon peple j-eem t have found themselves and thfir plate in the empire. Nt even the period of the Ii! ration of the serfs mean; so much. There lias been the t em;. ,-kab!o ome-back of Itussia in the war, the de elopmeiu of her industries, the way In which th? people have handed themselves toyther t help the nation. rKanizatbui and cooperation und like new word when applied to the apathetic, heterogeneous Kuss.a of the paxt. ()n of the reut changes is that wrought in the material prosperity of th country bv the abolition of odka. The decree went into effect in 1!H4. hut it look a year for Kusia to "-ober up." Therefore 1916 Aas the first ear of real t st. Sa inps accounts went uj beyond all previous irnajrininKs. .Money fortnerly j ent in sodden "jans" has ben in into better clothi l sr. food and comforts. More money has, of course, been earned by sober workers, which has added to the eneral result. ne hospital which previous to 1113 had 1.500. beds and was always overcrowded and with ?. waiting: list, sent 1.000 of its beds for military use last year, and still has more than it needs. Xober, well-fed. w; rmly-clothed workmen do not suffer from accidents .nor they nor their families from illness as :he odka-rid;b: n ones did. Altotjether. what with the enforced jaeking-up of physical well-belns caused by the anti-vodka edict, and the mental and spiritual stimulus of becoming a united people in the face of a common danger, Itussia has l esun a pretty definite march on the path of progress.

bonus or a wane raise, it Rave them insurance policie. The same thini; has been done by several local faci I tones. i Kvery one of 3.000 employes has been presented j with a policy made out in ni name by one of the bit? jlife insurance companies, guaranteeing him, without a

ent of expense on his part, a payment in case of death of a year's salary, provided that salary doesn't exceed $2... 00 a year. The policies are written in accordance with the "croup plan," by which larce numbers of men can be insured at low coft, and without regard to their physical condition. Perhaps; twenty per cent of the men interested would be turned down if they appli"d for a policy in the usual wa. As matters stand, every one of them is eligible. The total of the policies issued is about $ "0,000,000, and the railroad pays about $750,000 a year in premiums. It is the first time that any railroad has ever insured the lives of its employes. Supplementing this fine philanthropy, tho Union Pacific ha. Insured its men also against accident and sickness, through a Chicago casualty company. Most industrial nations regard this sort of insurance as the duty of society as a whole. Germany, Trance, and I'nglahd and various other countries have already undertaken to accomplish the same purpose for all their workers by systems of state insurance. Our federal Kovernment has sq Tar taken little action along this line. Many of our states have adopted a semipublic form of industrial insurance, but have placed most of the burden on the private employer. The Union Pacific railroad is representative of the steadily growing number of American enterprises which voluntarily assume the burden. 0 Fome day, no doubt, we shall work out a coherent system which protects all our workmen in all industries and whicvh properly distributes all the burdens. In the meantime, every such liheral action is to be welcomed.

TREES PROM VERDUN. It is reported that the Knglish people are eagerly buying chestnuts and acorns picked up around Verdun and planting them as future monuments to the ;lory .f that brave city. Lord French is said to have started it all. During a visit to (amp he gathered fonic chestnuts and said he intended to plant them as memorials in his grounds at home. It wasn't Ion; before the Uritish public had taken up the idea, and now hundreds of requests for acorns and chestnuts are beln sent to the commissary of Ii lice at Verdun. The r.ritish people are making every possible patriotic and reverent ut.e of the nuts so obtained. Not only are they polng to cultivate trees from Verdun, but they are selling the seeds in Ungland for the benefit of Uritish wounded. A ban' t.f nuts is said to bo worth its weisht in gold in Kurland these days. It is a happy idea. No moie beautiful or impressive monuments could be elected to the heroes and ideals Verdun than the silent, stately trees growing up with he generations to come after the war is over.

Italian Malges Volcanic Forces Drive Engines

ARIZONA'S GOVERNORS. The New Votk World waxes merry over the political plight of Arizona. As a result of a clos-e and disputed election, two men claim the governorship. Uoth have been sworn in and established themselves at Phoenix. Kach has tried to oust the other as a usurper. The people are divided in their sympathies. Suppose, suggests the WorM, that there should arise among the Mexicans "a neighborly impulse to straighten out the tangle over the governorship of Arizona and restore peace in the administration of the state." It might be regarded as a legitimate and praiseworthy undertaking on the part of Mexican interventionists. Nothing is likely to be done, in a practical way, because both Carranza and Villa are busy with other matters. Uut "can Mexico look with indifference upon the incapacity of Arizona to govern itself after the manner of truly civilized communities? In the state are many citizens of Mexico, some working on the railroads or in the mines, some owning cattle and ranches, others who are contractors or merchants. In the troubled state of affairs their welfare must cause the Mexican government grave concern.'' Mexico, of course, may be at rest on that score. Wo have a different breed of citizenship and a different view of government on this side of the border. We have occasional disputes f.nd clashes of authority, but we also have a civilized way of settling them. The rival claimants and their partisans don't shoot each other and burn the capitol. They go about their business and leave the quarrel to the courts. The Mexicans have much r learn from us in that particular. P.ut at the same time, the World's suggestion sheds a humorous light on the attitud? of many Americans who clamor for intervention ip."Mexico.

SOCIALIST YO I E.

The latd presidential election showed once more that, tocialism in the United States isn't much more than a general protest avrainst existing onditions that it Ucks the constructive force of the socialist movement in Kuropean countries. The socialist vote, which had been increasing in the three or four preceding elections, fell off markedly. It was only about two-thirds of the vote of And as a "party of prot--:. the so iahst party is performing a useful service It helps to keep our social and economic thought .-tiried up and active. it serves to feed into the American mind all sorts of new ideas imported from less conservative lands. It calls vigorous attention to anachronism, standpatisni and miscellaneous stupidities and injustice in our social and political system. It is a rt of gad-!ly to the big parties. It drives them forward along new lines of social and economic reform. The low socialist vote m the 1 '.M election is thus really a token of success It is because the big paitics have absorbed so n;an "soci tlisüc" ideas that they have absorbed so lare a part of the old socialist vote, and have lu'd hundreds of thousmds of citizens who otherwise would have one over tothe socialist party. Thus the American socialist correspond, rather roughly to th Ual .an socialists of Kurland, who under he leadership of I'err.nrd h.iw and other far-sighted thinkers have s .... c e-d-d in fretting a large part of their i;slative program -na. r-d without putting themselves forward prominent. v. It's a uestion of subordinating party to principles". Tl; American socialists perhaps re not consc-ic-;- of doing thH. M t of the leaders, in fact, set rn more or. erned with holding the party otganizaticn toother than with making their propaganda sc.-eed. Put the practical result is that, no matter what happens to their organization, such useful and constructive ideas as they put forward are picked up And carried forwaM by the older, more conservative parties, as fas-t ah the public can assimilate them.

TOO PROUD TO EIGHT. The democrats in the state senate did the very appropriate thing, when despite the cards that they held, they stepped aside Thursday and left the republicans to organize that body, unhindered. All the democrats get is some stenographers, assistant secretaries and clerks; sort of watchmen, enabling them to keep tab on what is doing and to carry on their correspondence without having to trurt republican stenographers. The responsibility after this manner falls upon the republicans, and there will be plenty of it, no doubt, before the sess-ion is over. It was within the power of the democrats, had they wished to do so, to have read two republican members out of the senate; one a Lake county man said to never have been naturalized, and the other a Porter :ounty man claimed to have been prematurely elected by about two years. Had the democrats chosen to take control of the senate in its organization, it wa.s within their power to eliminate thos two republicans and it would have left them In the majority as long as they could maintain the attendance. It might not have been: would noi have been, pood politics, and certainly not good statesmanship, for the enate would have been in a constant turmoil, no doubt, for the next sixty days, and very little could have been accomplished. Better to let the republicans have the "pap." which it seemed that they simply could not give up, and

I&y (Jarrvtt P. SerUs. They are trying in Italy a brilliant experiment in the use of volcanic forces which show what human ingenuity and science can accomplish when driven by necessity, and recalls; some of the wonderful achievements that the late Percival Lowell ascribed to the inhabitant of Mars, whom he believed to be facing, with success, a situation more desperate than any that is likely to confront the people of this planet for millions of years to come. Near Volterra, in Tuscany, there are volcanic blow-holes, or vents, in the crust of the earth, through which superheated steam is blown out with great force and considerable regularity from some apparently inexhaustible source beneath. These "suffioni" have been known for many years and have been utilized in the production of borax and boric acid, with which the stream Is strongly charged. Some of the inhabitants of the region have also, for a long time, been accustomed to employ this valcanic steam for heating their houses. There has not been an active volcano there for ages, and perhaps never, hut it is evident that thete exists a subterranean connection with some heated centre to which water leaks down to be converted into steam. The crevices in the rocks are sufficiently open and numerous to afford an escape for the sleam and gases without an upheaval or an explosion. About thirteen years apo Prince GInori-Conti, who is evidently a prince of the right kind, determined to utilize this natural source of steam power for the production ot mechanical energy, and thus he became a pioneer in the employment of the internal forces of the earth for the service of man. He found that near the village of Tarderello the steam issuing from the vents had an average temperature of 180 degrees centigrade, and that a single bore could produce, theoretically, from 1,000 to 2,000 horsepower. Applying the steam in an ordinary 4 0-horsepower engine. lie found that it worked well except that it corroded the metal of the engine through the borax salts and the sulphuretted hydrogen and other gases which it contained. This difficulty has. recently been overcome by using the natural steam not directly in the engine, but indirectly. In the place oT fuel, for heating an ordinary multi-tublar boiler. Thus it was found practicable to drive a 300-horsepower condensing steam turbine connected with an electric generator. The outbreak of the war has stimulated the further development of this enterprise because of the scarcity of coal, and several groups of turbo-electrics at I-arderello, all primarily operated i.y the natural steam, although this Is not brousht into contact with the turbines. The boilers are specially constructed to resist the corrosive action. The plant has been sufficiently developed to supply power by aerial conductors to the cities of Florence, Leghorn, Volterra. flrossereto and many villages in Tuscany, the trlphase current that is used being generated at 4,500 volts and raised by oil transformer to 36,000 volts. According to some of the reports that hav leen published concerning thi enterprise it appears that the industries of Tuscany, threatened with arrest on account of the

(scarcity of coal caused by the de

mands of the war. have been rescued from disaster. Put the war energies of Italy are themselves stimulated by the new source of power since the latter is largelyemployed to drive the machinery of munition works, although it is also used for electric lighting. If the imagination is stirred by this picture of volcanic energy, turned to human use, it ought to be sAili more strongly affected by the prospect which the success of Prince Ginori-Conti offers of the opening of a new era in the con-

nuest of uatural forces for the me-

proeeed to do something for the people. We commend j cila nical advantages of man. the incident to our republican friends as illustrating We have depended too exclusively

somewhat the th.'ng that the president meant about a year ago at Paltimo.e, when he asserted that "there is such a thing as being too proud to fight." With the republicans in the saddle, in both houses, egotistically erect, and with chest expanded, let the performance proceed.

INSURING 5,00i MEN. of all the Chtistmas Pifts made by American corporations, perhaps th' most admirable was that of the Union rciuV rui'.rc-ad. Instead of giving its men a

REGULATED PUGILISM. Wisconsin is satisfied that it's much better to regulate pugilism than to outlaw it. The state is not only making money out of the sport it cleared about 130,000 last year, on 2.000 bouts but prides itself that it h is wrought a sreat reformation. P.oxing, according to the annual report of the boxing commission, has "been raised from the status of a disreput.tbie barn bestiality to the elevation of a dignified, scientific sport." So greatly is the game improved, says the commission, that citizens who formerly objected to fist-lighting under any conditions whatever, are now sympathizers and patrons of the game. There are still admitted defects in the management of the boxing matches, and the public has to pay an unreasonably hlt.h price of admission, but the commission hopes to remedy these evils in time. Many communities outside of Wisconsin are disposed to agree with this view. It has always seemed rather unfair to condemn boxing when wrestling and football playing, which are just as strenuous and "brutal." are universally permitted. Prize-lighting, of course, particularly the knockout sort, can no lonper be tolerated by self-respecting communities, but limited bouts that are simply scientific exhibition of boxing skill are a different matter.

upon coal. Every year the warnings are redoubled that the coal supplies are being exhausted. We have to go deeper and deeper to get coal. We use up layer after layer of it. knowing perfectly well that there is an end. already in sight in many directions, and yet no great concerted effort is made to find a substitute, or. better still something superior to coal. Of course no wide dependence can be pat upon volcanic heat, but Italy is not the only country', and the region of Volterra is not the only place even in Italy where energy of that kind exists, free for the tapping. If the great war brings forth many imitators of Pilnce Ginori-Conti it will have done one treat service to mankind to partly counterbalance its infinite evils.

THE MELTING POT

"Come Take Pot Luck With Us"

Tili: HLACK SHIIKP. Occasionally it occurs up n this pleasant sphere That some impulsive father, stern and solemn and severe Disowns the lad who nourished in his family aboJe And drives him to the welcome of the open public road. Declaring with an atmosphere magnificent and fine: "I hereby publicly announce, you are no son of mine!" We sometimes ee a daughter who. a thoughtless little fool. Has dared to break the fundamental, vital social rule. The mother shouts: "I cannot bear the horrible disgrace! Please take away for good and all your weak and wicked face! Upon my pure and saintly head your sins shall rot be piled. For I announce to all the world that you are not my child!" But futile fulmlnatlons cannot nullify the truth. And while the aged may forget the antics of their youth, May tightly, obstinately shut their mean and self sh eyes To sad responsibilities of overwhelming size. They cannot break the henest bond nor hope to have it hid By saying to the neighbors, "We disown this horrid kid!" Arthur Brooks Baker.

con js i;n vati vi: nrsi x is. The bankers are putting their houses in hock, The brokers are rushing to Jump off the dock. The market is busted, securities crash. And prices come down with a thundering smash. All day pallid men. looking sicker and sicker, With faces like putty hang over the ticker. All day in the extras that fly round the town Are stories of firms that have quit and gone down. And orphans and widows who thought that they had Enough for the future are all to the bad. There are shrieks of despair on the Stock Exchange floorThe town is knocked cold by a rumor of war. The bankers are livid and trembling with fricbt. The terrified brokers are crying "Good night' " And worry and anguish and grief and despair And ruin and failure are thick in the air. The man who last week hd a million or two Has not got the price of a ten-cent beef stew. They are shearing investors and squeezing the shorts, There's a general rush to the bankruptcy courts. And war-brides but lately worth buckets of gold Are lone and neglected and out in the cold. And all the while turmoil and panic increase The town is knocked dead by a rumor of peace.

Now It May lie Next Christmas. It looked for a few minutes) as if they were going to get the boys out of the trenches by Christmas after all.

A Very Common Trouble. The war had a splendid selfstarter, but the brakes don't seem to be working very well.

Worth the Money. That $35,000,000 worth of proposed public buildings will make splendid general headquarters and barracks for the first invader who gets past our inadequate defenres.

Ileeause It stays Hight Where It I VII. They will never be able to make any moving pictures of the snowin New York.

Another Industrial Tragedy. The egg famine threatens to put the well-know n firm of Tom & Jerry completely out of busine?s this year.

Almost Fifty-nny. A seat on the s;tock Exchange costs $75,000, but you can get nearly an much excitement at Matteawan, where there is no entrance fee whatever.

No Iroress Reported. England will continue to show her teeth until Germany shows her hand.

A Discovery. Lloyd George speaks of the German naval menace, but nobody in England ever suspected it was a naval mena-ce until the submarines went into action.

ONCE-OVERS

Tili: DEFCCTS OF OTILKItN. j When you hear a person laugh at a physical defect or blemish you may know there is no heart in that individual or he is not awake yet to the fact that it might have been on the "other fellow." What pleasure can there be in making another wince? j What pleasure is there in calling attention to something which is manifestly not the fault of the one who has to stand it? You make fun of the man with his mouth open all the time. He has' adenoids, perhaps. J When you have a cold you feel that you are obliged to work just the j same, but you would feel pretty sore if those you met giggled and said j "another one catching Hies," eh? j Every one has some permanent defect, known or unnoticed. j You would hardly like to be distinguished as "the girl with the mole 1 on her cheek," especially if it were a small one nor as "the man with '. the gold mine in the front cf his face." (Copyright, 1916, International News Service.

Little Bobbies Pa

iy William I Kirk.

BITS OF INFORMATION China will teach paper making in a government school. United States yearly spends $100.000.000 ir. building public schools. Pet canaries in this country consumed 2.3:.0 tons of birdseed lat year. Pennsylvania js the only state which charges toll for using the Lincoln highway.

Pa found five dollars in the Subway last nite & brot it hoam to showto Ma, That is the first reel mutiny I ever found in my life, sed Pa. I guess my luck is going to briten up. I suppose you will advertise it. scd Ma. That is the moast honombel way to do. I was poing to give It to you, sed Pa. But I will advertise it if you say so. The objeckshun to adverting it. sed Ma, is that the rung party will claim it. It is hard to identify a five dollar bill, sed Ma. ' You may ad-beer to yure original decishun. sed Ma. I will taik it. & thar.k you. Then Pa paiv Ma the five dollars & sed I was thinking of going up to that bilyard tournament at Boyle's. All the Newspaper men will be thare & a lot of other well known publick characters, sed Pa. I ought to go. Certingly you ought to go, sed Ma. I think it will do you good to go. Maybe you will find another five dollars. Not thare. sed Pa. If a five dollar

bill fell on the floor among a bunch of yung authors. Pa sed. it wud be torn into pieces. It wud be like throwing a littel frog into a pond full of trout, sed Pa. But I guess I will go. But just then Mister Missus Slater cairn to call so Pa cuddent go. Missus Slater is a portrate painter. Her husband is a drummer.

I am always glad to meet a artist, sed Pa. a person who luv art & the artistick. Thare is a grate vein of art in me. seil Pa. I newer cud quite make up my mind wether to be a painter or a poet, so I newer beeoaim eether. It is too bad. Yes indeed, sed Missus slater. It is sad to see a human soul gvop-ing after the un-attain-abel. Nobody feels sorrier for a failure than does a true artist, she sed. Well, sed Ma. my husband is sensible not t monkey with ar: when he can maik munny eesy. I wish all the artists he has known wud jay him what they owe him. sed Ma. He is all the time helping out sum mute., ingloryus Milton, sed Ma. I wuddent let mv husband loan

any munny. sed Missus Slater. He knows better. But to return to Art, Art for Art'H salk, she sel, it is the moast wunderful & happy way to go thru life. The poor, plodding everyday person is to be pitied, she sed. As Mister Poe said: A primrose by the river's brim A yellow primrose is to him. That shows that he has got good sense, I think, sed Ma. A poet or painter wud look at a primrose & call it his Heart's Desire or a Wandering Soul in the Infinite, sed Ma. .v all the time ir wud jest be a primi ose. & maybe not a biq- league primrose at that. Thare is a littel thing in this wurld, sed Ma, wich is the moast rare & butiful of all things to me Kindness. & if you have got that, sed Ma. every day you live you are a King cr a Queen. Try that on yure piano, sed Ma. After the Slaters wus gone Pa sed Wife, you are a champion. I hoap I pick up a lot of munny to hand ycu.

Seep your money in

onth Bend

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, thoußh 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, 7r,o 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

NOTICEANNUAL MEETING of the Jan 111 Sobieski Building & l oan Association will ! i. ld .it WARSAW HALL Cor. S. Walnut and Dunham sts. SATURDAY, JANUARY 13th, 1917 at 7:30 o'clock p. m. At this Meeting will take pla tii'- !. t ii.n .f officers of the Association for the y e ar 1 il 7. Stoc k can be subscribed at all times at the office of the Secretary at Y;-raw Hall. dank A. Witucki, President; Valentine J. cladac. Secretary.

The handwriting on the wall of Destiny spells

The Union Trust Company pays

4

on all savings deposited prior to January 1 1th. New Building Corner Michigan and Jefferson.

LADIES' RUBBERS SPECIAL 39c KINNEY'S 1 16-122 E. Wayne St.

Why Haven't You ired Your Home? Have you considered our Wiring Proposition? We take care of lirst cost You pay us in in o n th 1 y installments.

it K

Bell 452 Home 546:

Kxrrn cj

inen rr.

Complete Homo i'umisbex.

Bttert Clothing and Btioe tar Mtn, Women and Children at Lo-west Price a ciiAPLx iiojce rmT. fiTORPA 42., and 417 E. Chapia Sc

ADLER BROS. Oa MJdUgaa $x Washington Eine 1634. rail btoiu; for nrt akd BOYS.

MAX ADLER COMPANY Worfcfs Beat QothcJ Oor. Ittch. mnä WaaX Sta.

JIcmAj tot DtulnecJL SIS Farmen TruAt mrt. Ppetd and mreaew tn bgtr&cta

F. L. SIMS

itrit Min.r MiTLAii ni:Ni:rrr i.irr. isniANCi: co. of Newark. N Jerfc-r. The )4linr annual dhldfn J company. I-ARMKKv TIUST UM(.. run itoo. rioM fctuo

wrxlVrl fcXN gi

H. LEMONTREE

XaAf!Mrla OtrO

Greatest RirgaLrvs In Town Economy Cloak Dept. Economy Dept. Second Floor, 319-211 S. Mlrfocan. In Oonjurction wttk th Indcf Mendent Store.

Don't IVjCash for Your Clothing Your Credit Is CicKvl at GATELY'S 321 S. Michigan St-

'When you think of HomrfuraUMngi think of SUora.-

114 W. WASHINGTON' AVH

WATCH US GROWJ-

"landcnIDi&dt

Xit Examine

DR J. BURKE & CO. fi?clal!ts tn Pitting DyeglaAsea. HO S. Mich. St. Horn rhoaa 2091