South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 58, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 27 February 1917 — Page 3
nrnw r :r. rmnrvnv 27. 117. AUTO WORKER'S WIFE TELLS OF . RECENT CHANGE Mrs. Bertha Hudzinski Declares She's Enjoying Health of Years Past, Since Taking Tanlac. Men W ho Are Trying to Reduce the High Cost of Living a - ? to 4 i V LOCAL WOMAN PRAISES PREMIER PREPARATION
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
Decide
Buy
Mo
irk ? - y? i i i i r
yy S - X
"It's Proven to Ba the Best of All Medicines in My Case' South Bend Resident Says.
Of thr hundred of Mat'-inrnts -i-n by r'.-ient. of thi city and M'-inity rt''HnliniC the rwrits of Tanlie. iom Is moro convincing thin lh.it rna!f on January 2'J hy Mrs. l'-rtli.t Hixlsinki, wifo of an employe of the Studehaker Auto Works. who IhPH at 2 Chestnut j-treet. "I h;ul stomach trouMe. indizesliori botlKrin in." -Mrs. Hudsinskl iil in explaining h'-r ao. "My at- ) tite v.us very jmor and it !ni that I felt like atinj. Wheni v er I did try to take a little food, it wouhl ause u.is to form in niv tornnch ari'l make me heiih almo.n t ontinnally. At times, the helchinu' a oull.be very painful as well as anJ.oyintT. My stomach was in a sick, toured 4'onditiou most all the time. "After reading what numerous t ther local people thought of Tanlac 1 decided to try the new rnedicin. j'e just linished my 5cnd hottle of Tanlac and feel fine yes. better than I have for a year or more. I have a hearty appetite now and T 1 an eat almost anything 1 care for without having to suffer the annoying, painful Udchm'. I'm not hothred with the sick, sour t-tomaeh iniy more. In fact, my stomach Is i:i excellent shape. "I really think Tanlac is the best medicine I've eer taken and I wat.t to recommend it." Tanlac, the Master Medicine, is rspe-eially hene'icial for stomach, liver and kidney trouble, catarrhal complaints. nervousness, fdceplessne.s, loss of appetite and the l;ke :md has proen surprismcly effective in relieving after effects of la r-rippe, secrc coughs and colds and tlie like. Tanlac is now being introduced nt the Tublic I)rug Company where a H'eial Tanlac representative is ex-3-laining the new medicine to the j.uldic daily. Adv.
TO STOP BAD COUGH
MlCTII IRY. IRRITATt'.I THROAT WITH ILM INT SYKl'T. MAYS Tills (IM) I AMIIONI.l) Ol (ill MK'iKINK Is THE HKST. We are fld that the old time remedies :ire tft fliid Invnrlahly contain lss harmful yet better medklne thin those which jire In use t-vlay. This be!nr Po. iinlniihte.lly the following old fashioned ieipe whirh Is quick actlt.g will be vel.-onied by many a there pems to be .1 regular epbiemic of cnuim at the lrrt nt t!m-. Secure from your druggiM 1 une I'armint (douWe strength). Like this home ani artd to It a quarter pint of hot water and I ounces of grnnul.ite,! ii!Mr. tir until dissolve!. Take 1 Mbl espoonfiil four times a d.iy. No iiior racking mur whole bodv with a .nigh. liggei ntrlls uliould opei., air p;i-..iges In tout bend should clear and your breathing become easy. Parmlnt x.Triip Is ple:iv;int to take, easy to prepare and cost little. Kvery person who ins a stubborn cough, h.-irll -obl or cat.irrh In any f'in iinM irlv this pref.riptiun trial Wettick'a cua supplv Adv.
BEnERTHAH CALOMEL Thousands Have Discovered Dr Edwards' Olive Tablets are a Harmless Sub: titutc Dr. EdwaruV Olive Tablets the substitute for calomel are a mild but jure laxative, and their effect on the hcr is instantaneous. They arc the result of Dr. Edwards' dctcrminaticn not to treat liver and bowel complaints vith calomel. His e'Torts brought out Xhcsc little olive-colored tablets. These pleasant litt 'e tablets do th? Rood that calomel does, but have no lad after effects. They don't injure the teeth like strong liquids or calomel. They take hold of the trouble and quickly correct it. Why ctire the liver at the expense of the teeth ? Calomel sometimes plays havoc with th-j Rums. io strong liquids. It is best not to lake calomel, but to let Dr. Edwards? Olie Tablets take its place. Most headaches, "dullness" and that !a2 feeling- come from constipation and a disordered liver. Take Dr. Edwards' Olive Tablets when you feel "locKy" and "heavy." Note how they clear" clouded brain and how they "perk up" the spirits. 10c and 25c.
MOTHER GRAY'S POWDERS BENEFIT MANY CHILDREN Thons tnds of mothers h.ste found Mother (Iriy's Seet PowWs an eioellent rrrr.edv" f.-r chiblren ompUlMng ef h.xidfi.tp. Vol l. fTenshness, stonisoh tinib'es 'and bcl Irregularis from whl. h children suffer ilurlü th days rr.wder re &y ml pleaaut t tnii ltd icelnt results are s.cv.rupllse 1 tiv their i:se. l'i'd by mother for "C Tir Sold bj Uruclsts eTerjwbere. "JJ
To the Wife of One Who Drinks I have in important conridei.ti! trs
' fr v'.ii. It will come In m pUii
to ccri'iuer t!i liquor
MEYER ! , insy -
Above nre th" pliotoRrnphs of tlie men and women prominent in the investigation of the present hiph cost of food and those who nre leading various movements to secure more ideal food conditions. II. H. Meyer, chairman of the interstate commerce commission, of Chicago, is doing all in his power to rush food laden freight trains east in an effort to relieve New York and
other lar-c cities, while Congressman Fess of Ohio has ai ouneed that he will offer a resolution in congress to regulate the price of foods in this country following the plan used abroad. Mayor Mltchel, who is the central figure in the New York situation, lias promised to do everything in his power to lessen the sufferings of the poor, while his wife is making an
active campaign in behalf c. lower prices and education which will enable the poor to procure and prepare inexpensive dishes of nutritious nature. Mother Jones, the militant leader ef the rioting cast side women In New York, threaten. to lead 10,000 women on city hall if the prices are not lowered nt once, and if faijm? in that venture, to continue the march to Washington.
STEPS TAKEN TO
HUN E
New York City Commissioner Predicts Drop in Food Prices This Week.
NEW YORK, Feb. 21. Mayor Mitchel announced, Monday night after the resumption of rioting on the east .side which resulted in the police reserves making several arrests, that a bill -would be introduced in the legislature Tuesday to empower the city to purchase food supplies and sell them at cost, as a means of ameliorating suffering among the poor here, due to the present high cost of living. Gov. Whitman, prior to his departure for Albany earlier In the day, asserted that he did not expect to send an emergency measure to the legislature, as he was 'convinced the situation was not critical." Joseph Hartman, city commissioner of weights and measures, predicted a material drop in the prices of potatoes and onions before the end of the week. It would come, he said, as the result of relief in freight congestion and the fact that virtually all of the potato and onion growing states of the country i.ow are entering the market. Kailroads in 15 states. Mr. Hartigan asserted, have arranged to rush "onion specials" to the city. Information furnished to him by wholesale . produce dealers, Dist. Atty. Swan n announced, indicated that tiie farmers were responsible for the increase in the prices of potatoes and onions. On December, he said, farmers were receiving $1.17 a bushel for potatoes, double the price of December. 191... Mr. Swann declared there wt no justitieution for the increase in the price of poultry. There is no scarcity, he said, and farmers are not charging any more than last year. Vegetables and other farm products, the district attorney's investigators asserted, they Jearned today, are being held in warehouses along the New Jersey shore of the Hudson river.
n !; How 1 x bit m " .!.t v W..t;d.Tf;i!. v,f.. p"ai tr t b"l. hin. j. o.mU.
m:n. iioiiAii si:i:ks $G.tMH,000 APPUOIMIIATION. WASHINGTON. Feb. 27. Financial relief in the present food situation was proposed in congress to Jay by .en. Borah of Idaho, who introduced a resolution to appropriate J J . 0 ü 0 , 0 o o to be expended by the president in aiding local authorities to furnish food and clothing to persons now actually suffering. The resolution also would prov.ee for an investigation of rising prices, their cause and methods of marketing and distributing necessities with a iew to bettering these conditions and to determine whether the antitrust laws have heen violated. Continued improvement in the car shortage and c ongestion at eastern railroad yards was reported today to the interstate commerce commission and the car service commission of the American Kailway association. Continuation of mild weather in tlie ea-t. it was s.iid. would result in unlocking the wheels of thousands of cars now v edged in crow ded yards and restoring the situtaion to as nearly normal as the present state of the country's business will permit.
and i.'i.iki' Jiorn h:i!'PV.
1 is I tic. r.'lb! . h.e. rn.ir.iii'e'-.i A r 1 1.- i i
V. Mation i:. New
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i;altimoiu: mayok iu vn l.HM lll'MIi:ii lOTAT01. FAIriMOIti:. Feb. 27. This city, through M.nor Jaim 11. Preston, went into the open market Monda j'nd bought l.t"..t bushels of potatoes at t a bushel. They w ill be sold to the public at cot. This ws th" : ; I- t srep in a moemnt b tile in : nie l pal authorities t bi'.ak down the abnormally high 'rice ul certain food tUyics.. DeaJ-
Elks To Go Dry March 1 Local Lodge Passes Resolution Prohibiting Sale of Liquor in Club Beginning Next Month.
South Bend lodge No. evolent and Protective lllks set a precedent at
Monday night when it two-thirds majority.
235, BenOrder of a meeting
passed, by a a resolution
prohibiting the use and sale of liquor at the club after March 1. The South Bend lodge is said to be the first club of any kind in the state to vote itself dry and is probably the first Flks club in the country to take such a step. The matter of voting the club dry was first broached a few weeks ago and it was soon found that a majority of the members favored taking this. step. The objects in view in passing the resolution was to
comply with the wishes of many members of the club, to show that the lodge stands with the people in every good movement, prohibition included. Hero is Koolution. The following resolution was ndopted: "Uesolved, That from and after March 1, 1917, the sale of liquor on the premises of the Klks' temple in outh Bend is prohibited, and the finance committee or board of managers created by the lodge to manage the temple and all its affairs as leased by the Elks' temple association, is hereby empowered and directed to the strict conformity of this resolution."
ers have been asking a bushel for potatoes.
$3 and more
Feb. 27. A spe-
PULUT1 f, Minn
cial Hour train of 4 6" cars, carrying 2.000.000 pounds of Hour, left here Mondav for Pittsburgh, Pa.
SEE SCHEME ON FOOT TO KILL BONE DRY BILL
Prohibition leaders in Congress Claim Plan is to Ixt P. . .Measure Vail.
British Advance Along Ancre on II Mile Front
5-passenger 6-30
Now you pay $1090.
' Tie CHALMERS 5-pmnjer 6-30 ,
Your immediate decision on the
Chalmers will save you $160.
Beginning the first day of March you must pay $1250.
Why not decide and act. Look this Chalmers over and you'll know why it is such a favorite. A sturdy
frame, long easy riding springs. Good lines.
well finished, well upholstered body. A reliable mo
tor. All the power you will ever need in ordinary driving. Then a largesurplus added on. Consider, also, the 2-passenger roadster, on winch, you save $180 by deciding now.
A solid,
FiTe-pawenger Tonrinj Three " Roadster Seyen " Tourinj:
Present Pr?cef " iAA1 c ej.
It
- 1070 Seren 1350 Seren (AU L.h. DeferWri
HAGEDORN & WEBSTER
LzxnoniLPe Town-cw
-v. -v. 2S50 ti VI 2550
216-18 East Jefferson Blvd.
Home 6578; Bell 1781.
ill I rrp m mmr
IVr--- . I t i. L- L 1 ' ... . i ' T?nP! 1 - ' - I ! -i-J i W HP.flJ .Vi -rm f J . L t ' 1 SI I". ... m, m ;
i
WASHINGTON', Feb. 27. Prohibition leaders in congress were up in arms Monday night over a report that the conferees on the postoflice appropriation bill were preparing to let the measure fail in order to kill tbe Iteed "bone dry" amendment
prohibiting the
LONDON', Feb. 21. The British advance along the Ancre river has attained a depth of two miles and
extends along a front of about 11 j
niles, according to the otiicial report from Pritsh headquarters in France last night.
FIND RISE IN SUGAR PURELY FORCED ONE
the the
Over a front of 11 miles from region of Gommecourt, north of Ancre river, to the district
(lUeudccourt, south of the river, th
British have pushed forward their
BOSTON, Feb. 27.nf the sugar shortage when the price soared I7t cents a pound in has disclosed. United
-Investigation of last week, to 1T, 20 and some place, States Atty.
iniii' i lines to a depth of two miles, ae-
l ...., I ,ltl i
into my Maie. if'. ik.tnuati "l ' -ordlnr
alifornia. ueclareo: tie naa tiennite
information that such a course had bern planned. He nnd other prohibition champions said if the conferees reported a disagreement and a resolution continuing the present po:-tofTice appropriations were brought in. they would see to it, that the Reed amendment went to the White house with the continuing resolution.
to the British official com
munication. The maneuver has served to throw forward the right and left wings of the British in an enveloping move toward Bapaume, the German stronghold in this region, and to place the British center at Warlenoourt-Faiicourt. a scant three miles from Bapaume. Bombardments and raiding operations are still in progress on the greater part of the remainder of the front in France and Belgium, and in
and Austro-Italian the-
Ieorge W. Anderson announced to-
f J night, that "it was about nine-tenths
artificial and promoted, and about one-tenth due to temporary inadequacy in transportation facilities.''
TO Tili; PPBMC. P.eginning -March 1st prices will be advanced 10c on nil shoe shining stands on account of high cost of material. Advt.
LP
er
roe
V
omus
ll
Affords You an Opportunity NOW to Profit by theTremendous Present and Assured Permanent Demand for IRON
rnbrAnb UtIYlUttttbK hUK tho p.ussian
INDICTED DEMOCRATS! In Mesopotamia the Tiritish have ! captured from the Turks the entire
line from Sannaiyat to Kut-Fl-Amara. At the latter place the
Instrument to Ik Argued on Day of Ai raignineiit of llumIW len.
i:ANSVIBl.F. Ind.. Feb. 27. A demurrer to the indictment charging 41 denuKMats here with conspiracy to defraud leral voters and the goernment, is being" prepared by two local legal firms. This demur-
; rer will be presented In tlie next two
weeks to Judge Anderson of the federal court, and probably will be argued on March 21, the day of the arraignment of the 41 democrats nnd SI republicans indicted here. Several indicted republicans have also engaged attorneys. All but two of the 122 Fvansville men indicted here have been arrested. These two men are now out of the ( ity and cannot bÄ reached by the deputy marshal.
Turks have been the position they British nearly a are being driven
forced to evacuate captured from the year aco and nowback harassed by
SISTER OF MRS. WILSON DIES AFTER OPERATION
Mrs.
Mather Maury Pa--os Away at
Ilcwinoke. Va., Suffering lYom Peritonitis. IlOANOKi:. Va.. Feb. 27. Mrs. Mathew Maury, sister of Mrs. Woodrow Wilson, died here Monday afternoon after an operation for per itonitis. Mrs. Maury had not been ill but a few days. She was the second daughter of the late Judge William Boiling 'f Wytheville, Va., and was T. 1 years old. She is survived hy her mother, three si.-ters. rive brother?, her husband. Mathew Maury, and two daughters.
No funeral arrangements had Leen
British cavalry, says tlie British war office. Iu-pe captures in men and war stores were mad by the British. In admitting retreat from Kut-Kl-Amara. a Turkish official communication says the movement was pie-arranged and was carried out unnoticed by the British. Applications for the new British war loan, treasury bills and war savings certificates amounted to more than one billion pounds, according to announcement by Andrew Bonar Law. the British chancellor of tlie exchequer. An official report from Germany says, that since the commencement of the war 4. 99. "00 tons of shipping belonging to entente and neutral nations has been destroyed or condemned by the central powers.
Prepare This for a Bad Cough It'll Fine Cheaply ami Katiljr Made, bat Do the Work Quickly.
SLOAN'S Sloan's thought
bruises and
Th finrt rough yrup that money can btiy. costing only aut on-flfth n much as re.idy-made p ropiratlons. can easily t made up at hum. The way It takrs hoM und conquers distressing rourhs. thront and clist colds will rer'.ÜT make you enthusiastic about It. : Any drugffUt ;tn supply you with 21!. nuni'M f Phio (7 fnt9 wortb,' I'"ur this Into a pint bottle and fill th bettle with plain grsnnlated unpar yrup. Sb.ike thoroughly nnd It 'n ready fur up The total co-t Is about HI eents find $:ivr tou a full pint a f.imily supply of a lot erftu.il. pleasant tasting remdy. It keps perfectly. It's truly nptonlshlnc hw nnickly it '.ftn. pntratlnir thronjrh every air passage ef the throat n i Iun?s loosens and raies the phVzm. soothes and heals thp lnflaml or wollen throat membranes, and gradually hut surely the annoying throat tickle and dreaded cough will disappear entirely. Nothins better for bronchitis, ppmmodlc croa. whooping rough or bronchl.il asthma. l'inex 1 a wprlal and hlshly roneentrated compound of cenuin Nrwny pine extract, combined with gnalaeol and I known the world ott for Its prompt hrnling effert en the throat membranes Avoid disappointment hv asklnr your rtniirs'st for "2 ounces of IinT" wtth foil directi, o and don't a crept anything He. A guirjntee nf ah"lT;te at-
litfa-tion or n.'incv promitly refunded
oes with thi prcpiration. The I':iex
0.. lrt U;ivje. Ind. Art.
6(
LT.VI.AITTNT LSr PAIN". Liniment Is the first
of mothers for bump i
sprains that are contin-
A GREAT MEDICINE
! That most successful of all reine-
ually happening to children.
It
j dies for woman's ailments. Lydl.i ll.
quickly penetrates and soothes without rubbing. Cleaner and more effective than mussy plasters or ointments. For rheumatic aches, neuralgia pain and that grlppy soreness after colds, Sloan's IJnlment
gives prompt relief. Have a bottle jn the practise of a skilled physician handy for bruises, strains, sprains ; that Mrs. Pinkham proem ed the
Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, owes its origin to a bouiuio recipe w'hich came into the possession of Lydia i:. Pinkham about Mfty years ago. This recipe had nroved so effective
and all external pain. For the thousands whce work eall.i them outdoors, the pains and aches following exposure are relieved by Sloan's Liniment. At all Druggist. 2c. Advt.
.'Try NEWS-TIMES Want Ads
herbs and steeoed and or1 pared
them in true old-time fishion on her kitchen stove for her friends and neighbors who iMifrered from woman's ailments-. The fame of the virtues of this wonderr'ul medicine .rread. until it i- today re ognized as the nandarU remedy tor woman's
The Butler Iron Gompanv is a $2,000,000 Illinois Corporation. All stock non-assessable, fully paid, and voting. Now offered par $10 per share. The Company owns 10,000 acres of land in Butler County, Missouri, containing vast deposits of iron ore which have been proved by numerous thorough investigations extending over a period of years. These Conservative, Experienced
and Successful Men Are Back of "Butler Iron"
Chemical analyses show the ore on this property to contain better than 50 metallic iron. A limited amount of stock is being sold to extend operations and to build blast furnaces and a chemical plant, thus deriving in addition to the generous profits which it will have from its mining operations, additional large profits in the iron manufacturing and chemical industries. Chicago Title and Trust Company, Registrar of Stock. As This Stock Is Being Sold Rapidlv We Advise Mailing Coupon for Further Information Promptly GUY A. REEVES, Box 746615 No. Laconia A v., Indianapolis, Ind.
PRESIDENT W. W. MECHLING, lot twenty-four years with tbe Carnegie Steel Company, at their Homestead plants, and
lor two yean past wita tne rorfcd Meei Company of Pittsburgh and Butler, Pa. Mr. Mechlin it now in active charge of tht property. VICE-PRESIDENT M. H. CUTTER, President of tbe Bond Htoseof M.H.Cuttei & Co., with offices in tbe Rookery, Chicago. Mr. Cutter has a record of twenty-thre years' experience in oegotittin and market in hib-grade bonds.
. A. MASSEN, of tbe law Masten, 11 South La Salic
SECRETARY firm of UolJen & St., Chicago.
TREASURER H. P. LAND ECK, of Oibkoih, Wis. Mr. Laodeck is a widely know Wisconsin banker and butioeit man. DIRECTOR B. F. BAKER, of Kew.oee, Illinois, Treasurer of tbe Kewanee Koilei Company, a 52,000,000 corporation, which manufactures tbe famous ' Kewanee Boiler, ' large users of pig iron. , DIRECTOR W. E. ORTHWEIN, of St. Louis, Mo., an ictuential business man anc head of tbe backing bouse of Walter E. Ortbwein. DIRECTOR E. P. SEDGWICK, Secretary and Treasurer of tbe Chicago Hardware Foun dry Company, which is also a large user ot pig iron. DIRECTOR C. E. TEMPLE, of Grand Rapids, Micb. Mr. Temple is well known as an expert cn tbe consolidation and man agement of public utility plants. DIRECTOR-C. H. WHEELER. Superin tendent of Ore Docks and BIst Furnaces ol the U. S. Steel Corporation, at Gary, Indiana.
Mr. Wheeler a acmatio-i with tbe iron and
teel industry covers a period of nearly
thirty years.
t M
in
A v.. lm!tarmpolW,
lnd.
Gf Bt!etsca : Plessc frrnd me fall rrtiears st enc eo cersinl th ofportooitf of f ai proil.bl ivettmenl io the slcxk of .he Butlff Ire Orap.if. Thu places m BDdcr 00 ob:.(.
N. Street AdJreis CIT
