South Bend News-Times, Volume 35, Number 285, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 12 October 1918 — Page 6
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6 STl l:iAV AITKItNOOV. OlTOI!i:il 12. 1918. THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES ESHMEN AND '". iU-'l rrnw to orr!!owiiis' rid vo !i njr t-ilIe n.;ifl f ;!.ink jirnJ with " 'It, l''T)-hf :it af'h''l, haw 1'ti tot r;i-,i -f th' miin rr.- h.ill. Thfy .irr nintn'i'" n' I'.'ir.'lr '1. Th kitfhrn '!!- ;irf now taking th'ir rm lis in th- minims' Mining room .iftrr th f-"'sl.ir ni'-s? H ovtr. POLLY AND HER PALS 44 Buy bonds till you bust!"--That's Pa's motto. (Copyrlgrbt. 1911, Iatternatlnal New OJl LimiT "To - 'r'LL 1001 Limit1 frZl fir 17. rK,l:AiU 1
VARSITY CLASH i
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Notre Dame and Regulars to Meet This Afternoon on Cartier Field.
Car?r 'a ill a c i r: t"-d-iy l'twrrn til var-fity .unl th f rriniTi whlrh (.'nn h l;o Kn i rcdic:s will 1 .1 r-ry w 4rr:i -on!".-.t. Thi- t ; r J-1 s-trirr-: uil1 '. !vii which .m hf ( I th- . .!l-.'r--h-rnin t?m. :y ovon thv ;il!"vsol to p!.l) with th varsity ijriI-r th war-tsm r'ii'r.- w:'.l (!. i- ir:r u; with the frohm.-' The freshriiin j- i : v ill of tb following m-n: Kl ton. Kirk, 1'roV.up. Nalb y. Cahi!!. Hartley Arin-.n. Atkinson. Cr' Vy, Mohn. i ' w i t u :!. Ii ry n. 1 1 1 tr t n . XVynn, Thi Hi p.1' an-l Li ml m. will lo the first rf-al rr.ru' "n This r,trtir field that a anything moro than a nractiro j;:u:if for thf Notre rmf rrre-rntAtivp trim. Koth sidrs are ralmin to h.iv th victory Copprr". Tli -aif-ity of rourso has the adwmtasr of -xvritir-, h ii t tile frefhmen h.ive a urfat lot of pood material to choose from, and there r.o rloul-t n nywhre that tho Kuno will y.e fast arM liard. 1-lrt lra-tir fr Prep'.. First r"act('e for th preos was h-ld yesterday afternoon und-r th puid.inc of Coach Connors. Th fouad was divided Into two f-h-ven ;inI put through signal drill. Trep athlftics wero oranlzd at a hi metins yesterday. Owin to the larp attendance in this department thre Is ;i lot of pood material to fdect from, and Z'Z men are already out. Financi.il support i3 promised the prep in proportion to what they are willing to 'o tht-m-Kelvt-3. Coach Connors is busy arran'inpr pamfs with hi-xh schools, principally In Indiana. Four men keeled owr ps they stood In lln lifter- a hird drill Friday mornlntr 1'efore breakfast. The mtr. were not accustomed to working early in th mornlr.fr on an empty ftnenach. The mes.i halls are IT WILL PAY YOU J 11 J To Remember 1 .I
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Make up some little jingle to rhyme with it so that you repeat it over and over again ? ? ?
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CLOTHING CO, 213-215-217 So. Michigan St.
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Available Money Reserves "T"HE main object of the Federal Reserve Banking System, I of xvhich we are a member, is to make more available the united money reserves of the strong banks of the country. Even in normal times there come seasonal loan demands of which the average citizen is unaware. The farmer must hax'e money loaned him for planting and crop moving. Interest and tax payment periods each present their special banking requirements. The Federal Reserve Bank through xvhich a member bank may quickly convert commercial paper into available assets when most needed enables us to meet these needs. St. Joe Loan 8c Trust Co.
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BOWLING SCOPES A l-T MIU: I. KAM K. nva: rirnr'rt. in H" l' M. Aili.t-r 1 KT .'1'.' II irwl .ru 1"1 H'l 1. r..!i:.-r 1". " i"-1". 4i Si.-ffr 1.V4 14 .". K'. 4II I Ii- t !; ivj -; 1 T' r iN '.7 v'i -TIT ! A J. M A- ! . ; f i.V. l- 17". 1 M. ;rsU l :.' vc, l . 1 J I. Itr .w ,, 151 u r::; 41' ; I. ;-,r-ki 11". 14. V.'2 4 "'' i .f?.. -i 1.7. 1'.t 1 47 I'm ' Hhc.1i. .11 -1' -'!' J1 '.:,jt 1 T t:iN '' !,;"-s -7' i
PURDUE AND DEfAUW CANCEL BIG GAME INDIANAPOLIS. Ind.. Oct. 12. ; Aft r a cnf'reTif' h-r.' today with Frr'y Hr.rty of th' Indiana state! i.o.trd of h-alth, th preridpnts of the two ychools railed off the football Kam which was scheduled for tomorrow between Purdue and I)epiuw at T.afayrtte. Tr. Hurty reL'ardfd footb.'ll pames romin? under the r.innin;' of '"public athorir:s" placed under the ban of th hoard of health durinic the influenza epidemic. ic.xcr; TRACK CLOS1T. PALTIMOpi:. Md.. Oct. i:. The state departmtnt of health today Issuer! an order closing Taurel race track, effect ie tomorrow. The order is rl'sipned to juevent the spread .if influenza fro mthat source. The Laurr-1 meetin'-r was to have ended on the :'Oth instant. ii.xitn co.xii. I petting scarcer each day. People will l.e fortunate if they can pet all the soft coal they need. Have you a 50ft roal stove? Pp our line before you buy. Quality is up to our usual .standard and prices are close. Reimold. at l-ö N. Main et. Advt. 726S-tf M This Number 3
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Copyright. 1818. by Nwtpjr Fatur FOOTBA D HI Middle West Schedules Struck by Federal Regulations and Influenza. CHICAGO. Oct. 12. Already staKi;erin under the new military reflations, middle western football was dealt another blow tonight when a score of ordlees and universities ca net-lied gridiron pimes scheduled for tomorrow because of the epidemic of Spanish iniluenza. Nearly 2u of th- oO odd games scheduled were called off. Reports received at Chicago indicated that some of the Karnes had been called off because members of teams were slightly indisposed, others lecause of probable attendance due to the influenza epidemic, and still others for the reason that it is feared crowds cause a spread of the disease, despite the fresh air. Five of the 10 teams in the western conference, however, will ko into action. Illinois will face the Great Lakes naval training station eleen in the most important contest of the day. while Chicapro, Minnesota. Ohio State and Wisconsin will engape minor teams in frames to put the elevens on edge for the big 10 championship season. Chicago will play a team from the Chicago school of ensigns, while Wisconsin will face Itipon college. Ohio State will play Denison at Columbus and Minnesota will hook up with an all-star aggregation. The Michigan-Camp Custer game was called off because of influenza. Among other contests cancelled for the same reason were IndianaWabash, Purdue-Depauw, Iowa-Coe, Ca,e-Ohio Wesleyan. Western Reserve-Akron, Hutler-Fort Benjamin Harrison, Penn-Drako and several others. Goshen News New Times ifye ial Service: GOSHEN, Ind., Oct. 12. The Elkhart county council of defense has issued a permit to Rev. Wahl, pastor of the German Methodist church in Goshen, to continue to preach in Goshen. It was shown that of the 23 members of the German Methodist church here, nearly all of them are old residents of Goshen and that they have bought J Liberty bonds liberally and have supported Red Cross. V. M. C. A. and other war measures. rrLTiis. Carrie Emma Hoffman, 50 years old, wife of John A. Hoffman, died following a three weeks illness of goiter and complication at her home at 10 3 X. Main st. She is survled by her husband, her mother. Mrs. XV. H. Fisher of Gohen; two sons. George of Winona. Minn., and Harry of Elkhart; one daughter. Mrs. Richard Haney, at home, and one sister, Mr. , Samuel Page of Klkhart. The deI ceased was a member of St. Mark's I M. K. church. Private funeral services will be held at the home Sunday afternoon at 2 o'clock. Rev. A. Lamar Lamport ofheiating. Burial in Oak Ridge cemetery. Mrs. Ray Heeter. 23 years old. died at her home, 203 Middlebury st.. North Side, of pneumonia, after an illness of about one week. Her fatal ailment was the first serious sickness with which Mrs. Heeter was ever seized. Surviving her are her husband, a barber employed at the L. G. Grady shop; one son. six years old: seven-months-old daughter, whose condition is serious: her mother. Mrs. Agnes Spacey of North Manchester: and two brothers, Clifford Spacey of Warsaw and Emmet t Spacey of North Manchester. The deceased was born at North Man j ehester July 11. 1S33, and came here w ith her husband a year ago last , June. Strictly private funeral service will be held at the home at S o'clock i. m. Sund.iv. and the body v ill be taken to Nrth Manchester. Fnnk Wcatherspoon of Noble county, who was caught robbing the coMntry home cf Frank Smith, near XVawaka. was sentenced to Jeffersonvllle reformatory for IS years, when arraicr.ed before Judge Wrigley at AlMon on a Vurplary charsre. The .iudee had riven Weatherspoon -har.c to reform and he failed to ake advantage of it. Instead he tried to escape from the sheriff, be-
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5tric, Inc. Craat Britain Rixkta RMtv4. inc caught after a ?hort run. Then the jude called off the orlffinal sentence of from two to 14 years and made it IS. Morris M. Rlack, 33 years old, died of pneumonia at the home of his brother, Rollin Rlack, in Noble county. He was ill but a few days. The body of John William, a gypsy, who died at Jacksonville, Fla., is being sent here for burial In Oak Ridge cemetery. Bodies of four gypsies are burial in Oak Uld. A government airplane was the chief attraction of the annual Lagrwnge corn school program Friday. The plane arrived at 3 o'clock Thursday afternoon from Dayton, O., the pilot and a mechanician having made the flight without special incident. After demonstrations Friday afternoon the return trip to Dayton was made. Ni;W CASKS (Circuit Court). Kramer & ons of Laporte tiled wuit against Frank Hale, demanding judgment of fl,200 on note, which was given to secure payment of groceries bought by the defendant. Clyde Derkey filed suit against the Klkhart Hridge & Iron Co. (Frank Brumbaugh) ahking for $460 judgment on note. A Goshen man, Albert Rink, riding a motorcycle, and Mr. Ogden of Klkhart, driving a motor car, came in collision in Flkhart. Neither was injured. The office of the Pittsburgh Plate Glass Co., in Toledo, O., was robbed of stamps. Max Hascall of Goshen is identified with the concern. News-Times Special Seryice: ELKHART, Ind., Oct. 12. Health Sec'y Dr. I. XV. Short today declared that the ban on public meetings of all kinds, which became effective last Tuesday, because of the influenza epidemic, would be removed Monday unless he was instructed to the contrary by the state board of Wealth. Dr. Short said that he had telegraphed the stae board of health of his intentions with the request that they notify him by Saturdaymorning if they disapproved. The state board, through press dispatches, is quoted as ordering all meetings closTt until Oct. 20. Dr. Short does not believe the local situation warrants such treatement and believes that the state board will give its O. K. to his intentions. Fifteen new cases were reported at the health secretary's orlice todaj. None of them are regarded as severe. Under the ban now in effect no services of any description will be held in any of Elkhart's churches tomorrow. The death of Miss Ethel Amanda Eby. from Spanish influenza, complicated with pneumonia, at the General hospital at 1:50 o'clock Friday morning marks the fourth fatality from the epidemic in this city withing the last 10 days. Miss Eby was a nurse. Mrs. Emily XX'ise died on Oct. 3 and George Hardy and Robert Seiden Freed on Oct. 3. Miss Eby was born in Nappanee Jan. 3, 1SP3, the daughter of Henry V. and Mary E. Eby. She attended the public schools of that town and graduated from the high school. She entered the general hospital training school for nurses here in September, 1917. Besides her parents, Miss Eby is survived by two sisters, Mrs. Eunics Kinney of Milford, and Miss Lula Eby. at home. Word was received here this afternoon of the death at Huntington, XX". X'a., of Andrew Mumaw, son of Mrs. H. A. Mumaw. 1300 Prairie st.. this city. The telegram tellin? of the death, gave no details. The man. was born In Orrville, 0., 41 ycars ago. The body will be brought to this city for burial, but funeral arrangements will not be completed until after its arrival. STRF.KT CAR KILLS MAN. KOKOMO. Ind.. Oct. 12. Henry Stepler. aged IT, Amboy, Ind., was instantly killed at 3 o'clock this afternoon when an Indiana Railway and Light Co. traction car struck a truck on which he was riding1 10 miles east of Kokomo. The boy, with two companions, was on his way with a truck of the Amboy Creamery" Co. to Greentown. tc get Ice. FIRST IN THE NEWS-TIMES
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Rtiterd in U. S. Ptft Off'i IS iS SE Austria's Capitulation is Also Expected Hourly by U. S. Officials in East. WASHINGTON, Oct. 12. Proposals of peace on the part of Turkey reported in London dispatches, had not been received in XX'ashlngton tonight. State department officials expressed deep interest in the reported move by the Turkish government, but stated positively that no proposal had reached them. At the Spanish embassy, which has charge of Turkish affairs in the United States, and through which any peace proposals from Com antinople undoubtedly would be transmitted, it was said no intimation had come from Madrid that a communication of this nature might be expected. Definite peace proposals by Turkey would occasion little surprise in olttcial circles here, however. It. was announced that Turkey was to dispatch a note similar to that sent by Germany and Austria-Hungary, and in view of the fact that none has been received, there has been a feeling in some quarters for several days that a very definite appeal might be forthcoming soon. The setting up of a new government composed of elements less pro-German than the previous cabinet, has strengthened the belief that Turkeymight decide to offer peace on terms similar to those accepted by Bulgaria. Acceptance by Austria-Hungary and Turkey of Pres't Wilson's terms reported in an Amsterdam dispatch, also would not be surprising it was said. Conditions in both countries are known to be favorable to the ending of th'3 war at the earliest possible moment. SCHEUCH APPOINTED HEAD OF WAR MINISTRY AMSTERDAM. Oct. 12. Lieut. Gen. Scheuch, who recently was spoken of as the successor of Gen. von Stein, head of the German war ministry, today was appointed to that post, according to a dispatch received here from Derlin. Greatest Bargains in Tmn. Economy Cloak Dept. Economy Dept. Second Floor, 219-211 S. Mich i?ran. Over Geo. Kraft Co. 5 and 10 Cent Store. SSß prances Ctrrect AjvttI tor WcnrfS EVERY SHOE a Bargain Shoe at GUARANTEE SHOE COMPANY Eyes Examined by H. LE1YIONTREE South lVend'i Lradinr Optometrist and Manufacturing Optician. SOITII MICHIGAN hT. Home Thon C504. 1SU rhone 347. A Jewelry Store for All the People, CLAUER'S Michigan. Near XX'a hingt on. CITIZENS BANK & TRUST CO. Safety Deposit Box4 $1.50 per year.
TURK
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outh Bend News Telephones: Bell 2100; Home 1151
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