South Bend News-Times, Volume 36, Number 223, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 11 August 1919 — Page 3
. ME bOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
VOMiXY rVI-MVG. AlT.rsT 11. 191!.
CE CREAM SODA
SHOWS HARD K
CX
Fort Wayne Visitor Swoons After Taking Famous Luxury on Saturday.
F--rr annthfr count ni.iir.f-t nat .Mti.nl prohibition. Tl. fante argument of the dr:s, th.it no case rrr teen recorded f a man unking a soda. thn grir.g hm and Le:-:ir. his v.e. or .loin ."ny i.f the oth'-r roirjiation stunts which ..'j unk- rre s ;pp-sed to do. his b:m Med in .south Herd. Fnd Iiv. kf ti. a ho gave his ad-.'ir-v -is Frt Wayne, didn't b-at hn wife, according to the record--, hut i,fie Ls th- history, told by th
t lottir at th" polier- station. Drinks Sohi Water. T.nwkr-n wits drinking ;i Fda atrr in a N. Michigan ft. drug .-tore late Saturday nU'ht. when h.r.rc the customers .1 thrill by dropI m,; to the Hood unconscious. The police ambulance wan callm, and J.awken -Ans taken to FTnworth hospital, where lie v, as released Sun 'ay. ' Th moral to this story is. after the rupprepsion of tobacco, the d-adly ice cream soda should refeive j-ome attention as one of the 'a oriels' greatest evils.
Many Women are Attending Retreat At Notre Dame
Th spiritual retreat for vowr, given annually by tfie Notre Iame MlsMon hand, opemd Sunday eve nlng In the ,-iacrcd Heavt chapel at tho University of Notre Dame. More than Z:,0 women, the majority vi whom are from South Bend, were present In the university chapel, whfn th? retreat was opened by the Ilev. James Wesley Ionahue, C. S. C, retrent ma.ster, who preached a sermon on "The Great Frille. " A large number of women frorr. citie? in northern Indiana arrived in Fpfcial cars In tinie for the retreat. Walsh and Kid in balls, reserved especially for the women retreat -ants, have been taxed to their capacity early ffunday evening. More out-of-town retreatants ae expected to arrive at Notre Dame Monday mornln. Tho spiritual exercise- -a ill open Monday morning: at Tr '.O o'cloo with mas. at which Fr. Ionahue will officiate. In the evening Fr. Donahue will preach a bermon on "The Triumph of Love"
COPPERS WILL HAVE TO BE "SP1FFY" LOOKING Spilth Tend rnppors hir- bn elecfd to et th rar" fr thfl eity'" Pean Hrum-m-U in th nnitp-r w,f personal nppear-ntv-e Chief Kline has issued an order that hrMfter all officers n duty must prent as nat api':i ran. ns peibl. ;-..-l.il mention b tug m:id; of rlean cnlltr carefullT ptvHd and brushed uni-f.-nn-. sind ap t straight fore-and-aft on th hrad. James Cutting. U te. tiv nnd general ntility m:in of the department, has 1
kl.-k ennitntr n trie n-w 'rurr. l.rlr won't be l-ng en-vjtrh to keep caref.il'.v romlTtl for -'me timo vet. Some i.f the ohb-r nidnt-pr of th for.'e nr tili more rut of lu-k. as they h.iren't any liatr Wt t briisii. DR. FOeWeRTÄINS DISTINGUISHED VISITOR William rUshop. past president of the National IJbrary Association of America and now librarian at Michigan university In Ann Arbor, was a puost of tho Rev. Pr. F-aul Foik. C. S. C. librarian at the University of Nor" TMme on Saturday. HOI.D M UM1.MAI WW HOA-T. Tho Youncr Peoples society of the I'.ion Uvanpelical Tatheran church hoM a marshmnllow roa.st Saturday nicht a? Sprir.brook park. About : 'o members of th society attended.
Cleaning Up the Town With Cr-eased Pants j and Shined Shoes Etc., Etc., Etc.
AW. "hief Kllr.e has directed his men to keep their shoe? shined and their pants creased ajrain a desperate effort to kh back into the pood graces of the. ex-administration organ, r'-semhlinp that of Mayor Carson when he called the retail grocers into conference to see what could be done to tavp them from invasion by the federal government In Its war on tho hisrh co.-st of living. The mayor explains now. however, that tho retailers will have to handle the-e government wares without profit and he has sent a member of his hoard of works to "Washington to "bring home the bacon." If we may judge th appetito of of administration officials on "baron" at .ill by their apparent ppetite upon booze, it Is mighty little of it that once reaching the city hall, will ever get away, save into those officials' pantries. The retailers will see mighty little of it, profits or no profits, and the public will pay the expense of tho works board'.i member to Washington. You wouldn't be able to pry it loose with an order of the courts; that is until it is found to have vanished. Then they would bo around begging for someone to take. It over while they investigate everybody connected with the administration tolow the 'ranking heads." II. ÖLT the. point Is that Chief Kline is going to insist that his patrolmen, etc., keep their shoes shined and their pants creased. That will help considerable another grand step taken in the direction of "cleaning up the town" and you are not supposed to be a student of Shakespeare's "all that glitters is not gold." One may expect a splendid array of shined shoes and creased pants at the hearing of Driver Arthur Uovgren tonight. Lovgren is the man with the consummit gall to bring "Tony" Harrett into this question' of liquor disappearances. The charge, of course is not that but that he failed to report it to the chief, and it is claimed tha. such report under tho rule?, should be made in writing. We had never thought of It in this light before, but possibly Lovgren is one of tho several officers on tho force who can't write. Five have been appointed to the present force of exactly that callble; three of which can neither read nor write. How Could They Rrport In Writing? These assuredly were not "inherited" by the mayor. Neither were the two who were discharged by the Keller administration, nor the one by the Goet;i administration that have been reinstated by tho Carson board. III. WONDER If something can't be done to Induce the board of safety to try the chief's darling, flasoline Sergt. Kimerley next. It seems that some automobile castings were disposed of recently for something like 514.00 say July 11 and somebody forgot to turn In the money. It requires more gasoline to keep the police automobiles in motion than for all the equipment of the tire department and when do they figure on getting that Cadillac back into operation. Ought there not be some Investigation Into how it came to be broken up. .Employment of Joe Luther's automobiles by the police administration has become so frequent, that it is causing a strain on the automobile market. Nobody wants to see Mr. Luther owning all the auTomobiles in town.
ABILITY OF PAINTER APPRECIATED WHEN HE BECOMES INSANE
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If yoa tr crerstont rt'.n bo? v"hr o entlaus cf those wbo tro .;aderl Her s irorts-t tews far you. 1t9 korela eystea 1 fo-r.rlithl::r rrsr ia healthful. tetJ.y. -leaar.i redjetioa if ca and women wtio bate Lfea for yean nrJened with fatnest. Ue c;l cf Loreia arsj 'olio it th redurt-oa system. itimn. :o tedious Jfrc:fi. no ca!onil or gilt- a ri:i2f'T correct and dciig.tfU eyste-a. Lnj.'jrJ by ffostcisKS. Eedsrtica 10 t C3 Ybs. er ncre tr!irr Tia re3n1r to f-?t -TTeirira! ru--entirely gjari:ieeU on f i r tc, utJer f KJ forfeiture cr ro cojt to ThVt Intlnltt Jey tn fr'"r i cT'-r tvtt v-i rMir rrei--j-rErTs gradually ttDmiag, tmailer (.'. i mi ar- l-spre--"g It m.-.ty. fca!i 4-i ar'r-r!r-rni rr1"t tiarr'r' i"" 1.' anil r'f'0' ' rr r-t-f yrxr C. 1 rr"ibaU.-a cX Olben! Becoinj i'tnätr ttii catlly stay l Tcu nay cttaia ell cf krela at drr!t, r-f rrywhe re. rcsit'td? hcri'.f?i. Brorhv,-, -'i'h frr.rlrrlr t e t i t, i 1 ciii'"!. in v'nxi TfVp(i. fre. If tj rrita Koreia " Co,
SPIRIT OF WOMEN OF FRANCE INTERPRETED
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News of the City from the Official Records
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MAIUtlAC.i: LIClLVSli. Andrew W. Kazmierczak, trimmer. South Uend, to Theresa Kamalska, domestic. South Bend. Adon Sclanccskl. blacksmith. South Hend, to Mary Kopoztoz, labor. South Hcnd. Alozjy Dlzeweczkl. machinist,
South Mend, to Hattie Waslkawska, i
machine operator, Soutli liendArthur Hitchcock, telegraph operator. Chicago. III. to Florence Iierquist. clork. Rockford. 111. William Arnold, rubber worker. Mishawaka. to Netta Holmes, housework. Mishawaka. George Ilinner, clerk, South T.end. to Georgia Hopkins, clerk. South Bend. Ralph Clipp. farming. St. Joseph county, to Bessie Erwin, farming. St. Joseph county. Joseph Tal;ai. body builder. South Bend, to IIa Shaw, saleslady. South Bend.
"CARE FOR ALL LIVING THINGS," SAYS BROOKES ' The life of grass and hrubp depends "upon the care given them ty their protector nnd cultivator, man. rnd h-? should no- more neglect then than he should neglect tno cultivatoin of his on body." S dtclard Capt. Nehcmiah Brookes ot the Salvation Army, in a sermon reached at the army hall on r.. Jefferson blvd., Sunday nUht. Comparing man with all other life on the earth, he a&setted that man is a crass that has its day, but the soul of man never dies. 'The robes of Christ's righteousnesi are the soul's reasonable attire," aid Capt. Brooke?, "and the rtlthy rag. of sin should have no place. "The bdy of nun receives consideration in rest, food, clothing and application of medicine for cure of diseases. It Is foolishness on thu 1 art of man to omit consideration -of the soul'3 eternal welfare.'
SFFFIUOK COl' KT. Norma Moran vs. Charles Moran; suit for divorce. William Badger s. Conservative Life Insurance Co.: damage suit.
M.utn: iiosi-: i,nj;u. Marie Hose Lauler. who will lecture bore at the Redpath Chautauqua, was a French school girl in a Belgian convent when the war broke out. Captured by the Germans, she escaped, was recaptured and Anally was released. She tells her story In a vivid, authentic lecture which bears the appropriate title of "The Spirit of the Women of France."
BISHOP WHITE TO BE WITNESS IN LARCENY CASE AGAINST RECTOR
Special to The News-Times: GOSHEN, Ind.. Aug. 11. Bishop White of South Bend will be one ot the witnesses In the trial here Monday of the Rev. R. A. Robinson, rector of . Si. John s Episcopal church in Bristol, who is charged with grand larceny. The (a.1 was continued from Saturday after counsel for the defendant had asked th;tt the complaint be dismissed because the Rev. Robinson had been arrested U ice on the same charge. The trial has occasioned quite a stir in this section, as the defendant is well knowm. An attempt was made to secure Rev. Robinson's rlease Saturday, when his attorney submitted evidence that ho had been the victim of false arrest. It was charged that the method by which he had been aprehended waü illegal.
KNIGHTS ANSWER PLEA OF IGNACE PADEREWSKI
NEW YORK, Aug. 11. At the urgent request of Ignace Jan Paderewskl. Polish premier, ten carloads of supplies and 15 secretaries were recently sent to Poland by the Knights of Columbus for the relief of more than 2.". 000 Polish-American troops who were in dire need of aid, according to William J. Mulligan of the Knights of Columbus committee on Avar work charities, who returned here today on the transport LaSavoic.
KIDDIES SHOW WAY TO INCREASE YOUR CAPITAL
RAIL I) F RECTOR DlFS. CHICAGO. Aug. 11 John Shaughnessy, brother of Ixrd Shaughnessy. chairman of the board of directcrs cf the Canadian Pacific railroad, died at his home here Sunday after beins: ill more than a year. He was ."5 years old. A widow and two children survhe him.
ItK re;i sing tne rnpltal investment !" percent in n day i an noooinpllshinpiu that eines not in the lifetime of eveiy I -Maines man. Hut Harold Palmer did that Saturday. He and his side - kl.-k. Clarence I'.rltton. started off from their homes at .W Lin
coln War K. enrlv Saturday morning
with 10 rent capital. They invested it in newspapers and at nlgntfall counted profit whi-h totaled I'd cents. "Business was great," s.tid Palmer from his nnnp-lox üfwu stand at the corner of Michigan ami Jefferson sts. "but It would have been better if we only l ad more capital."
PACK HOWARD PARK FOR POPULAR BAND CONCERT
A crowd estimated at seven or right thousand heard the conceit by Fred Elbel's band at Howard park Sunday night. It was one of the largest audience on record. Benches, piers, canoes and boat: were filled with listeners lor marly two hours.
Tho prorrnm was arranged with i
a view to suiting the "popular taste, and it "went big." according to Director Elbel. The next concert is scheduled for Suncay evening at Ix-eer paik.
1'hom Tin: cufstnct trfj:. "Astronomers are trying to weigh, light." "Grocers have been doing it for years."
No Magic
About our Low Prices. We make a reasonable profit. But our rent is lower. The difference is what you save. -THE
HOME
FURNITURE CO. 326-28 S. Michigan St.
NFW YORK. Aug. 11. Ralph A. Blakelock, whose power as a painter was recognized only after he had been committed to the Middletown asylum for the insane, died Saturday at a camp In the- Adriondacks. according to word received here today. His friends recently obtained bis release from the asylum and had sent him to the iamp in the hope
that the quiet of the woods and mountains wcild restore his health. Born in New York in 1947 and almost wholly- self-educated in his art Mr. Blakelock never realized to the full the fame his work had brought
him and received only a pittance ofj the fortune his talents earned. j For many years he hawked his:
paintings about New York obtaining for them never more than a fewdollars and undergoing the severest hardships. In 1S9? his mind p.'-e way under the strain and he wa. taken to the asylum suffering from a delusion that he was the possessor of great wealth. He remained there continuously for 17 years during which his paintings had been recognized at their ttiu value and he had been made a member of the national academy and received honorable mention at a Paris exposition.
McHENRY
W. P.
Teacher of Artistic Singing South Bend Conservatory
j 'y i Mi!B III (
Specials for Tuesday and Wednesday
2 10c Pkgs. Bluing
15c
6 Boxes Searchlight Matches
2 10c Pkgs. Corn Starch
15c
3 Large Cans
Hominy
2 10c Pkgs. Baking Soda
ISo
10 Bars Clean Easy Soap 41 o
2 10c Pkgs. Sal Soda
3 Cans Dutch Cleanser
2 10c Pkgs. Macaroni1 3 Packages or Spaghetti Climalene
WE ARE RECEIVING SOME NICE ELBERTA PEACHES FOR CANNING. BUY NOW.
XVXn jou think of IlomrfurnL.Mn think of S.i:.,
FINDS STING IN SOFT DRINK, GETS TEN DAYS rOLl'MRl'S. O.. Aug. 11. "It's like this, jedge." explained Arthur Lucas, colored, charged with being drunk. "Ah went to do circus and do clowns had a sign which says: 'Beo. where is dy sting?' and ah as t m" f. says ah. dat ah'll Just try s,lT;,o of dat stuff. Ah did. Yuh ih. d cd ih did. and here ah is " "S!m. a i for Revo, if that ; br (t.-e." remarked Judge Ruth. "Ten laj s for you."
THE CALL OF HUNGER is answered by Nature with abundance of food -but be sure you eat the food that Nature intended for human beinds. The whole wheat is kind of all foods. Shredded Wheat Biscuit is the whole wheat , nothing wasted, nothing thrown away -the most real food for the least money. Two or three of these crisp, brown little loaves of baked wheat with sliced bananas sliced peaches , or other fruits , make a wholesome, nourishing meal at a cost of a few cents. Ready-cooked, Ready-to -eat
A WELCOME GUEST AT ANY TAB LE"
r i'ffi' I I III if PWSuFftn- 5 I I I V -?ax ill?? J;todO- -
A HAPPY SIGN FOR HUNGRY PEOPLE t
ni iiuiL Appiucu lihj maiiit;
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mark of "good things to eat" wherever it is seen. Thousands of housewives depend upon it. It marks Oscar Mayer's "Approved" Meat Products. It identifies meat delicacies from the "Approved" kitchens. Here for 36 years the rare and tempting flavors which Oscar Mayer has perfected have been worked into meat foods of sheerest purity and wholesomeness. Everywhere these superior meat products are known. In Chicago and for miles around they are the touch eclat for luncheon, supper, or social occasions.
Lfjok for this trade mark ivhere you buy meat products. You ivil find it in markets and delicatessen stores of the better sort, every where.
OSCAR MAYER CHICAGO
OSCAR MAYER S APPROVED MEAT PRODUCTS ARE U. S. GOVERNMENT INSPECTED
SOUTH BEfJD'S GREATEST BARGUNOf VERB
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Announcing the
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Fur
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With one of the Finest and Largest complete line of Furs in the state including Capes, Coats, Coatees, Dolmans, Scarfs, Muffs, etc., at a guaranteed saving of 10 to 35 percent under anv other store in South Bend. Our enlarged Fur Department is under the management of Mr. Louis Frazin, former manager of The People's Store, where he will be pleased to meet his many friends and customers.
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