South Bend News-Times, Volume 37, Number 32, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 1 February 1920 — Page 9

THE SOUTH BEND NE WS -TIM ES

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hot um IS DESTROYING 'MIDDLE GLASS'

Former Lord Chancellor Gives Views Regarding People of England.

LONDON. Jar,. Th peopl of Grjt Fritain look fer-wr.-rd to a new yttr f;;Il of financial and political difficult!-- bit with Kratfr optimitm than they would In; thought potMibl a If-w month a;o. A "nfn- world fit for hero a to live in' vhlh was an idal of th w;r h-is rot yet f, f-ri f'lllv attained r:l home and international jrfV3ms whkh brought on th4 war tili are banging over the had of the nation. Yt the Pritish people ar1 tryin-j to face the future in an invlncibl Jaith

to orvju r all

Seeks $5,000 Alimony, Three More Ask Decrees

1'ive thousand dollars alimony is Stoffel chars Iii wif with j ked Ly Hartha Van Hteenklte In p?6ing an unconfrol!abl and an: h-r suit for divorce from Ceril Van irritable disposition. He stated that!

ANDLE SI CASES

Mnklto ii;d in the circuit court Saturday. -Mrs. Van Steenkiste charge thtt hr husband frequently cursed her and upon several occasions falsely accused her o infidelity. She stated he had JS.OCr- in real estate. When his wife told him ehe had no use for him. Leslie Stoffel went to pe an attorney. Suit for divorce was filed in superior court Saturday against Hazel Stoffel, charging cruel and Inhuman treatment. "Sh continuously quarreled with rne." said Stoffel, "and many times she chided and rebuked rue. Upon .-.veral di;Trnt occasions she said h did not love me."

it was Impossible to endure living with her any longer. Be.ie Van Iusnn charts failure to provide In her divorce proceedings against Oscar Van Dusn. He Faid h would not provide a home for herself and small child and kept company with other wornn. On one occasion, she stated, he wsi pone for three days, Mary Borkownki charges hr husband with using liquor to excess in her suit for divorce against Boleslaw Borkowski. Phe said he frequently came home drunk and that on Nov. .10, 1913 he left to work in another state and has not since been back to Inquire about his family.

in th nation's ability

troubles. I,Iol George Cheerful. Tne most hecrful optimist of ail is premier Lloyd Oeorg. Under the leadership of his umlugsing faith hat everything will work out for the bst, th cloud. of d spondt-ncy, pictured by th new.spa p rs as thickest when the chancellor of the -hequer declared that the nation v;. heading for bankruptcy, .ty Kiito:; have visibly liftd. A fort no."t cuse for confidence i the steady commercial revival ard essation of labor troubles, whi h Hritons hop.- will continue. Tlu .- uive ground for prediction by nj.tini'Ht.s that (Jreat l.rituin will return to normal conditions soon' r than other i;ieat Kuroiean ountri- which ;- k;i ge d in the war. Look head. Ma mif.i' t ü T'-rs in ninny lim- h.ibu.sin --: liook-, J far : h .id. The cotton trade, one of the .imc Hritish industries, is said to hae all T 1 1 4 01or it can :ill for the next ii v.

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Shipbuilders say they are in the same happy condi'-pui. They hav et to 1m convinced that AnuriCi will be able to take away the former British supremacy in the carrying trade. They base th' ii confident on the belief that while the Uriti-h are ;t st'afuiinx race, the Atuciio.ins anno t. Apparently tht-y l.eiie that A iii-rian ships built in the war are destined to be bought eventually by distinctly maritime nations. Their t ontideu e however, is not iron-clad. !ord Ineheape told the sharehr.Iders of one Great Britain steamship com1 any that, .if the American governoierit turn l over its ships tti. private o-ti'ts, 'it- at Britain m-.'d r.ot l e ; fiaid. hut if the Amerii-an eoile -.-.ere to b taxed to Vuibl up their i:ieri-antib4 murine, the outlook for the shipping industry in th--e inlands A.a r.otbin but ro.-y. Bankeii Confident.

KritUh bankers ;tid merchajils '.o. forwatd to a great increase of

isines- with S011 tli America in 1 ;.

The4.- p vi to hold their pre-w;r i:stom-rs and to jcain much of what Germany lot. They profe to disovir.t tlie prospect that the I'niied State will acquire control of the South American lield. Many nations are anxious to buy iiom Ir-at Britain. How some of them can pay is a problem. The deIin in echane raUs had a depressing effect im American trade but exchange with Kraue". Italy and smaller markets is favorable to Great Britain. Against these reasons for business onthlenve stand two handicaps in tlie form of financial and labor condition. The national debt appear ..ppallmg to the British public but ptimists argue that i! is smaller than wa the debt after the Napoleonic war, measured by the counwealth and pot ntial producing power. The question of clearing the decks by some form of a capital levy N - :11 at the front and may one of the burning political questions of ;h car. Hail lrtblein. The nationalization of mine and

j a: I way is another British problem'

nd with it are lirked questions of hour ar. waccs which onfront. all industries alike and which Ihigland hares with America. It has been snid that Great Britain's recovery after the Napoleonic wars iva.i po. v-iole through underpaid labor b;x British employers do not expert thw

10 be .imoni: the assets of the future. I

n th conti ary. nuny industrial

eiders say British industry is far

ms: a question whether the steady inrease in wajres may not hcfomi' a iangemus handicap in eompetitltui with othc countries. Ibor has eith r prosprctive benef.ts in the proml of Premier lIojtl Georges, jjreat scheme for building ccinfortsMe workmen's homes throughout the country, which, is just beginning to mat rialize. and in plmr.s for in;:rance againt un:mplonent which have not yet developed. The principle of the latter plan is that all men out of work through no fault c? their own ehall I e assured of a respectable living as a ris:ht, without any taint of pauperism. lVar IreLaiid. Ireland still is regarded as one of the government' most difilcult and threatening domestic probU ras. Karly forecasts of the new home ruh- bill met nothing but opposition from all Irish factions. The Sinn Fein, w ith a majority of the Irish votes, thr ate tied to boycott the scheme a.s it

bvcotts the British parliament.

India and Kuypt are be ing weigned in the balance with hopes and f'-ars as intense as tlK centered upon Ireland. India will sr- in the r rw ;. r.ir th- lo'sTinning of th.e program of Kdwin Sar:iu ! Moi4,tagu fo:i.e rr. a.-ure of sd f-Rovernment . Cfhi;i.'.'U u a protictorAt ovr

Kgypt h now being rpsisted with much the- sam bltterne? and same methods as the Irish resisted the present a d m in ist rat ion in Ireland. The new year Is eyracted to be

vital for th fortunes of the army and

1 m-.-mh, inaii is 10 re'uuuei the army next year to virtually its pre-war basis. The navy is at a critical stair-. Kx-perts upon whom the country re-lied in the past, notablv Baron Fisher, formerly first sea lord, and Bear Admiral Sir Percy Scott are for s rapping the old establishment. They declare that bi battleships are obsolet, that submarines and aircraft 'have revolutionized warfare and that submersibbs. and big submersibles, are the only craft of the future. I Experts Skeptical. Naval experts whoso opinions command equal respect are skeptical and say. "o slow." It is urged that a country whose life depends upon ;.s navy should not drop its old maihinery before the new has been proved beyond reasonable doubt. The mw dispositions of Turkey ami other lands of the near east ar:almost as important for Great Britain a- th fortunes of her own territories. Setting up of new mandatory colonie-s and inland involves luany decisions. Seldom has th nation faced greater or more various and difficult tasks than the n w year holds for Great Britain. Yet the average man i absorbed in ne subject more than all of the others together. This is the cost of living which yaa increased mote in the past year than durin,- (he four years of war, and lie sefs no turning point in sight. This me ans that a large part of the population has to readjust its scale of

WILL NOT REVISE WAR GUILTY LIST

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PARIS. Jan. 31. The list of German war guilty whose surrender for trial by allied tribunals is demanded, will not be revised, it was stated officially today. The list containing more than SflQ names including that of the former crown prince, will be handed to Germany Feb. 10, it was said. It is absolutely unchangeable. The council of ambassadors Monday will decide upon the manner of remitting the note to Germany. Prominent Germans on the list, it was learned, include: Prince Rupprecht of Bavaria, the duke ef "Wurttemburg. Gens, von Kluck, von Buelow, von Mackensen, von Der Lanken, von Sanders, Stenger, von Ostrowvky, von Tesny, von Cassel and von Manteuffel; Admiral von Capelle, the brothers Niemeyer, Majs. von Goertz, von Buelow, von Vlentiner and Forstner and Ueuts. Budiger and Wernher.

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ASKS DAMAGES FOR AUTOMOBILE ACCIDENT

Sait for damages caused in an automobile accide nt was filed by Henry .1. Mick el against Frank H. Wolfe in superior court Saturday. Bickl asserts that in October at tin corner of Mishawaka a v. and Kiuhth st.. while his wife. Taicy Bickel. was driving a Ford on Mishawaka av., Wolfe turned into Mishawaka av. from I'ighth st. as to force Mrs. Bi( k l to run her machine into a lrgh bank to avoid a collision. The car is claimed to have been damaged to the extent of $200 and judgment for that amount is a.sked.

Recent Berlin dispatches reported the German government had dispatched a note to the allies tn Paris asking1 moderation in enforcement of the clause in the Versailles treaty demanding surrender of German war guilty. The Herman government, it was said, feared that surrender of the accused might precipitate internal troubles in the republic.

Some of the presidential candidates who started early are now learning that when the fires of enthusiasm burn too long they burn themselves out.

Annual Report of Officer Lane.

Shows Work of Reform Department. During the year ending Dec. r.l. 19 If, the South Bend probation department handled 51 cases, certified to the bureau following conviction in the city court, according to the report of Iawrence J. Lane, probation officer, made public Friday nitrht. The offences coming under the jurisdiction of the department upon order of the court include the following: Va errancy 9 Wife and child desertion and nonsupport Intoxication S Petcy-larcer4 7 Assault antf battery fTrespass .5 Failure to send child to school... 4 Provocation 4 Twenty-three of these offenders are reporting weekly to the court, according to the conditions on which they were placed on probation. Twenty-two have been 'released after having complied with their probationary requirements. Three were committed to the penal farm for failure to carry out their instructions and three have left the jurisdiction and have not been apprehended. Collects Four Fine. The " probation department has collected four lines in cases in which the defendants were unable to pay at the time judgment were rendered. This department also collects weekly installments from five probationers who were convicted of wife desertion and nonsupport. This money is remitted to the wives and families of these men and receipts taken which are filed in this office. In addition to visiting these offenders once each week and helping to .secure employment for those who are unemployed and investigating some 2 00 communicatio v for the chief of police, the probation officer has investigated some 150 cases which wero not in court. These investigations were based on complaints arising out of family and neighborhood quarrels, were of 0 trivial nature, and In most instances were adjusted without the necessity of a criminal prosecution. It appears that under the "dry" rulings an Invalid can get one pint of drug store whisky every 10 days. Evidently the dose would be about one teaspoonful before or after each meal. Why get sick?

TWO CASKS l'OSTPONFJ. Two cases set for hearing in the

city court Saturday morning were 1 i .. , . . . 1

po-ipouei upon aKreenien. ueiween opposing counsel. The ca of the state against Stev Abraham, charged with vagrancy will be heard on April 1. Abraham, it is said, lias Kone to work and the court gave him plenty of time in which to make good. August Groehner charged with provocation by Effa Wood pleaded not guilty and asked for a continuance. The hearing will be hhl on Feb

Tli average man is again coming to the opinion that whoever named it the "income" tax was dead wrong.

Nasty Colds

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First dose of 'Tape's Cold Compound" rclicvci distress Three doses break up colds No quinine!

Don't stay stutfed-up! Quit blowing and snuffling! A doso of 'Tape's Cold Compound" takes every two hours until three doses are taken usually breaks up a cold and end? all grippe misery. The first dose opens clogged-up

nostrils and air passages of head; 1

stops nose running; relieves headache, dullness, feverishness, sneezing, soreness, stillness. Tape's Cold Compound" Is the quickest, surest relief known and costs onlv a few cents at drug stores. It acts without assistance. Tastes nice Contains no quinine. Insist on Pape's!

On East Colfax Ave.

Better Coal More Heat

THERE arc certain coal regions in the United States that Bend out an excellent quality of coal. Such a region is Saline County of Southern Illinois. The famous Harrisburg Coal that is mined there possesses extra energy giving an extra amount of heat. Besides this it is remarkably free from foreign matter. Everyone who uses it reduces his coal bill for Harrisburg Coal gives more heat per dollar. Our sincere advice is "For better coal, order Harrisburg." You'll find us prepared to deliver Harrisburg Coal with the best of service.

Samuel C. Lontz & Sons Main 74 Lincoln S074 The Home of Klean Koal

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We have just opened up new arrivals of the prettiest lingerie. In the well-dressed woman's wardrobe, lingerie forms one of the most important items. We have exercised scrupulous care in assembling the best, and in this showing and sale are oiTering wonderful values.

Also Introducing the New

Philippine Under things

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Lovely Silk Gowns Dainty pink crepe de chine and washable satin gowns, lace and ribbon trimmed, $5.95, $7.50 and up to $30.00.

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Chemise and Step-ins Crepe and Satin Step-ins and Chemise at $3.50. $5.00, $5.95. $7.50 to $18.00.

Dainty Bloomers Bloomers of crepe and washable satin, both tailored nnd lace trimmed. Bloomers at $5.00. Bloomers at $6.50. Bloomers at $5.50. Bloomers at $7.50. Bloomers at $6.00.

Silk Camisoles in pink, white, blue, lavender, navy and black, beautifully trimmed. Prices range from $1.25 to $5.75. Dainty Muslin Gowns Dainty lace and embroidery trimmed gowns, novelty crepe and plain tailored effects.

Gowns $2.25. Gowns $2.50. Gowns up to $5.00.

uowns $1.50. Gowns $1 .75 Uowns $2.00.

Pajamas and Billie Burkes Two piece Pajamas and Billie Burkes in batiste and novelty crepe at $2.50. $3.00 and $3.50. Pretty Musljn Camisoles Camisoles at 50c. Camisoles at $1.15. Camisoles at 75c. Camisole. to $2.50. Camisoles at 85c.

Gowns at S5.00 Gowns at s5.5o Gowns at S5.05

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A NJWN Silk.

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Satin and Crepe de chine Pajamas Pajamas at $14.00. Pajamas at $1 5.00 and up to $32.50. Pretty Muslin Chemise Many attractive novelties in Windsor and witchery crepe and Dove silk Chemise: some are hand embroidered, also lace trimmed and tailored. Chemise at $1.25. Chemise at $2.00. Chemise at $1.50. Chemise to $3.95. Chemise at $ 1 .75. Muslin Petticoats and Drawers White muslin drawers and petticoats in a variety of prices. Bloo mers Bloomers in hand embroidered pink" batiste, pink and white crepe, voile and Dove silk. Prices $1 25 $1.50. $2.00 and up to $3.50.

Philippine Underthings The new dainty Cotton Underwear, as lilmv and soft a

Gowns Hand made, hand embroidered umvr.s in the celebrated "Philippine Maid" brand.

Gown at 7.oo and up to S14.no

Chemise

Chemise at Chemise at S5.no

Chemise at S5.Sn and up

Corset Covers Corset Covers at S2.50 and up. Sleeveless gnwns, gowns with Ion 'or short sleeves.

Glasses Correctly Fitted

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Dr. J. Burke 230 S. MICHIGAN ST. Broken lenses duplicated the same day.

ADLER BROS On Michigan at Wa.sliingtein Sintv IS',). Tin: stohi: von mj:x am novs

Art i jicr..it. Picture lYa;ain; THE I. W. LOWER DIXO I LATIN CO t PAN V, SouUi IJend. Indiana. Wall Paper. Draperie. Paint Suppltc

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