South Bend News-Times, Volume 37, Number 153, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 1 June 1920 — Page 4
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES CHEVROLET WINS AT INDIANAPOLIS !,800 ILLITERATE U. S. SOLDIERS OF 48 NATIONALITIES AT CAMP UPTON J - , - . Republicans and Democrats ? l pj i Thom.1 Sofoiul, Milton Third, Murphy Fourth and I)cPahna Fifth. 1 W ' - i "
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co.ti.ti:i IM: mm i'AGi: OSIZ) hLi P.rst M'; -t tho pu anl J I'alma shot ir.t th- I'n!, which ho MtlnLaln (1 until hi t ir caught on Cre. Half Dorn A-iilmt . Thr wrr half r. dozen ncrllenti. but tho drivers and their Bides miraculously csrapi d d'-aih. While po-din? around tho treacherous north turn, Arthur Klein crashed into th .1 lo wall, la niacins his ar n h.idly that it was withdrawn. Iouis Chevrolet, d?rltjner of tho rar vhlch his brother piloted to victory, al.r wa.s in a smashup. His ear skidded off tho rourse wh'-n a .stfjrlnc connection broke. 'hvroWs hack was injured and ho withdrew. Itoscn S.irl's had the misfortune to smaMi up two cars. He wrecked his fiwn entry as a result of skidding off tho trar-k. and 'while driving relief for IUnny Hill, a sterlncr knuckl' broke and ho crashed for the second tinu-. (h-vrolet drove a consistent rae from the start and never was below fourth place. Most tit the time he was either in second or third. Ho trailed Io Palma from the point and took the lead when Do I'alma had to stop. Four winners of former ra'fs on the speedway tried to repeat. Rene Themas and Io Palma. and 191 Ü winners, respectively, cam'1 In within the money. Julcx Goux. who won In 1 j 1 . was forced out nfter conipl'tin miles. Howard Wilcox, last year'rf winner, had engine trouble and quit after completing 15 miles. Donate $20,000. Merchants of Indianapolis donated $20,000 to be distributed as added money, $100 to each of the two hnndn-d' laps. Of this money, Hover won . T 0 : De i'alma, JS.300; G. riifvroUt. $1.300; I.iu Thomas. $700. and Art Klein and Jean (hasagne. $100 rach. Of the 23 cars Martina the jrrind. only 11 finished. The followint; is the order vf the cars and time:
Chevrolet
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Driver I'livridt T. Milton ...
.11. tony Mu r j'li r . .."i .." ::M..".i Italpli De I'.Uma .c. or, l.-, i:d'h- Ib nrne :H M'J.l''. le.iti ('li.'ixs.ipne. :l."i:ir, tls .Im- Thii:- . 1 ."" Kali!i Iiilfrd . .7 :f :u:.7a Tom All-y 7:J1 :i.l
Johu It. r...!l!n-' lii.i-li.-.!. Itav How iiril ' V. icr 1. I eis Chevrolet. Rosroo ?arUs. Joe Poyer. .Art Klein. Jules Goux. Amlre P.oillet. Howard Wil ox. Jean Porpato, Kddie o'honnell. Willie Haupt and P.ennie Hill also started.
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Above (left to right) Colone! Arthur Johnson, in command at Camp Upton school; Major Louis T. Byrne and Lieutenant Angelo Quaglia. Below Specimens of handwriting before and after instruction at the camp. At Camp Upton, ,1 I., there is a school for illiterate soldiers which in many respects is the most remarkable of Its kind In the world, and certainly the most remarkable In the United States Army, for i is no less than t. melting pot in which 1,600 men, representing forty-eisht countricu and nationalities, are being molded Into the flower of Uncle Sam's new army. Little is known of this ABC chooL which is conducted by Colonel Arthur Johnson, a classmate of General Tershing. and Major Louis T. Byrne, who is the Colonel's chief cf staff. Angelo Gnaglia, formerly an ace an', a first lieutenant iL the Italian army, said Uie following: "Four mondths ago I Join AmerWn army and I can no :peak English and no write English, and I put myself in school. In tena day I like letters and write a leetle bit. In thrcea mondth I wrltea pretty good, and in foura inondth I write my sweetheart a nice leetle heart, I mean love letter. I am In army and will stay and always ready to fight for Star and Stripe."
;;.imm 200 l.SJO 1 .UM 1 .."' 1) 1.
jum; brides contest OPEiED AT MIDNIGHT; REPORT TWO WEDDINGS
(CONTI NITI) FKOM PACK ONE) Is arranging to have a hand at the t'olis-um meetlntr. and the presents will le piven out as rapidly as possible. Just as Mion as the entire collection h;is l-ern photographed, and the committee of judges says the word that the distribution of prizes shall proceed. The actual distribution will be In thiirp? of Nelson E Jones, assisted ly the committee of Judpes. Hundreds of people lire expected to attend the -o!i.eum meeting. Everybody is invited to attend the exerciser, and the meetimr Is being advertisvl f r and Vitle aw a special feature of this week's Interurban lay. vhi h takes place regularly on Thursday.
GIVE GAS COMPANY INCREASE IN RATES (CONTINTFIP 1K)M PAGE ONE)
norking c.ipitil and Jieo.ono for going value. The company was ordered to set aside annually for dc1 reet.ttion 1.' percent ff the alue of its depreciable jiroperty at South Hend. An ;i.llo a nee was made of a pproxi ni:i el y J:;..nt for iivre.tse in g.is oil. fuel, labor, taxes, etc. "Heing fully ailvised." th order declares, "the commission finds that the prerent schedule of rates ami charges is insufficient, and that certain higher rntes ?hould be authorized and it will be so ordered." No discount I allowed for prompt payment vf th $1.00 or minimum t barge.
AUTO ACCIDENT MARS MEMORIAL SERVICES
Ir Asfsfed Vrera: FW It IS. May "1. An arrident marred Monilay's ceremonies, when an automobile returning from Pony cemetery crashc! into a tel trvaph loin neir St. Qucntin. and Mis. Feck, an Amrrlnn; Mme. Pubois. a French Ited Cross worker, who drove the car, ar.d Tadallle Mangan, wer seriously injured. Mme. Eo I'ebre, the fourth occupant of the ta.-. also was hurt, but not so severely. Mrs. Peck ant! Mad.ime ManCn. It is feared, will die. An American returning from nl'eau wood Mondav told of 4.000 or more peasants walking distances ranging from a mile ami a half to 10 miles, rach bearing a wreath of flowers to deposit on the graes of Amirican soldiers. "It was a grat Memorial day in Erce," i'd Maj. Prake. chairman of the Memorial day committee, "but it is only a rehearsal of what future Memorial days in France will be." The um of "0C0 francs is left on the credit side of the committee for the puprose of decorating the American graves on Memorial days to com.
THREE PREMIERS CALL CONFERENCE AT SPA
4 riii: lovi: IlPItT.,, Choosing1 a semi-blind man as the mate for an old maid, and 1 paralyzed woman with an ear-trumpet to lo the bride of her elderly father, were among the achievements of P.abs Hardcastle, played by Constance Talmadge In "The Enve Expert." the. screen comedy which will be shown at the Oliver theater for four days, starting tomorrow. Hut these were only a few of the triumphs of the love expert, who conducted experiments from Huston to Florid-,.
"THE ( OXFESSIONY "The Confession," one of tho most po1iyul dramas ever screened, will be the special attraction at the Auditorium next week for three days, starting Monday. i)Vt 'L AxntToiurM. Tom' Mix flighted his many followers In his latest production, "Desert Eove." in which he was seen at the Auditorium yesterday. Mr. Mix performed some of the most daring feats ever seen on a screen in this picture. He is supported by a company of excellence. Topics of the pay and a "Sunshine" comedy were also shown. The bill is being repeated today. Pauline Frederick, one of the best r layers in pictures, coio.es tomorrow in a thrilling mvsterv drama entitled "The Woman in Room 13," taken from the p. ay of the same written by Samuel Shlpnjan. The piece Is said to give the clever star an opportunity for some splendid emotional work, for which she is noted. "I" rule Tom Without a Cabin." a two-reel Mack Sennett comedy. Mutt and Jeff and tho Fox News will help to make an attractive bill.
Says Chicago Will Be Largest City In U. S. Within 50 Years
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EASAEEU "The Common Law." one of the !..s; of the carlhr Clara Kimball Young productions, and adapted from Koheri W. Chambers novel of the same title, is the attraction in picture form at the Ea Salle today. The dark-eyed favorite in this story plays the role of a girl who defies and flees with the man she truly lOVeS. Tomorrow, starts .1 two-day's engagement of Pofothy (iish's latest corned v, "Murv Ellen Cuims to Town."
CASTMI There is romance and thrill tr good proportion ia "My Eady'tf Garter." starring Sylvia Hoamer and presented at the Castle theater today. The title has reference to the jeweled circlet of a rountc, a valuable bit of vanity, and the chase that bads thro'igh a maze of adventure when it is stolen. First as a Saturday Evening Post story and Inter as a book, the -ory is one that has thrilled thouar.u. Tomorrow Clara Kimball Young is the star of "The Common Law."
AUDITORIUM GIVES SPECIAL SHOW FOR CLERGY AND PRESS
Ti A -' iat-d l'rf- : IIP Mi:. May :l. The Mo.itrrrn sr.ys Monday it learned that as a resiit f urgent representations by I'rtmier Miller.ir.d cf France. Premiers E!o d (b o; ,-,, and N'.tti have H greed to the conference of representatives of the ..Hi. arid Jermmy at Spa hall !e he;, on Jtire 'ji. and that tbeje s'- ' ... pi iv ; ., n i'mtnt. It 1- exp.ete.i the cur.frreuce Will continue a utck.
A fsprclal perfornianc? of 'The Confession" will be jriven by the Auditcrium theater for all members of the clergy and press at 9:30 Wednesday mornin. June 9. It will be gratis. This photoplay is declared one of the strongest in moral tone and gripping tn dramatic interest that has been produced since the "Pirth of a Nation." Henry Walthall, who starred in the p. W Griffith masterpiece, takes the leading role of the clergyman in "The Confession." The production has just had a four aeeks' run ut the Playhouse in Chicago.
AVERT STRIKE. P.? An, bated Press: PETE IT, Mich., May 31. The strike of Detroit street railway employe, threatened for June 1. was averted when the Detroit Enited Eailway announced Sunday that lh. varo dernands of the street car nniüs ur.ioa will be ni
"Chicago will be the largest city in the United States in tho next fifty years. The boulevard link Just opened and the projected rebuilding of South Water St., now assured, presage a new era in the dev lopment of tho North Side," says Theodore Iiunte, Chicago candy manufacturer. "The construction of a doubledecked thoroughfare on South Water st. will stimulate this development by relieving traffic congestion across the other bridges and convert them into main business arteries. This transformation now seems only a question of time In view of the decision of the merchants to abandon the street and establish the greatest produce market in the world in another part of town. "The boulevard link already has caused big advances In real estate values. The exodus of big business firms to tho north of the river has begun. The new plants planned or in course, of erection will transform the district immediately north of the link in a few years into a big business quarter. "With the bulld!npr of a subway, the elevated loop will be abolished
and the business district will expand tremendously. P.usiness houses will usurp thv fashionable Gold (Toast. Gradually they will revolutionize the North Side and the entire district between the north branch of the river and the lake, as far north as Eincoln Park, will become to the Chicago of the future what tho loop district to the city today. "If you drive north you will find that the gaps of open country which a few years ago separated north shore towns, have been filled with residences, and what is virtually Chicago extends in an unbroken sweep from South Chicago to Winnetka. Eventually the greater city will absorb these suburbs and manv more to the west and south. "With nearly 3.000,000 people now, with the vast natural resources of tho Mississippi valley and the Middle West contributing to Its growth; with lt3 railway and lake transportation ind its dominant position as the nation's great central market, I confidently expect that Chicago will outstrip New York In population and business in the next half century."
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SHORTAGE OF NEWS PRINT DISCUSSED AT EDITORIAL MEETING
IJv Associated Tress: ROSTOX, May 31. The news print chortage was discussed today by tho National Editorial association in annual convention here. A resolution waa unanimously adopted and forwarded to Chairman Porter, of the house foreign relations committee a; Washington, urging the passage of senate Joint resolution 152, which is designed to afford immediate relief in the emergency and especially to benefit country newspa ers.
1 48,000 KIT DAGS STILL UNCLAIMED
H) Associated ire: NEW YORK, May 31. There are still on Governor Island 148,000 barrack bags, 6,000 trunks and boxes, and thousands of other unclaimed baggago of soldiers, sailors, marines and others in the military services, which the Knights of Columbus Monday announced they had inventoried. Eoth tho army authorities and the K. of C. have sent a call to former service men to reclaim their lost property in connection with this mass of unclaimed baggage, statins that already more thin 75,000 pieces have been dispatched to their owners. Breaks Speed Reeord F or Passenger Plane H Associated Press: ATLANTIC CITY, N. J., May 31. Tne American speed record for a six-passenger airplane is claimed by Ixo Möns, who Monday piloted a Larsen all-metal monoplane in a non-stop flight to Philadelphia and back as the nnal outdoor event of the third pan-American Aeronautical congress. He covered the 120
miles in 9 minute-s. 3. seconds, ac-1
cording to the records taken by an official of the Aero Club of America.
Funerals
MISS KLlZAni-TTII G. UOITOItF. Funeral services ror Miss Elizabeth G. lloltorf, who died Saturday at Colorado Srrlngs, will be held this morning from St. Joseph's church. She Ls survived by a sister. Mrs. D. A. Wistburg. of South Bend.
Statues, vigil lights, at Schilling's. 4994-1
TOO LATi; TO CLASSIFY.
WANTED
Ne.it npppnring woman for cafeteria counter; also a pantry woman, (tood hours and pay; opportunity fur advancement and lnrreased pay. No esperiem-e necessary. WASHINGTON K KSTAPRANT ANI CAFKTLKIA. .Main and Wellington fctS. Main Sl. 5001.7
LOST Near St. Mary's rollte: a No. 2 I'remo camera; reward. .Main 431.'?.
WANTKD Mon to drlr teams. AprIv S. Lafayette. Ma '.a 1CTV. 4'jjvtf
WANTHD Sales girl, sf-amstr KayDee Clothing Co., 1-21 X. Ml.bigan h. COoO-tf
London to AusSralia
In Aeroplane Flight . LONDON. May 31. A sportinff effort to riy to Aust:;.;.i .. . smiill airplane was begun th.s morn-,
lng oy Läeut. Hinkiey. a former member of the Uritish air force. The machine has only a 35 horse power motor with special petrol tanks to provide enough fuel for
j from 6ün to 70 miles of continuous ' "!l- TK 1Ul.n( ..-lit 1 - U
1i.,iAi. i j in uiiauiii 111 iii.i rvr iiif Tight by way of Paris. Home and I LVZL
WAXTKIi MMdlfvsred woman for dishwasher Smithy's Ifcnch Room, 21." N. Mala kt.. Mlsnawafca. itf FOR SALE Furniphlngg of rlne room hoce landing gas rang, electric washer, dining rom rt;if Wheeler, Wilson sowing machine, rng. t.nhy high chair, rte. Going to California", reason for sellln. 5". Lincoln way W. Zr2-3 FOR KALL In northwest part: Strietlr raodern. Reren tom boup nd garag. ne.tr church3 and one of bt seho.-ds in city, large lot. east front, shade trees r.d bearing rult; possession within r,o lays, -'hone Main 4i17. ro.1-4
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WANTED MMdle-riEe-l vornan for dlfhwashr. SmUhy's Lnnch Room, 21. N. Main st. m
Advertisers maXe profits from
1 volume not prices.
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You Want the News of Your National Conventions in Chicago and San Francisco. You Want It Told Nearly as Possible So That You Can Virtually See It Enacted. That is What The NEWS-TIMES is Planning for You This Year. Two News Association Leased Wires
Two Special Correspondents
In addition to the Associated Press and United Press wires directly connectino; The NEWS-TIMES offices with the convention hall, night and day, this paper will be specially represented: . - At Chicago (June 7th to ??) by JAMES J. MONTAGUE, well-known to NEWS-TIMES readers as a daily contributor of "More Truth Than Poetry' Mr. Montague is one of the best known ne wspaper men in America, and a great senser of under-currents just the things that make a convention story interest
ing.
JOHN HENRY ZUVER, editor of Tlie NEWS-TIMES, who, well, is perhaps one of the least known newspaper men in Americans more of a senser of uppercurrents, and will write what he pleases. At San Francisco (June 27th to ??) by JAMES J. MONTAGUE; with t same qualification as for Chicago. ROBERT A. BUTLER, editor of the Indianapolis Times, who will do for The NEWS-TIMES from out at the Golden Gate much the same as the editor of The NEWS-TIMES will do for the Indianapolis Times from the Windy City.
YOU remember how The NEWS-TIMES handled the national conventions four years ago. It was a revelation. This year they will be handled even better Get Started Reading the News-Times Right Now! Get the advance reflections from convention sources and have the habit of reading the best paper in South Bend with the paper coming to your home as a matter of course. It is easy to start. Use the telephone Main 2100. The girl will get the circulation manager for you.
South
Bend
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Morning Evening Sunday Order for Morning or Evening and Sunday Seven Issues at Same Price as Six Other Dailies
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