South Bend News-Times, Volume 37, Number 155, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 3 June 1920 — Page 2

fDAV MOItMXi;. JtXE 3. 1J20.

CHE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

MUSICAL PROGRAM IS FEATURE OF ROTARY MEETING

Qui) Takes Action on Fake Stock Sales in Citv.

A nlr.il pri-mm ratur"I tho

MILK IXSI'ECTOR GIVES MOXTIILY REPORT

notary !u

Oliver hnfl V i ,ikn bir.fT tho k

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fi rcomparlerl on th ji.ir.o by

Icra Ucnhf now. .Son?, characterized .is r!d favr.ril' nn l many rf. thft now fT.f9 v.rro nr.f: y th t !ub en?f m!!e nr. 1 a qu.irtft rnrlTed a pnth'tlo littlo r.uml,er, hlch fJrcw rnumls of applaud Th club unr.irr.nuply acropfvt mi Invention y tho a ! v. rt::n club to hfar Richard H. L a.Mrs a Joint rn'-tint: of th Chamber of ('6mmrcr, notary Klwanls nnJ Ar!vrt!.lr.r clubs at th Oliver hotel, Friday r.or.n Jun-- 11. Mr. L. , who Is poci.il conns' 1 for the .Associate! A-iv-rti.-!r.K citie s of the Vorld wil! Flop In South I5on1 after df livf-rlriK an arl'lrr s brfnro thu anm.'M advertising convention to no li'M In ImlianipoM-; nxt wrrk. .Ah Facial counsel inv-.BticratInfr fake oil storks, motor car. accr.orics nnd tire swindles throughout ihn country Mr. was jrlvr-n credit for th" prosecution anl Kuhsojur-nt convMlon of th hoads of the Pan Motors Co., an alleged fako con:ern, which vns accused of swindling thousands ,f people by the Kalo cf fraudulent Mock. The rotarlar.s aIo decided to purrha.se and present to th; boy srout organization a canoe to b u.-'l at tli camp to ho established at Birch X.ake, la August. HOSPITAL STUDENTS' GRADUATION THURSDAY

Mi! b'-r.z rurpH-d to South Bend P'ttror. is of rood quality and for the most ;art contains mor than th- b-al rr-juiremfnt of butterfat. ar cording to a report given out WVdn.M.iy by Hoy H. Wolfe, city dairy inspector. Ir.spe, :or Wolfo pxamined ?,7 milk f iiTiplo.-, and 2fj ft thse sarnpl'J cor.talr.rd rr.tjro thai the b ;al rfjuirnif : t of butt rf sr ni of theni r :: r i'-.g as hlh as five percent. Accarding tr Lj. Wolfe, thre. percent butterf.it Is a good nvcrage. Of the ::7 f.ir!s of rui'.k insp'-ct-f d, 1 f -.:.- j-.r d .-orr ! i r t. The repot t of tl;e dairy l;i:p(ctor follows: r.a r . O. J. Wlttr.er & Sens 2."

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Ft. J'vseph hospital eommencoTnrnt fxrclscs will he held Thursday night at 7-30 o'clock at t-t. Joseph's hall. N. Hill sc. The prc. ntali on of medals and d!ploma5 and the nddrea to the Pix graduates will bo TiAAde by Ttev. V. J. Carroll. C. S. C. J.afttor of Joseph's parish. The program will include a. piano folo, "rvhapFodle," HandMi.m ly Mi3 Ilstello i:roi:.sard; a reading. 'IJneoln and Lnr" by Mis. Helen Mlnnlhan; and a vocal solo, "IMrthday" by Mi?s riorence Guthrie. The six nurses who will receive 'their diplomat uro Mi?s Mary Donnelly of Dloomington, 111.: Miss Vio!lot Collings of Richmond, Ind; MIsj DLarle Francisco of Uronier, Ind; ;.nd MIjs lther Jor.es of Coshocton. O.; And Miss Veronica Judge of ASma, Mich. JWO YOUTHS TAKEN TO JEFEE RSON VIL L E

In chargo of two deputized guard?, Charles Dodds and leo Shaeffer, said to te loaders of a j-rang of young desperado s, who have been In court a number of times on charges of larceny, robbery and receiving stolen roods, left for the Jeffersonville reformatory Wednesday morning, where they will s?rvo th sentences imposed by Judgo Montgomery In the superior court Thursday. Both pleaded prullty to an indictment of grand larceny, podds was sentenced to a term of 1 to 14 years and lined J200 while Shaeffer was sentenced for one to tight years and tlmd 5100.

sorPiint is ikowm:t. ry United Trei3: INDIANAPOLIS. Ind., .Tuno 2. Clarence Hatfield, soldier. was drowned Tuesday r.Tght wlien hi canoe tipped over in White riv r. Itobert C. Tyler, soldier companion of Hatfleld, made bis way to the shore nnd nummoned ail. The police dragged the river and found Hatfield's body. loth Mdlicrs were staTloned at the speedway and were In the air service. Hatfield wa-s born at Burkct, Ind.. and Tyler formerly lived on It. n. out of Tcrre Haute.

RHEUMATISM LEftVES YOU FOREVER

Dffp 8e:itM trie Arid Deposit Are DUfroUxl and th llheum.uic l'ni Mrt to I.it th ystrm ithlu 1. wrrntj-four Hours. rTry dr;lst ia this country 1? v.itliorizd to e-iy to every rhe'ri-ati" sufferer tiist If tuo betrl.s cf A'.leurfcu. te mro r-QH:rfr cf r!-.o;;:r.a'ltn. 'iors not stop sll agony, red lire s".!ln J.lr.!s an-l do wr wlta eeu the s'ig!te.t twlii-" rf rfceuniatio ra!n. xvl:i g'dly retura jour money without eorrrner.f. Alinrhu "hs efn trle.l nnd totNl for yere, and really warvKous result.-. 1. wo been aoonn-.T'ishod In tne most s- e; css where t- Miffering aii'l a irony Intense and piteous And Lere tU- ;ati. nt Mr. Jau.es IT. Aün. the d'.-'over r f Allen rh'i. vrho f.-r rr-any yearn sua-rel the torment of a ':to rlicumati-i. defires ft'l sufferers to ka-w tL.at he 1 ej i.ot .vnnt h ;-.f.t of n!i one's r:o:iey i:::Al'.earhu i'.ee!i ly coaiuers this worst ef nil disue. in 1 !;o t. is la-

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Pain Stops Instantly Hump Vanishes TRY IT AT MY RISK Ne-.v, marvt x ;y t- trt-.it ' u:.: " '"s. fct--i ;-wn h-.stur.-:;,- iv.She t!.o ;::y

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Willida dairy I. F. Clav . . , RcdUMe- Dairy

M. F. Shirk , Flusser liror. , NtlJ-on Dairy O. H. Illntzeiman . . . Weft .Side Milk Co. . . Suahedis.' en Sons , Hcffer Pros , SunnvFide Dairy .... O. H. Hlntzelman . . . Hoff er Pros Annis Pro. , Nelon Dairy , Suabedissf n & Son John W. Witner O. W. Wittner Sz Sons Helic.ble Dairy , West Side Mill; Co. Matthew Horatch . M. I'. Shirk , Slussr-r Pros John ShoSly , Funnyslde Dairy .... Peave.s Dairy H offer Pros West Side Milk Co. , Matthew Horvatch John Sholly J. S. Smith

Nehon Dairy

". H. Hintzelmnn . Siiabedisf-n & Sons Hoff er Pros M. D. Shirk

Somo dirt. ROY II. WOLF!!. Dairy Inspector

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CONSERVATORY PUPILS TO GIVE RECITAL THURSDAY NIGHT

The regular bi-monthly pupils' recital of the South Pend Conservatory will be held Thursday night at S '.""Tock in the recital hill. Next Thür. lay night. June 10 the pupils of MiM Helen Roth, rcadr, will appear In a recital. The program for the general recital follows : "The Vio'et." piano. .. (Small wood) A!'" ha Bsr. "W.d'z of the Forest Sprit's." piano (Schmidt) Irma Witwer. "To a Wild Pose," dance D'ris" Dears ivters. Tj, r.!!o" and "llskimo Lullaby." p;au' (laynor Uluke) Terrill Austin. "Ava Ian ohe." piano (Heller) "Chy of the Putterl'.ies," piano.. (Dennee) Fstb.er Kaplan. "The Mir.r.rrel Lover,- vomJ . (Geehl) Mrs. J. C. Astley. "Hunting Son," piano .. (Spindler) Helen Brubaker. Toe Dance GtraMir.o Orovelski. Rustle of Spring" and "March Grotesque." piano (Sinding) Maurine Martin. "Ia pegatta Venezienna," piano.. (Liszt) Molüe Siegel. "Ftanling in tho .'eed of Prayer." vocal (Burleigh) Hazd Seward. "Arabesque," piano . . . . (Hclmund) Lilly Mohn.

SHOE DEALERS TO GIVE BANQUET Shoo denlers rf the city are planning tr give a banquet at the Chamber of Commerce on the nicht of July ?,, nnd their employes will be extended an invitation to attend. The bannet will come just before the shoe stores begin their annual summer Wednesday afternoon closing schedule.

Fciv Hoosicrs Failed to Report For Service Les.1 than one percent of Indiana draft registrants failed to report for military duty, according to a report covering the application of the selective service system in the state, received by the state historical commission from Maj. Robert C. Paltzell of Princeton, who was agent in Indiana for the system. The report makes public the first ofTicial compilation of draft statistics on particularly Indiana conditions. It shows fi.'lD.S34 men registered In the state for military service. Of this number, 6,312 registrants failed to report as ordered by local boards. f this number, 3,534 were apprehended, and their cases disposed of, leaving 2,77 8 cases of outstanding deserters under the selective &ervice system. Seventy-seven thousand, four hundred forty registrants were inducted into service by local boards. 73,0 4 8 were accepted, and 4.39 2 were rejected because of physical disability.

"The Confession" Proves to be Big Production "The Confession" r.ovl to e one of the best moving picture productions staged in South Bend ia m.ny months, at the special performance given for members cf the clergy and press Wednesday morning, at the Auditorium. The photoplay will be regularly shown at this theater the f.rst half of next week. The scenery, laid in the great Canadian northwest. Is in itself worth the price of admission, but the thing really worth while about the production is the fact that it Is

a departure from the usual drivel ef eex romance and ta?s the action cf the piece upon deep religious conviction and an unfaltering trust in eternal Justice. To be pure the girl Is not lacking and the love romance is not minimized but :e gist of the action is the story of a simple prieJt who refutes to dlvajlge the secret of a murderer told him in the confessional, though by so doing he could save, the life of his own brother Innocently charged with crime. The production is by an all star cast many of whom have teen 5?en In South Bend in major productions stich as "The Birth of a Nation" betöre.

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PRISONER ELLS EXPERIENCE

Chief Petty Officer Richard Canno, of Ill-Fated U. S. S. Neptune, Gives Story of His Perilious Adventure And Remarkable Restora

tion.

Pichard Canno. Chief Petty Officer of the U. S. S. Neptune, whose dramatic capture at sea by a German U-Boat and subsequent experiences aboard the submarine and in a German prison hospital, thrilled the entire country, is still another world war hero to test the remarkable reconstructive powers of Tanlac and give it his strong endorsement. Mr. Cannon's adventures were so harrowing that his constitution was completely shattered "but after months of suffering, ho has now regained the wonderful health that enabled him to pull through his adventures alive and is today the same strapping two hundred pound fighter that embarked on the ill-fater collier. But let him tell his own story: . "When the Xeptune was torpedoed off the Irish coast," said Mr. Cannon, who now lives at 707 P. LaFayette, Tampa. Fla., "I had my right leg and live ribs broken by the explosion, and when I came to my snses I found myself on hoard a submarine bound for Germany. I was kept in a German prison hospital for five months, and you can imagine what I must have suffered when I tell you that I fell off in

weicht from two hundred and twcmy-fivn to a hundred and thirtyone pounds. When I was repatriated and finally got my discharge in February, lüil, I was little better than a livinj skeleton. I had no appetite and my digestive system was so upset that what little I did eat always gave me severe pains in the pit of my stomach. Before I joined the service I never knew what nerves were, but after what I went through my nerves were so shattered that I couldn't keep still a minute, and the slightest thing upset me. For six months I continued in this condition, unable to pick up strength, and so weak that any attempt at work tired me out "completely. I began to think that I should never be a well and strong man .again. "But the way Tanlac overcame my troubles and built me up was nothing short of marvelous. It gave n:e such an appetite that i wanted to eat all the while, and I sure did make up for lost time. I had no more bother with indigestion and from then on I picked up strength and put on weight until now I tip the beam at two hundred and four pounds and am as well and strong as I ever was before I Joined the service. My nerves are as steady as a die and I'm like my old self again. Tanlac is certainly a grand medicine and I think every suffering person ought to try it." Tanlac is sold in South Bend at The Central Drug Store, Public Drug Store, Landon's Pharmacy and Wettick's Cut Pate Drug Store; and in Mishawaka at the Red Cross Pharmacy.

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Hear the phonograph that baffled James Montgomery Flagg Come ia and test its marvelous realism for yourself rn audience of 1800 New Yorkers completely baffled! An Official Laboratory Model did it actually rivalled Anna Case, one of the world's most brilliant sopranos, in a startling test at Carnegie Hall, on March 10th, 1920. In our store, you can hear an instrument exactly like this famous Official Laboratory Model. You can test it for yourself and see what a truly perfect realism it attains. We have equipped ourselves to give Mr. Edison's unique Realism Test.

Jk'NEW

EDISON

of the Miraculous Proof given at Carnegie Hall, New York, on March 10th, 1920.

Mm Ca draped her beautiful self against

the phonograph. One cf her song recordings wu put on the instruments and they, M iss Caie and the phonograph, sang together. Then ihe stopped, and her other elf continued. Then together again. "I looked away and then back agah, and it puzzled me to determine which waj at the bit. The Pianist

41

it

Tht PhotMZrafih with a SouP

The instrument used on March 10th, 1920, in Carnegie Hall, New York, was an exact duplicate of the original Official Laboratory Model pn which Mr. Edison spent three million dollars in research work. We, too, have an e?iact duplicate of this three million dollar original. We guarantee that it is capable of sustaining precisely the same test made on March 10th, in Carnegie Hall, New York City. This guarantee will be given in writing, if you wish. Our Budget PUn putt this gzsrtntetd Ofleist LSrt0j MtS tsithin nur reuh. It's a thrift Trjj tf buying. Aib dbeut it ts'mn tta cinr t htr tht Relum Tttt.

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fey

Then the tallest pianiit in the ehiSzed

world played a charming thing, accompanied by himself via the phonograph, lifting hia finger away from the keys now and again. I could see him stop playing, -ut I couldn't hear him stop.

TJie Dark Scene

Then the big stunt of the recitai.

Misa Cue began singing with the phono-

grap.n. At a certain stanza the houae was suddenly darkened. The song went on. I was shooting my ears out like periscopea to detect the aecond when she would stop. I was sure I got it. Then she seemed to be back again. The flood of Kghts came on, but no Anna! Only the phonograph singing away. It was quite wcrxJerful, and the audience applauded and laughed. Two girls behind me said GoogTacioas., Read what the New York papers say: The twin -ship between MUs Case's singing, and the reproduction thereof, proved so cloee as to be orten indistinguishable." New York Giobe. "When the lights were lowered, it waa impossible to tell when it was Anna Case, and when it wu only her voice that waa singing.' New York Evening Sen. "Tht voice b the flu5y pink draperies and the voice in the mahogany box seemed one and the same," New York Evening Mai.

It

Big Reduction Sale of Women's Ready-to-wear.

Big Reduction Sale of Child ren s Ready-to-vrear.

Robertson

Bros.

C

June Sales Opened Today Bringing these good values to you. Merchandise were we to quote their regular wrorth you would be surprised. Our stocks are going to be greatly reduced thif month of June irrespective of their original costs. 1 m Watch our advertisements daily. The big full page ad of yesterday read over once more.

EVERY WOMAN DESIRES THOSE SOFT Silk Undergarments Dainty garments of Crepe de Chine and Washable Satin with exquisite lace hand embroidery and ribbon trimming; also in plain tailored desired by the woman not wishing any frills. The prices at this June Sale are at a saving you will appreciate. Bloomers at $3.25 and $5.95. Regular prices, $5.00 and $6.95. Envelope Chemise at $3.95, $4.50, $5.95 and $8.95, usually sold at $5.00, $5.50, $6.10, $7.00, and $10.00. Camisoles at $1.98. $2.95, $3.95 and $4.50; you save $1.00 on each of these.

Gowns at $7.50 and $8.95, exquisitely trimme and worth $8.50 and $10.00.

Bathing Suits will soon be needed The season for going in swimming is always welcomed. The cool, refreshing water, so invigorating get out your bathing suit maybe it is too old or faded and a bright new one will make you enjoy yourse If all the more. The New Suits are Here

In every new style and color-foremen, -women and children. For Women Suits of all wool, super-knit in great variety of new styles and combinations of colors at $8.95, $10.00, $12.95, $13.95. Also suits of cotton in black and colors from $2.98 up. Bathing caps to match any color; tight fitting and water proof at 25c, 39c, 50c, 75c, $1.00 and $1 .50. Men's Bathing Suits Smart looking and snug fitting of these garments appeal to the man fond of swimming. Knitted with view of freedom for each movement and made of pure worsteds in fancy blended colors of fast colored dyes. Prices from $2.75 to $8.50.

vi XL

June Brides, like their older sisters, will know that there is only one place to get pure "Made in South Bend" ice and that is from the

ARTIFICIAL

Main 2221 Main 395 Lincoln 6123 Lincoln 5395

Splendid

pportunity

is offered an experienced young lady stenographer. Secretarial position.

News-Times

TTTaunlncd

H. LEMONTREE

tVswtb - Bead's Zadiag OpUo(rUt ud JtAnaf wturtr.f Optician 7 can duplicate anr pair of ftaaa,- do natter wber tfcey -r rtavi s. KicniGAM st.

We Sell Them for Less

Federal Tires

Guaranteed 6,000 Miles Traffic Non-Skid. 30x3 Plain Only. $13.50 3 0x3V2 Traffic . . 18.70 32x3y2 Traffic . . 21.85 31x4 Traffic 29.20 32x4 Traffic .. 29.70 33x4 Traffic 32.00 34x4 Traffic 32.50 33x414 Traffic . . 41.45 34x412 Traffic 42.75

LUDWIG

0. E.

Auto Supply 409 S. Michigan St.