South Bend News-Times, Volume 37, Number 196, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 14 July 1920 — Page 9

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

wi:pespay 3iORxr'n. jely m. iozo.

50YIET WOULD

START BRITISH ON REVOLUTION

Hard in 's Sisters

,Tinston Churchill Saws Lmine

Would Have Hir System

Spread.

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voiutior.ary vmlrncr wr.ich has

T!-iu Ruyyia such a J !!',' r'.ice to 1:'. In" Wir.ftor. Churchii:. minist c,f war. d-xlared in an :rt:c'? Z i. i'L5MO(J l:i the 1-Jv nir. g N'-ws, .jr.y'.vf rin; a report by a Hrin.-!: ! ib".' Iflejration which ir.tM Husia ar.d - h ttr directed to th- Erl'.ish ,-

by Eenine. ho'ild the tfovi't Rvftri.i bo estab-

lpn- 1 in England the var in:ui.-er 1 eliev x thnt not nr.ly woal''; freedom

thr nrfj n 'I fre.-doin of

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MUTSU COMPARABLE! Prayer and TO LATEST WARSHIPj Gospel Fail, Try BUILT BY AMERICA! Vamish, it sticks

Japanese Battleship Resembles Largest Water Fighting: Machine in World.

YOKOSUKA. Jarar.. July 13. Iho Japanese battleship Mutyu, recently launched horo is closely compirablo with the nr-wrst Amtricaii

battle?hin. the Maryland, launchrd

i SARVIN CREEK, Ky.. July 11. j There was a perceptible decrease in j the attendance at tho American M. I E. church here, and Pardon Ehediah

Frefd'.ar.der Tollovr and his seven draeons wf-re puzzled. Maybe it was. yes maybe, that the interior decoration f the church were so unattractive; at any rate it was feven years since the auditorium

ilu- Enqlih labor

KVrpr.'ky, the Meo.-h ".

revob'.Mor.arki) in li::-

? thmeies

! rovfn (1 in the antral ch ios ' vrr.tr Mr. rhun hill. j "lluFsla was on the thn shold of : If tor:.." 'after all )u r truRie:, lie w. s 'vithin r".ich f th i,oal. j

Th- flf rmans nt in Iynine, as oj. rm .ij is nt .- ab i in -i cylinder ;ir.d h- robb' d her of the victory hhf had all but won rind which h Tiilrchl have shared with us. "A million Gmvir.s, released by his .act of tracher. wer Ut loose n the French and Uritish fronts

nnd nearly That number of P.rit'.rh j sind French t-oblicrs are de;d fr mutilated in consequent-. ln-tad of' "victory h- cave Ru-;a fhmo and; immeasurable disaster. I

"l.enine detrol the rtU'-t-iaii republic. He di.-soived the Russian parliament. He- b.ad the br.lk of its Taer.ibr.s hu':terl down and killed. Jle has robbed his country of i -try, re.ue and freedom-, and what bap he clen them in exchange Wr.ioKtd Willi J'amiiH "I1i:sia, the srreat food produc-

c-nter of th world, wracked

Aith famine; the towns depopulated to half their numbfn; the workmen .-eattered, destroyed and th.-

rest rowed or de-mom lized him-l

dredrt of thousands of pMpl driven to lh( woods and mountains to form.. lrf on Guards' like Kobin Hood in the middle s; the railways on which the whole economic e!ivili.:i1lon of thesi creat regions fiepend, inkinC hopelessly into absolute ha'nation. '"Only the peasant with h:.- rifle m his village guards the hard -won produce of his individual toil. r--futn to sHl the fruits of his labor for worthlehs paper mnc-y and keeps alive the old Russian love of hearth and home. "The egoism of the peasant.' says Leninc, "must now be brorvrn. 'This, then, is the man whom the crazy portion of the soiali-t pariy has .een worshipping. He h;:s now rxealed his measure and his nitnt ility to ih I'.ritish jMiblie and be appeals to them to create in Rrltain that enslaved, infec t d, starving and venomous liedlam to which be has reduced the noble and misht Russian ptate and nation."

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t Ncwpoit News, in March. Both ; had been painted and the scrawny

3

Mrs. 1 1. l. Vetow (left) and Miss Abigail Hardinp. sisters of the Republican nominee, who are untiring in their efforts to bring about his election.

Bar Will of Widow Who Ate With Cats

CRIME OA' DECREASE: SHERIFF LEAVES POST

All 1

MO!

ATLANTA, (la.. July l.t. Heraus

of a lack of business to keep thj of-

alive. Robert McLennan has ten-

red his resignation as sheriff cd

ontmoreney county.

The ornce has been eondticted on a fee basis, in addition to allowance

for the sherirr or 5.iwi a year as janitor of the courthouse. With the advent of prohibition, it is said, business in the sheritf line has fallen olT sharply, so much so tn.it- the orrieer uas otdiqed to seek other employment. Thf Rherirf f Kalskaska count;; recently resigned for similar reason.-.

W ITH FORTY ULLOX LOOK ABOUT FOR HOME

t WINNIPEG. July in. Trying to f:nd a place in which to establish a home worthy of $ 40,000 i:oo the bothersome task of Mr. and Mrs. John Cvmpbcil of Aberdev.. Sootland. They made tlie nm:iry out of plantations they acquired several years ago in Java; they sobl ut some time Ajco to the go rnment of Jaa for a sum close to $",000.00. After touring Northern Canada they went on to California.

Thursday Only

72 Pairs p Women's : ;

Lace Ox- - Leather f

: V :V

Louis heels ti-"

$6.50

values, all

sizes

S2.98

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SEVEN THOUSAND .MIN'FJIS DISCUSS AMERICANIZATION. Americanization was enthusiastically discussed at the convention of the Ukrainian National Mutual Aid society, held last week in New Kensington. Pa. The sessions were attended by 70 delegates representing about 7,000 miners of Pennsylvania.

warships, however, are considerably

smaller and less speedy than the great British battleship cruiser Hood launched on the Clyde in Auarut. The Hood, on the other hand, is crir.ed with l"-inch guns in her main battery, while the Mutsu and the Maryland will have an equal number cf 16-inch rifles. The Hood, continues to be the larest warship afloat, a distinction she will hold until the Massachusetts clxss of dreadnought comes Into United States navy service in Make Comparison, A comparison of tonna.ge. length, speed and runs of the three reat shins -hows: Mutsu tonnage. 23.S00: length 61 ft.; designed speed 233 knots; main hatten S. 12-inch. Hood tonnage 41.200; length S50 ft.; designed speed .11 knot; main battery- S.löinch. Maryland tonnage, .12,530: length C2 4 ft.; designed speed 21 knot; main battery 8.16-inch.

pews weren t so good to tne eye as they might be. Seven deacons and a pars-on sot their heads together and as a result an appropriation for painting the rostrum and the ceiling and walls was made from the church building fund. 1 he pews were varnished, too. Tho Sabbath found the usual small congregation, but those who came sf u-k. It was the varnish. They couldn't lea. The church closed temporarily and the varpish was permitted to dry. Then the pastor and his deacons learned thr.t it was the hot weather aflecting attendance.

AGED COUPLE KILLED BY EX RAG ED HEIFER

COUNCIL BLUFFS, la.. July 13. Trying to take a. young (a If from its mother resulted in the death of Mr. and Mrs. Andrew Liddell, wealthy pioneer farmers of Treynor. Iowa, near here. The aced coup'?, both of whom were more than S1) years old. were so badly gored by the enraeed cow that they died before a physician could be summoned.

Rock of Ages Calms Coics for Milking Period

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Cows are b. i:-.g r.-.:lk'l to the

j ir.g strains of the cM hyr-.n. ! of Ages'" by John l i-hty. v. j dairyman of F.ast Huniingto- ! purchased two highly bred Hcl

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bees to a hive graph on top of jazz music. Leighty s'arto

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LITIIEKANS AVITJi I'UDLISII

ENGLISH.

me Lvangeiicai Lutheran synod f(-,v ,vtV5 aco He to-i

elecided during its annual convention ! ,vo r, The w oi -t u'k rs in

m Detroit. Mich., t b.ae Its publica-; try on hrl. How to tion translated into the English Un-them kept him awake nuhts puage as there is an increasing num- j MU- ;in (, A'trim v. n:an

ber of theological students who do not understand German. The Lutheran church in the United

States has today a membership of j a.." 00,000, with ',731 pastors and 1..-' t33S congregations. The value of the! church property is estimated at $144.716,051. In 163S the Lutheran j church in America comprised one ' congregation, one pastor and 50 ' members. In 173$ there were nine pastors, 4Ü communities and 5. 000 members. By 1S4S these numbers had increased to 538 pastors. 1.307 communities and 135,r:3 members. The Lutheran church maintains today 62 orphanages, 4S homes for the aged, seven institutions for epilep- ! tics and imbeciles, nine training i schools for nurses and 47 hopitals. j

iv n: -h fo rh.a:? AZ'K withdrew ! orca rired another T ' - il-iv-ar.'S.c'-i'

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in:z4tion '' tl. r-.erger. ball." Tchlra r.e 1 rly 1 0' ar.dard er f-

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nr.d orphan, ill ' r ? i :i i e x

Swiss Profiteer Fined More Than Ttvo Millions

GENEVA. Switzerland. July 13. A Swiss multi-millionaire company promoter and financier, M. Jules Bloch, who made enormous prolis

during the war and declared only ad

portion for taxation, was nned by tne federal commission at Berne the record sum of 1(1,000,000 francs, which according to the present rate of exchange amounts to more than $2.600,000. The case has been pending since the armistice.

George

Hist

& Co.

Certified Public Accountants Members American Institute of Accountants. AUDITS INVESTIGATIONS SYSTEMS SPECIAL FEDERAL TAX SERVICE

Shoaff Building

Fort Wayne, Ind.

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Sue: crest

The Selection Now of

Fur Coats

for next season's wear and öfter convincing reasons for so doinp;. The very low prices prevailing now are sufficient reason for buying so far in advance, the advance styles are another, but the large stock to select from and free storage presents advantages that are not to be ignored.

Furs Exclusively

232 S. Michigan St.

NEW YOLK. July 13. The supreme court has handed down a deision upholding a decree refusing to admit to probate the will of Mrs. Jane K. Barney, octogenarian widow who was found dead on the kitchen lloor of her home in New Providence. N. J.. in 1913. The a:rcd woman loft an estate valued at more than $300.000 and willed practically all of it to a second e-ouin, Lewis V. Ennis. cashier of a New York bank, who had m-v-r known his benefactress until three or four years before her death. When Ennis offered the document

for probate the other relatives ed Mrs. Barney, several lirst and second j cousins, precipitated one of the most hard-fought contests ever known in the Surrogates courts. Counsellor O'Neill e-stablished that although the aged widow had in a i manner been able to look after her j affairs for bfteen years prior to he r j sudden death she had been an in- i mate of an insane asylum during j

the several years between 1S71 anil 1SSS. Witnesses testitied that while Mrs. Birney possessed an income of V-'OuO a month she was so niggardly th.it she would not buy sutlicimt food to keep up her health and strength. The evidence showed that she 1 i eel on about $3 a month for food. Among the incidents cited by witnesses to show the eccentricities of Mrs. Barney was her custom of eati r . -r her meals with several cats, sometimes as many as nine on the dining table.

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of the New

What is Sinn Fein? Hear DANIEL EG LEY. A. M.. Columbia I'nheTslty, Profe'sser of Economics Boston College, lit Rotary Room, Oliver Hotel m1iics(I i Ee-ning .Inly lilii. at H:0 o'tdex'k Eer liodv WHcnmc. i Ailmi-ion Erv. DEBATE INVITED

Th

e Bread

of

South Bend

T Line

is not what this heading might suggest. By "bread line" we do not refer to a row of hungry people but the line which good baking and a tried and proven recipe have drawn between ordinary bread and the high, light, generous sized loaf which comes from the Busse' Bakery. Ask your grocer for

B'iISSe,

BAKlO 00. A Better Bread for a Bigger City

We want you to get acauainted with our new CLEARANCE FLOOR a place vhere better footwear can be pur

chased for les

r

HO W!

K 1

operating expenses will be reduced to a minimum and how selling marks will develop sales volume to the maximum. There will be no high priced salesmen to eat up our profits and to urge you to buy. There will be no long waits on Mrs. Brown while she does her selecting. Prices and sizes will be marked in plain figures and you can try on shoes to your heart's content. There will be assistance for those who want it, but our upstairs store will be so arranged that you can serve yourself.

WHY?

This store has always followed a well established policy of keeping its stock of merchandise fresh and clean. This new department is going to help us adhere to this plan. With our upstairs store in action, nothing can get old or moss covered in our establishment. Backward merchandise will be rushed upward and prices rushed downward. "Keep moving" will be the pass word of our footwear stock and our Clearance Floor will be the way out. Every streak of badweather, every late shipment, every pair of sample shoes will spell a saving to you. Every day will be Sales Day here. Each week we will advertise a special bargain. Watch the papers regularly. Those women who have wanted better footwear, but felt they couldn't afford it, will now have opportunity to wear the BEST Beitner's reputation for fine footwear is second to none.

Ill S. Michigan Take

Street Third Floor Elevator

i

AvKen shoes come up here prices o;down

Starts Tomorrow

and includes a wide assortment of bigb grade Women's Footwear made especially for Beitner trade, that it is up to a high standard. Prices quoted below are, in many instances, below cost.

i i

wnicn

means

LOT NO. 1 High Shoes of White Reignskin, with low French heels

LOT NO. 2 Patent Leather Pumps, with handturned soles

LOT NO. 3 White Canvas Oxfords

(

LOT NO. 4 Genuine Cousin's footwear, in pat ent leather and black kid

LOT NO. 5 Brown Kid Pumps with high throat effect

LOT NO. 6 Foster strap Pumps, with Cuban heels, glazed kid leather

$5.95

$3.55

$4 35

LOT NO. 7 White Cloth Shoes, with heels

mi

ilitary

f s

LOT NO. 8 White Washable Kid Boots

$1.45

$2.45

LOT NO. 9 Black Suede Slippers, strap effects and plain

1

In addition to the shoes mentioned above, there are a large number of miscellaneous models designed for every occasion. By coming early, ycu will find your size. Cousins, Patent Leather and Glazed Kid one eyelet Ties; Red Cross Mat Kid, one eyelet Ties; Oxfords in Patent Leather and Satin Combinations; Black Kid Theo Ties, Elaine Pumps in golden brown with French h-els; Brown Calf Baby Louis heel Pumps; White Nu-Buck Pumps with hand turned soles; and French Grey Oxfords. You'll be impressed with the wide variety, the style and quality, the low selling marks.

BEITNER SALES ARE BONAFIDE The Home of Hanan-Cousins and Red Cross Shoes "Artistic Footwear of Quality"

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