South Bend News-Times, Volume 37, Number 264, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 20 September 1920 — Page 2

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n..pi iiMl.M.vw, m .i'TVMlW.n THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

ARREST BOY FOR ! STEALING COUPE Elkh'n-t L.ul. I ! Year- Oh,, lla a Smooth Lim. Suv Policemen, i

With h. hii: j r.i t k I . i.r an a loyis". ri;i ( ( rn. Ins outhf u i fice An!". Mr-rr:-'. 11 y-;ir ,!-i, U'h-r?. Ir..!.. v ..! h.4 . onv. r.--i ;i.c Incil p'i'.i'f .SjTiay rr. or r i in of 1..J in r. ( t' r i - n or n 'l'i'i with a v. ii toiii'. !..:- :hf. h.-i it :.: !. n fr' ,e arrival Klkl .nt j-o!..- o;fi'ilä. Ar!. ! , v.!'!. '. i ,')!! '!... 'Ti. lükhirt. v. .-j y t r.iv'ht t .!i-! i ail'j'iart r.- by rt. Ku'.f it- .ir:-l M';torcyc!- tfi-fr Wright. Thf Inno ouih u ci :n f-.'V-"" -.. a Por-1 ffiu;'- ;i.-l !hr :i-i!'-n-i. roii-l i hr jrjon of th' ..!: :.ffic rs wl;-. ainMnl thrn. :r.o-. t i 1 l;!tl- t. mv .tn-l . --ir.K t- "pi ortunitj ArU :i aj p''t!"-! hi'i.-rif i(k-srtiar. f- r th- p trf . Ar-l I- n clo.-ly -i i :-tl-r.' -J .-li," 'oflz'.r-.ki ar.-l h:.- r -j 1 i i ulny.H the f-an.1. Mirk io Story. rjitf- th j'j':i'.-ii -f ?h -. - an.. Ar!-ri flut:.' t- l.i.a o i'i.Ti na I ory tli-" t);- ar was th- jii-rl cf his father. I! is uif trv attitude rid inr.ri''''nt :i;i'f .irinx ' li 1 .tbo'it v on him hu frft!ori. wh-n the Kl'rft art p"h- arriV" 1 to tak- a ori-i-n-r Kick I'lknurt. Th- u.iiiu' nar r.rtS'-nc- at pol l-:i d-pia rt -i is was .o--n x I 1 . 1 1 :i -i ! t'i- lo- al .isl: rpeint at; 1 vhn th- a;r.i::i f tho K!khart - !irc a ki rln why h' ytolt- th Foul coüpf f r -1 ; Jh': OitiMiinfrs Ic' '".. h. i-pMol t!iat h" vurit?'l to 'iit South J'nl, and then h i! a Marty lauich thinki'iiT of how hj nearly talk-! l.ini !f cm of Jal. Seiru: that lu- ,-jM t o I'-n-f r t..in hi frf-U'iin Anion nijilo'. -d i.i-: outIifuI in convtnjTv; tho V1 i rt police tMi'ichls hut K nyon a.is in r. way rPsponiM tor thr thft r-r thr car. As th ooli-f lo.t-ll h" two ytuih into an autonnlil'' 1 nuii'l for i:ik'.h.'.rt. Ar-ltMi turix-d h's M '.(.- to.-;..rc!? tlto rap tain :ir.l .i'.o. "(Iff, Cap. I'm kIuI you ioi:iHftr me - I an kt homo tMilt non't hav to stay i:i South

I Pla' Tlu News-Times School Department School Work . ditcci by Elisabeth Steele. Study I Home The Boys' and Girls' Daily Messenger Sports

AKT LEADS COLCIL. SQUAD TAKES LU E E.DS HAPPY SEASOy

OLD MAN PUZZLE

iFA'D INDUSTRIAL KEY ! TO RUBBER MAKING ! THROUGH MERE CHANCE

ahead. Durinp that time Goodyear took out fixty patents He was protected in Anu-rica, hit in Ilnffland and Krante others tock and worked his ideas. He nevf-r n--ado a fortune and he died in lv.",o. but evt-n for hi death. SO. 000 people were ena-d in the rubber bufir.es. S'ir.co thon citien have ariert around the faotorits that ho made possible.

G-'i-iC .ff-ffrP-.M b-at Alt to Hat Art didn't .-a r . even thouprh

h- had .-i-nt two hours the en-j ir.r 1-cfor.- v. (i kir:' out a mi e loRi-J cal -p-.oti that would convince the! 'vj.-'b- h:h K.hool of the need for a, tu'I'T.t ouncll. i

.leffri-. w.s a I'-.nltr arid always j

HARD LUCK STORY LETS MAN GO FREE

Chicago Boollcpj:er Gel ?.)00 Fine -Others (et Sixty Davs on Farm.

rikhart. Ind.. S pt. IP. Th r.roh;i lulitx th.it his wife would ha v

ti undercro a fourth operation mi-j

Pflkd P.-rr Forton of ietroit to beune a whiskey runner Iftwocn that i :ty and 'hieatr-'. Mi the pie;tliat his oe jiurjiov, wa t- raio l ands fu- thr puvi 1 1' u lu was let here f:?Ht!:.d.' w'.th fi?iec ami o-!v .ailing m i lie city court. A s : .. ! y d T-.ttT.-f at t!:c pnai f.nu v.i. ?.ur penned Vn'i of th hralth of hi-: vif. who a5 one of tlie fi members of the f-arty captured by the r.lkhart polfe. They Pad I .". nuari of whiskey enroute

tu iKtrolt. Harold IriniPf. Ar- j tliar IV.ss and Ifarr Woodward'

with other pn.ncr.-, were fined JIT," ia"h and ent to th ptvil farm for FlxtV dTV.-. Tl.es- v i, ! th-y wr re fac-

tor- workmen or: a n ation anl

took the ohan-o to mil: e some f.i?v ! ii.niif y. The captured u hisl'.ry as j vhrv'to t!ie FUkhart hospital. GOSHENl)ÖCTOR ASKS DIVORCE

woul-1 he, because he kr."V what to do at uni-.il times. It wa.- his i-m' ji.ahry. a rpuality of real leadership. When everyone had it-covered from his surpri.se, a bit: murmur start d. Ttun Talmad'e arose. ,-Jcf-tiu-" i- r;tfht," h- said. I am Lick f him." It wa.-i enough. Th- ir. embers of th- Klan betfan t fall in Line. Art hai won hin cause without ever pi'es ntini,' ir. in a fr-v.- minutes hlOuti'l himself elected president f th new i akdale Hiyh School Counj 1 . and there were cries of "Speech! Speech'." Art made a short speech. It was run.irkable how the spirit cf the u hol- s- hool was changed. Tub i'erkinM aroi-f when he had finished. ".M-M-Mr. p-P-I'resident' h- m-s-.- pluttej ed, "I iii-m-niove that we ,tsk Coach Murray to 1-1-let (leore and Art back on the t-t-team." There was wild applause and the motion pTis-sed with a volley of cheers. ( f course Coach Murray did it. and into the next ff;in:c the team ttent with a ban'. Jeffries had lost none of his brilliancy, and Talniadire none- of his speed. Both played with a new kind of determination and pep. The team couldn't be stopped, of eourse it was a victory. Tile two defeats were forgotten, an-l the season hurried on to a victorious t losie. In the mantime Art Talmarifjc and his student council were busy. N'eu things were on foot in that hih school, one of which was a bif party to lie held on the nifjht of the last k-anie, the Saturday before Thanksci ir.p. a it a party ? Well. I ffuess yes. .vnd. where-; In the headquarters of the departed Klimaeks Klan in a room that the iut tubers of the Klau had dedicated as. the club room to be managed under the superof tlie ( ouncil. Tim room was crowded with boys and irirls. and with happiness, too. HOY UNEARTHS $1800: GIRLS FIND $100.000

'The ox race: l).p, rid. s-onp, love, cool" ! Sure, it makes sense. Just rearrange. th- p-tter-s an-l out will come fojr famou3 men. (Answer to yesterday's: Concealed mottoes. "Here we rest" (Ala.), "Hope" ( R. I.), "Liberty ar.d Independence" (Del. . "Forward" Wis. . "Agriculture. Commerce" Tcnn., "The Union" (Ore.)

Q. In what state was Noah born? A. In New Jersey. Wasn't he a New-Ark man?

BOYHOOD STORIES or famous mi:x

OF FAMOUS MITX ' Dwlglit L. MomI.v Th first day of school came and the new teacher opened the s-chool with prayer She asked that she mlsht have the titrrnr?th to rule the school ,y love. This was something new and the boys all 'thought what a Kood time they could hae. All went well for several weeks, then one boy broke the rules and was kept after school. Instead of whipping him, the teacher sat down beside him and told him that sbo had prayed to be able to rule that school by love and that if he loved her, he should try to be a pood boy. This so impressed the boy that he too began to pray and became a Christian. When he grew up. Dwisrht I Moody became one of the world's greatest evangelists.

GIRL SELLS PICTURES PAINTED BY HERSELF

Raymond Hortcnson of Highland Park, a suburb of Chicago, found a pot of dd. but two little prirls of owatonna, Minn., found j 100,000 when they were playing. Ftav mond was helping his father dltr a foundation for a barn. The girls were making mud pies. Kaymond'H old uncle, now in a fanitarium a Hastings. Neb., would never trust banks. It is supposed that he buried the money that Raymond'." spade struck. Anyway Raymond thinks he will buv an automobile. Puried in the river bank of Owatorin.i were several pieces of paper. tr.o pot into a mud pie by mistake. The little girls, looking for a "purchaser," took the mud pie to a "shopkeeper." Hure enough, it was a 5 1.00m bond, and it led to the disovery of $100.000 m all. part of the loot from the Great Northern State Bank of St. Paul, robbed recently.

Walk into the lobby of the biggest bank in Frankfort, Ky., and you will see there on the walls a beautiful painting, tho scene of which is a wooded park adjoining one of Frankfort's schools. This painting was done by Mildred Harriman, a thirteen-year-old girl, who this year Is entering the Frankfort High school. Kver since she was three years old. Mildred has been practising all sorts of painting. She is unusually good' at painting landscapes. Instead of putting her paintings away in a drawer, she like a mod orn business woman, offers them for sile to offices, banks, and stores of her own city. They are readily taken up.

"A Goodyear & ton., Hardware." Thif sign hung above a dingy littl store ir. Philadelphia in One day Charles Goodyear, a younger member of the linn, went to New York and . when there, took a notin to buy an India rubber life preserver made by the Roxbury Co. At that time fortunes had been lost in following the lure of the tap of the Inlia rubber tree, one inventor and manufacturer after another had tried to succeed in the business, but none had done it. For, try as hard as they might, no inventors had been able to keep the rubber from being affected by the seasons. Goodyear was fascinated with the desire to make rubber really useful. H-o began to experiment with his life preserver. Charles Goodyear had made up his mind to solve a problem in chemistry that the ablest chemists had failed on. He knew no chemistry, he had very little education, and on top of it all, failure of some banks forced his ürm into bankruptcy. He was imprisoned for debt. For five years he suffered and struggled, in and out of jail. Tho only result was to make him ir-ore determined to win. His friends called him "crazy." He thought, spelt dreamed and wore rubber. He was a walking advertisement. He wore a rubber cap, coat and rubber shoes of his own making. Then, one day accident came to his rescue. He was mixing sulphur with rubber gum. Some of it happened to fall on a red-hot stove. To his surprise and delight, its character was changed by the heat. It would not melt. He tried and tested it In every wa he couU think of, but with the same result. He ww a victor! The secret was his! Yet success did not come quickly, b'lx years m.ore of hardships were

NOW FREE

OLD LADY RIDDLE

over, has composed little tur.es to ht theni. Phyllis cannot read or write, and all her poems are dictated to older members of the family. She keeps the tunes in her own lxad until M-me n.usii al friend writes down the notes. "I'.ut Phyllis lias heen precocious, in all vay?.'' said Mrs. Joyce, "she '.tike. I plain English at twelve months, and could count to twenty before he was a year old." Here i one of the poems which Mrs. Joyce says Phyllis composed by herself:

Mm

WS

Why are you most likely to n,ijJ t tie U: 50 train?

Answer to e sir rday's : Ir j--asust to read in the Autumn when Nature turns the l- a es. LITTLE PHILlJs IS DAUGHTER OF MUSE

'True Story of a Kral Girl Little Phyllis Joyce of Webster j Avenue. New Rochelle. N. Y.. claim; to be the youngest poetess in the j world. ; Phvliis. who according to her mother. is only two months past her 1 third birthday, has alreadv made!

up several little poems and ir.re-

tlinfs Joke for Ilos. "Jimmy i " keen, "boasted A nu Kate, "ht- has an answer ready t"--r you every time." "H-m-m" replied Mr. Crab'a. h.r

( aller, "you know the old . saii

'Smart children grow up stupid and dull, while 'dunces becon.e clever men.' "What a bright boy you must have been,' sir," spoke up Jimmy

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Tinka Tink T.r.ka tink. Tink tink. Ily the light of a star. On the cool river brink, I tink mv guitar.

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FROi PA N

BOY MARKSMAN HITS BULLS EYE EACH TIME

Says Wife i Too Intimate With M;in From Corey Lake. M irh. r,-i?l!F:', fnd.. Sfpt. If. Tn tho circuit court here Saturday 1 r. Si'nrier IUmamN. prominent ;- shen ph-(dan. file 1 -uit "or di.rce from Hattie Kdmands t- whom he was married in l'.a. S'-nsatmn i' charges are embodied in the eomp:a tr.'. Ir. Ldmand alleges that hi w.fc ::ud his 15 year old daughter. Florence, have gor.e to an unknown .,ti n with orie No I Po- of Corey l ake. Ml'"h . and with w h m Mr. Fdmands-i i- charged with having leoom so intimate that she abandoned her borne. the LMm.ind's summer estate at Cory lake. There she had been rnca-ed m raiding --t 1 '.oo, id stock having import e 1 a oie-d vjf cattle from Kur--pe. The husband a'.!ei:cs that she h t v. re, ke-1 the husir.ev a f fair of th-j family. n-lnrin-h w.i twice marr.d. The first union was broke;- 1-v iivorce a short time before he marr e." the present deferdent. who a the :1m wa a Gosh. er. . oHege student.

Jean's Joke for Girls. T.:bb had brought Join six little gray and white kittens to play with, but much to Jean's sorrow, all but one of the kittens had been drowned. A few weeks later, little twin brothers arrived at Jean's house. As arrangements- were being made for their baptism. Jean inquire " anxiously. "h Mamma, which one are we going to keep?"

Richard T,ee Keck, of Rridgeport, Ohio, the city once famous for having the saloon with the longest bar in the world, claims to be the international champion boy rifle shot. He bases his claim on the fact that last year he won the Junior National Rifle Shoot. Richard started to Fhoot when he was only five years old. His father encouraged him and helped him. In the fall they would go hunting together; at other seasons they practiced shooting at targets. Richard hopes to be grown up before another war comes along. He thinks that he and Sergeant Alvin York will be in the same class.

No Soap Better For Your Skin Than Cuticura Sgxrvp!') (Söst. 0Btrflt Tilcrwa) ttf CiUKT lv'riM. ttrf. X. If -Jim, iUti

Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Frees Another Woman From Suffering. B.uonrA X. J. -"Before ! vrz married"! suffered a great deal with

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fore the first one came T tras weak an-l r.crvou, could not eat and wa-j dizzr. After I took the Vegetable Compound I could work and eat. Now I am ftronp and recommend your medicine to mv friends." Mrs. Anna Si-F.va, 25 L 17th St., Bayonne, N J. Women who recover the-ir health, naturally tell others what helped them. Some write and allow their names and photographs to be published with testimonials. Many more tell their friends. If you need a medicine for women's ailments, try that well-known and successful remedy. Lydia K. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Write Lydia L Pinkham Medicine Co. (conlidential) for anythinp you need to know about these troubles.

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Open 8:30 A. M. Close 5:30 P. M. Sat. 9:30 P. M.

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Noah Webster defined "Elegance" as "beauty resulting from grace and refinement" In so doing he likewise defined our 1920 Fall Suits.

" Mil - V " ''"'A'' i 'I M wr: l-itr-Ti 7 r t :

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Art: Materials. llctur Framlas. THE I. W. LOWER Di:COILTlXG COMl.V"T, Soutli rk-nd, IndlAna. Pnr

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ECONOMY RECIPE HI Fortan Spaghetti Uilanmitm Fortune Spaghetti. Macaronior Er;; Noodles can be used ia tbis reap. INGREDIENTS: 'i lb. Fortune Spaghetti; J- cup cocked carrots; h cup cooked turnjps; 1 cup cocked peas: xi cup sliced onion ; 4 tablespoons butter or substituted tablespoons flo'jr. 1 teaspoon salt; cups mdk. Coolc spaheni ta Ixn'.ms; salted water until teoüer. Drain. Mix with the carrots, lumc and jra. Me'.t burter. add enion;. cover and cook Sranutes or until soft but rot brown. Add Sour and stir until flour is j'.ightly brown. Add mule slowly and cook, until thickened. Pr-ur ever pacetti ar.d mix lightly. Pile m 3 hot dh ar.d ipruikle with chopped parsley. FOOD VALUE: Aboredvsh ccntairj erwagh for six servings. Cot, Vk. Food value. 1762 calones. 46c will buv 11 02. beef cf 4ti caior.rs; or 15 cr. pork cf fl?3 calones; or IS ox. mutton of 770 clones.

FORTUNE SPAGHETTI Only the finest durum wheat,Semolina,isused in making Fortune Spaghetti. It gives it a delicious and distinctive flavor like that of nut meats. The more you eat Fortune Spaghetti the stronger will grow the impression of its exceptional flavor. Use Fortune Spaghetti according to the recipe herewith. Consider its food value as compared with meat Count its saving over even the cheaper cuts of beef, veal, pork and mutton. Note with what enthusiasm the family receives iL You will then require no further urging to serve Fortune Spaghetti often. Your dealer carries Fortune Spaghetti, Macaroni and Egg Noodles. FORTUNE PRODUCTS COMPANY, CHICAGO

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Our Mishakaka Station No. 10, located at Lincoln Way and Mill Street is Now Open Elkhart, Bristol and Plymouth Stations will be Open for Business Within the Next Two Weeks

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Featuring Energy Gas and Puritan Motor Oils

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South Bend, Ind.

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