South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 33, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 2 February 1921 — Page 14

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ni:i)Nrsi.Y .mokmn;, rnmuucv?. THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

PTUA ot i tit nninnii!

HURT IN SHOOTING AFFRAY AT HALLOW

HER PROBLEMS

I'-j Ir.?"rr..if !' WT.LIN. I", on- th- v:f- of lioyal Iri-h o r ar.il !" vf ri ! in two .h'-'itir:

iW.iy. C ip:. K:-!rr. in Irn'ror cf r"yal Ir.:. . -r. n:il.a ary nr.'l "wif. wer fir l up"t an! wnn

I. Two persans, an Ir.;- ctor of th

'"ii iry wf r- killed j

rs ". r. - 'a it" wr.'ir. i-J r affras at Ma'o'v

at th- Mallow M r.s. ;:inu- !

and f t:x. K: hospital in a

a : . hi

r.iti--n.

fit't ! V

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th hh .'.e.l .r 1 th-

critical condition.

FOUR MEN KILLED IN TRAIN CRASH

recking Crew Quartet Pin

neu Under iHiriiinir Work

Cars in IS

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I!y Ir.tf r.iatltnl Nv s-rvlre: NIIU'AHK, O., fb. l. pour mpn v.-.- burnf'l to death and f'.vo others Pu.-tainfl Injuries, whn IVnnsylvanla f-r-iKht train No. 8,i-, running 25 miles an hour, crashed into the rear end of a wreck train which was standing on a .siding nrly this mornlnpr. Tho dead are: William Williams, T. A. Pack, C. O. Itoush and John Z immer, all cf Columbus. The force of the collision caused :h! wreck train which consisted of ;i tool car and bunk car to teUscope the engine of the fr i'ht train. When th crash came. th oil

wreck train exploded

cars were

tho oc-

lamps In the

aill almost Instantly the

ablaze at t-vcry puint. There were 10 men aboard wreck train when the collision

currcd. Six escaped with Injuries of a fiiT" or le3 perlous nature, but four of the crew were pinned under tho wrecked car. Cri s for help wero of no avail duo to the rapid spread of thft Hann. The bodies, burned to a crisp, wero recovered from the embers. J. M. Kennedy, head brakeman, himself severely cut on the leg1 and hack of the head, and with one ear almost torn from his head, drained from the wreck another member of the crew to safety. He then went back and attempted to rescue the fo:r men pinioned under the wreckage, but was unabb; to aid them. One of the doomed men tried to batter down a window. Just as no j-'ot his arm through It, the roof of the burning car caved in, and all was silence.

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Bu Anndk Bradshaw ng. S11SPF.P.TR OF

MICHIGAN MURDER, : FEARING VIOLENCE

l'y InternatloLal N?ws SrTl: CAY CITY, Mich . Feb. 1. Fearing mob violence, the police Mon!ay night spirited away four men arrested In connection with the killing of Martin I Debits, and 1. M. I'arrons. promii.ent citizens of thl3 city d'.irlng the robbery of the Day County Savings bank here Jan. IT. Whfn the arrest of the four uc-prets-became known a crowd surrounded the police station and threats of violence were heard. It I" not known where the men were 'aken.

ml cht have

I continued.

been exacted." Kane 'Out oi 4,000 ar-

rcctfii onlv a few hu:i..ea nave Deen

! actually- deported, ai.d while tho ! government can be rightly blamed j for needlessly breaking1 into the .peaceful lives of seeral thousand : innocent people we do not have to I bear the added shame of a larg jnumber of ill-considered hit-or-miss deportations. ! "That we have been fate rom i this disgrace Is due to the courage

of assistant secretary oi iauor puc who refused to be made a rubber stitmp by the department of Justice and the conscientiousness and In- ! dependence of Judge Anderson, who In Massachusetts, Insisted upon carefully going into the facts In the cases that were brought before him. ahd as a result found that constltu-

i tlonal rights had Deen vioiaiea an i that there was no evidence to Bus-

tain the contention oi me eu eminent."

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AFTER THE AMATEUR THEATRICAL SHOW MAY im positively bewildered to understand whether Jack's remark was an insult or a comp! ment He said that 1 acted the part of the fool so naturally I didn't seem lo be acting at all!

i FEELS FIE IN MORNINGS NOW i

Snow Says He Sleeps Fine at Night Since Taking Tanlac and Gets Up Ready for Big Day's Vork.

"A man doesn't mind for a medicine when it

WAR ROMANCE IS . KILLED IN PARIS

LACK TENTATIVE JURYMAN TO TRY MINE FIGHT CASE

. jjy Iiiternatlonal News Service: Court Sentences Girl, Encased i minc.o court house, wn-

ii.iiu.-i'i, 1? . ., rvit. 1.- .niy on

to American Army Offi

cer, For Thieverv.

15r International News Service: PA Uli?, Feb. 1. A war romance between pretty 19 -year-old Suzanne Pallly and an American army odlccr wa shattered today when n Paris Jijtlir .eiitencd Snzmnp to tlio girls' reforiratory for theft. Some time ago a wealthy American wom;n, whose name the police declineil to give, wan robbed of two capes in

a nig jMris hotel, velvet with a fur other Mas satin, valu war. Faid to

One was black collar, and the Their combined be $1.000. I'rn-

addltional tentative veniremen ron.alned to be selected when court convened for the, sixth day of the Matewan sun battle trial. When this 20:h man is in the jury box the cbalb Jiges will be ma-de the .state eliminating two and the defense K'X. Witness- for the state have been called for tomorrow. Probably the lirst to take the stand will be Tom Felts, head of the IJaldwin-Felts de tective agency whose brothers, Ia( and Albert, were killed in the gun light in Matewan min conflict Mav 11, last, together with live fellow letcctlvcs.

ployes of the hotd were questioned

but without avail.

It was only week afro that Fur.

anne. an assistant cashier, was ar- j rested on the day before she was to j ixiard a liner f'r New York. I :The girl readily confessed t!ie i thrft. She sail! she became encratred ! to an American lieutenant more ;

than a year ago. He sent Iut money to go to the Unit.1 St ites but sh bad. been reading American and

Unglih fashion rr.ag.uinert and con-j eluded her clothes were nit jroo.l t riougb. She hoarded her savings for several weeks, becam-.' sick and; was forced t. spend nil her mon" ' for a doctor. Then .h stole tho two. capes. Yhn the police searched hf r rooms they found she hud cut. the capes up into two skirts and a i jacket. ;

Kane Calls Red Raids

Yielding to Hysteria

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Er I n to rn.it Ion u Nrvvs Service: WASIIINGTOX, Feb. l. The socalled "rod raids" conducted by Atty. Gen. A. Mitchell Palmer and his agents were denounced today as "shameful yielding to hysteria" by Francis Fisher Kane, former U. S. district attorney at Philadelphia, before the senate Judiciary committee. There was nothing In the soralleJ 'red' agitation to show a movement for the overthrow cf the American government," Kane said. Kane resigned his olHcc after he had disagreed with Palmer as to bow the atrents of the department cf Justice should proceed against

co-called "reds" in Philadelphia, he explained. "I cannot Imagine how any decent man caji defend bombing but can't we handle these things fairly and make the innocent suffer with the guiltj-," declared Kane. "It is abhorrent to think we have to go out, a bipr, strong government and seize this poor people at attempt to dump them In foreign countries," Kane continued. Kane said he was "reluctant to testify as he did not wish to be put in the attitude of having any further controversy with Palmer." "The whole-tale raids of last January met 'with the results that

testifying , helpa him

like Tanlac has me," sam öiepnen . Snow, 005 22nd St., Terre Haute. , Ind.. weU known employe at the ; Vnnrlalii railroad shops.

"I was in a badfy run down condl- ; tlon for five years. I suffered aw- ; j

fully from indigestion, lost my ap- , petite and was afraid to eat anything for fear of the misery which ; follow, as the gas, bloating and pains ( In my chest and stomach were so terrible I could hardly stand it. L ; had that tired, worn-out feellr.g all the time, and pot so I dreaded for night to come, for I was so nervous ; nnd miserable I could not sleep. I

ried most everything I heard tell of,

but kept getting worse. t "I am sure glad I tried Tanalac. J for there's s-imcthing about th -

rned'.clne that made me ieei ntiiei from the very first, and now 1 would not "be without It for anything "Why. I ha - neer had a sic moment s'nee 1 finished the fnt bottle, I feel as well as I did when . young man. My appetite just can't be satisfied, my digestion is prfeot. and I have gained several pound? in weight. I sleep found every n:rht and ge. up refreshed and ready for a hard day's work. A medicine that will chancre a fellow's feelings like that certainly deserves to be praised." Tanlac is sold in South Bend at the Central Prup Store. Public Pn:? Store, Iandon's Pharmacy and Wettick's Cut Pate Drug Store and in Mishawaka at the Red Cros.1 Phar

macy,

Adv.

.lie . l.'o . 1V . lue

F,raf Ininl Krndcrvtl Ijirtl I'-arly June IVas Sujcar C. ix:; widnkshay at ik r.iu.i.K r.uos. 3 PJ S. Mit libra ii St.

3720-: Advt. i

AN OLD RECIPE TO DARKEN HAIR

.iTO FINISH RECOUNT

YEBHESDAY; FORD'S

MET GABI IS 3,125 ii

l'y Intern.itlnpal News Serrice: WASHINOTOX. Feb. 1. Tho recount in the contested Ford-Xew-berry S'?n;torlal election before the senate elections su'-cnnnnittee will be completed at 1 o'clock tomorrow the committee today announced. At noon today Ford's net gain was 3,12 r with S2 election prrcincts to be counted, including 4,") in Detroit and :7 in Wayne county outside of Detroit. 1

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Recipe to Make a Gray Hair Remedy

i i

Sap;e

Tea and Sulphur Turns

Cray, Faded Hair Dark and Glossy.

Alme st Tea and

pounded. 1 rives color and lustre

knows that Sage properly oni-

rvet yor.t Sulphur,

"ack the natural to the hair when

faded, streaked or gray. Years ao th-? only way to get this mixture was to make it at home, which is mu.sy and troublesome. Nov.-adays we simply ask at any dn:g store for "Wyeth's Rige and Sulphur Compound." Yea: will get a large bottle cf this old-time recipe

Improved by the addition of other

Ingredients, at rv litt 1

body uses thb prepa

cause no or.e can possibly tell that you darkened yr.i:r hair, as it do-n It. h-t naturally and evenly. You dampen a spc-nge or soft brush with It and draw this through your hair, taking one .mall strand at a time; by morning the gray !nlr disappears, and after another application or two, your hair b -om s b autii'ully dark, thick and glo-sy and you look years younger. Adv.

A. T,. Paulson. M. P.. who has

practiced medicine in New York city

for many years, pave out the follow

Miu recipe it'-r a home-made gray I hair remedy: "riray, streaked or !

faded hair can be quickly turned j H ' lack, brown er lieht 1 rown. which- !H ver shade you desire, by the follow- N

i:;g remedy that jou can make at b.c-me: "Merely gt a bc.- of Orr pow

der at any drug store. It costs:-' ery liltK- and no extras to buy. Dis- 1 V solvo It in 2 oz. of distilled or rain j H

w.ucr an'i cotiio k inrougn in nair. Full directions for uo and a gold bond :uirancee come in ea-"h l ox. "It is Kife. tlocs not rub off. !s not sticky or greasy, and leaves the hair fluffy. It will make a gray-haired person look Z0 years younger."

aillSIE llllf 6 ' $1 LSI

ii oil

Adv.

IlF.ATiTII OP AYOMIIX. How mar.y perfectly well women do you know? Isn't it true that In order to keep up with the march of

ttle cost. Kvery-j progress the endurance of woman ration now, be- often strained to its utmost, a

the tax upon her system Is in manv

cases greater than she can stand. Headaches develop, und nervous irritability, rackache. dragging down sen.s-itions. and other pair, ful allrunts peculiar to women. The reliable remedy when a woman gels Ir.to such a condition is I.ydia F. Plnkham's Ve table Compound, as for nearly half a century it has proved the natural restorative for these troubles. Adv.

i v :

For the first time in over three years GENUINE IGN1TO lump coal is again available. We have a sufficient amount bought to meet all reasonable requirements and will mi orders as promptly as possible. IGNITO coal needs no introduction to South Bend people as they know its clean preparation (no slate, no slack) and the saving in money effected by using this justly famous coal. Former IGNITO users will welcome the return of dependable coal and order their next ton here. If you have never used IGNITO try a ton for comparison. Best Illinois, $9.50. Genuine Pocahontas, $13.00, and all sizes of Anthracite for $16.50.

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rnnerAnarT3

Successor to Loughmans 801 S. Main St. Phone Lincoln 5644

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Surprise

argain Event For Thursday

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Dresses of Velour. New Spring Serges and Taffetas in all the newe s t styles, straight lines, ruffle effects, embroidered braided models at sensational reductions.

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Group 1

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Thev a r e arranged i n three groups. We arc certain these attractive new arrivals will meet vour most san

guine expecta

tions as to value.

Group 2

Group 3

Mew Spring Hats are Here In a large assortment, combined with satin, faille silk, taffeta, georgette crepe and Gros de Londre. A very good choice of shapes and styles to pick from. Thursday

CD Q

Values up to $7.98.

A New Creation

v in Oxfords

and Pumps

In brown and black suedes, satin, calf leather. Military and Louis heels in the very newest styles.

Values up to $9.00.

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Wed. Evening Feb. 2nd

The net proceeds of this dance, which is sponsored by Prof. Charles V. Gates, will be turned over to The Visiting Nurse Association.

Tickets on Sale at Geo. Wyman & Co. Robertson Bros. Ellsworth's Store Hullie & Mike Oliver Cigar Stand

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