South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 37, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 6 February 1921 — Page 15

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r FEATURE. SOCIETY, WOMAN'S, THEATRICAL, AUTOMOBILE aid EDITORIAL SECTION SECOND SECTION VOL. XXXVIII, NO. 37 a M:VKiri:r. for tut. iiomr, WITH AM, Tili: LOCAL NEWS SOUTH BEND. INDIANA, SUNDAY, FEBRUARY 6, 1921 DAY AND Nir.HT l't'LL r.HASr.H WIKE TKLLÜKAnilC .SKKVH'i: PRICE TEN CENTS When The Weather Man Allowed The Rain To Fall On Some Children At Pottawattomie Park, He Started Something

News. Times

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"Mr,:.- th.r.c nr- wrought ry rain than this .vorl I

might th .': ge he twisted to :, th- th'-ug'nt of this shry. f.-r a t utous sky a few drops i f !.i n f.-Ihr g Ii the surprise -I fa' -s of a Kroup of f - r . k rs a i ,t hurrie'l i-' amp- ring for vhdt' I '.cks av ..v, all if to :;, ak tlo in'e-r.tivc fer a rrciiji f.f na n to f riiiuli jiians for an , mliiyi nir sh-lt r v. hi' h v. .ubl prt)t ' t Pe-tta-wattomie. park pi' r.i ke r.s fi om su'i.h n sh'',v-rs. During th- storm that f' IIow 1 a man was trin k; rtf.t hy lightning, but by an i'l i. which will soon f:k-l s ru'niir. :i ti"n in th- : . tion f a .'-h'ltr hous" at JVtt.'iWJttt?'tni- lark, i f w hi-h South Penl and Mishawaka ri;i r.s ran he justly proud. Th- man who f. r.t ' o!, iv 1 th- idea v. as J. A. Kauf r, a number of the- Travi'-rs' I'ro'.f-th a-'i-socii-tion. - and other i:s -mb rs. with th ir familb s. ware having thr ir a nnual picnic- at Pottawattomie. The hildrer. v,f ro enjoying th" playground appa r. the baseball diamond and tennis e ourt were tila-d with play, rs. groups of peor- we re watching the outcome of a three-legged rar, v. he n the weather man upse-t the dipp'-r upon the defe-nc-less association, who were, of course, not 1 r .-"-a- d to go in swimming. A. I. Perb y of the park Im ual happen-el to he among those prfs'-nt, and v.;h then !"!' huob- the targ'-r. of a number e.f epucstbms as to wher- all the so people could lind shelter from tile storm. Mr. I rh y, not l-' in a prophe. much 1:. a oui j i board fan, r ili-d that he didn't know. lApaiul ()ri?in;il Thin. The proposition vaiH brought up I-fore the n" xt jnetir.: of the T. I. A. Th ir original idea was to truild a on-.ctory frame buiblir.K at an apprxiinat' rost of J."., 000, tint after investicratint; the many advantages that a shelter housa- would have at thi park, the idea i:rw from a '' by ."0 foot structure, oneFtor' hiKh, to the present buibilnir, which will IIO'J ftft lont,' and .t feet wbb-. Work on the proposed building will be started May 1, und if everything vorks out according to schedule, it v.ill b iinished in eiht weeks. The building will test npiroximateIy $3 5.000 and will be located directly east of thr- flagpole, midway between Mishawaka a v. and the woods. The front of th- structure will fact- the .avenue. The Mrtictur- v.ill lie sponsored by South I .end and Mishawaka members of the Travelers Protective nvsoci ttion. Marvin Ik Smith of South P-end, now con:wcted with tin- I)o'!,. Manufacturing Co., is the architect w ho dt signed the buildir.. The exterior will he of stucco, with a rd tile roof. The posts supporting the observation piarjorm on the HfCnnil flor.r, and the piatform iiself, Will all i- of ttone, with a stone railing and facing. The platform Exclusive and iiv nt.XNK pakkiik stockiii:iix;i:. t h the occupancy of the white house by the Hardin cs. on March 4. Washington '"society" comes into its own. For the last tine in the history of the capital city the new president and his wife begin their whita liou.se career on terms of social intimacy with that group of persons :f wealth and leisure, mainly of no official status, who constitute at least the foundation In Washington of "society" in the current sense of that term. Th" roup mi -.ht he called, "the -too of Yahinixton." At any rate, its own numbers would so lotrard it. There are and have been senators and ven an occasional mom. of comtreas mingling within the circle. With dfpb mats. !oth Amenrau and Mnt'iip",in, 'society" has a'.w a s maintained an entinte cordiale. .i:ait;st ofiieers in the regular establishments of the army and nay the 1 ars have not h en set up. Put presidents are another matter. The tlrst question Washington "society" asks about a new president an! his wife H: "Are they socially possible for lis'.'" Sometimes the answer is frankly negative; but. some-, how, both "soiiet" and th- white house continue to Move in tli i r respective orbits as if unaware of each other's existence. Washington "society" is like "society" in every other world '-apital. "Ihnalty w.n in a beyar .." wrote Henry Adams, describing, in his "Kducation," his life in la mbn in tiie V.,;s. "One xvas tempted to think that the nicest distinction between the v-ry b. st society .and the secondbest was their attitude tow ird royalty. The one regarded royalty as a bore, and avoided it, or quhtly said

Since The World War Emphasized The Importance of Petroleum In Industrial Development, All Eyes Turn To Mexican Fields

WASHINGTON. F V phasiz-al th- imporba :a e fa t e and a w a k. m a . er part it w ill k. calk d o in the i-:di: .(:--.! , , future, inte: -s' !. i- tu: : which 0 rat'c- :): m -t elu-'ir.g oh t:.-b!s. Thi je. t of the tol ow ;.:g b Geograpiia al sa-i t: " M '. o a t : ' is:., th. lafe. Its tta: p-a. da.)-' baf'el-e a e'.aV. : kl' : Now it b.as a CI e-up .I worbi. a nun.b. ; . : v. ! f.a m 7ka 1 " 1 . .k;iv a i : ! .'1 ! M; i ", N u ilk- a! d b f.u v; an: k. Sin.cc the world war emf pttiadtum in modern warn re-aii?. it ion of the- v n gr-.-at-:. ;o play in n 1 oi-strra tian and 1 n rt ft I development of the ,.'.! naMe and mens- t Mexico. sp . tacukar of th-- pr s nt prr.eaüi'N e.;l Ieg.o:j ;s the subnlle'i;. ism d by the Natie-nal wan id. ra-a for it prodvndion f we lk iebiin' a m dtst .0 ;ht iii pad ;mte :'i ear ait". th- u'.a at st uu-he r.- in the ; i h. are- pa !'.. pia-lnciüg : .:ia N . o!i of I i e i 1; : i g.-ld' p-.o'ka ta-a reaeh-.l 1 L' .."'' -i.e.e rpa--. d tlatt of t!ua . of the .-rg e our.t: ;. to ha li the

Defines Twelve Important Cogs In The Machinery Of The League Of Nations And The Problems Which Await Action By That

EW YORK k w . Ive imr.e.rt .nt ce-gs m th m.ta b.in-r e.f -a-- L- a .:;:, ,.f Natte-. ::.:. n. -af w hie h an- to I s- t in m ti. n w 1.. n tla- ea.;ma-.t of the I.e igt:e cone-:as in. b .. S-- it. a rk.e 1, Pe l. l' 1 . aiai the problerr. whn h aw a t; n. ar- .1-' :a I in a f.-r-e-ail of ti.e- work of th- la .g.;.- which h ts just been n--d 1 he" re-. Arthur Sw :.--:. ar; f . r f the An., ra an , r-ianis-sh n t th- j e.o e . : : , . : . .a k rs -,-;:b s and wlm is now attach -i to tia- - ..:::: of N..t:..n' s, . ret.iri.:t taff. :s th. autiie.r . f th..- f ot , .--t-t. lb- -i s that 12 cogs are r -Ik. - p . . . i : .tn a. t!a- t e r anr. 1 of whjch w Ü' in - 'ae .-. - - 1.- b-.-.'gr;a t -1 by the- ,'.",! if at its fertile es'ol'.C- ! ': a. The subject th. , ill be- hand:. . ;,v th..- c.mmls"ie.ns are num. : ' Mr. S.'ai as f eilb REDUCTION r ARMAMENTS - T- i r.a.! examination into the pi e-.; condition cf arkl armaments, now under way 1 y Ca- p. rn .a :.. military, ravl ..ml air commission of tl." 1-- a a,;.- -..ill I r: pb-t d. In abktJr.n, a temporary -!.! n.. p n e.f p. rts .n the p.-Ilti-al, soeial aral ee nomk- we. -hi will ' , ;a'a ,! te submit plar.s for a reduction of at mam nts. The aim e.f LhU comraiie'" be to get number, of tlie league

111 be four rot widp, and will hci furnished with chairs so that spec taiors may view the baseball pama or tennis tournaments ..Hhout being sunstruck. The building will be? elevated oi a three-foot terrace, with a Iine trr(? placed at either I'te of the four entrances, and enough shrubbery to lend a decorative effect to the trrace. Kach of the entrance will be five doors wide, wide enough to admit of even the elephant passing through. The eight towers, which look as though they had lightning reds on each corner, will be used as observation towers, and furnl.hed with rustic furniture for the vue of the spectators. Each of the towers will have a pmall Individual stairway leading to tho top. The windows on the second floor and the doors on the first have been so arranged that, when opened, they k'jvo the bulldinp the appearance of being open. Form Half Circle. At the back, which faces north, a grandstand projects from the center of the building, forming a half circle, the diameter of which Is 30 feet. Here bands from both cities will be engaged to play on specified e vening.-:. The first Ptory of the building will be 14 feet high with a cement floor and tables and benches to be used for the accommodation of picnicker;! in caw of rain. A lire place at each end of the room will he at the disposal of small parties to use for weiner roasts In case of rain, which would otherwise have to be postponed. Three drip. icing fountains and two nursery rooms, one at fach end of the building, will add to the convenience and phasur of visitors. The ladles' and men's rest rooms will toth be on the main floor. The interior finish will be rustic in effect, with walls of a rough red brick and beamed ceiling, stained a dark brown, remindimr . those who have visited in the Alleghenies of the country homes of some of America's millionaires. Thirty-three posts, arranged In rows of 11 each, will support the second floor. The money obtained from the rent of the two refreshment booths, one selling candy, peanuts, crackerjack, etc., and the other handling soft drink, which have already been rented, will ,ay for the maintenance of the building; that is, keeping the building cleaned, the windows washed, etc. Spacious Assembly Hnll. The second floor will have an assembly hall 16 feet hie,h. 10r feet long and 5S feet wide, with a finished hardwood floor. Cloak rooms will adjoin the hall, which will have a stage and orchestra pit. Moving pictures will he shown by some of the churches and possibly community speakers will utilize the hall from time to time. The walls of the hall, which will have a seating capacity of 2,500. will be of rough, red brick, with a truss ceiling, consequently no posts to obscure the vision of the audience. The stage will be lo-

Wealthy Washington "Four Hundred" Is Now

About To Be Linked With The White House For

that the queen had never been in society . The same thing might have been Raid of fully half the peerage." It miu;ht be said, too, of full' half the presidents, taking them by and large. And even when the answer to Washington "society's" query as to a new presidential family's social eligibility has been entirely and unqualifiedly affirmative, as it was in the cae of the Hardings lust three predecessors, it has not always followed that "society" has had unchallenged entree to the white house. The tenants of that domicile have had nothing to say in the matter. I'ullkc Prvdecoors. Put in and of Washington "society" the Hardings undoubtedly are, as no previous presidential family lias be en. Twenty years of retrospect takes us hack to the pnosvvi Its. They were well acquainted in Washington thnauch Mr. Roosevelt's service, first as civil service commissioner, then ns assistant secretary of the navy. Tlie- Tafts we-re almost as well known as the Koosevelts, and in much the same circles. Put these circles elid not then include, nor more than barely Impinge at isolated points upon, what Washington knows as "society" today. And the Wilsons came to Washington practically unknown to and quite unmindful of any "society" In Washington other than that which they brought with them. The present Mrs. Wilson, whose own social status rests on the foundation of old Virginia lineage, has always moved chiefly in a social orbit that centers about the southern tradition that is still powerful at Washington. To this group, composed of members of Virginia and Maryland families, many w-.rld looked for its oil supply Rumania, Galicia, and the Hutch East Indies . "In P.' HI this production was doubled, and by 1017 it had more than doubled again. In 1 9 1 S Mexican oil wells -yielded nearly 04.000,000 barrels, and in 19H, more- than S7.00u.000 barrels. This latter production was in excess not only of the current annual production ef Kussia. previously second among oil producing e ountrie s, but also exceeded Russia's high water mark vi S r.p.oia.iaei' barrels in 1001. Now only the United St it' s, with ;-. production of nearly 400.000.000 barrels, is ahead of Mexico. "Put Mexico is accepted as having the greatestbm.onstrated oil field ill the world, and it is estimated that if all its preriucing wells had teen permitted to flow at their maximum during 1919 the resulting production would hao been 32.000.000 barrels more than th" actual production of the entire world in 1Ö1S. As a matter of fact only abeut 12 per cent of the potential te agree' not to exceed their present scale of armame nts. to agree lo a proportionate and simultaneous re due tnm in military budgets and to accept the prin-itpb-e.f s. it nitric and comprehensive reduction of armaments te the- last figure compatible with national security. Investigation cf the priwte manufacture of munitions and war materiil. denounced as "a source of danger to the werld through an extended sale throughout the less civilized areas in Asia and Africa" will be urab-rtaken. PERMANENT COURT OP INTERNATIONAL JUSTP E Nominations of 11 judges, chosen for a period of mm- years, are to be made next summer and the sehe th ns announced at the second assembly to he held in S. pte inker next. The list of candidates will be prepared mainly by The Hague court of arbitral justice and all nominees will be votel upon separately by the assembly and the .council. So far 22 nations, including Gre at Pi itain. France, Italy and Japan, have signed the- pretecol providing for th court whose adoption by a unanimous vote of the assembly is held to be the gre atest singb- advance the league of .Nations has yet ta pster, y in international relations. Twe Important problems which had to be decided before the court begins to convene were, first, should

BY LORETTO LORDEN eated in the center of the hall, between the two towers, and the seats arranged in semi-circular effect. At the present time there .'? only one other shelter house in the state of Indiana, and that was built by the Travelers' Protective ;.-ociatio.n of Frankfort. Ind. The building can be usr-d by tho Moy Scouts, any civic organization, state conventions, joint entertainments hy churches, lodges, pubüc schools, baseoali clubs, etc. The structure is thoroughly fireproof ia every way.

Shelterhouse to be Erected at Pottowattomie Park

,.; !, ; v,: I : I... . , ' f-'-i-'p'-l H l4mUn m I as'a Wf 1 4 - in. m 4 .vp:iv:.'-4 P pite. mm m I wtn milmm-mMMM Ti5-ifcex?i-.'. ' - -;::-- . v-.v isiy-TTr:.. xv:7. ; - ?rrr- -i V' --i-- - :- -h. .:..--

The youngsters won't have to wait till circus day to feed the "efelants" peanuts, when the city administration board completes its plans for the Pottawattamie park zoo, for there will he a regular circus menagerie along the (I rand Trunk railroad tracks. The zoo will include buffalos. camels, a variety of hears, an elephant, monkeys, reindeers, kangaroos and possibly Goley. It. KaK'r, J. AV. Shirk and J. F. DeTlaven. some smaller animals if they can be obtained. of which still retain their ancestral acres and country seats, Washington is merely a larger Georgetc wn, a convenient renter fer white? residence, in which the activities of government are as incidental as tho proceedings of the city council are to the social life of Xew York. Neither this native stock, nor yet the "nmving shadow-shapes that come- and go" in the persons of senators, members of oongre:, diplomats. cabinet members ami dh r officials and their families constitute the Washington "soede'ty" that is now for the first time about to fee the while' house occupied by those to whom it has already affixed its approval. The wealthy "se t" may, and to a constantly varying extent does, include members f all these groups, but underlying all the shifting personnel of officialdom, and ignoring, where it cannot assimilate, the more deeply rooted elements of the city's life, is the group of permanent residents if wea'th and leisure who began first to build their mansions in Washington some 40 years ago and who have not only made- the upper Connecticut av. region one of themost attractive residential sections in America, but have- succeeded in establishing themselves as. the spemsors ami arbiters of something that comes as near to being "society" in the European and historical se nse as we have ever had in America. "In London," writes H. G. Wells in "The Outline of History." "there was society.' a continuous mingling of influential persons and ideas." He is writing of 17thcentury Poland. Its geuernment, he points out, lacked the solidarity of the P.ritish. "Poland has no Londean and no 'society.' " "Society" in England was the natural growth of the flow of the Mexican w-lis Is permitted be cause storage, refining, and transportation fac iliti-s are- inade;uate to take care of mn. Thes facilities are b. ir.g steadily iacreaseel. however, and. . ports abne fe;r P,:20 probably average, el I ' . 00 0 , 0 1 barrels a month, the- rate definitelv e:-tak'lislied for the first six months of the vear. "iho practice of Mexican nativ-s of collecting fragments of asph-.lt and bitum.cn which floated en the waters of a large lav-oen Ta-ar th" coast ef tlie Gulf of Mexico south e.f Tmpdco, and sealing them :r the m Ighheiring city, b-d to tiie re akkta. lion that the-re must be underground petrrb-um su)pli.. s near. Small producing weiis and ev-n f 'iiiy la:-g- producers were brought in from l'.'"l or.wavd, but it was not until ' lfeQS that the first f the- ti a n:e-ndous gushers that have astonished the world was brought in, near San Geronimo, spouting be tween 1-0 . 'J a and 7ö,0eu barrels of oil a day. "No such stream of oil h;l e 'r liecn encountered the court have the power of compu'se-ry adjudication? And. second, should it be orgar.i7e .1 by re sedution eif the assembly or su'-mittt -d to ratification by individual nations? These fpu-astions ware eleehh-el by the assembly provi1ir.g that these nations sei desiring may acct pt the principle of compulsory adjue! ir a ti n ;inel that the organization of the court should be subject to ratit. cation of individual nations. Action l r or against the court will be taken in a number of parliame nts which meet this year. MANDATES An international commission of nine members from non-mandatory pe.wers. is to be appointed by the council in aea ru dar.c' with an agn ement reached em Nov. 2th Tlie 4ly.r sth a of man.hites for the 13.0o'V;'Co) or more people- ecf the pacific I 'lands. South Africa. Turkey anel Kiao-Chow. fre.-d from Germany sine! Turkey during the war, opens e.ne of the hast advanced of all the League's problems. Tentative drafts have been pre-.peis.-il by the allied powers so that the l eague Is now in possession of the terms cf all prespectlve manelates. This will be analyzed and. where necessary, possible changes recommended. INTERNATIONAL ECONOMICS AND FINANCE A permanent, centralizing, economic and financial organization Is to be formed within the League hy the

The keeper of the park now resides in the bungalow at one end of the park, and will have supervision of the zoo next summer. Committees responsible for the success of the undertaking are: General committee: J. A. Kaufer. chairman: O. 1 Stevens, secretary; C. Coen, treasurer; F. Ik MacDonald. A. Eby, C. J. Spohnoltz. I Class, M. Cobb n. I). J. Kelly, A. i:. Peltz, "W. II. Trost. Jr., L. M. Hiiard. F.

Executive committee: J. A. Kaufer. chairman; C. W. Coen. treasurer; J. "W. Shirk, assistant chairman, -O. F. Stevens, secretary. Building committee: Elmer McDonald, chairman; J. W. Shirk, assistant chairman, and George Platner, secretary. Advertising committee: John Dellaven, manager, and K. Kager, assistant manager. Earge photographs of the new shelter house will periodical r.ssemblage of peers and commoners in parliament at Westminster. Our kaleidoscopic system of rapid rotation in public office, and the entirely natural desire of every public official to get away from primitive Washington as far and as fast as possible when his term of office expired, militated against any permanent society in this sense for the first century or so of our national existence. Even so keen an observer as Henry Adams (blessed first aid to every woubl-bo commentator on American social problems for all time to come!) failed to find a vestige of society in Washington a short half century ago. "No rich or fashionable stranger had yet discovered the town. No literary or scientific man, no artist, no gentleman without office or employcmnt, had ever lived there. It was rural and its society was primitive. Scarcely a person in it had ever known life in a great city." Diplomats complained to him that in Washington "there were no theaters, no restaurants, no monde, no demi-monde', no drives, no splendor, and, as Mme. de Shruve used to say, no grandezza. This was all true; Washington was a mere political camp, as transient and temporary as a camp meeting for religious revival." Gravitate Toward Washington. Ilich and fashionable strangers, however, and. in Adam's phrase, "gentleman without office ear employment," began to gravitate toward Washington within the next decade. "Boss" Shepherd cleaned up the city In the '70s. paved the mueldy streets and installed sewers; and strangers many rich, a few fashionable, and all without office or employment began to buy town lots ami build houses, ami the foundations of a permanent society in Washington were laid. before and the drillers were entirely unprepared to cope with the situation. The great jeyse-r of oil caught fire from the boiler of the drilling outfit and for two months constituted the greatest ami most sp'atacular oil fire- that the world has ever known. The re.arir.g pillar of flame shot upward during its greatest fury to a height of 800 to 1.400 feet, illuminating the countryhide at night for many miles, and was isibb to ships more than 100 miles at sea. It was finally extinguished by huge pumps throwing streams ot grave 1 and mini. "Tho gigr.ntie gushers of Mexi o are believed te flow not from oil sands as in many fields, hut from cave rns hollowed fiom limestone by -n sie.n am! later filled with oil. It is supposed that the uneb rgrou.a l lake of oil res-t on water under art- sian pressure. What may eventualis- be expected is illustrated by one e.f the- most famous of oil wells, the Potr-ro del Ida no. 1 his well flowed a mighty stream eif oil for eight y. ars. producing more than 1,000,000 barrels regularly eaedi month. appointment of an advisory, economic and financial committee, the membership cf which will be rompo-d of leading world financiers and economists. This ommittee in a sense will be the successor of the supreme economic council. It grew out e.f the Rru-''ls International crnfrence and will be charged with tlie duty of considering the immediate application of that body's recejm mend it Ions. Other subjects to be dealt with by commissions are proposed amendments to the covenant e.f the League, registration and publication of treaties between member nations, methods of applying the ir.ternatf -nal economic blockade and means of providing funis for the secretariat and auditing its accounts. Other commissions or organizations will take up methods of improving means of commur.icatbm aral transportation in Europe and coordination cf international health organizations in combatting epidemics. Under the head ef humanitarian work come sue h subjects as the Armenian massacres and the white slave and opium traffics which are to be handled by the Cooperation of several or all governments in the Eeague. The United States. Spain and Prazii, at th council's invitation, have agreed to us- their influence to end the Armenian horrors and the allied powers.

lows of the down-tow n section. .V wn-h dr-iw ir.i: ct the tui'.Jing is now cn display In l'.jgty v. I:.:! rx. M;havak:t citizens will L to 1: ing as South 1 5 end pc-uple. In f...ct. i: j-s ; b v .f those sponsoring hs constru -tb.-:; th;,: th s as we'd af liiver Park res?:dtnt.. ?h.vj: i !. a- Th 1 of it. The park !s easily acr. $;! : , ; ;t , a .v mir.utts' ride cn a r.ortii s. ie Mi'', f. t , r !,.'-..r, visitors directly in front cf th- ; ar As :. r th Ik nd r.or Mishawaka has a vry v:- r. :-- ; .rk :a at the present time. It will ultima . 1 y ': n : cities to units in n:aking Pettawatt; :..i o:;- f tk- ' t -t equipped parks In northern Indiana. The ; ; i .;roun 1 apparatus, has-, ball di itr.ond nr. 1 ?e : ; r vet vvy popular last and w hen the s' elt. r house i - t:;h- '. .: -. stalled, it is e pected that -Mi-:. a.. ;.an. I'.iidites Will take l !'.. l r :".t-.. ill- s ; .. i'.-tta-.-. ,;tt :..; park for many a panic n nd pb a.;:rSince the jioscibjiity of en ctit.g ; ;, ,- i ::, m South Uend "" ms to !e v ry r-i:;ot-. : '.iri-cs h i arc asked to respond to this pruj--' t f- r .1 ;r.it:::;ty building. The i.ld coliseum down n- r t!c r:r wk.'.h was used last summer miht s rve v. ry veil xn aeomn.od.ate a wil l west show, 1 ut to ir.. .'e , rtars to sing in such --urroundings is r ot a 1 ; h, r f.nr anil auree.jblc to the stars nor to the nu1 1 r- -.y taxes the singer's voice, hr.t hi- pr ::al;ty v. ll, which would appear to much etter .. P. -;nta.-e on a stage with proper Settinc. Th-n. to--. .--Itli,.::.! a h- atinu: piant was install- d. it 3kl r.,; h cfn t upon rcnuuii.g the .old and damp-. l: m t!ie ground, and the tenches left r:iu li to bo '.-i ::a l in tl'ie way of comfort. None of this (i i.-ci rn f ( ;t will be p--rb- v.r in th new shelter house, with its r:;o b ? n J-.. ..: .m,- pkint c' wj veitilation, and comfortably i:p:c k t-a , d .;:s in thlarge auditorium. 1'itizens tan in op.va : s to accept emr.igements at this aud.t. rittm v. p-ide. With the opening cf the m w dr:e ..kr,.- t':,. ,,lt' bank of the, SL Joseph river tills 5 u:c.:a.-r. whi h v. ill go through Pottawattomie pr.rk, lbcvat -l p .i k and as far north as North Shore d:.. it is h-p. d that motorists in this vii init w ill take aa rp-c: ,1 ir.tf r.t in the building of the shelt y hone,.. If Mishawaka citizens take as mud! ir.t. r. -t in the project as South P.end jkotiIo h:ive ek.i d t:p to tho present time, the park will be won b 1 1 . . I ful this summer. It took only a :.. " :- to p:;; tlos idea of this structure In some b-ody's brain: p.. rhap a good hard thunder storm wa.ubl brirar down a whop. pack of ideas into of fa-la Is heads from hotli cities, :'or the betterment of municipal amus.-mcnts. The First Time Washingtonians of the- ancient tradition still Jove to regale whoever will listen with stori- s. k.: ey apocryphal but none the less humorous. .f so ; p.y ambitious wives of newly rich men who ha v.; s-oght, by wiy cf Washington, to gain the social entre e- wh;. h tic ir h-me towns could not and New York wa.ubl not a -:, 1 th- m. There were plenty of thes. among the "Strang. 1 .-" v. he built and se ttle! in Wa-b ington in the 'es ,.,.,, but they, or their desc-nda nts, i,,t th- d. :..:. ?.t force in Washington "society" of today. Many families of wealth ami culture- have com, to Wa.-hi'arton in the la,st 40 years because of . nuir.e int. r at in public affairs and a liking for the .nr.cts with , ff. , of,.. Washington is no barg- r a city to ;.p.. lra.m a' thrfirst opportunity, so there runs throu.;h its "so. i. ?y" o? today a substantial and growing stratum .f tho- -a ho, having gone to tho capital to take up , .j d-'i-'s. have found it a pleasant place jn v. hb h to r. -.aia after their terms of office have expired, a nd to . ar."- ambitious to provide matrimonial opport s for thir d aught eis, Washington has b ivr t . n fa too us a. one ,f the happiest of hunting grouiais. To analyze further the mixture of r.noiv s th u hs resulted in the erection in Wadiiratt'.ri of the s.-ial structure that may be term' 1 ".-' i--t. " v.a al i u !:- ous. It exists, and in a very mm h m- ' r- and substantial s.-r.se now than r be-f-T". It pre :. . ;; longer resented by Washiiif toniar.s of th.- ,.;.i traditions; Its hospitality ext' mis to a'l f tic a-aktit regme wno care lor the otpc: n er.e-r..- that, gk.e the new "society" its bas s for r i-te m .-, -. (CONTINUED ON PAGE I S) year in and year out. Pit. al!y ed te worthbs:; salt water ", "Pah as the kr'.vn oil p. possibb; that only a 1 gier:::::: c o a a .ng the liqu: 1 mm- : al Tin- la-Ids re-...- m.d. r -pkoaV square mil- s. b e.b.gi-' s hav--tu re for f)il in Me.xa o o r a: th" -:. . n ' h 0 :-:; e k '. 1 . a : i . . .' r . :a turn 1 u ' t ! a: i " a i . 0"a S'pjare- 'mil s. "Til- future of the M. ;e-a n be pre.'foune'dy a ff ' t.- 1 by t k M-xiran eor.stitutir n cf 1 1 7 i iour.d ur.-.le-r 1 r.d do. s r.-' ' land but to tls- s'..T". This i based on it have b --n ce t-s's wh.eln ontre-d k7 p- ; :.' d'J--try. A'tb'i! ha i - n k . :. ;.'. 'v to channe Is a-ai in th-- M - a .. cijir-ns have :.a e-ri rea ): 1." . i :ts, . t o through their rep re -s.-r.tati at c r.nw as. e-rtair.ing the : st rncth-- I Fifteen nations, inch: iinr e'a:. d i. I tria. Pulgar.a and G rn.ar.y ar- gas to cot.-.kat typhus whi h ha .- b - n ia. Europ'- m- re than a y. ar. In int'-mation. J co.-.f. re-:.;:" op. th- " fice is to be- held this summ. r. A a ejtial:fieI re-ddems of Am. era a a:, i A-., tp.-m a won. an, is to be appear.-- I ) v report ' n th- t-afrka in we ::. n at. ! e k.l : rjf the we: rid. Suppre-ssi'-n of the !ra-dr- in r.pk:m : ccti'- drugs. ccp...-;al!y In CJfn.i. is 1 -: advise. ry --mmittee a i .1 i-y p. rt-tri-'S involv--!. Tk- N-th- r! k. g he re.;fore has take n th- b t-l the opium trad by e .operative- .otic, whole pre. bb m ove r to the L-... g:.-. In com lush-n, Mr. Sw-,-.- ?v--r b - kirmeuiths l'etwe-n now and S-ptem: . r full of very caiefnl are1, eh t .ik ! .-:dy e.f league intere:. The L-ag-.;-." !: .; of s-e-wing up, U geing a?i-:ad wt'.h than ever." . . . -. . i f.::.t i g .a-...

be cn display this week" Ir. all the bu.-!. .? v

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