South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 58, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 27 February 1921 — Page 12

12

si nd ay. ri:iur.uiY 102t THE SOUTH BEND NIVs-TIMES

SISDWOB MAIL . GOAGH OF POUCHES Knock CJrrk N-jih-U- While Car i- in Station at Pitt-bur-

P It 1 ' rn:i : 1. : .t S ' ' iMiTMin:;. r. v The i f ar of Turn Pittsburg to W.,r.e'..urg. . mi I' ni.v 1. :in: t lr.-f-. was r"M' l S:ur'..iy morning at: 'I Jtallv.ay M.-.i! ("tK .T - M'u! i-'iugh kr-k.-i :,.-.!. by the l.an.ül. St.:t:"ii r: . .1 .;.. fi.'iii.l M'ulb.uuh un : on the floor of fix- 1 ;iY 1 tu ;n - I-' for.- th' tiaiM ;i !u- t .iic. Three j.,;clif r"",t;i liar : r tri! rI in 1:'. ami mo-M. r.ih'e j' ir'-'I r"--' ! 1 1 r v. re .--toj.-n. Two pi.u P.. an; .-Sill I;..--. !.t,-. The amount of th'- lo'.t i. :. fir r V. n ov :i, govirninnt ami r.i 11 1 -.1 1 .lho:iN an-Iioiip.--tJ. Modes Mav Yarw But Homespun and Tweed Still Reign IiV .NM.TTi; IIIIAIII v. Outdoor 1 t ! 1 . s ;uw.ts hav' 1 1 1 i r app'-al. Ani'-T!' T'i- f .1 1 r i s that are ri illy g' ,J fi r f-.f.rt wear are luteils an I h"tm . -pur. -. They re I horotirhl v jir'M-ai a t!icy are r.t 1. ff t .1 1-v the wi a'Ii'-r. At the I f t a .l. lu'htful .Uli of row-lty v. mi! f . 1 1 r 1 . IKht l.'.m- i.s in "lor, it -h" v a J . 1 .1 i -,i r. 1 -st r ef1i t that is i 1 t r stir -.-a. Thr j i k t is fa.-hiohol from thr l!ain l.lw ri:-it rial, 1-iit tin- inserts n the lower j .! 1 1 as u !I as the foliar a r . origin.- 1 in the plabl. A njrroA rov.--i.vi! it iP-tiro-M the n aistlino. TI10 r hi-ii'i i'i i-lu'W." a !.ir iiM of w riois in l'!u', r:y atnl r 1 ifitt s that n-f ! t th- !'.rs in th f;hri' of th" suit. Th- t:iii' is alu.is t u.-' ful .ip-liolifja-t til'- outing uit. In thjiioijrl at thr riL'ht, as ull as th' !irtt is d v lop ! in a haiui.snmo tinnifvpun. Th" ,-rtuini of this inabrial is a warm shadr of lawn. ? hurfa;' is hroi:-n hr- and thf-rr by l.rov.rj anl rwn liia s in a .-itunnin plui.I. 1 'mi. i 1 1 1 v - -1-, ! wltli ;i L'i'fi - rnus cnlLir, oniain tit ! ith hutrmis wliii ii may l ns l for fastt r in wh ri th; rap is- hsirtMj t hold n u k 1 y. Tin- Mft li it is als iiiad' of the hohle;-pun with ;i hand of ro.-ii v Iv t hui'kh il at tli- sid-. Tfiis trimiinin HKitdi'S t!i- sitnply fashioned tout that is on.'ly l'fli-d .it the waistl in . A VARIETY Ol' 11 A) S TO SERVE SALVO Dr. H;livi'V W. Wib-v. advocate of pure food for children. i rcommendfl 'tanned salmon f,.r children fiver . Iv ttui rhr ir...T 'ill. I innvt lltl'i1 1 . .4n fc.iT .'.- -v ...... - - - tious animal food that ran be hail." The I. S. bureau of fisheries s.tys: "The lighter vari'.nies of salmoti are highly nourishing and more f asily -.digested. Pink salmon is hi tter than meat for building fhsh and bone." ; Tho usiMUiness oi pniK ana cnum j'almon as a. naid to setting a good nh1o slioiilil be welcome news to the hotisekeeper. This valuable food, hitherto little known. has been brought to the attention of home cooks by the work, experiment and conclusions of the I'. S. bureau of wsheries, which has shown concludvtiy the Importance of pink and chum salmon, both from a nutritive standpoint and the point of view of i onotny. Its wide use tor the fam,ly table will bo an aid to obtaining whip exercising the utmost econ omy. Salmon Salad saiulw iches. 1 lb. can pir.k salmon 2 tbsp. fine chtppcd cucumber i' It 1 l'- t S I U I F 1 tsp. grated onion or onion juice " tsp. r.-.ixfil salt and pepper. Moisten with salad dressing. Mix thnrus:h!y and spread between thin she s of broad. Salmon Au ni tin. Üriüovo fkin and bon- s fnm 1-11. tan pink or chum s ilmon. add 2 ges, 2 ounces butter. sto ! from salmon - c an. season with salt and pepper. Mix and b at i:i bowl, add 1 rup soft, stale bread rnd enough mil k to soften. I take in buttered deep di'h until top is nil e brown. Salmon With Macaroni. Pick one tan of pink or chum salmon into small pii t es. Make one ',dnt of crdinarv white f.iu'e. I'm i biyer of boil, d m o aro'ii broken in irn li lengths in the bottom of bakmc dish. io-it ;i l.iy. r of sai: -. then a l.i-r of s.tln-.on. cor.tiiiuir:- uriti! d;s! i- tili d. Saui i- should come last and be .vprink b .J with buttered crumbs. Hake until brown, i'akcil Salmon With Tomato Sauce. 1 lb. can i hum or pink salmon. 1 Up toTivitoe-s xz tmp water 1 s!i'-e fmion "bo. e or t w o x 1 t s;. in 1 1- ' - t-p. l-U'ti V ' '' 1 '3 tsp. f'o.;;2 tsp s.d:. IN ppi r to ta-t--f'ck t . n t o, w.ii. r. omoiis. r! i-s Z rnüMi! s. .Melt bu: r. add flour, and stir into ho; ::-..ture. Add t- ilmi'ti and put ri i-.ikir;.- pan. pour around half t! !U.-e ami bake ;' " miimtes. bit--ri"c oit.-'i. K-moxe t ht pl.it! r. poo-- ari.v.d retnaining hot v.tuee and K.iroih v. parilej. This ill serve six p rsor. . Junior V. M. C. A. Rhins To Form Scout Troop A 1 iv co;;t tro-p ;s f be crg.ir.--' -1 anu-r-.g :;;-t i s ;' th,. J..n;or V. M. C. A so'.-.e t.r;e :xt week. Dir ctr-r GaT..:-h- ar.noujv ed s.tturi'itv. .rv ii;i-:i.. -r of he " Y" who j r.'-t .or- :idy af:';'.;.itc I w.th so?::1 tl.rr s-ouT troop will li :.i,-. i in 'h.- ru-v troop wh;i h fo J,.- known s tip.- V. M. C. A. junior troep. TL" pl. h:g af'.s of th- fi-.--.r-or.th tenttiry di:Yered matt ri. illy from the pack m u-e t:-la . The V rjetia n pat k. for .mplo. consist : m-m nt -i ig i.t ( ..!.'.- twe'.tyl - c of them mark d w ih mblems f f vriTieii.i k il l- t.fty. : wita i. ui. '.orals. iii d n to loür su.ts t)f fo'irte 'i cards n !:. Tb.e 'i.:v-t tb p;h oi' th- I'.ci.ii'i i ar.al is forty-er.' f. . :. Tis b n-tl: Js ttbe-ut Mile--, f'i'm! p w.:tr Jn the dri :Mm :!! i io ii'e; vta-r in the racbe f ' an.

Mo? i key Gland Fails To Build Up Girl's Mind

illi'Ar., !'.. . ." !i d t h- r.ii ""'I hi ruf has Lad in ittr atrn'-nt f Mar;.- Zu ruh; U. Shi- was fount! in th- bivnunt of !;!- lion. at .Jolict. Ii!., whrr' she had h'M-ri hidd'ri y h'r i.ar'n'.s H jiars ;it,- aft r an atta k f infanti!' paralsis. Mil- ha i tin- hr.iin of n nne-yr-ar-'ld. h"h- jnr.or walk or talk. Dr. Max Thral; of tin- Aini riran ho -ji;t..l transpiat d th thyroid j:Iar.d of a monkey irto th- ri k of Mary t" r stor.' h r f;.(.ulti s to t.oiii,:;!. Tli.it was twii nior.tJis .';'-,'(. SJnlias hnuii a s.ilu physioal irni r i-Mi -r.t. H r nunta! rf.nditior. ia unf.I.a d. Ir. Thorak h.is turiid h r asorr t" Ir. Sit.iUtid Krtih.ho!. Tii laltir vayx .-ii will n-vr leih l) a ii.,riual tn r.talit . I Brahmins ! i;v in:im. m:u:v. ! Th in a snu' litth-. srnu littiu j world j Wliosi- liinit-t .'it' ol!i; and holiif j and th' 1 lul', Iinaijlnir. sutiu-how thf jti.intt ii ' .-v.irlid j A!otit thfir seloct litt!- Rroup as j a huh; I Hh-ek, prosjiorous. sht-Morcd from j want and irnm woo j Th-y patrnniz- life with an opu- j h-nt air , And n.'-r will harn it has ever horn .uo That lifi' dotsn't know they have don- it, or care. Tluy'd laugh it a group in a general store In sm' distant illaiji. all tjathrrcd about To argue tlu .state of the nation; they'd roar At everything said in that meeting. I no doubt. Vet those men touch life, they are ! close to its heart. Their talk becomes that of the country, at last. While thfsi in the clot-room, and apart. ab rrotestmg. arc borru that is vast. on title The great worl (linovt-s on. while in oftice and frill The:" smug-vi.-agetl bj sta hdera puzzle and fret. Unabb to fathom liutnanity's will Which drives on regardless of them or their sot; Vet while fin the stream of existence they're srwirled They never admit it or know it. beca use They live in a snug little, smug little world With snug little, smug little customs iind laws! (Copyright, 19 Jl . i mi i I)i:stuoys riA.T. Intoriuitlannl News Serviie: by PA UN HS VILLI'. O. Feb. 6. j Five hundred workers were forced into idleness here this morning when I tire destroyed eastern Ohio's largest cigar factory, operated by the Itoby j Cigar Co. Tho hiss is $400,000. parj tially covered by insurance. A Mt. Vernon (N. Y. ) shoe lirm j placed a pair of size 15 shoes in j thejr window- and offered to give ' tin in away to anyone they would lit. ; John MoCarty. 7 feet 2 inches tall, of Pittsburg. Pa., who was visitin j relatives there, heard of the offer. I Followed by a crowd of admiring children, he walked into the store. The shoes fitted him perfectly as Cinderella's slippers. MISHAWAKA NEWS Man in the Street Gee. if we could get the building movement going that Mishawaka so much needs half a million worth this year, by hokey! In reading the biographies of great and noble women. one is struck by the circumstance that It is not nu-utionod where one of the m got her stat t im a public dance hall. , , , rts that good Tho government repo m;iK ct s may oo nau at pre-war priei. Put ytu'll have to put up j more woi k or goous io ger. au' prewar price to pay for the cow. The truth of tlii matter is. we are getting to be tloi'.a r-erazv in thi coun try. I u t ri ush a lly a tow in't any less row titan during the If ou don't bciice i:. ask 1' erhart. He knows. worth war. Fred A tolumnist S. 1 V ; a w i wif. knows she can jolly more out of her husband than she can nag him out f. True, but that is a vulgarly ma- : rial and hypocritical way of getting it getting it under false pre-t-nsts. as it wm. The real fun is ; tly him until he tjulrms and juct i. ike him die. Then she feels as if he bad not only shown her powt r, at earned tho money besides. campaign against illiteracy sliould proceed without cessation, but we notice that quite a number of men seem to desire getting tangled up with some permanent corned beef and cabbage works rathe- than become enthralled by a problem in conic section. Owr.er tan now move liyaors from their present storage to their homes for personal use. in accordance with the recent opinion of the supreme court. This wj.l enable ite a ipenJ their number ot e'trsens to r.ights at home again. , We are ::ot taking any part in this Iha'.-Igir.dis row, but we do hope that tho chief justice of the United States supremo court will not eide to take on the supreme arbitership of pugilism. wrest.mg or craps, Buss. a needs 10.000 American , issionaries." de lares a Maryland minister. Ten thousand fiddlesticks! B'i-ia r.ecds to be invaded by oO.OCO barbers, back! up by a merchant f.e' loadtd with soap. about reform The ?trant:esi thin:

ADDITIONAL

Duplicate's Ray's Mishap

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Josef fluill mot's visit to thi (ountry almost an exact duplicate f JoK-'s Kay's trip to Antwerp last summer. Hay h ft America for the Olym- ' pie game? figured an an almost cerlaJn winccr in the middle distance ' events. In training he pulled a tendon and made a poor showing before' tho Antwerp crowd?. (lulllemot left I'm we in good condition. In training for his Atleritan ih'but in tin- (luaranty clu-o.tiOu-mcter feature he hurt his right foot. Unwilling to disappoint the fans Chicle Evans, National Amateur Champion, (Sow Writing Golf Edition i Twenty years ago Charles (Chick) ; hvans. jr., present western and na tional amatour goir champion, started t( gather material for a book on polf. He finished writing i' this wir top. and it is to be published March 1. "Chick i:varis Oolf Book" thatV the title was begun on the links of tho Old Kdgewater (Jolf, club In Chicago, a. course now covered with ; apartment buildings. Chick didn't know then that the notes he was always scribbling would furnish the copy for the must unique contribution to the Scottish game ever put between covers. He was imi.ly imbued with one Idea, and that was to permit nothing to escape him. What he suw on the link as a caddie he jotted down and filed away. Sometimes Chick made Occasionally he picked wrong golfer as a model. mistakes, out the Then h - had to begin all over again. He copied the swing ef noted players of that period and put his imprecision down on paper. Then he started to practice. He repeated thai swing "a million times," ho says, and made careful notations of how j he progressed and why. only to disI cover at a later dato that those mil - j lion sw ings were all wrong. Always a Student. Hi; caddie davs over. Chick bocame a champion at an age when most golfers begin their game, but 1 he never coaed being a student. After each match he wrote down what he had learned, and pride never prevented him changing Ills stylo. After long and patient pracI tico he once worked out a grip j which he considered perfect, and j which contributed to his winning ' i li:i in r hmshlns On his first trip i r r uau tic iuuiiu iii.il ii.iii. uuu" i j 1 ,:, f.,, ,1 t li t ll.prr Vri-.lnT. ha 1 a better one. . it took mm six months to unlearn the old one. Tho persistency which has mark ed his career on the links i reflect- ' ed through the 400-odd panes of his . . .? ...... . i book. Ho left nothing to chance, ! With him it was to be ".shown." Besults alone counted. A style, backed by years, was dropped in a day if a new style contributed to tho clipping of a stroke off the courserecord. A remark overheard by him on tin links while a caddie that his i j i-i its failure to tackle the t hewing jgum habit. Isn't it liable to make ; us a prognathous nation. Or, by ! giving the Jawbone constant employ ment, docs I: really encourage gabby people to bo silent? Of course, as the dreadful time draws near when our faithful pa- ! triots of democracy arc to be scpaj rated from their juicy emolumental ! delights, wc feel that they ought to ! manifest the resignation of Job. who said in the diy of affliction. "The Lord gave and the "Lord hath taken away: blessed be the name of the Lord." Nowadays, some women have so many operations that they make a set of fashionable night gowns every lime they go to the hospital which they call their operation outfits. Now that rather and Son week Is over in South Boend. would it Imperil matters for us to suggest that j Fathers and Sons tell each other the truth, or would It be better tot let the conversations between them take its naturally restricted course.

. j In Idaho, the anti-cigaret bill de-Tsponsorcd by state Sen. Harding, has j passed. We know of no reason why

'this bin snouia have become a law ! unless the legislature took the pains to ascertain that a sufficient number j of people enjoyed cigarets to war- : rant the suppression of them. j i "Glory be." exclaims a writer In ! the Nebraska State Journal, "the ; time has arrived In the readjustment j program when we can purchase a

SPORT KEWS

th- stout-hearted I'oilu ran in soft : rubb'T-sokd shoes and saw Hay,, H logins and I'onilg finish ahead of him. In true form Guillemot wt.uhl be a good match for the American fliers. His du-tancc. h.owt ver. i-j 5,000 meter the race in w hich he won the Olymjie championship. Defeat has not detracted his popularity. from Injury to his foot made it necessary for him to decline scores of invitation matches. Ho will not be abb- to run for months, physician say. persistency would make him a champion, if nothing eine, was never forgotten. It was that as much as! :1 1 V h ! tl i-Vi!1i ol-irtn.l liri-i nil I his "notes." In time this accumubated information brought him title

'' inie, ,u uome arm aoioau. nuuiwnen wp road that ÖÖ per cent

eventually made him the lone American possessor of the golfer's -Double Crown." Carcvr of Author. Printer's permanent ink has now made a record of what Chick .-aw and learned during the transition period of the game. 1'ortilied by the nuffl of material, biographical, historical and technical, he has ! written a book unlike any which has before. The story brings out In vivid tyle, not only the picturesque career of the author who, with pure dogKotlness and without a single golf los-son, made himself a champion, hut historically and technically it is Invaluable. What L'O years of golf has taught ban been boiled down by Chick Into two chapters on instructions. "Shots and how to make them.' and how to use them.' and "Clubs tell It nil. 1 Explanatory photographs embellleh . 1 . .... . rr-l.ÄMÄ r m 1 r- 1 1 I

no- ,oe,e ,i,r oi inese iu;can tropics are known to have the

page illustrations. Included Is ricture of the world's greatest golfer and striking bit of scenery m tho mc: difficult course in the world, TVXCII CIIALLi:.(;iN HITMAN. , 15r AflS(K Vr9: , NF.W York. Fob. 26. Joe Lynch, I bantam champion. Is not only w illin-, to give Pete Herman a return match for the title, but ho is challenging him, Eddie Mead, his manager said Saturdav. I'l'.XXSY WINS. Ity AfOiiM l.ited l're: PHILADELPHIA. Feb. 2th The Fniversity of Pennsylvania team re-f-ater Columbia here today 18 to 13. ri iun: nvi: wins. i Tf .- I...I.a.I !..-.. ow .1 CHICAGO. lb. 20. Purdue defeated Northwestern in a w estern conference basketball game tonight. 24 to 15. NWAAIPICD: PLYMOUTH, Ind.. Feb. 26. The local high s.'hool basketball team was swamped hero Friday niyht bv the North Liberty quintet by a 8 9 to 2:: scoro. The visiters scored fit will. Seroggins. th visitors' star forward, hit the mt-sh for L'l fild gol. hat without paying half the purchase price of a house." Just to prevent a tremendous controversy over this declaration K t us state that the person who wrote these words Is a man and Is not Interested in spring millinerv. A Chicago fashion dictator suys the short skirt Is doomed. We iL not underestimate the power of die tators. and we know fashion dictators are tyrants, but tyrants fall and tyranny perishes When ou put some man's dictum against the eyea of the world well the ayes are apt to have It. A Georgia judge holds that It is not illegal to steal anybody's liquor, since liquor has r.o legal status. It may no: be- illegal, but it is exceed- ' IriRly ill advised especially where trigger-fingers r.re always sensitive and liquor is scarce. v a John F. Krar.ur says women are 1 j skilful as bootleggers, being enabled! to hide bottles in their clothing Few womn dress so they could hid a small bottle of iodine, much less a quart projectiüe. If ydj are going to ay it with rowers, say it in the front yard with them. Melville W. Mb had his swn ! Packr.rd car stolen Thursday night. If that had hapene-i to his name sake. Toni Mix. it would have b?-n recovered by the end of the first reel and there would have been a . beautiful woman wt the steering ! vhee1. i

7 Hope to Go Higher, " Says Parachute Drop Record Maker

i-A WTo.V. oki.i.. ! ' !. Sf r;t. 1:: I " V. i t:ilrrs . ; a n-w wrH n c - or,! at Vi s Id ruvtr Law:"-.. tkl.l.. v. lif n h- 1' a-c.d fri;i ..n irpl 1 n- at a h- ich: :':'.:'t" feet a:d les'-fnd-f -fi'ly with a p.;r.:chu: T!i' I i -viiius high ri ' ord for i parnchut'' junij; way J-jjooi f.-t. S.r;it. Chanit" rs tlls "f t lu- thrills. ind si nit !o!.s li' experh't.c d in th following manner: "It's gr- .it por: to d from "the : uof of wcrlJ." - "A of foar miles is rial fun.! "Ti'.i-n- i-r. " t muva danger of this 1 ."-po.-t omir.g a favorite with th- ' : m altitudes, though o'nc ouA-e t:i'"il I ' j-arachute-jurnping. ymi l.avt a crav- ; ir.g to leap from hihor und higher1 1 altitude. : ' I broke a v.'orl 1 record in l- ap- 1 ing from iL'.'iO t as reist red i hy tile altimeter of my pi'.ot. Lieut, i i ll T. Wa-'iu-r, b-;t that art. I'm poii:g to jump j-ist a j "ro:n his h c-p point. it).milc (;;tlo. "T,u- tried to dissuade t nu'hir.g the attempt n v,for a 00-mile gale was blowing ii ir.ade landing in a paiachute and ' h.n- I 'We battled for .in liour in r,.;.'; ( Do llavilanu to attain our heißh: i "'"Vc wrr not cquipp.eil with o- j i gen tanks, and, his being t.ie huh- 1 ' est altitude I over had re-iched. 1 i ! wa nearly overcome. I didn't io:;lh:i- this until I had Start d to ris for my lip. I was so weak I could scarcely get to i.iy feet. "In my youth I hail always been fond of h-aping. but wlvn 1 looked j over tlv side of our ship it sceru-ii I like a. Inn way for :t jun p. OM j Mt. Schott looked lile a miniature i inuJhousf. W.'uricr (Jivrs Signal. "I was ho bitterly cold that I felt T as King uiolei-. I.icut. Warner looked ba'k and told me afterwai d t j ho saw by my paleness that if I was - going to jump at all I would have j to do it then. "He g ive the signal. Scrambling over the .side of the plane. 1 dove I 1 I head hrst with all the effort I could ! muster. I had to dive far out to , avoid bring struck hy the control j w ires or the plane's tail, I "I fell like a ro k for a ' .".000 feet before I could s. rip-cord that held the cover t least i.e the of my j parachute and jerk it out. I "I remember little of that fall My i actions -were mechanical.. I do know , Ihn t I fumbled n bit in getting the rip cord out. I was weak. A light breeze caught, the p.u.iJ j Percentages intrigue our f;.iu vour Iresidents have been College men" we wonder how many that was. Twenty-seven n.en have held tho orlice, and on that basis 14.SÖ were college men. But Mr. Hardj ing may be included and tlm would ulieate that IT.. 4 were colle.-'e men. The fractions grow worse: i: looks as though .someone was being in sulted. There is a further j.ossibility: some folks reckon Grover

Cleveland as the twenty-second and j to goUth Bend "and forced into Inthe twenty-fourth president. This J mnrai relations hv Talbot, ah n? with makes Mr. Harding the twenty-ninth ! rs sipanjrler. president. It's a strange thing that I " 1 '.

in so important a matter, men can not agree on how many president's the country has had. And when ono comes to fractional presfdents. tho task of the percentage gatherer . proves hopeless. Milwaukee Jouinal. C(.rlain t;th of the South 'Anu-ri-.i!-mn ponds and set.k lar,cr an(1 (cooler stretches of water when the j sun threatens to dry up their late j habitations. Thev spend whole davs and nicrhts on their march, anli I travel by hunrirods through the; moist undergrowth of the forests. According to a Brazilian cher.ii -t, the fiber of a plant which abounds! is the state of Para can bo utilized ! in th manufacture of several varie- ! ties of paper.

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j s MAY MANTON TRIX LAST M a y M a n t o n ' 5S EE ; EE 1 ZZ ' EE E EE EE 'EE EE ' EE E i

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KEEP YOURSELF FIT in order that you can do business with wide awake people. And the one certain way of keeping fit is by taking a course of Turkish Treatments at the SOUTH BEND BATHS LADIES DAY SUNDAY, 9 A. M. to 3 P. M. Lady Attendant. FARMERS TRUST BUILDING Frank Kosczewski, Masseur, formerly at Oliver Hotel Baths BASEMENT LINCOLN 2719

r-rf i -7 yj

I 1 A v4-l-vt. A ir3 1 TOP FT ( r V i lull chute as it unfolded. A wiiifi. flutter of silk, and I wa5 floating at an altitude of ahnut 17.00C feet. Tieplane had disappeared. I was in a daze from t h. lichtnrs of tno . i : - ! mosp'ioro and the cold. I 'There is ; lwavs dancer f s.i! ! parachutes iKritinp from friction. . fo emergen' v, I had a second par.'.I ! chute strapped in front of me. "The ground was rising up rnp;'i ; to meet ire. so at an altitude ;' ! about IO.odO frt T flung the second i parac hute ooen. "Then the gale in the Inner ni, i tude caa:;iu me and I was r'.-dtt. ! In the high wind . yj i i . . 1 1 1 t . Fort S'il! reserTition. unable to fr--myself. "My para?h ite at las: caus;h In trf:-. ;mtl I scrambled safely to earth. It had taken me approximately'':! minutes to lai.d from an altitude of four miles. ".My hope that next lime Lie:.. Warner tan carry me several tho isand feet higher.' UlAre in Bra-net of Of United States Marshal? (CONTixrr.n from page onli those of John W. Taliont. supreme president of 'lie national Order of Owls, and Mrs. Pearl Spangler. nurse at the Owl hospital, who face 1 charges of violation cf the Manr. White Slave act. preferred I v Mls j pcar, Hilton Hnplry, of Tcpkn. i Fief rigerator cars, cooled by. an .- monia machines operated by Internal combustion engines utilizing t etroleurn for fuel, are being built fo; a German railroad. When You "Say It With Flowers'' Say it with the Rest. ; j f May Manton Kxchisivc $Q 00 Klark or Tan

V

A

" VVN'

One More Pair

Almost every woman has

longed

for one more pair of shoes or slippers. The demands of fashion and service are so varied that an extra style adds a wealth of satisfaction to the Spring wardrobe. This season every woman can enjoy the possession of an extra pair. Present price levels are of such a character that one more pair is easily within the average shoe budget.

Guarantee Shoe Co. 1 125 N. Michigan St.

17

Northern Indiana's Leading Newspaper

MORNING EVENING SUNDAY

The

OUTH

NEWS-

A VIGIL THAT NEVER SLEEPS With a corps of twenty-one editors, report-is. telegraph operators fourteen men and seven jirN. THh NEWS-TIMES covers the local held, night and day. It is the greatest news gathering and publishing agency, r.ct only in South Bend and throughout Northern Indian?, but in Southern Michigan. Three Leased Wire Telegraphic Services and Special Correspondents Feed The News-Times Columns From All Nooks and Corners of Earth The United Pres and International News erviecs. supplemented by the Associated Press on the morning edition, stand connected by telegraph with THE NEWS-TIMES offices and nothing escapes thr telegraphic editor's notice. Besides special correspondents are employed in such centers as Washington, Indianapolis, and nearer home, in Elkh art, Laporte. Niles. Plymouth, Goshen; everywhere, say, in St. Joseph and surrounding counties.

Special Features Daily and Sunday That Break Up the News Monotonies They are innumerable, of a news, sport, ethical, social and fashion nature, by such writers as E. M. Thierry. Milton Bronner, John H. Wigmore, Dr. James I. Vance, Djuna Barnes and Olive Roberts Barton. They also bring you daily The Satterfield, Condo, Parks and Ahern Catroons and the "Duffs," "Freckle?," "Toots and Casper," "Barney Google," and "Polly and Her Pals," Comic Strips A page each of these latter two, another page of "Just Boy" and one of "The Katsies" go to make up a highly colored Sunday comic supplement always interesting to the children and some grown-ups.

AMONG THE STARS BILL ARMSTRONG'S 'TOWER OF BABEL" Everybody knows Bill Wilbar Ray with his "Tower of Babel"; the jokesmith. not only of the whole office, but this entire town. Bill ha3 a following just five times as numerous as the papers we print quoted and requoted until no longer recognizable. "A little nonsense now and then," etc. You know the rest.

MISS HELEN ROWLAND AS MRS. SOLOMON America's most noted woman satirist. Her "Mrs. Solomon Says," in The Sunday News-Times and her "Reflections of a Bachelor Girl," and "As a Woman Thinketh" articles, arc all classics. Mi?s Rowland isn't a female preacheress. She is a philosopheress. Get the Rowland habit and s?e the world of femininity with unsealed eyes.

EDGAR A. GUEST AND JAMES J. MONTAGUE I hese are the day to day poets among The NewsTimes features supplemented Sundays by Arthur Brooks Baker. What th ese th ree can't think of to weave into rhyme well, simply isn t worth it.

J. P. McEVOV BACK WI TH US His "Ignorant Essays" are a comparatively new accretion to The News-limes. He calls them "Ignorant Essays" apparently because there is so much in them that everybody knows but need to be to!d about before they knoz they know it.

r

ADELE GARRISON THE "REVEL ATR ESS" Proof of the interest in her "Revelations or a Wife," long a feature of The News-Times, is always present when now and then her copy fails to arrive and it is necessary to forego an installment tor a day. The telephone at once brgsns to rattle and her "fan" want to know "why." Leave Your Su bsci -iption

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'it the

Main St. and Colfax A v. Phone 2100

END Office

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