South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 93, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 3 April 1921 — Page 22

1

22 -TNDAY, AI'Rll, 3, 1021 THE. SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

ühe south bend NEWS-TIME j The Foundation But Not Founder

Morning Evening Sunday

3. IX. BTErini.NiON, rutll'tser. JOHN HUNXlT ZCVEIt. V.r.

Member United Press and the ' International News Service . . . Xi Jiiiiüi L' lttioo. -' . Member Associated Pretj Tfc AtiocUteu i'r i .Uivly i.Utltl tu t 'or ric Jiiut.oa cr a). utB uiii Uif udlUfl tu It or nt .te tre-iitcd lu ut irum edition cf LH pap-r. ,n,J tb Io l mUuuJ Lrda UU dcti t ot Pj tlcru u cdltlou. Ail ri.U of republication f "-1 o Pfcoe. M!n noa rrlTte J.rmr.cü ietnn. Qt r?? rice of persori or departing nuuied. AXtr s p. m. ; s ' touer; iilu bjcUI Ultor; Alau 102. firctUUoa n lrtiut, SUBSCRIPTION RATES: ilnrnia ta1 nen!n E5,l'V: Unfile- ipf. Sc; uu3aj. 10c Illvrre4 jj rsnlr iU S and MlsUwik. I lu.W tr tar lu adTance, or .C'C ty .ck. Morolcg or Krfr.iD V-lIUr-ni. dalijr lucluiln M.nH. Lbiared I tU ojtL H?ni patoiTJee a ecuul tla ! UAItb liV MAIL. cd 1 Vr. e Mot. 2 Mo. 1 M. 1 3.uu 4 SA 'W 8 1 LtS -TC LAO 7.W 873 2UJ K.Ui 4."i . Fcrlfa Rste. 51. to montii

DfCRTISTN(i It A TEH : Alk tb adrrt!!r? dp"rtrn3t. : ror!tn A1ertltD HiprenttJT : CONK. IlfJNTON e ;

WOliUMAN, INC.. Fifth a y., Nw York City. 72 W. Aiairi at.. CaScsRo; American bid.. Detroit, Vlrtrr bid. Kna Cltj. and i onititi'!! n bldg.. Atlant. Tfca Neu a-Ttm .n' f!t?ori to kp Ita adTertials jr olumn fre from fraudn.e. mlireprentatlon. Any penoa defrauded throuya patrona tf aoj diertiiement In tLli rarer will confer a fatur ou t tutotcmat by reporting toe fct completely.

APRIL 3. 1921

OUR FIRE INSURANCE PREDICAMENT AND OUR QUADRENNIEAL CHANGE OF PARTISAN FOOTBALLS. Til predion nr1 nt !n which South 13 n l lind.s itv-lf In th Tnatt-r of Insurance rat. fa, afl forth by tha tiro in.Tjranc-i tiniU rwriU-.-a, tho result of our not r aving kept rice v, ith th provth of tho city In tha matter of wuttr uj.tly. illutratta only one of the lollies of our present cjstpm of city govc'mTnent. W-3 rire not s-iyini: tliia In criticism of tho Cnrson adminJptratlon. any more than of tho Keller administration tr thft CooLz amJnLtratlon. Each of them after j-pcndlr.fT aljout two-thirds of their time preparing a trtram found Insufficient time Ifft to carry them f ut. and Lholr succcsora .succcsaivc'.y have consigned thoso proKranru to tlio Junk heap. The Carron ndmlnLnratlon will fo tho finio ay BB tfld tii Keller and Gotz admlnlirtrations. Of c&iTk, tho Qoots program could not bo acceptable to Keller, not the Keller rrcgram to Carson, and Mayor Carbon un!e-n ha chances to become hi3 own nuccfiwor, will sf- his program Junked. It la the beauty of political parties, or political cliques, movlr.fr In and out, each to undo the work of hte predecessor much as posaiMo and dl?play a different range of lrllltancy. A continuing form of poverrrment, vrlth a com-m!-?1on non-partisan, and never changing: as a whole fit any on tlm. with an experienced city manaper to execute plan.- for municipal lmproTOrnent, would enahl the city to pursue a definite pro fiam and eventually g-et .somewhere. Our water fy9.tem ouht to bo a bu.s!nr?3 propceition and not a political football. "VV aro colntr to hear more about this continuing system of city government during the next ffiw days; tomorrow In particular, and all ho regard th city ns their's rather than a playthin?: for politicians will do well to ll9ten. Tho fid-lre-? beforo tho Chamber of Commerce tomorrow noon and th9 Hu-slne Weincn'fl Chamber of Cornmroo tomorrow evenlnT should have a full attendancei. Ikcw tho addre. lieforo tho Leafrue of Woman Voter In tho efternoon. Mr. Clyde VT. Ketcharn, of Kalamazoo, hns been through tho mill; his lived under both tho old mayor-council fystem of government, such ns wo bave her, and under the city manager plan such tf that city now has. Kalamazoo hed problem very p'.mJ'ar to our water problem; problems that were srminply rrrrpr?slrlft of polutlon, with politicians at h helm, Fh lms polved thoo rroblems and the polftfnlap.3 are nr.trry, of course. They would have don It different, or probably, not nt all, and then besides, tho crime of their henchmen being phut out ftr.d havlnjj no part In the execution. and .ArcortÜmrly thl.i urrin that everybody possible trar T.fr. Kotchrtm -it fim one cf tomorrow's meetfXST? to t nddre.s.nl ty him. Let us forget our pollCcrü Lfolnderi r.r.d do it for Fouth Ber.d. This fler Innrnnce iroblem in onlj on of a few where uvwi tho rrju&e of u aro be!n hit in the pocket"bocfic try our cxlstlr.c: Fyrtom of partium maladmtn-i.-tÄtJori. Wo can't alTord to continue it. I-.et u have

SCOUTING IN SOUTH BEND AND ITS PROMISE TO THE FUTURE. Zhe campaipm for funds for fcoutdom In South XCnrt vhlch J" To be conducted this week, is one of 'ba nxsi wtrthy that la been put on hers for jo.ih

j firvw CTlirs 1h Fuld too, without ca.tinsr any ret'ectlons

jpca t3tcthtT3. It Is Uilierent but ncno the irs-s lmcr.et. lThoH Soys of today who aro to be the men C.t tomorrow-, mmy of them, ned ycoutinar. There

I cro Iocan In It, traininiT In it, discipline in it. obj (ütrm'Mo frcr.i r.o ether source. It U the 'east, nnd at j fb Tvme time tho r.ut, that r ::y community can Jo j fnrCio r.pVjll ('!:.: of it."? leys. j rVoui'nc is an Institution, rot an rxperinienf. It ' tCd the, rouh an I ready younttr frequently more rcuh than rady, nd converts him joon to tha rplrlt of potvIc; tho forvlco cf tho heme, the j pcliool, hi Job, his follows, tho community, lie 1s ; n-nd to feel his obligation?, to respect them; to ; recoprni7.o his duties, and give thei preference. It is ' to the boy In his formative years what fomp advoj cate have raid military training wotild do fr votiivt tr.en ? ut which behaus of their greater mar-arit. ! Fjeh xr.r.itaxy training dvca not do. Scou tin? dee;? for tho boy what military training ! promises the youni? man but seldom delivers. It dors ', it too without tho ir.illtarlam. It inculcate?? patriot-

Ism, afford d!.-clplino promoter regard for duty, without any of tho mllitarisrio evils. It Is in a way toe. a. fcrt cf a boy' republic, involving in lait;

! rr.ffsure tho principle cf Felf-povernment, and exirler.c at h-'.f-deter:r.lnatlcn.

Fouth IJrn.l cann

arford to let

m oVt'-me nt

1 tn. "Wo are huibüns1 for tho future. The scout ru- ' cutive i drlr.i; no -it work. th. 5-a-;ts are folI"v. -

irz hin r rather aoeptiric his directions. in e.-

celKr.t ;.-:rit. In-l:f d. If we could accomplish r." th In?; -more than to lay tho prour.dvork for some futuro poller men an 1 lirtmcn. It would 1 o wr ah moro than It courts. We in'.L'ht even pu priest the formation VH FCCUt trr.i'P. if it wt re poy:hle, a?r.'r. tho re

ar, d the police t pei iaily. 1 l.ul our .' th.e i'.itii;.' Mpir., anil oir tire, h-- 1 : . v '1 c naii. h: ciiH-r.-' : -1 '. ':. in s v. : i , , . w m1 1 I : ; : i 1 1 :',; ..! i i . ;. t .it O: i:.. f. r t :.. ! - t tid!- - .-f f.rf'i-.-n or p-di '.r.-' It v . 1 i

te irood fcr th" fn'.y n.s lain ; t i n . and K'od v for them In I'.lr.z rood to tliem: Iv. s. a. will. W'q

men and pc'.ie policemen fc"n.. ruori p tr.rffa, nrm-r.-r t double th--:.- v But it v. h! ! ihelr ever l

By John Henry Zuver XVI IT has been said that there has been only one Christian and that he was a Jew, but that is irony. The Christianity that we know was not founded by Jesus, but by Paul; thence by a strange series of coincidences resulting in a composite institution best defined as a cross between Pauline Judaism and Roman paganism. King Constantine introduced the paganism. Paul never saw Jesus. in the fleah. It was many years after the crucifixion before he even heard of Him and he must have, at first, heartily approved of the manner after which the earthly career of Him whose cause he was later to champion, had been summarily ended. Paul was an educated Jew and educated Jews never took kindly to the teachings of Christ, save in now and then an isolated case, such as Paul himself became, after a severe shock. He was also a Pharisee; boasted of his learning; was strictly orthodox; thanked God he was not "like other men;" had been educated under Gamaliel, the reactionary, who was a descendent of Hillel, the progressive. Paul's tribal name was Saul; Saul of Tarsus but hia father, a Benjamite, had been accorded Roman citizenship so that the son was "freeborn," giving him the Roman name of Paul. He scarcely, if ever, boasted of his Roman citizenship, however, save when as Saul he was getting some Christian into trouble; or as Paul, the Christian, he was trying to get himself out of trouble. The earliest known of him was his persecution of Christians of the school of Stephen, seeing in such doctrine a new creation intolerable to Pharisaism, and therefore a heresy that needed be suppressed. As a member of the sanhedrin he brought about the condemnation of the apostle; then invoked the Roman law to effect his execution and joined in the throwing of the stones. Next, in his dogmatic fury, he had himself appointed an agent to stamp out the Christians at Damascus. "Saul, Saul, why persecutest thou Me?" Along that road from Jerusalem to Damascus, Saul and his army of butchers were trudging their way. And then, "it is hard for thee to kick against the pricks!" Saul, struck blind, fell to earth, as the heavens opened, but he saw the point. It was the voice and the light of Him whose followers and teaching this mad pharisee had set out to destroy. Converted! Yes. And "what wilt thou have me to do?" Paul never directly answered the question that the secret self-consciousness of the truth he was trying to exterminate had drawn from Jesus through that burning light, but he evidently decided not to "kick against the pricks" any longer. Those "pricks" were the "pricks" of conscience; "pricks" of inherent intellectual bent seeping through from Hillel, despite the intermediate reaction of Gamaliel tending even toward friendship for paganism. The' "kicks" were the "kicks" of pride; of fa natical self-assurance, intolerant of change, vain refusal to admit the possibility of any improvement that might discredit the infallibility of former ways. What happened to Paul on the way to Damascus has since happened to millions of men; the outcome of their own little internal battles of conflicting emotions, intellectual clashes, prejudice dueling against enlightenment, of which the outside world never knows. They see the light and are temporarily dazed. And as more than occasionally happens, when conversions take place, Paul became just as uncompromisng, as determined, and as intolerent of his old ideas, and the things for which he had stood, as he had fomerly been of the new faith which he had now come to embrace. His conceptions of Christianity were even more furious to Jewry than the presence of Christ himself had been. He was tutored in all the intricacies of Jewish law; was by habit an expert in all the quibble and quips of the learned, and thus maddened his old friends and new enemies the more. Convinced that Jesus was the actual Messiah foretold by the Jewish prophets, he set out to prove it by the use of exegesis and forensics, but when the high priests began to talk the same judgment for him as he had helped deal out to St. Stephen, he heard a loud cry from Mesopotamia and became a missionary. Secretly making his escape from Jerusalem and then Damascus, Paul turned his attention to the Christianizing of Gentiles; appealing to the Romans, the Ephesians, the Thessalonians, the Corinthians, the Galatians, the Colossians, the Philippians with whom the Christian church, in fact, took first effective root. 0 Christ was not a Christian. He was the rock upon which Christianity was built. Paul was the chief architect.

MRS. SOLOMON SA YS

By Helen Rowland Being Confessions Of Wife 700th

My dushter, consider the e!fcoinplacency of man. Tor it is more imperturbable thin a matinee idol's vanity, and h.irder to -afre than a good lawjer's temper. I. ho saith in his heart: 'How the women of the world ra e over me! Tor behold, half of then are afflicted with man-omania, and are mad about me. "ArJ the other half are afflicted

I tvith man-ophobia. and are mad at j IPe!

' Half of them torture their hair v. i:h lives and stains and hot curl-iuK-tons for my delectation and approval and thy other half cut off their locks in lmitaton of me. "I-n. the Man-omaniacs ftain their lips with pomegranates find with carmine, and disguise their faces rice-powder and Chinese w hite, that they may bo beautiful in my fight. "Yea. they shorten their tkirts and their sleeves and endure torments of exposure that I may behold dimples in their knees and their elbow?, to find tnem pleasing. They uncover their backs to the icy night wind for my admiration. They dance jpon three-Inch heels, that they may seem lissome In mine eyes. "At my approach, they flutter and bite Their lips and are covered with smiles of welcome; and at my departure their lives are filed with emptiness. For, unless there be a Man present, life hath no oharm for a Man-omaniac. And all their days they battle, ore with another, for my favor and my Fmiles. "Mut the Man-ophobiac? are more flattering still. '.'For. although they pretend to hold me In scorn, and call me 'Tyrant!' and 'Oppressor! and 'Wom

an's enemy:', yet do they imitate me in all things! Yea, in the bobbin;; of their hair and th smoking of their clgarets. they flatter me, an! follow after me. "And. when they search out mv foibles .and weaknesses and hold i up to ridicule in their oluK. I pr : their contumely with ha-ha, bolt is all free advertising for me. "They hae stolen my rrivi'.cey. and filched my jobs, and broken int. my professir ns; yet in their sewrrt meetings, all their talk is of me, and how to encompass me, and what to feed me for breakfast. "Ho, when a Man-ophoblac Weddeln, she apologlzeth to her friends.

and tcornetl. to take her husband s name; and her spouse is known in the temple as a new member of th" 'Only Their Husbands Club." "Yet. in his own house, his ttc and his moods are consulted, and his slippers are laid out; and when he returncth from hi labors ho (indeth his wife powdering: her nose! "Verily, verily we arc the irresistible sex! "For to bo worshipped in popularity, and to bo denounced is note;iety. "And. until the women cease to love us or to hate us; until wives cease to eater t us. and widows to flirt with us. and damels to pursue us, and vamos to camp usj; yea until all women I e come indifferent to all men we .hall continue to shine and to rejoice in the spotlight! "Yea, vintil they find something better to think about, we .hall continue to be 'if! "Verily, until they cease to take ;is seriously, and begin and take us for pranted 'we should worry!" b'elah. (Copyright. 1921.)

Ignorant Essays BY J. P. McEVOY

tepeat that no contribution that one can make to tho community welfare could mean more to the future. They are boys, just boys, now, but it will make th-m better men and more like the kind of men we need. Somebody sometime said: "God givo us men! A time like this demands fctronp: minds, great hearts, true faith and honest hands; Xen whom the lust of office cannot kill; Men whom the npoils of office cannot buy; Men who po.-sefw opinions and a will; Men who have honor; men who will not lie!" It Is a prayer toward the answer of which nothing premises more than Kcoutdom. It anticipates the matured life of the true scout better than anything else wo know of set to words. To our mind, no mora gripping instrument for the fulfillment of that prayer through direction of youth, could scarcely have been evolved'even from high heaven.

Democracy

THE KING BUSINESS LOOKS UP. That former King Carl would have attempted to regain the throne of Austria and Hungary, and reestablish the dual monarchy, had he not expected to nccomplbdi his purpose, is decidedly improbable. He must have enruuraf ement from somewhere anions the royal families with which he is aligned. That is practically tertain. Carl'.- hanoc of regaining his throne is greater in Hungary, where it mlht be no difficult matter to transform the regency into a restoration to the Ilapsburg monarchy. Austria is- a republic, hut it also mi'ht te switched to Carl's side by an oldfashioned coup. Regardless of the outcome, moncrrhbts hope to unite the two countries with Carl on the throne. Constantine, Carl's former partner-exile in Switzerland, rt turned to the Greek throne, where, he appears to be seated hrm'y. Ry royal marriages of two of hi ihildren, lie has strengthened his position. Constant ine's ucc-ss, despite allied opposition, encouraged Carl to break his parole in Switzerland. The kinc business looks up decidedly. Rut tho cas of former Fmperor Carl eclii:s-3 Constantino's. Tho Hapburs were equally guilty with ihv I lohc v.7.; rn in starting the world war. For centuvbs the Hapburg family in Vienna wis t'.w cer.tir t f European intrigue, the tock erchange wh'-re dip.omam tradtd. gambled and conspired. "What wo oa;; "Trouble in the Ralkans" could In marly all cases be traced to Vienna and the I fa paburs: bark door. (live a Hapsburg a return to the throne and you'll s-.-on have tho Hohenzollerrs casting their fishlines toward lb rlin. Rack of thee king intrigues Is the i'i'res.s of rentral Ruropean and Ralkan people. They re dangerously ripe for anything that offers r. change. lienor Hungary, possibly Austria also, n ay flop frrm the frying pan into Carl's Are, It is. b.owev-r. doultful if the Hungarian or Austrian people v.ould for any period of time endure the return f a monarchy. A people who have once tasted democracy will not long be content with im- ; c rial Ism.

iiv AisTiiri! mtooKs bki;h. Democracy, you must admit, is a peculiar thing. A hundred million folks essay to pick their proper king. They get a gang of candidates all made of kingly stuff. A pang of which the poorest one is plenty good enough; And then they fight and pull each

other's metaphorlc hair. ! Deciding which fdiall mount the I throne and Jill the royal chair.

twin iu;i lkctviu:s. Mr. Doveleigh attempted to cook himself a meal, but then Vi know how that is. How many times have I told you to stay out of the kitchen? Do I go into your office and spill scrambled eggs on your des'c? Do I throw ess shells on your lloor? Do I smear coffee grounds on your walls? I do not! Then why do

va.i rnmo fntn mv kitchen ana ao

) ' y.A . o i i v. these things? You was hungry?

Suppose you was Hungry: is uiu an excuse to make another Russia out of my kitchen? Did splashing coffee on the walls and throwing canned beans in the ceiling and filling the sink with burned bacon dull your appetite? Do you always put scrambled eggs on the door knobs when you're hungry? How do you get that way? Is there some hidden charm in scrambled eggs when applied to door knobs, and coffee when sprinkled on walls and ceilings? Docs an oven cook better when the door is torn off and do ice boxes function more ecfl'uently when the waste pipe is stuffed with spaghetti and corn cobs? I'm asking you, do they? Aw, lei me sleep.

Ret you sleep! Is that the only comeback you know? You talk with Rip Van Winkle! At least Rip knew enough to keep out of his wife's kitchen. I should think a husband like Rip would be a blessing. Think of a husband who would be considerate enough to take himself away for 20 years, instead of hanging around one's kitchen

trying to make tea with nutmegs and putting camphor balls in the .soup. Who told you you could go into my kitchen anyway? And when you do snoop around in there why do you leave it looking as if a four year old child had just gone through? Who do you think you are, anyway, a wrecking crew? Or tho Destroying Angel? Stay out of my kitchen. Co you hear? YHS, I HEAR! Yes, J'ou hear! A lot of good it will do. You'll bo back in there again. Dut don't let me catch you in there. Do you hear Don't let me catch you in there? J'm a patient woman. I don't say much what did you groan for then? Did you mean to insinuate any

thing? T say, I don't say much.

I'm patient, but you can go too far with mo. The next time I get into that kitchen and find corned beef and cabbage on the window panes and the top of the kitchen cabinet covered with ripe tomatoes that have bounded off the ceiling when you tried to p-rl them, you'll hear from me. I IM."T IKU'RT IT! I didn't say anything thi. time, but you'll iiear from me the next time. , ( Froni which one may deduce that Mr. Doveleigh will hear from Mrs. Doveleigh the next time.) Copyright, 1321.)

Getting married is as simple and easy as ordering tilings vvpr the

telephone; getting a divorce, as com-

piK Uieu iiin Mjui-w c;i i jug iii i.injn them back to the shop and trying to exchange them.

For four eventful, thriiling years the !

winners boost their man. And all the losers coldly knock in every way they can. The monarch has a watt, they say, upon his nether limb, Which makes his re-election hopes precarious and slim; His wife's a polished woman, but she cannot cook a bean. Which leaves her quite unsuited for

I

a democratic queen.

The

usages of ancient times were

pleasant in their way. And very capably, no doubt, they served their simple day. The common people sat about and drank their lemonade. And never tried to take a hand when kings were being made; And candidates who wished to hold a soft and purple job Had more to do than make a winning promise to the mob.

Solomon wives but

lived happily there were

with Too no "Rluc

laws" in those days to keep him sticking around the house all day, Sunday, no dry laws to make him grouchy at dinner, and no "in-laws" to drop in and ppoil his week-ends.

After a love-spat, a woman can more easil forgive a man for cutting her dead, than for treating her with perfectly cheerful amiability.

SHORT FURROWS

By Kin Hubbard ;

Crude oil prir.s have been cut In two, but gasorr..iv?c from the crude oil continues high. How iln :t it. Standard il ? o

-t -f livit ' drops, tb-. lu.dloid h doisn't '- i- n i:iin-,- tiie.n. f-r hi dol'ar so: ir ' a .

isHK LIGNUM (

.

We all have some little one tV.Ing ( been a

w're alius goin' t' do. but r.evfr git done. Ever' day an' ever' day we- think now we'll do so an' so, but we git clean thro life without doin' it. Somehow we never git time, or somethin happens t' head us off, or we git side tracked, or Je.t fergit it, but anyhow somethin'

seems t' keep us from glttin around

t' it. Ez Pash has got a screen door that's been leanin' agin th front o' his house fer IS years. Jt's all rusted out an' jest holdin' t'gether. He jest never got around i' liangin' it. I've heard him say hundreds o

i times. "Well. I guess I'll go home, j I've got a screen door that ought : :' he hung an' I'm oing i' hang it

THINGS WE NEVER DO

goin t gu a u it lens ler

I

ti

l

r f

v bile I think o

it.

Ft

ther it

It's a rare r"r.;rf.'nun who renumber speeches . ruatle 'ast summer.

le.m where he p it it jears ago. He's industrious enough lie's not shiftle-. but somehow he's jest never got around t' it. "Oh. guess everhuddy's that way." Mid 'Squire March Swallow. "I've

th blamed thin? In print an I've

i

my spectacles fer th la?t 20 years. bcen tryin ever since f look It up. I expect I've started out t' have it . . .. .. , . . , , . , ,A . . i by George, I can t git around t it. looked after 40 times, but somehow I never pit f it. It haint th cost. "That's th trouble. We're all too fcr I expect I've spent enough fergitfui little things o' lif-," -aiu money other ways in th' last 2u Rev. Wiley Tanger. 'Th' litt!years t' have it fixed a half dozen things th' bast an' i:.an tii' times. It's Jest pure fergitf ulness." most. We're all thoughtless when I remember once when I wuz a it c m- hatpin' screen doors, little boy visitin In Bowlusville. doin' kind acts, rcmemberin tm r Ohio, I heerd some-buddy talkin real friends an' doin' little things about lignum vitae an' I cut my fer nothin. When we git ole these visit short jest f git V ask my paw things pile up on us an' then it's what it wuz. but I ftrgot all about too late. An' that jst reminds me it. Then agin after I wuz a grown J I must buy a pair o' socks before man I wuz changin' cam at Forest.: I go home." Ohio, fer Wauseon. Ohle, an' heard ' Rimer Moots wuz alius goin' t'

tome stranger say ugnum ;;ae. i ten ;;i- wii now nu.r;; rp tii"ugru

said t' msejf now th n I'm g'-ir;' t'lo' her. or do sooIvt:iin' t' make her find out what that is a.s soon as ilthink he n.illy tard fer her take git to Wauseon. Rut th' excitement her t' a r: ovio or somethin. but he

Sil I r

We Will Make for You

i Hot

Gas-heated hot water is cheaper in fuel cosl and effort than water heated by any other means. Never has coal cost as much as it does today. On account of the advancement in transportation charges there is little likelihood of a return to former prices. Every home needs hot water equipment and demands hot water service. There are so many types and sizes of water heaters at such a range of prices that you can hardly afTord to do without this service. Hot water is no longer a luxury but is really essential to your health, comfort and happiness. We invite you to visit our display room where we have on exhibition all types of water heaters ready for your inspection and where we will gladly give any information you require. Northern Indiana Gas & Electric Co. 219 N. Michigan Street, South Bend, Indiana

:.Oi-, i WV: f-r- n J

t ri y -

c

Washing Wisdom, and Colors that Run Every housswife know3 there are colors which will run, unless washed just so. Our washing experts know it, too. When your family bundle comes to us, everything is carefully assorted silks here, woolens there, colored goods in one lot, white goods in another. All of these classes are washed separately, each by an individual method which careful study and years of practice have shown to be best. And if there are colors which may run, the dyes are set thoroughly at the very beginning, and your garments come back to you as bright and fresh as when new. Kiddies' rompers, babies things, school dresses and waists, frilly blouses everything that needs washing may be safely included in your family washing when you send it to es. wHfcfN ,OU ClLAN housm mis SPRING Send the Carpets and Rugs to us. Certainly, we clean them as well as Dry Clean all sorts of wearing apparel, from the flimiest blouses to the heaviest coats. WE CALL AND DELIVER ANYWHERE IN MISHAWAKA OR SOUTH BEND OAVIES IAUNDKTakd cleaning

THE SOFT WTER LAUNDRIT

ur-u LMwrm ,5T. fcomi nrND ad Chicago.

Send

Phones Main 597-598

J

o' meetin my aunt mad" mo ferir. all about it. Fver' tim I thucht of It I wuz cither in bet or amonq strangers. About a month aso I saw-

kept ferri tin" it nn' ferittin it till one da' she skipped out an' he never did pit t" tell her. (Copyright, 1321.).

Buy,

If You Want to - j Sell or

TRY Nev8-Timco Want Adc

I f

p.4 ( 9 i i