South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 170, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 19 June 1921 — Page 7

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SUNDAY, JUNE 19. 192 1

t ) ' O T i our cavmzs nam 7cc Interest M' rti:.!.. I; ,i lN'ato Ooid T'ri.j ....I: - r ... i;. v. it-- r,fl i H,,n ?i a::;. :irt of !-:. ! lti-d. and !: direct leigition of us iti'-r; I r st m'r.t Corporation n. ;-. : -s ever $225.000.) Our 1 1 r n I l,-'o (',( Not' s are 1j rrnny r -; t - nuT attractive thr, the :o ertrag? or : i t"j 1 contract 1' i::?. Th-c t-i-r.di an- 2-u 1 In ;!:;c of SlOO.ne. $r,PO.OO anil $1.000 S I XT I II T 1 1 N I XV I T3 1 i:.NT coupon rioN 122 So. Main Ft.. 201 Convervat.v ur- Hl Ig. South Hend. Imhar-.. Phon LH63. Hidden Charms are Revealed No woman ran afford to !'t her straight hair hldo hr-r rharm. Neither ran any woman aTford to take th risk of ruining her hair -ith a hai so-caI!'.'d 'permanent wa vrs." V'e u- t h f f ain n u s ,f.:! method; v, o arp !ir -o-ed wavers. Success ir.intce 1. Comfort Shop Hiss Darr r,o: r.oi .?. m. s. itidg. 1'lionc .Main V.l We have just received 2 patterns of very good Printed Linoleum which we can sell for the above price. There is only 1000 yards in this lot and these are PreVVar Prices so come before fh lot m rloffl out. We so have many other patterns at 89c. This sale will last until the 1000 vards is sold. The Indiana Wind ow Shade Co. 226 W. Jefferson Blvd. oath

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The Master It is n ncrv shape in the new brown shade Another Walk-Over combination-fitting oxford is something entirely new in shoe construction. Not only new in style, but in the cast of the shoe. It has the riht instep fit that evenly distributes all the weight. It feels good. The heel fits as though it were tailored. It is

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wide at the bottom and converges at the top would stay on without lacing. The new brown shade ia a deep, rich ton. Not a surface color, bat right in the Russia leather. Also in black and tan lealLera.

$10.00

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I A ;.irK" KfJV1 I ti i 1 . 1 1 n Jut cm- ' r-;.-t fl in Detroit has more than four . : i i i 1 m nf corridor.

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ELTON B. CREPEAU TKACIIKU Ol' SINCINO Studio, HO.-i X. Miohl-nn St. Lincoln 101M SOUT SHORE LINES EXCURSION Sunday, June 19 HUDSON LAKE LAKE PARK 50c ROUND TRIP to Michigan City .00 ROUND TRIP For Details Inquire of Ticket Agent Main 2920 123 N. Main St. SPECIAL ATTRACTIVE PRICES ON HOUSE WIRING Electric Accessories Electrical Repairing of All Kinds All Union Labor it Clouse's US . MICHIGAN 8T.

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5fotUhs Tale To Police Of "Wagging Tongues" Forcing Him Into W ay faring Life Shows Why Many Boys Leave Home

lly I'AIIK .1. LKONSON. Only ncently a youth appeared at the oflic; of th captain of police In South U:ncL Apparently he had s'-t-n Letter days. The earmarks of rrflncmrr.t were very obvious, yet the battle with life had detcated him. He was a "bum," peeking heiter from the rain that was falling In torrents outside. Jle was peniless, despondent and hla InterIn life hid ceased. He v.ti9 pitiable. 11 appr".'ic hd thj desk sergeant and nervously aaktd for a "night's rest." "Where Is your home," the sergeant rather gruffly Inquired, for even the usual good disposition of this police officer la sometimes Impaired by the numerous pleas lor lodging. "In Rochester, X. Y.," the lad answered. "You have fo'.ks living there, haven't you?" ho was asked. "Ye?." was the answer. voi tii sni:us ti;ai:s. "Well, then, why don't you ask them for assistance instead of goioj forth among strangers ?" the official Inquired. "Surely, your father and mother. If they are alive, would be willing to aid you, rather than have you become a 'common beggar,' wouldn't they?" Tho lad's head drooped. Tears came Into his eyes and it was eome time before he coul dregain his composure to answer the sergeant's question. "Perhaps my mother would if she were allowed, but 'dad would never stand for that. You see we have had trouble and I went out Into the world rather than to be the cause of 'breaking up their home. There was nothing really to ,t; it was all caused by tho neighbors' gossip." And then the young man broke out Into the story of his life and how he had left the doorstep of his father, vowing never to return. He had been just an ordinary boy, according to his story, and as all young men do, had sometimes stepjped beyond the limits of the "straight 'and narrow" path. But the everseeing annd everllstenlng neighbors. i anxious to see the faults of others and to conceal their own, had made him the target of their conversations and attacks. And each one had exaggerated his "awful wrongdoings" so that when the story finally reached the ears of the father, the boy wn? then "only fit for the prison Cells." dishkrard ins The irate parent had called the lad to him and told him all that he had heard. A violent denial of the many things was made by the boy ADVICE TO LOVELORN By Annie Laurie Dear Anne: I met a young man In September, 11 19. We had a long talk when wo met, and we each thought that the other was very disagreeable. "We went with each other afterward, and became very fond of each other. We live in elifferent towns. We became engaged cn my 18th birthday, In November, 19 20. He said it would be best for u to wait until I was 18. He writes me most of the time, the most wonderful love letters, then for two or three days at a time he will write me short letters, saying all girls are not to be trusted, but he invariably adds that boys are the same way. Wo are to be married In the summer of 1022. he says. I love this young man dearly. Do you suppose he loves me ? This young man doesn't go with other girls much, though he corresponds with other girls some. Hut at tirnert, sny about a week every month or so. he will have several dates during that week. He seems to be honest, and seems always willing to do the right thing. I can't tell whether he ioves me or not. Do you think he loves me, and would you advise me to let things go on as they are? I have dates off and on now and then with other boys, as this boy lives in another town. VERY MUCH PERTURBED. Very Much Perturbed: You are engaged to him, so why do you go with other young men if you love him. Why not devcto all your thoughts to him, and spend your spare time getting thir.gs ready for your trousseau, Instead of going with other boys? This would show him how true you are, and might make him change Ids opinion about all girls being untrustworthy. Dar Annlo Laurie: I have known a young man for two years, and I think the world and all of him. I would do almot anythin? on earth for him. He was away sme time ago. and he met some girls while away, no doubt. Since he has come back he does not seem to care as much for me as he did before. He used to take me out In the machine and talk about the nice homes we would see, and sny how happy he woull be with me In one of thewe home.'. He used to tell me about his business, but he never speaks of anything arty more, and never seems to want to talk with me even. We never quarrelled with each other. What do yem suppose is wrong with him? He never speaks of me to anyone, and I never speak of him to anyone. "When we meet he always teil me he has to work, and this is the reason I never see him any oftener. What would you do If you thought of no one else on earth but one boy and he never paid much attention to you like he used to? LOST LOVE. Lost Love: I'll tell you what I'd do. my dear, I'd go away with all my p!rl friends and all my boy friends and enjoy their good times, I'd make myself so agreeable and be such a cheerful and good-natured little person that every one would like" me, and I'd have so much fun I wouldn't have time to think of a boy who had seemlngiy forgotten me. China' resources are Abundant that they could keep the whole world from starvation. Rodriguez Alvcs, Uraziiiaa mri" r."7 to China.

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS -

but his father only believed he was trying to deceive him. Then follow a rather stormy scene in which the mother hclple?!y tried to defenl her offspring, but was forced to glvo way to the will of her husband. The boy. In his anger, had left the home with the warning that he would never return. After listening to this tale of woe. the sergeant ordered the boy given shelter and as he was being led into the cell room, advised him to take the first "freight home" th nxt morning and to attempt a reconciliation with his parents. And the boy gave promise. Little has been paid and little has been written as to why "boys leave home." Volumes on this subject have been presented to the public as to why girls desert their domicile but the young men have been always alighted. As a reason for this, authors have oft tlmea cald that It was the spirit of adventure that led the boys away from the "ap.-or. strings of their mother." Periapa this is true In many caseo, tut tiero are some where other reasons might be assigned. Judge O'Donnell. in the probate court In tho city of Toledo, recently said while parsing sentence on a wayward lad, that "glssping neighbors cause family rows and family rows make bums out of boys." And the magistrate was right. JlLAMi: "WAGGING TONGUES." There are numerous cases on record In the Juvenile and higher courts of Indiana where boys who have been committed to prison have assigned their downfall to the "wagging tongues" of the neighbors. And of course, the parents must accept part of the blame, for it was they who had accepted the story of their "friends" rather than to believe that told by their own son. It is the family row that drives the majority of young men from their homes. They do not want to be the cause of worry to their parents and would rather go out to make their own way among strangers. And while attempting to make their living, they oftimes fall into the companionship of the dishonest, and many tlmee are thrown Into the dark cells of the Jails or sent to the gallows for their acts. During the recent crime wave which swept over the entire country, the police commissioner of a large eastern city ordered that all suspects who were In the Jails be brought .before him. At that time the Jail was crowded and when the official presented himself, there were more than 300 crowded Into the examination room. The men were liner up alongside There's a little zephyr stirring, And It wlilspers in my ear Of a wood where wings are whiring, Of a lake with -waters clear; And it bids me slip my tether, Pack my kit and go Where the trees commune together, Where the piney breezes blow. There's a stream that gleams and ephxshes. Where the gaily-speckled trout Hides beneath the bank, or flashes Up and down and roundabout;

YOUR HEALTH . .

Just What Happens in "Water

on the Brain" By ROYAL S. COPELAND, M. D.

Commissioner of Health, .New York City. "Water on the brain" used what call i.s a term to describe the doctors "hydroce phalus." In this disease, as the name indites, there 1? an accumulation of fluid within the cavities of the brain, or else the brain is- practically afloat i n fluid lying be AYA OR. COPETLA.ND tween it and the bony skull. The fluid Is not the cause of the disease; it Is the" result. It is not unlike dropt- In this respect. There are several forma of hydrocephalus. The first is called "serous menlngitiu." That Is. it is an inflammation of the coverings cf the brain with a watery exude. It repembles pleurisy where an exudate form. Hydrocephalus attacks adults and children. It is so much like tuV.erculer Inflammation of the bri:-. covering that it is easily mistaken for It. However, there Is no fever. The head 19 drawn backward, and there are complaints of headache and discomfort. Sometimes the patient Is delirious. Some babies are born with hydrocephalus. There are c-jses on record where the fkull has contained several quarts of fluid. After birth the head continues to enlarge, and nfiy

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the walls and the dep-irtmnt head per.snr.ally questioned ach nvm. A stenographer took down the arswers to his qu.Pt!or.p. His two main qiior! nkfl of tho men concerned th" located r,f their homes and why thy had left them. i:irc.Tou m oki:s v.n i:Ts. Of the 300 mn questlone.:!. 220 gave their residences as outsid of that city. Of thi number, 11 J hal come to the city t seek work whil--SO would give no re-ison ether thin they ha l i-.ft th ir homes following quarrels and were ain.'.cssly drifting over the country. Investigations showed that only a small percentage of th . who were in quest of work were criminals or who had committed any great wrongdoings. Of th "drifters" four were identified as murderers, 2i as highway robbers and all but seven as being guilty of s-omo minor rrime. Tho head of a l.irne western university in an address recently, j-cored the parents of the land for allowing their offsprings to drift away. He declared that 90 percent of the cases, the parents were ;o blame f"r either driving their children from their homes or for not interening when the children announced they were going elsewhere. According to him, thero was but a very ?mall Lpercctnago of cats where the parents' influence could not have saved the youths from having home. Of course the adventuresome spirit often leads boys Into unknown Iparts where they attempt to seek wealth and fame. Many are often successful since In most cases that fame spirit which caused them to desert their homes has been the impetus of forcing them to success.' STAY AT IIO.Mi:, IS PLEA. But there are those, who, after deserting the surroundings of their boyhood days, become despondent when tho battles of life appear to bo against them, and fall into the lairs of hose who seek to accomplish gains by nefarious methods. It is In this manner that a great majority of "crooks," gamblers, "dope" users and drunkards are started on their downward paths. Movements have been recently undertaken in the various parts of young men to remain in their "home the country In an effort to induce towns." It has ben pointed out that among friends-, opportunities for success are available and tho chances of being caught in the "downward swirl" are less dangerous. Ferhaps this will be scoffed at by the younger blood of the country but after fighting their -way among strangers for a few months th ir opinion of the plan Is likely to be changed. And I dream of woodfires burning, And of bacon in the pan. And I feel the outdoor yearning That comes calling" to a man. There's a little zephyr humming, And it whisper "Come away. For the gang awaits your com.lng" So I've packed my kit today. And I'll flee from pavements hard, in Ftreet where traffic always roars, To the Forest known as Anion, In the Kingdom of Outdoors". (Copyright, 1921.) reach enormous proportion?. The f.: co continues of normal s:z- so the contrast between the face and skull is very marked. Sometimes there are convulsions, blir.drv ss and feebleness of body. Such c;-sci are not favorable to outl"ok. When hydro'-r phabis is acquired i-y a grown pers n it is usually 1;. to a tumor of the brain. This growth is low down and interferes with th escape of the brain fluids. It acts as a sort of dam, holding bacl; the secretions. Coming on late in lifo, when the bone-s of the skull have bocomo thick and hard, there is usually littb er.1'irgemeent of the head. Hut, of courso, the accumulated fluid presse on the s'"'ft and vital parts producing serious effects. The re are h adaches and gradual failure of siht. The patient str.g-g-rs on attempting to walk. Unconsciousness for weeks is r.o. uncommon. Fortunately, hydrocephalus i not frequently met. It has such unhappy effects that it Is well it i? not met oftn. Blindness. d-afnss n.id '.ojs of locomotion cut off the victim . r."m communicating with friend--. Various operations have bfn recommended ar.d practiced. Th"' skull has been opfr.ed an 1 the fluid drained out In this way. The spinal canal has been punctured and drained. The serious form of the disease may disappear in the course of several weeks or a few months. It responds very well to treatment, ar.d the outlook s good

I fiin.-: a reduction of 10 p1"! ' ff,t in our naval program with enm-j I missions .'.-nt to tho Icaiiin? nations) i to asl th ir cooperation. WlUiim I J onirics Bryan.

A GOOD INVESTMENT Worn-out rus and carpets will make you handsome rugs. When your rugs need cleaning call us, as we do repairing, sizing and dyeing. Also feather renovating. South Bend Carpet Cleaning & Weaving Co. 566 Laporte Av. Main 844 0 - J e weir y AUCTION SALE Daily 2 and 7 P. M. M AYR'S Don't throw coal away. Get the bets: kind and ycu won't have to throw it away. Old Ben Coal burns down to tho very last atom, and heats in proportion. "And the cost of Old Hen coal is less than you expect," adds Mr. Coal Man. "Read tho Coal-man chats" Jacob Hoffman 814-S20 S. 3'JchIgnn St. Main 3170 Lincoln 5890 Sa43 CmmI CkH3 Q Sm3 SIZ3

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BEDROOM SUITES

Offerino- Our Entire Stock of Hand

el some Bedroom Suites at

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For those who are furnishing new homes cr those who are refurnishing old ones, this sale offers wonderful possibilities. Think of buying beautiful period bedroom furniture at one-third less than the regular prices prices that already had been brought down to new low levels. YOU MAKE YOUR OWN DEDUCTIONS HERE ARE SOME EXAMPLES

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$175 BEDROOM SUITES, NOW SI 16.67 $200 BEDROOM SUITES, NOW $133.34 $250 BEDROOM SUITES, NOW $166.77 $400 BEDROOM SUITES, NOW $266.67 $500 BEDROOM SUITES, NOW $333.34

HANDSOME 0 Gash or Credit ii a ECTZ c E7T3

Why

vans. Our Terms J. M. 235 South Michigan St.

for hot weather

A tinkling, ice-filled pitcher of refreshing lemonade, dainty sandwiches made from "Busse's Bread' and you have a hot weather repast tha t at once tempts the most jaded appetite and satisfies any normal hunger. It is a mark of distinction and good taste for a hostess to serve

BUSSE'S BREAD"

BUSS

BAKING CO.

JZI3!3 m iiii h

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SPECIAL THREE-PIECE BEDROOM SUITE

$98.50

OUT OF THE HIGH RENT DISTRICT Two Doors North of the Grand Trunk Depot

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Buy Your NOW are Reasonable ROSE Main 235 H I ma czz cm crz ma cn zzli r M.7 10 Cash or Credit

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