South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 287, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 14 October 1921 — Page 6

7HF SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

G

SOUTH BEND MEWS-TIMES Mcrr.in:: Evening Sunday J. M. hi"!:riH:NSUN, I'utllaber Mfinr-r : A?-ociatcd Prc3 United Prc.it International News Service 5r i ' i'r-s : ft',-.:;t;v -ritlt.l t.i tb u fof ffp::!l ;''D i f .h la w a fl.i; a; ;.- er.ir.ed to It or nt et' m : rl.'-.i in t:.- r.oraa.,: eiitira cf tMi paper. 3 I V. t:.- : :u p Led Lerna. IL13 Coi 1:0: " u- t :::.:- -a -ate-ai.

n.CDfi: Main 1('V ;tol 210. (II ranch Eifhf.

THUMS up mhci:iitio.v c n ! Sc-. 'tt. :r . . . . ro rnti J.r..: - rr l S-;r..!.-ij, ;Vr v.-r 'O rvtit ' r .t. .S.l!:i j, r.e jeaf - - - f 10.00 1.7 ?f.:i Mn .'ru" r.i ! Si.r on rural rnatft. 5 r.e jeir - A ! I i. ' r v- y n. .1 " i - - - - - . . . - - 7-0 !-?- : n S I-.. - 1 I'.n- Of.f a Won 1 ClaM Mall.

CCTCRER M. 1921

the measure or success. "Th h r I - r. the- rraare I 'htvt th Ilea of r - n lr.-.' rail- -1 ;rr. ..t a. they ar( gettera of r-.y. "1 1 'j r.ar.'t 1 character hy driving after ; '..ar:e" . . .- r. . aha -r I!' I'r.or Stfthc-s or Harry '.V ir-I v. l. . j 1 ".-' ; a" ''..- Thi.-- 'it r.f philosophy in an 1. ; iv--,r t ''. ." (.:':' rt. of th who have :;..it-.y r.i. aral iryinsy to belittle their It ; v. hat th-.- ca:rt: rn'.-'ht call expert testimony, f.- r it ::. -! fr; m II A. In;r, tho nation' bluest :,r -1 v, . : :., c- la?.,1 n. 'I I...:..- :' -:-.r.- ..; r-f hia o'.vn creatioa and run. i:;tf r. -Ti.: r-.!!:'.!.-. Thirty yearn .uro he was the !...:: r- .f ;i 1 . : : 1 ' ; t i I 1 a K.i r.s u. Today hl.- forest xt- r. l fr-:-. L .1:. i to AK;.l:a and ho counts hi3 I i.!';..' j l..y t if t ir;i-2r I; ; -, . . r, v. ht v-n th- mst radical would - ; i " ' i n :'.: f j i- ;it"iin.-t it no word of h ;. ; :..:: . . v r b fn vhisp r J and no f.d-,-!', i f. i 1 r; t r:.:t-l to snoop into it3 , - f vi.-; ition of trust laws. :;..:: t!.( i 1 owh.-r cf this fortune finds !',. (t h - ; !..,; r. at aftr all. He has only r.i-T. y .-in i !: . b if. r- ;i-h-.- ' "t for something1 else. f.-r b.- f '.!;: r.' v- p-irt or an arr' 1 to his fel- '. .--. ;.. . ! i ; . r : . i (';';.' tu j.in with Iii in in cro- ; n it . r th.l Ii" 1 1 ' ; . . . 1 "would give :''::., u:; i ;--iiiity t. this :; ri -rat ion ami kocp Vi-;r im :.!o! ! .: I'ri.-'h t'.ifu;j-.hont the ng:." Ti:it ;;h. ' .: th- h-yr.uN- t tii- universal hunr of t i i - .- !; sir.- t!: t th'-" who live after you are to ti.it i : ii tl! thinh of ou ami think -r you i h : :. i 1 i m . It i -: t:i ::.. i;;;p.ibf 'a Iii- h -j ! ;.-! tho anriont in,"H to : . ft tho it.iiniil-i a.; th"ir own ir.au.-'olo-u:ms an o:t to i:r Müiicthlns of eternity and :;oI l it fur th'ir own. !: :s t h- same i.npul.se which prompt 1 ;!::; tu . r v th-ir names npon libraries ami t h ;. i hir 1 t1- graven stone to beckon t th- f titur- ti rat; vr. t"or r cognition. Th; -h! s-..- t he.-.- who may 'ptarr. 1 with Mr. I,- m: ab.-at 1 '.: h.,' t. r b'li ir.-- not bull. ling characti r. I: a!l b ; n l.-- up'-n liow you do your delving t"ur tier.- a:-- t t- m;ta.t ions in ih? eh.use for mo'i.-y, in tie ! -i: le. :s pss. .-ion. than in any o t h r ;i : : . ' i " . u ; ; (hara : -t '. rt !'!::'. 1- 1, to gi atsj a fortune in a v.r.' tiir i. . i . 1 i : toras ;ni ae'iisintr face tov.-.irl its ; -i ' ". tr.i b r an be. destroyed v. h n tbu ' .. .;. i' a- ih .liar.-- i 11 theni.selves to : . h; -ih la - . i t" i or. .-.! rat t u;- -.. -r othT riht and h" p ". p , a : i ' ( a '. ':-. I h .- ,. I t ' ' a v. h:--h. a'l m n of wealth

.: : .ii: i w hi.-'a tit-- w a hi alwayn t a. ; b' -' r.e- m -to-v is no fiirn of

i " r '

K I' w

y i- at n ' y lio r : . : .

- ti i a a. an of th.-- t! ay when

bhak.-a i: . v. rot. h .-:'!! i' m i.-'-rpb c- ? Win eari j-. .m'.I i ' : . ia li i:.aa of tliu l.iy when Kar.rrr! j lia'i i th- y... .b aria V V.'h ' v ; - it b. -t t- ; 1 tlo- i-mst -terees to the crew d v !i : r.. rar lat armd to Ib'a.e in triumph? All ar. -f t. a. The j.t.1i to gr a titers w.ts ii.'ver p r, . l v.rh u.-hl a. t -1 !. v. r will h . r.ut re i'l '"' t v at nirer Mr. I-ntr. looking now tor y-::.- th::':; i- than tu--:: -', tvr t!ie philoa-ailiy of i'i ir i: : . . a. v i'h ta'-. tr-ao m hi !!e- b :r o have : . . I. y a I . i v. a r ;; pr nr.-. Th.it b -i i ' for yaft'ty ; as e;;i . ;' .a ;:;. in a- :i'" o.- n ha h th' ri-h- .- !:: -i : : r. i: e.v xhb ;:. a uoMAn: or nir !;ic. T.- ' : . ear' : a .ra .1 to i.- h- t hat p u . i - ..a., a' ' i . a a at r of brute fore0, a-., . . . : ... i rat-- a.-ti:a t.- and that it is bereft -f ; ! . u prb...m-e motions, !-"t the story f A' e h ' b ' . :M a ;,,;a. It : a I f a 1 ;-. .!.. 'a Taylor, a scientist f ea t . :. .; . . ;r a tb it Ab.-'f ar -r canns that :n a-.- r v . '. . t bfe : th":atlit v.hieh eotejuerfl aa 1 v. a.- :a- l iar, ha A f: ra ait orphan ayv'.'.i::!, hal finished : b. tb .. laaa aliool a-r.o'.e.- at 12 and then went !u' n 1 '.'.'..h .-:. to a:n J'. a a . ;. I !,- spent half of th.-- a a 7.;. ht s h.uol to b urn stenc.graj.hy and at 1 i a i 1 . rt. ': ! -. a- : ! : !'.. h- a Ith was shpf ing an-l loinh o r; : ei a ! b put into training tho amo ? .:f,' " ' s " t b.ita to nUht school when o'h. r : r pool r r-dng to th-- nioVi' s. 'i' ra - u . ; ' ra.h. 1 at i:::a as a weakling but 'r. . . . a t'.a- :'.aa st an-1 striai-;est amat r ' i t a. o , ; h r b' ri-r fur his It. Ith. but one night a 'a - a :a ! d an epponeut when the man - : .: t a-aia-r fa.!- ! to nualify. and Abe ' ; . . : . a ' : . ral von. ' ' h o .wuiäo.l !;im box dc--l.tr--. I - a. '. -v.- '. - '. -itth s by merely thinking a frae- ' " '- a. a i r th.;n do his opponents and -1 '...a -. a ' ;-a - . fr.uu p syehology, rather than A.' a J a u h as a st norr.'i ph.er. Ib ha made ; . ' ' :':..- r as a b.-,-r. Who a ho g.,-s back to V a h -t . .. .-.-r. h-' wi'.l saac.ad h. eauo he b r a- : : !. .ba- . f t!a:aaa: fat and of eompjorinr ah ''.- a a - y . r- -tat! aCtutiae. Ah- didn't just

rn who .are force 1 to ptcrlflce for them, have every rlht to look upon th'lr rprr ntativrs and to know why efforts to stop wars fail, if they j0 fall. Op'-n ILcu?ions rf tho questions involve! are the tf?t insurance acalr.t failure of that conference. Men before the bar of public opinion will not dare to d-fy or dlsoh'-y public ori-ion. As for disarm am'-nt Wng impossible, it needf only th mention of what armament means to deny the hope. Prof. I, a cock, in a reo-nt article in Colliers, has Hhown strikingly that tho plea for a "strong navy" mean.'i nothing ur.bs it bo the stronger, navy. Tae little Monitor wan a rtror.g na-y in ILself hecause it v.tui superior to other fighting ships. ToJuy it Is m b-.--. A navy 1 strong only when it is eqial or superior to tho navy of any ether nation. An army is strong or weak only when compared with thfvfse it hs pltte! agair.Kt. The existence of such navies and armien is a constant temptation to their uso and an open invitation to wars. Tho hope that the Great war was a "war to end wan?" ha not died from the heart.! of men. It lives as the aspiration of mankind, for peoples do not like war. They have been made largely by monarchies that arc now pacing and by statesmen who knew only the pant. A letter to the president demanding open cessions of tho conference may show him the trend of thought in this country" and may help to get real results, not a servih compromise with tho interests find ambitions of those who would keep the burden of a war program upon all nations.

o-

MEY CAN COME BACK. There is a mountain in Peru named for an absconder. A street in its capital is called for a fugitive from Justice. A national holiday celebrates hlM memory". In all tho history of men who have beaten back after crime, the name Henry reJggs stands out as prominently ns that of O. Henry, who wrote his way into human hearts while In a penitentiary. Meiggs. in the early day 3 of California, trained a3 an engineer, became a bank clerk. The constant handling of money temj ted him. He wanted it to spend, not tc pas- out to others and .co, one day. he took w h it he thought he wanted and ran. He spent the gold in dodging otlicert and found him.self, stranded, alone, broke, hunted, a fugitive, in the strange land. Then he set out to reclaim himself and he called upon his early knowledge of engineering. He painted h:. dream of a great railroad through the seemingly inacessihle Andes and he diel not stop until he made his dreams a reality and opened for the world new riches anil new wealth. For himself he ohtaine-d only the tonsolathm of beating back. He worked against terrible obstacles and finaly gave hi.s life before the work wart finished. Peru knew- hirt story. Put it honored him. not because lie had been a criminal, but because he had surmounted his dark past and rendered real service. Men can come back. One mistake is not the end e. f usefulness. It all depends on whether the lesson of a single crime is turned to profit or is allowed to 6 ar the soul forever. The life of Moigg.s :V a beacon of hope for tho vr-ak. and an admonition to become stremg.

MAI' PATH TO GLORY. Tho ed.l days are gone when women, ambitious socially, shoved their husbands into tho political arena in order that they might shlno in the reflected glory. Woman's suffrage and the activity of women has now opt nod avenue for men, who would not be otherwise promim nt, along which they may prome nade to political eminence. Pre.Vt Harding lias just appointed a federal trade e om müssioner whe, ray frienily aelminis4:ration organs, owes his selection to the fact that his wifo helped to win the election. Another man has just been sent as a minister to a South American republic in recognition of his wife's political acumen and activity. Our political system Is built upon recognition of the faithful and the rewards to the victors. Put plain ordinary c itizens, who pay the hills, may stop to wonder what one woman's political prestige in ay have to lo with so important a body as the ttaib commission and why another woman's sen' eif organization will give any assurance of perpetual friendly relations with a sister nation because she wants he husband provided for. It may be suggested that appointments ought to be made with some regard for either fitness or political claims ami that filling them with husbands whose number in public affairs Is represented by the cipher, is likely to result in something else than efficiency.

It's easy to meet expenses; the trouble is dodging them. Too many people are trying to widen the crack in the liberty Poll. o Tho height of politeness Is to get off a street car and give a lady yuur standing room. o All-night movies might solve the housing shortage prob! -"m.

-o -

f' "

5 ill Armstrong, f- ? 1

if

kitttiik caiTj cim:r ki.im;. -picht c::nt t,ayy::t: t ti:v (From The News-Times) CHICAGO CAV ' a h a l iae in A tolid Pullman train will pass the lb raid an! Pxrabmcr. The rh:through here from Cleveland on j cago pap-rs ar- c rtaahy i:e!t.t. - the night of the thirtieth, brir.g- 'frank w;th r f. r-ta to the bg.l ing delegates and fiends from Ohio. ' prof s.-ien.

The neatest eoek dce?n't always'

make the best soup.

AS TO KI'N M MP. J. M. i-hu h b ib. r -..ra' t Jah.

He.-r-katr.r.n fr-:a Tat.

that

Ilarlv to bod nn.1 nrlv t , he ha,s at. ;.-t f uti I a r- ii hi

catches the worm.

; sh :p.

Ii 1 n

An 1 a v. h ! : valau. ha . f J

I p,.st ! car's h."S b. t; r- iv - by Some men know ',- t.m tiv Jak uiviri; !.' a s b -f t.o- t : -

are given credit for. itrovua y betw.' . ti th - ri-a-. s -ra: - I the lU.t--l mm at P.'-S A -t a S. PoUa J Wonder what a man thinks about ' .te her on wra. s th it th-y .a :' f that has a paid up lifo insurar.ee thb.k nv.tch -f Ata.b i-a-i -r policy. : hotel, cw ti- d by A' Frar.k. bat th- y -A . , intend to s t i - V: it at. rc-ard. "j The police ought to provide our I While Abe Fran: v.u ib s Jake th..; j burglar with calendars showing all 1 h,'s wa5t!n- avi-::- ly a rt ply fr::: - 2 of the holidays. There's no sense in ir11 t Jhnd e at v.h.t'.a r th." S- til:: 3 a burglar working bo h Sundays and Pf-"d bankers stopp.- with, him arc holiday?. pood for tlv. ir b. aal a id a ar.. !t 6 . I begins to look as if the thing miahi 1

iu;fi:iuu:i) to axxii-; laviiii'. i u t,,-,,Jr:-'

10-12-21. j Dear Bill: '

I've been awful worried about

V

Miws op Tim (bi)Pi:its. A Job.n Cli.-ss r.r.sv. "rh is aa i:u ua'J;

the future solvoncv of r.m- ,-r.r..i I Michiiran str -t a bu r ..aito a stay

- -.-. - -.

friend Kneel Wlch, as I saw him i

i I'-ni-afi a i u ; . ..u- .1 m . ; own r :i :-t. N- w .art ; s y as J. j

and a lady friend eatin doughnuts

and coffee in Andy Weisberg's

C has lug up anot a-r clover hu'.ler . a lor a thr- shiag la.uhia? t- put out . g

buffet last Sundav P. M. Kneel i in front of Iiis st r-u v.a'i! hra-w h--'f

probably don't realize the chances I hack for the winter. J he is takin as sometin.e she will I " f, LI

steer him in the main dining romr and after he pays that bill he'll b.

"Po yoti thi"l; th- liuia'a- where

rt with yuur c

vou are gu;a g uin

wearin celluloid collars and th 1 w;f. -." v. la ai d a luv .,sk "iibu t same suit witlout bein piresse'l un- j Pird" T.urch.

"!: wa.ul.labt dir" to da f-tlv-rwh1-:-" , f

was the hast v ia h a

til next payday. A lady friend took me in there onct anl my bootlegger nearly starved to death before I was financially able to open business relations with him again. So nb-ae tip Kneel off. Yours for the repeal of the ISth Arndt. 4T.

At a in. "t ag f th iiuemployt J the uther day, tea- th ' u a em ploy cd su.ggest--! tin at th-- snip kite r.e a be , eatabhahrd at tho Oliver hotel. He .

" j i - i ' l ' . I . - ...... ' l .4' to 'l:.'.-r s-'Up to ..-'v h r b. tia- city. .

k:

-;

JL.

"If l were rich." said my Fne'.e Jan. '

And many a lesion I've learned from An' .h r - son. him, i t ; v to buy

-13 t:

Hi

uv t-'hatme I would 5 j

iri

5

"I'd spend a part of my golden pool A gr.r.ful baok ;n a tnrt!inr's eye. j 'j Sending a few poor boys to school; With the extra coin which I had tcjvj

And never could folly lay me flat Or ruin my future for doin' that.

:ly pi a y the i S 1

! spend ! Somehow" I'd w ill

: s "If I were rich, with a heap of geld . k I'd warm a few houses that now are ; "A f -ol i. ha." said my Uncle. Jim

cold, "Vv'ho h t.s r.i n.o"u luarar sa.ame to I'd give away what I didn't n ed j him. 13 uy books for some invalid to read, ' He can s 'at'rr it la re in a thoipair.d

Or sent tor n tltftf hinniiu-w wnvs I

An' that wouldn't ruin my life I Wha-h would bring him glory an'! guess." i words ..f prn'..-". S : An hi . r dd. if . ia- h t:e bu-s'o'ul, : $ n-w m . . . t -.i . . t. .-... ... .. .i V" -.." .a

ii l were luen l w ou.u kit t away i u:-; i -a a -, c.atn- ' i . i.a- g. -ai- i

From the scarlet haunts where the, ;-: a-.' h'"

La iff

V L1 If

Tier ton 3 rd ley

Ily IH'UTON UKALi:V.

About this time of ti:'- year I get

Weary' of worry' and work and fret And a world all turmoil and toil and .sweat Where I'm but a helplexs pawn; And I close my eyes and dream I'm out Where thereV? never a thing to think about, Anl where I can lie a lazy lout Just lie in the gras- ond yawn! Oh, just to doze through an l ib day With never a move to work or riay.

Put oa.lv to loaf. In :nv vww swee

i

( ) a Win! i . Put ! Y.b

he turf of a. rich gre. n lawn. ;

. ." . i u aa.UU a V

ut hur: 1' .::. vc f-T 1

he in gra-'.

- ' 1 U.

. n 1 Y.twn 1 J 1

Alas, it' r!y . ,. :Vj j kt-.nw. 1'or th- ''- tha -a -o bay, aral there's bib.s I .'a.

And a lb ; ? hub . - f coup.-.-I tod v ; ; h nr.' b . a a : -1

Put aur a, .v 1 rt -!r- a::. I gue-:-

f ha vir. r : ah.in.g a .!-.-

A v a; of .- '. r a la .an To li ." ' a - - -.-. u ; va

nl -'it ra". a. :

!

r .vsa j !

i

more smta

&

i "I'VY Oi l H b! '". i ' ' l.ld r.

I

i : A Y C ! 'i' r . t'it' uf d I-

a

I iSSH TOQItPi! ,!;mn..."c-;;;- v.:

: .. . ea t. i

i a 'r -r. .- ra n ,r.,::

to r. - .11 f

am - - a aa-- a h cf -d

"bS! ur : Z

JU döITvOS d MOrvtaUP. ' April wh. r. th n.-w comniivi-n. i

a-xmi-iM -xir Be ;i2n iJr.a-: ?.-. jtp

n.a nay. r f

ii in iMnossinu:? ' -. itu re ':." pr. -nt hgs isstied a letter to tho pabb" w irr.r r t a..t the world need not expect disarm, at;.- r.t a. r sa.lt cf th conference of nations a"-d thr -h - u st to f hop,-d for is a "limitation" 1 t " - a i ' " "i b.- r- r f. r the warning lb s in the f.v-t that ' i o; 1" f th" Un.'.t. d State c. through every known :i:a -f .; r.:-r n. have demanded that this nati.'n I. .: 1 in r- ..'ly b.-r.rm.tng ami in lifting the burd ns f.f futa.ra w.r.s !r-a:i industry-and labor. Th-- ; r. htalnarl-s to tho ea nf-renc,. are far from .a i a.-b.g ari l the b tt. r of th- pres. b r.t should be fulbuA.-! bv u r r.'W.l. rat a ces -ation. of efforts to ' r -;1 Tt-lb f, and with it. a pledge that this country v, .11 stand for open s- ssions of that confer-cn- - Tat!-.ei ira-M of .PplonvLts and statesmen behind lock-! t!o u-a 1. t.. always new burdens for the p. - 7 ba Tiio man who are expected to f.ght wara, th an

OfherEditorsThanOaya - - -,xa W 1 . (Pallas Di.ivatih.) If you work eight hours a day, that uses up the equivalent of 122 days a year. Sleeping light hours a night us;s up another 122 days. Sundays take 52 lays. Then 00 day. are devoted to eating, if your no als cunsume tw o hours a day. That loaves you ;h days for dr.-s.-ung. undrt sing, going to the movies, jourmying to and from work, washing the car and doing odd jobs around home. Parole: Where does the cellar chemist git his time for making hooch? o irnutNAL. (M I'rani-isco News.) A sop's fables, now being cartooned in the movies, apptal to audit noes as sound common sense, same as tht y appealed to the Greeks 2.450 years ago. The fundamental truths cf life never change. We are always locking for "the truth." yet usually the search takes u lack to oid ideas, tried out through the centuries. The starch is not futile. It unveils new truths. That is progress. o . iyiipukks. (Columbus Citizen.) A third of the nation's business failures take plaon In Massachusetts. New York, Illinois and Pennsylvania. In September. "6 out of every ICO failures occurred in those four state-s. Thlti would make it seem that it is ifer to run your business in either states.. Xot so. It merely happens that those four statt s house more than their nharo of tho hazardop.j ir.dustri s. If you "ha? e the foodo," geography tloes not matter much, one plh.ee Is as good as another. That'u as tru of Individuals as of businesses. Stick, to th hom towr.

MISMAT1H). Brought up upon the rugged s'-il Peneath a prairie sun. I early learned to look en toil As something to he done.

I felt that I should rather die Than slight a Job or shirk And when I grew to manhoe! I Was wedded to my work. Alas! how passing years destroy Idea's e.f our youth. How things brought us only joy Grow ugly ami uncouth! Before a elorn years passed by I curst-d the cruel Fates For I found out that work and I Were not congenial mates. If I es.-ayed to take my ease Or to tne golf course go, It mattered not how much I'd tease,

i Work said abruptly. "No."

: To stupid, dreary toil held fast ! I suffered sere distress. And as the decades slowly passed. I I liked wori-: less and le.-s. i Pis'.ike is but a feeble word.- -A better one is hat.

My black and l itter wrath was stirred Against my gracc-Ies-s mate. And if I ever gain my way Th law will take its course And I from work some happy day W;l! get me a divorce!

Th

or: a it eriar'r r v. er.t rm ! y i.

rar- ,;p ,i

e e-un ,u . ' n.

ar " . -i

ArthurC. M. iCrru-n, YValbr .!. Mo- ' 8 ; Muhen, F. !-...! d !h Ols.-n. John 5 i Harn b I

A 5 oft ti'". o": th-' , U, l! d. ' get; t: mu -h b. r tha: i: heat

! up a ad r t:..d!v a :.-.;.;, s. Th.- 1

m1 nufa -;-:i- r h "''.-'!' 1 the r.-a-s-

sure re oi i r.-d for a a

l dep .rt !".:: ;'r a a. ! v. 4' s th--.. 1 , i v- b. u ' a i ;t s , .-'. 1 .a

v u a

1 1::--.-.--.

Union Trust Company Jafe Pei-evsit Ibe(vs wliJi special facilities for the? prH.icy of cuts. tomSrs.

Kallove'eri

(uite Conte nt.

The Sorbs dt-fcOt care who mah.es j the peace of th1 werhl as long as j they are permitted to make the war.

;!just the thin;: for thclj

b . l a ti, party you are planning.!;

An assortment of favors

'that excels any of previ-

I !

!;ous years.

Pifty-ITfty. j Western cowboys think high life movies are the real thing, and society ' people hae the same idea ab t;t i cowboy movit-s. i

j je for your party, and when Fallible. i: , We know a woman who fs sure comes trom Makl?lsis

Hoover will ne vcr se ttle the employ-j Idyou can be assured it's . .. 1 .i : j i a!

'ou'll f.nd many an idea

1 i Here for table decorations'.

ment question because he didn't! U

answer her letter asking him where ha could get a cock.

COAL KELLER- RAMSEY COAL CO.

b Main 477 Lincoln 1349

;' correct.

d ! j 1

V. T! n n rt oo ;'.('' o Cp !.n y(P. t-i Lv.Ki.vi. at. iii tijj The ?hop r-f Courto-r Oliver Thnitvr BUI.

la i . i

Trv NEWS-TIMES' Want Ads

ORGE WYMÄM a CO

COME A.NO SEE L5 Store Hours: 8:30 to 5:30 Saturday close 9:30

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New Showing of Prunella Stripe Skirts $10.00 If you haven't one of these you'll want one. If you have an old one you'l want a new one. The vogue of separate skirt isn't going to die a sudden death just because the weather has changed everybody will want one to wear this winter for they're just the thin?; to slip into on a rainy day to wear under a raincoat to wear coasting, skating, on motor rides this fall and winter.

Tomorrow Will Be Just the Day j for you to sec our specially priced suits. (This isn't a sale, these suits are simply marked unusually low.) I

$49.50 and $59.50 and you'll enjoy seeing them too. There are tailored ones, if you like them tailored, there are embroidered ones, if you like them embroidered, there are fur trimmed ones, if you like them fur trimmed. And the quality of the material and the fine workmanship make them doubly attractive at $49.50 and $59.50. (There arc more expensive ones, too.) Take Particular Notice of the $25.00 and $39.50 Coats for they, too have smart style, fine workmanship and pleasing trimming. Normandy cloth, and Bolivia predominate. Th ey are plain, trimmed with buttons, embroidery and stitching or with fur collars and cufTs. (There arc more expensive coats, too.)

Do You Know

that the most attractive

trimmings of all this year are Ribbon Trimmings?

Ribbons For Girdles All colors to be sure but black in prominence. Black Moire, Satin, Cii i

and Jacquard, soft taffeta 75c to $2.25 a yard.

Narrow, plain and double faced, also picot edged ribbons for trimming purposes 20c to 50c a yard. Roman stripes .and bayadire ribbons in all the popular colors 85c to $2.00 a yard. Fancy brocades and metal effects for girdles and bags at $1.00 to $8.00 a yard.

Jersey Pettihockers

A brand new Yi:

of these jcr-;v p"tt:!ockcrs in navy v browr. in nil sizes at $ 1 .5( Underwear pt. ist floor Make Your Comforters Now

and Save Money Our prices ,:ic the I 'a ;t tit vrarf-.

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Cotton Batt Three pound :or)d cot ton, size 72x 90 at 73c.

Hairbow Ribbons of every imaginable kind. Assorted colors in fancy flowered and designed ribbons, striped ribbons and plain colored ones, too 35c, 39c and 50c. Camisole Ribbons Ribbons for shoulder straps, ribbons for camisoles that are delicately tinted and soft, ribbon to run through undies.

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(A dress lihe this is made of prorgctte with bands of ribbon an American Beauty red and black would be stunning.)

Ribbons of every sort for fancy dress trimmings. The Onlv Hat for the Little Girl

is the beaver, plush or felt tailored model. They come in brown, blue and black (with a few brighter colored ones) and the best thins about them is that they turn down all around, turn up all around, or just on the side whichever way ooks the best. Beavers at $4.50, $5.50, $6.50. $7.00, $8.00, $9.00 and $10.00. (Madge Evans beavers are frcm $500 to $10.00.) Flush hats are $2-50 and $3 JO. Felt hast $3-50. $4.75. $5.75, $6.00 and $6.75.

Three pound rod, pur.; white quilted cotton batt, 72 x90 at 9 5c. Finest Batt ::v.e, wool itnished (like wool) fie 72:-: 90 at $1.15. Cotton Chaüies 50 pieces of the boat 3')inch cotton ch; l!'- made. Has beautiful Per i in and floral patterns. -:: uA.i for comforter coverir. ts nt 1 8c a yard. Fancv Silk Hose (If not for yourrelf, why r.ot buy some ff)r Chri.-t:;"is ifts Shop oar'y r-.nd avoid the rush. ) Fancv lace pattern in b!ao: and th? rrv 'i..a!r .- brown and ;;rcy at 0 3.95 and $4.y5, Italian Silk Ho'icry in black and colora at $3.7:5. Italian Silk Hc-j in out-ie at $4.50. Thread ik h.orr2 in Ll-irk. white and colors from $i.25 to $6.25. Fmbro'.ejar d elokr d hese and e:;.bro:d?r' A. fronts from $3.00 to $7.50.

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Hosiery Dept. 1 st f.ror

Wy man's The Store of Twelve Specially Shops

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