South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 150, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 30 May 1922 — Page 6
i
1 TUESDAY MORNING, MAY 30. 1922 THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH EEND NEWS-TIMES Morning Fvening Sunday j. m. Mf:rm:NHiN, r-u:hcr.
M rd - : Assnciatrd PressUnited Press inUmfinnnl N'eWS Service
f l.rt' t." :urdir.-d e.-r-.a. it.J u - , He tt. .. d.:.a.
j .ho.ir.(!s of yir. ever sir.r prhit ori man ared ,1 pith through th J 'in , It may be that th rM- r.f th futur? will v m th air. wih fly. r.g rr.aehin. c irryir.g p-f-e-r. gr? ar.d fright. j That, however, is bound to he a I ens' way off. It
is "cri to dr'm about. I'ut. m ar.tim. let's r:ep our fe op. round and gt behind the r'l-rr'i ds movfmT.t f'rir.CT than vr. Pro--
I rr;y and r Tuition com slow!-.- over b. i
Bill Armstrong, (
Oils. 1
Tr.nMS or .-tT..-:r.ix,Tio::.
Ir.'r. und S 'ivi a v, r '.7 wrrk - - -
M4";linl Sirdar, , r,nl r:-. on- yr - - - !
t
CA fnt !) On? $10 CO
MAY 30, 1922
,;: 77T REUKUBERFA)? A r.l-lT., happy, pr-perous. a-fal. tMy frorn tn r t!,r Sir of i-., hf an t devote, it to th r-r-v-.r- . h' r---b' vi. i . X , wr-.'h a tr'.-o rf flnwrf I '.aid upon fh; v.hi, h f.jrn;?h- a rr.v-hd f.-r tho. TT-hn h cor to th'- hr' It. -beo. . , r - v h i3 bud call Th' ro-;rl ;: . a r . 1 1 .. - f,Vf fr:-.orv ;..r,l a v. ord of r-mbrar,ce. W'-".H-:'d wr.rn -v.:: -vr.d 'h-.r .low and tott,rr; -a v.- to tr... I:tt f. tr.T ulb the .tory.of th- rr-,n f-.:h. th.t th ?ho-,M a united co.irrv nr. ! a ro-;r.:ry r.t ril fre-Km. t-i-- 1 nnl a-rotTd tablet will brin? to their rr.Vr'd, or.- r.r th- r.? of rr.-r.al I. of i-f-r.-.i eri-f. of r-nal prid th.t th:r love vs? a p.rt of th- -nr:f.- ir.ado by brav mn on th" nbir of a roi:ntry; .lvorior.. ThA rr r.-.r.'ir.r of thv ur-a army. oM mn r.o to hm tn--h-it of . onf;;rt h..-i Its rwr to nro-:- hatrM. will jo-irr.'-y to the rre:z r-t('f1"' of tl- who v.-r: th-r rnn,r.v! in arm.-, nearly fiO rir .aro ba c'Tio-. vhm that hao made all the ra.-r!:.' - of youth and th bard .-rv;r of war worth " Th. thought of th.- tod.,y w:ll b th thoughts of vou'h. and th mi-.d will turn bark to tho, glorious day. whn th vr of e-,rly rnanh-od wa. thirs .and the roar. at: of h art ar t th" brav purpo?A of patr!o'im ir pir-d a r. 1 dir-rv-d thir l.v-f. Tlv will b jo;rd in thir piU'rima? by tho?e .vho will f.? p.caln tb'-y rmmbr th days whn th maah-.od of th ro-mtry nn:n hanl the rhallrr-: of tynnr.y and ;"ito--racy a n 1 to.k up 3-:r..i to dnv forevr from this cor.'innt th la-'t fir.al mmaro to tb.r- i 1'als of librty. Th m:: and womn who will rr.ak a special n.irny to thn- who rvd wth Iloavlt and V..od in th ?parh-Anu-rican war will rmmbr rlsy,; whm thir hr.irt.. v r- filb-d ith r.r.xl'y aß a bio:h? or a husband ai..wrd to that rail and nr rior d-f. r.dd. with h.- life, th inte-ri'y of th .c:.ir and .-tri; Thb veir th'T ar othr irrave? 'in the silent cinc5, th :ravs of th..". who crnd the son to bfnl v..k th forr.M of hate and greed which ra."hd out to control a world and encased in the mad end-avor to or- :nor T.s!av mankind to the theory of d:vin r:?ht of kin-4. Her the toirs of tho whof o hearta Mill ach will min-l w;th th hallow, d thought 3 of tho.- who. only yr T..-day. v. r thir comra-lcs in arms xtpon a foreign .-hote. Thr will b flowrf. and tfar.' ar.d memoria r... th it final wrath b '.aid above th city. fh writh of r"n-Ad f.dl:y to th things tor which th-v f " ir: h' ? V.'.l! th" who wüfli from bryond th stars look dowr. and in th.ir infinite knov!d krow that tho lacrifire wis worth it all? Will tli romrad- of th.- arred vtrans who i,ia r.-h apain t-bay r-'all. up thr. that in their ftrMl hour. thy flt tb.a. m dyir.. th day would com whm no lor.r m-n o;1'. 1 hat .and kill and drrrh tb. soil v.i'h ldood? tiio wV.o i' J'iv -pon. b'd to th rail of cvir.tr" hn Th r.'l cam in th ' b-ins years of th- las' r-nt'iry 1 rl'.v, row. as thy b'.ivd then that hv v.-r 1 rw.z'w.z etrtMl p-'.ar to a war-worn Tor!d? th--f o'hr yr-u'V.s. only children yesterday. 5:11 f'l th rhtill th. i" fi:rro! th'ir souls .as thy marc:.-; in F.-lleau Woo. Is w;th th thou cht that th e f iih: ir.c a war to or.d war.-? Th.- who ha v p is.-d. who ; iv thir years, their routh. th:r l!vs. wi'.l n.arch a cam in spirit today. Will ah f'.',-Ar tha ards th rmmbia rice of corar.ad or of frv.d rarry with.it a pled-e thit frton tlo- v orbi :uur turn to . :h'"r nuans than that rf hero .ctifi-- to z:.n :ts pi- and happin.-?? Th p ;; -'f C- ti-'.iiv,;. of San Ju.ar. Hill, of Ch i tear. T;-.ir: y- l. m f.aoh flower. Pith wreath, aria fl-at'.-nr u lh ;
M' rv.orv.
d.tii--n ar rr.or than
v ..: .1--l;i! xv. niory : ! a rdr-i;rat!on to the cause for v.hi'h. l.ti'o-. s di'-J. detrain er; t it ud vw-' b.av as its ir.sriration a r w z-al t' r th- ; ' ': :f thy won. Trti .1. o; r. tir. b b 1 upon untirinc effort to mak t!i tlnf-r- f.-r which tb.y fot: hl and d;l as eterr al a s ;1 - .r -r .
roads vom likk. If you d; i a w. u 11 1 in'rrrt-! in this: Whn th oVrnmr f ml n; th roads it i& b.e'.pir ? b nil. t h r.'.ry will ha a r.twork of
. a r. 1 south-
I v 1 ' m 1 . o : lai.ti an 1 T'ai-if-
r rn b. ;-b-s. To ;r.a". ovr that nr.: 'h. rad. yu'd hi to drive o;;r ir :r.:l . t n h-iir. 2 4 !-.--;rs i day. for 2-0 : v. s. Krai pv ; "s :: i r w i;- :n 1 ."2 1 nfr.eun:.M to rear'.'-' a m. il out 11 ti:r.s a-"ro.- the
- c th a r 1 r. ?i m.
r.rd th sta-'-s built 11. nv.l-s rf fr.j'-ral-aid h:;hw iyr. V ar d-vl.--p:nc a prcat civilization hre in Amrla. i r road bill lire i in all cT.tr.r the r.t- a-.r rf pf- r- -
OXE MORE BOMB. M:f Ivy Willi m. th f;r.t w oman in Er.jrlir.d to :i imi'fi to th ICr.ch.-h bar. did more than tblirh a pretedr.t ior rntran.e into this profu-.or. !t , ( r x v i'rorn time irnr.i'.iifri.i! it has h-n a custom. w-hn al.T.iltm n(-n :o th I Trn;. tn ::i tk n rri! crmor.y of -t. a part of that ceremony wap th drir.kir? of a zhi-s of wine. Vhn Mis William came to that part of the Th- t":w;jscl ji-l!rrt 'frf. hock.l at this oerthrow of th-- ufrorn rr eirs. quit': a? much t-hor-'Kfi n. thy v. . r h.y th- t-metity of t womn to .aspir to the trv;r to whiih thy did nnt dire iefj-. an opportunity. Ju5 vhy -any on vr bi;vfd that tho? who a s.-.r Ji.f tb e m dispensation would 'be httr equipped by th r xhilarntion of alcohol if lo?t m the of tradition whcr the custom oricinated. Probably wa.- linked to th fart that primitive man. emrcir.ir from a v.a p-ry and knowing- the, power of alcohol. se-Zf.,i upon ,any occasion as an opportunity to drink it. Certainly thre could b no theory resting upon any basis of fact which would indicate that a brain Inflam-d v excited to va?ar:fi3 and turned away frona fa.-t. would function better in brir.gir.tr about e-'juity and r:cht. It took hur.gr striken, a fw boml-f. many parade;, years of exhortation to secure ti.e ballot for woman and with it the right to equality. The first result is the turning of attention towards th evil of drink. It indicates to a decree what llr.glish women, with a ballot, are thinking about. A decade hence, it is juite probable that th'e Englishmanwho wants a drink will have to fly acrosa the Chanr.l. o THE URGE XT PROBLEM. Th Chicago underworld, (hat rather cWinite area of vice and soddenness, nf sin and crisno, of the outcast and the defTint, is now ruled by piris who aerag. bait 1? years" of ac. That is a change from the old days of 20 year? ceo when th vmn who found themselves in this' Fame slum were hardened and fteeled by years of depravity. In that day the young girl who entered this life was th exception, and only force, kidnaping or some privat tragedy !,l them to these haunts of th vicious. The Illinois doe cominision. in making its report, states that 70 per cent of the underworld ar girls who com from the country, ami gives the average a co at 1?. If that statement be tru, it L tim to inquire what causes led these girls from the sheltered and (,uit existence of rural life to this short cut to liest ruction. The coming of th automobile and th. telphon. of pood roads and pictur show?, of radio and rural mailt?, should hive so changM country life that the old monotony. vhi"h was th dread of th ambitious r.r.d th youthful seeker of adventure, wruM be banished, x It might be readily undrstood. 2- years ago. that girl would be attracted from th places wher nothing ever happened. from life that war- filled with real labor, to th bright and beckoning life of th city. But that day hs' rassd. Schools in the country vi in efficiency with those of the larger cities. Yry littl of th rural district is now more than a half hour away from the center of pome city, either rord or larger car. , And yet Chicago find. that 70 per cent of the girls who form its chief problem, of girls who ar ruining heir own lives and who become a menace to society, com from th country. Thre might be. some raf.on jn believing that the modern city girl, early acquainted wih ?h dangers, used to the ways of city lif and its pitfalls, is less asily a victim of tho: who lead her into wayward pith? Th great restraint ui on human conduct, the good opinion of others, is still powerful in city life. The apartment house doe not seem to have ended the .-pint of neigh horlir.?s. The congestion of the c-ry street has not abolished that regard for what othr Phorie think. It is a rather pitiful picture which this re?ort presents, and a most alarming on. It is not probable that the remedy or the explanation will be found by delving into the dT.se district to which this flotam of life tossed by circum-" stance. Th.oe who solve t will go out into th country towns, th little villaces and th quiet farms and find out what is there, arousing th spirit of unrest which drives th thoughtless girl to hr doom. o "Study of a Young Girl" is attracting art critics. Th till rounds ss if ;t is "Man." o
We alw :i s hate to work op. at holiday in .'it we h r. to work ar.yj day, but its -vors r. a holiliy than! any :hr ti.ir-. W th-ia-fore ,fncratu.ate ours- Iv--.-- on ;c ing al l to j i .c uj th following for th di.'h a-; t.n to. lav of c Th- com- ! ir.u n . a t ;c p b low a : . ' t i th.s c "ti ! addrr s.-. d to th- . . W i it or. to rh'- tra , kr o ;r.-r
well that it w.i: y... d-epl- apprer.atd on th:s- b.-autTiuI b.c. ::d a v.
r ..--ail ii - , . '
; l
: . v:
Much If you
WOH.I MKi: TO DO ANiOOl! thi(. ion i:i:.m;t cwM-j CtlHtsiTAN. IIIIATIUIN j iiss..uv m i in nt or Tin:
u oi:i yr .oi. 0 Kxcanr.ihal Touring this state trying to f.; er. ouch Mr'r."y to tak , o-..:- j u dr.ik L'r.i-
vo.i t:y th.r far .-.j that be abb- to snterp'Tt :'.
1
-imed. and w ak
T
s i r. r e i - i ' ' b!.-ir ksl.bas r.
b nt.id streng. I r - op- to
th Hayti f'huri of Christ, th same a.-- th D.i;'b-s of Cari.-t in Kn-'land. I w .::: to Ii-'roit Mich to work in th Wilson l ouirlry r.ut When 1 Cot th-re h could not us-d in, also I could not irt r.o plao- to Hoard, the colored folks v.ztitcd from 2. to .1.00. p-.r (iy fr,r laord and and room, and they 1 only pay ... SO pep day so I could not land'! and Po.-itiou o started toward d rar. el Ilapaids Mich, foun 1 that I couM -t an :'oh hut r.o place- to s'ayed bur pat dived kep--r could not cet any sl-p could no" stay d iut doors so had to co!;-..-- away. from, tri' d to rc-t j-ona sworks on the farms but th farmers gived m anl sng and dances saying that tha country, wr over runr.d witli cre.oks murders and or?hr b.ad men so they could r.ot tak-d an stra'i'd man in th hous-s with thir v.ivts and Chrildren-. so then I started out auaira. I trie-d Hieb Schoo!., nr.d drammar School, a nI tried to get in soni of th colored ( b. dies but wtre able t- talk in d. It. Mich, but rhr-y would r.o- u:f me any thin- and we-re shopping with brother rani es william but h were jealous of his wif so he askd m to get out after h said that he would keep ni tili I could get an job. So thrn I find the sam iri Ann Arbor: Yp.-ilir.fi. Kalamazoo. .lima Detroits. Toledo, n.iyton. Indianopiiis. Muneie. Xw Ca.-tels. and Fo-toria. 111 Fountain. Fba'fle Creeks. Pontiac. IV-nton Harbor. Saint Joseph. Xiles. lic-r- they want to charged a man 2. pr rlay and then only pay 2. 70 pep day so you could see how much I would makes. Thar what I have tunrrd up against in th following facts. I were able to talk in the- following Churches to h.-lp b out since I lft. Detro-.t. Church of Christ Kalamazoo. Mich. Then Were ah!- To talk with th Eider of th Ann Harbor. Arthur. Then talk in I hop.- you will be ahl to s my point and if you Could snd m donation between now ar.d Spt. Next to th Dean of Drake University locate. at Desmor.bs Iowa. I
w cull 1 i k t a g ' : a n char.-' to t ilk in ''t ''.'.'.ir. ii eu r-.ir. . iv hoo'.s. er Young Mee tine or I'r.i'. ' rme t.ng or any orthr me'ir.g w hi- ii If yoa hav to
hive I v.ei i to
iU;-) :..e c it Tl
c i;ld do this fur Me I wo. id 1 g 1 a i . r.- if you could -e t any W rk f.-r I wuull b -la i to ; a Jo'., .f jr. ,r.r. ct o.b- fcr :r.c I walk' 1 over -tat--- truip.5 to c t work, but Ha v.- not rtt-n. Very much aa, thr seams to h "o: of wii.kedn:.s in the w orld at Li 1. tt day in thi? Cv.ir.t j-y fulled of Cn'.!e:es anJ Church but lo' k likes very I:t:b:.- 1 ' h r : s t a i p. t y up i n N" 1 1 s .Mb h. they chu: 5.- ! m- 1 ist night 1.- irr: h-i aivl sur-rvr they woM r.o: q:-ed roe- any Hre.iklci?:. Hal to come away from r.-p.top. Hare or w :t h e-ui a r y v r- ikfist Tu sd a yniorninc. Tri-i f-Tv?! lari.i-r.7. hotw'T. her and .a-.r.t Jos-p!.. Hit r o:l 1 r.o: make.- an Job. Pass Mr. Whokck Kanah his wife r;d m diners ant two pairs of sk.r.e- arc! 4 pair of 5 o.k.- and R collars. Which look good to mr. tiles comes in very nie for I wer. 1 a red footed, hoped they will h" vc rooi prospers times as many would not do this for m but tb.e-y did. hope they lived Hong times, an snakes lot of mon.v for ths cloth- wer y. pv a ppre ia t er by m de ar sir I cannot writ with pn and ink? hoj.o you will i c able to nnler sbar.d. thn. .that reason I wanted to tak this Pible Cour.-d nexf fall. Yours truly I V.l. 11. A. Z Sw a k banner Haytian Ml -amy Student to t'.S A. P. S On man pived in tn cent to come el own town from Saint Marv. Depot. I mne he lived long and snakes lots of money a? h dne ir.or than any body for 1 wk- tims sip.
Well now that that's over with, don't you fee! a Jot better? We knew you would !:k it. as this art id s-enr- fo fir si-ht into the- spirit of the b.olida .
mnsovAL jiit.vtiox. Walter r.-gan ha? returned from a bu.-in.-s trip to Philadelphia, at bast h told u- with a straight face that it was a business trip.
Milt Fruder.ste'.n passed us on the N'ile- road Sunday afternoon. Mr.
rru.!nste;n was so hadlv f riithte-n-'d j
that li drove tnroucn a men neu,--:
fence into an adjoining field wher he remained, until we had disappeared entirely from view. They r.nd tb. mayor of Buffalo $ .-.a t for making beer. W would lik to pee anyon try to make a hrwrp out of our city hall.
1 1
We extend our congratulations to rnrrr.fr I. Marl Il'ede as a nw papa. Mr. Heeder will now provide
Mnu.-.'" with a sPc-ed.ametcr and
walk nil over his house from srir.r se
to sunset, in several years of instructing th little on a? to the proper tim to sleep.
Today is a day w rest. W im.acine it'll be " a. m.. at käst before Evelyn begins prowling .aho.it.
YOUR HEALTH- Byc0D;e,a s-
Th fellow who has been hating to carry out th ashes has begun hatinc to cut the weeds. o Business isn't charily; y,,It th bcin at home. ,a
conf.r.-nt a r. I 1 a-k. D
The sp. d w it h w hi dt. c- -m
ra re 1 with former
a network of goo.j reads
thro-;--, cur wilbrre?-; p.p. 1 mountains and arrc-s er pltir, is !. hrt of amattinc. i I T.'. f.r-t Ca'- rc a.'.-r u:l iü-g program was started !
crly t j . ars z In Krnt::ck, whn Abraham I:n- . -In v as a b.--y - ? 12. Traffic-.- n-w he, Is cr -ipat- d in China and I'gypt. wher carts w :'e- f.r.-t ir.vr.t 1. Th' - f.r , ir:. t:. ,-n whe's and axles carvel cut rf nr. ol. 1 I .- f .-' r.-. It t -.-K centuries for r. in to cop. p,e id the ..x'.e b. inc separ it from the whel.J. Th oil He mans, mi--.-- rcad builiers. had 23 pave d hlrhw a-5 cut f lb .... . vr pavemr.ts of bricks ar.d mir. era; rfnio;: they drove their lumtr'.r.g chariru- w;h iror.-rimme d whee Joy-riders of thr- da:. lounc-d in reed-work ba-
-t m.i.r.'e
en sel.d v. h.:s ab -ut a foot thick.
Think of that whn ri ling in a flivvep f.. em ........ 2.Lxr.s Lattle for good roads has teen t-oins on for
A TAM'S OF Till! IJIRDS. t Pittsburg Post Th call of the biolog-.c il surv ey at Washington lor volunteers to aid it in making a count of th yird oopulatiop. of the Cm;. , State: ilpi-Tates th care which is r.nw being taken in th collection of data on a subject concerning whih th information formerly available was basM onlv en rousrh estimites. It is d. sired to know with some vproximation to accuracy what ffct the pres. nt tat and fderil laws have on the ir.'-r ase f cani .ma ireti'Orou.' birds, how- I ;:'... are distributed and how thy have adapt' d themselves to har.ges of er.virop.m -p.:. Accordingly interested per.-ops who ar familiar with the birds that b:ed in th-ir vicinity ar a.-ked to coopr.it in tb. takirc of a census. This d a not t ctu;r.- a.-.'t'Nf to a locality where birds are numerous: it is just as important that a count should b made m are is where they are scarce. As it is ro e.vv-.ry for th purpes of the o p.s is. to count only i.e.-tip.g birds, th enumeration should not be made 'until the hred;nc c i.-on is at its hight. which :n th vicinity of Pittspurg w:li be about the first we-k in June. If th count is made at an earlier date, there will be dan.cr of including transient birds which will go farther north to breed. Tb.os who are wulkr.it to do the work can obtain e'.irectinr.s ar.1 report blinks by" writing to th b.o1 ic.cal survey. Wttshinctor.. I). C. wh:h is asking from -voluntary observers becaus it has no fund? Mth wd.icli to piy fcr the taek. Th census sh- uld be cf considerable value, es- ; eciallv if repeated periodically. Xo longer is mere gue.-s- or k to 1 relied upon in '. ir.g the economic etue.-tior.s in which birds. ire ioncernd. The sublet is too imicrtan: to be- hanliu in an unientific way.
Yesterday I read that fatigu d"8 not increase susceptibility to illnss. Ilxj erimepts on rat mad at or. of the great universities wer eaid to show that, if anything, fa'ifcu increases resistance to disease. One swallow does p,o make a summer. It will take a lot more testimony to co'Anc m that over faticu is not dangerous to human beings. I am not "up on rats, except to know they ar shrewder and smarter in som ways than men. Thy d-vlg traps and manag to furvive whn een an American Indian would b c.urgb.t. I am prepared to believe- that they can r.-ist faticu as a mun animt. I doubt if honest tiredness ever hurt any ope. Work is needed by every on. You will no thrive unless you use your mu.-ob- all of tnpni and us thmm enough to provoke perspiration. " ( Any sort of mu.-cular effort mad in spurts may do more "harm than cood. Spasmodic, st 'joggling. x-hau-fin.g effop's may injure the heart and rf ult it1 r il d imac. On th othr ban I. rcg'.hr, s-s-tematic, pu.-taird x.-rc: to th o;nt of fatigue will do yvu good. Th other day I i w a wopian el...-- fo 70 yc ..r- of at who b.as f-iuvenate.l h : if an l is k. ping this ,scop.d "youngpes-" by dtily execises to th musio of .a h'-'!in-craph. She can skip and d ir. .and f oa through th.e air a.-- cimc fully a any profelonal el me er you i-ver saw. Tiiis woman had curvature .f th -pin in hr youth. Irst-ad of w-ear-ipg a pi ist ep cast op som sfeebanded ruj port in g device, sli cho?.to find move mrits and ef rr;?. j to develop the wrher.-d nri-cles and to
that lift! evidep.ee rem.ins of her e arly eb formity. Mach e.f us should find som physical activity to keep fit. Th laborer needs no addition to his daily toil, but everybody should exerr:? enough each dav to h really and trulv tired at bed tim To b tired is on tiling, and to be over-fatigue-1 is another. Whether th over-fat igr.e is the r.;ult of lopg-contiuueil and exhausting manual labor, op whether it comes from r.i!-.'al effort, there can V no doubt that th l"werd vitality leaves: the hoch- b's- .aid to ri.-lst th invasion of di-e-as. Scienc has made many tests to prove th tfec- of injury upon the bodv. For instance, if a given part of the pr.lv of ,a rabbit is crushed and then th r.aNbit is Injected with th c.-rm- of tuberculosis, th injured orcan will b th part first involve, by th germ action. It i- a far-fetched argument I r elmi, but it s'ands to reason that thesf- units of soc-ety damaged by o ei -f it icu op otherwise, will be the first to suffer when pidmics sweep th earth. Puit whe'h.er our disas resistance ; op is pot lowerd by ovrfa'igu. w do kopw that our efTi-
impaired by
Quantity-
rod "..-t ie-n in any factory- is in-r-as ! bv having r-'gulir intervals f rrst and refreshment. The r -"ords of eve-rv industsial lar.t show tb.a th vr-rv gr.a t raa--rity of a ide-nfs hapj-n life jn
!ay when fatigue has je,f nd
d ph si 1 1 pow e rs.
a
s'roi;: pen p. e t wite d b a e-k
I
sh.o'ill.-r. Sh n.as su . e ,;.--d so we;; 1
t h d
a 1 e ; - p e s - a :
W w .11 w-i-.-h the experiment? on fatinu -'.'It ri ir.t -rest, of cours. but a present w sti-k to our gup, sad ins - tli i ovep-fa'igu its an m-oe.j-t i r t f 1 r a r.t i g h v,rr lis" os-
c 1 u - - c f ' '' - - a s e .
c-.'ba d i CT
t 'lu c- a. i", r AY.!
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Make Decoration Day Dedication Day Flowers for the nation's heroic dead. Tribute from hearts flowcriric; with gratiude and reverence for those who made the suhlime sicrihce of arms. Let us dedicate ourselves to two hih resolves that will honor their memory more than our symbolic wreaths. Resolve to honor and cherish the country for which they pave their lives to exalt its ideals .and respect its laws. Resolve tea advance the cause of Peace the Peace for which they paid the price. Let us heip brine: true the prediction of Senator Owen: "The world is entering a period of a thousand years of peace." &EÖRGE WYMAN a CO, Oomo and Sco U
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Say It With Color Color, color, color everywhere. The world of Drapery Fashion i rclorihed by a rainbow dazzling to behold. The color carnival of 1922. we brli-ve. is the spontaneous expression of the buoyant hearts and bright prospects of America the nation that has crowned military victory with economic victory. The color harmonies of Drapery Fashion are delighting enthusiastic audiences at this store very day.
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fflJkororial Day 1999
By BcrtonSralw
The I e i I 1: here the I.- . I who or.i w . y n. I.aughit.g anl bl.tl-.e and v.-ivlly nr. f; i i d . Into e i. h tight ih;r i. lib';.- st: 'ngtb. thy t'.ung Ar.d. w n a gl ry thit shall nev.-r fad. They cav tk.e-.r i.vs ;o -.-. ak a n i:op. live. Ar. .1 so above t h ; - urives we b-r ! tod. -jy To give- the v-rais - irts ar ria l to cr. .
Knowing our b.' t b- more thin we . pa:
Th IV ad he hre th I)---id who fought a ! f-11 On many tb 1 is. and freely t;a.- their y. uth That th w ho -b..-ul i .. n- att-r thm mirhf dw'.', Within a lap. 1 f ju.-tiee. ngp.t. and truth; They f : g 1 1 1 to tv.tke rut a free, to r..-ak a w .- rid Whr h p naught rV't.r..-h an! where love. :r.;ght grow, And. dream.ing thus, into tb- right they h.urle 1 . . t . r .1...., 1. i'.t .. i. . j o . . . a
The De id lie here; th :.-g above them va-? And w.th u:.;ov:ei he. ids we humbly st r.d And 1 ty our fb-w ercd tributes on th-'ir graVrs Who died be-au they loved this goodly lar.i. Their wo: k is nn..-h-d an-1 their task is thr ul.. Up n .ui shoulders :s their burden idi To carry :i with filth an I purp...-- true The cauc they died f--r val.ant. una frail! v (Copyright, 122, NLA Service)
Rich Colored Cretonnes Make home interiors, porches and lake cottages places of beauty. Cretonnes, in a variety of bright cheerful patterns make up into effective pillows against a foil of chair or chaise lonue covered with linen ip cover material which comes 5 0 inches wide in black and tan. blue and tan and lavender and tan at $1.00 a yard. (The wearing quality cf this linen material ia well known and it launders or cleans exceedingly well.) We show cretonnes of bright rich colorings for living rooms, and dining rooms, also the daintier shades for bed rooms at 50c. 75c. $1.00 and $1.50. Hand Blocked Cretonnes may be ordered from a swatch book. These cretonnes are the sort of thing you will want if you arc anxious for something distinctive and of exceptionally high quality.
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Ruffled Curtain.4 $1.75 a pair Some new ruffled curtains have- pjc come in. They .are of marquisette, silk hemstitched, in whit only, f'-r bed rooms and for the entire !;o,:, if it happens to be a small one Our Drapery Department is well supplied with many other thitigs. Curtain materials of every description, Orinoka drapery ir. terials of unsurpassed beauty. t:v newest in lamp shade material-, from the silk to the braid and base's, exquisite pillow materials ar.d trimmings, and some most unusually good looking lamp standards. Our Salespeople will gladly h'!p you plan yeaur hangings, lamps and pillows to make your interior, or porch effective.
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