South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 179, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 28 June 1922 — Page 2
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
WEDNESDAY MORNING. JUNE 28. 1922
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: AWAIT RESULTS
OF CONFERENCE ON COAL STRIKE
GUARD UEItRIS MINE MASSACRE VICTIMS
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! A-nraiice Multiply That Administration Will At- ; tempt Settlement. ! j ' . vnti ni; d From I Vitro On1.) j v,..rk(-ri Turwlay ab-mdonf-d .all' i for lmmuiatc tailing of a j
th contcmplate-I with- '
pump men from the
i Ir i'.v ! f.f
rommlttf-'1 -idjournt-'l in-lf-fi-, leaving th anthrarjt fitua,T3 it va.- oi)Tn it o:;v nM
Mon.iy nmrrir,;, whf-n It rfrr'-tl tho , net ; lly umnimo;H p.-nii;.-'-K-io; t y rffrN ndu rn vrtf of th" 1 o 1 J . -O'iO c minors to mako th prt-vail-in . i;)f-r,ion an ah.--oluo strike-
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I.iSor nrüciil. and nirnh'Ts ci
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ili c.vtd
Li- i - ir. : ii it; I I r u:v.- a:: 'I th- f. J-. ral
Mr. Iy underlined to
id.
h'.- th.it tht-l:stt-n to tiitir I
t h c-rnrn iJtc rxpr'-.?'! ?reat rln
lion Drr (hr tor.e nf rn'-sno. although thy
rmk" It puhlir, "I: npj.nrs thnt lrrcnri dl.it? develnptvients in hnth fh1 b!tun.Ir,f.u. and ; r:t!inrlt !ndu.'tritrf may ho looked ii r imm dlately as a result of the conference- with the president and government ofTicials," sail Thomas Kennedy, president of the pcneral
x .1 iiw.nt ithd i f ale committee and of district No.
i;. v.; - - -
s-..- " .":x ;. ,.jr
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li a Is .-x j i - 1 tli; la.iv. ay in-a.i- i;i.,'ht i.-L-.ai i.u;.- tr.i'.j i .-
teilte .i' r- an-iir.d u.iim: luadTJ.arten . .-.mr 1 to . ortend some numentoud uctifn. , It v, ;is ltarn-d th.it th.o por.eral committee f th'.- federal shop crafts woul'l cor.tiiiUM th-:r lucttlni;.- to.T.iornnv with th draftlr. of a .stril:o program, tho rf.ibjc-.t of tii'ir di-8u-iior!. Iliam fcr the er.tlre strike sit ation wu- placed squai'iy on tii: jho:il''. I'.-' of tile lail ' cutives ly I'er-idfnt Jf-wt-.Yt tel?trara. He de--c'trrl tii.it til l ü- il;' fif the transortat:or, act hi'I resulted a seri of Cop.irnvt i . i s b t'.vt (-n tho ro.tds and thir i ri.j.Ioyi s wiiioh h id dr.r '.; d a s!t:; f i.jii wherein-nearly million in1:), or two thirds of !ht' in railway mploy to'lay, nrIU Sides t h1' .sliopmrn, the maintensncf of way laborers, iiremtn anrl cdlerf. and part t" tho tleriis and ipr.al nun nr- bailotin? on thi.i
question. Th) telepram
finco t'ie i:i'fruri' ff th"- transportation act and dwe-rt Htrontrly upon the refusal of the x atives to estAblish t r-.irls of liiltnr ;iljust merit, 'provided for in th' ac, to settle local or r clonal disputes.
...
.V"
STUDY AMERICAN WIRELESS METHODS
7 at Hazlton. The miners' contemplated drive for funds will 0 on a.s planned vesterday, Mr. Kennedy asserted.
rf UI'lL HIT: Ulll'ill i nu abandonincr stepn for prepredpesin the event of an ultimate strike, h? annnuned a rneetinq; to b held
i at FTazeiton Thursday, when com
mittees and campaigners will invade a dozen of the larger cities of the east with an appeal for public financial subscription to the "war chest' of the ITnited Mine Worker.".
Th" first ta-a;t!;v of th southfrt' Illinois min war battle, James Morris, of Johf.-ton City. 111. Morris a member of th" union's truce committee, wa.- shot on entering the mine. Dr. Diark and Head Nurse Dudenbostel of the II rrin Hospital, are dressing MorriV wounded arm. Injured victims of th mine massacre ar bein? guarded bv special deputies of ITerrin's mayor. A plot to slay the injured men .tthe hospital was rumored last night.
CALL MINK COXIT.HKXCi:. PITTSmrrWl. June 27. (My AP') Pennsylvania entered the lutuniinous coal strike late Friday through Dr. Clifford p. Connolly, commissioner of labor and Industry, who sent a letter to leaders of district No. 2 and district No. 5. United Mine Workers, and to the heads ot all bituminous coal operators' associations, offering services of the di-
r'Vi"'weu ran events' w.ion ui iin-ummjn iw im. v.-
strike and calling a meeting of union leaders and operators for Pittsburr July G. The oporatnrs addrrwed represent all of the mines east of the S a a' i u c h a n n i river in Pennsylvania and the union officers receiving the communication preside ovpr npproxImatrly 100,000 miners. "I am sending this appeal to you helieving that you are deeply interested in its contents and that you will bo able to . attend the meeting as suggested, " wrote Dr. Connolly.
of the fact that the de
partment of labor and industry ol Pennsylvania ha under its jurisdiction a division of mediation. 1 am taking this method of trying to get together the operators and miners of Pennsylvania for a conference leading to an adjustment of the local situation." the letter continuedThe motion for the invitation to meet was due "to the fact that the .suspension of operations in the-ld-
tuminous coal Industry In this state
r.woit sthiki:. Ii:TIt01T. Mich., June 27. (Hy A. P.) Approximately ST.. 000 votes had Leon tabulated Tuesday night on the strike referendum conducted by the United Brotherhood of Maintenance of Way Employes and
railway shor laborers, according to "m view
Information forthcoming from the general hid quarters of the organization here where the count is In progress, and it was announced th ifuatlon i-s unchanged, th members generally favoring a walkout in protest against an impending wag cut, provided other unions Joined in. A spokesman for the union declared it now seemed assured that .approximately four hundred thou-
'Business Trip Flyer Says Upon . Arrival in City Business Man Finely Air Route Quickest Reporter Takes Flight.
1
ANNA M. MILLER. Miss Anna M. Miller, aged 54 ears, died at the home of her fatlur, L. C. Miller, 630 K. Indiana av., at C o'clock yesterday afternoon, following an illness of about
British Gradually Adopting Broadcasting Methods of This Country'. LONDON, June S. (By Mail) British govcrr.crent officials are giv
ing: close study to American rr.vethch.l3j
of wireless broadcasting and gradu-1 ally are adopting some of them While the wirelei telephone Is r.ot ! tTs popular In England as In the j
United Btate. due largely to govern ment licenainff and control, the people are .beginning to show intend Interest in it. Some of the Ixr.don department stores have established wireleM departments and are selling receiving ft for as low as 1 10. Ra.div terminals are rigged up on their roofs, and crowds of choppers are etertained ear.li day with wireless concerts, speeches and weather reports. Direct contact with Arlington and other American, stations w easily established. Nothing written on the subject of
wireless broadcasting- has brought it hon? to England .o vividly as a recent New York dispatch to the London Times. "In the United States," says the correspondent, "there are already half a million home-made receiving pets lor listen-dng-ln and a tmüllion manufactured sets have been fold." "By the purchase of these imple and inexpensive receiving s ts as used in America, "continues the- writer, "there is no village in the British Islc so poor or unfriend d that it will not be able to afford, or find a patron to jrive the necessary receiving instrument. The villager and every remote farmhouse should receive every night as gdod singing, a-s good opera, as good dance music, as good a lecture, or as good a survey of the news as any mlllio.ialre In London can buy." In answer to a published gtate-
terssion of th? activities cf th bca.rd & library annual might pro f.ta,bJy b las-Jtd. ummarizins th S7tatLs.V of the various libraries. Another enterprize might be a record of Important books or manuscripts, rproduction9 of which "by j'hotostat or similar process have been collected in this country. No systematic survey of the manuscript rfcurcefl of the larger reference and university libraries has ever been undertaken. We need a publication summarizing the essential articles on industrial arts. The library worM needs indexes to the great
collections of re prod utt ions of paintings and need." ir.de't to pictures
HERRI S FORGETS MIME MASSACRE: ATTENDS CARMl'AL Continued From Pago One.)
Lnr a f'.. k.r;r.g arc lt?ht. th mayor's fae a - -'n to st grimly. Thn he spk' slr'viy: ".'houtl -.v.. ;-. v. troib'. at thit hospital and (.J forbid I can murder a small nr-y of mn who b-
who do net rat upt5r. our
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fur r
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a
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go:
other r.ien. They had cup of coffee."
"There men." plained, "are plain
have guarding our hospital.'
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Mayo
Pace cx-
c loth 's r.ar. I
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a
' . e . r. r is r. y o J c . e -
ily f.-ur ,r Ircth-
isix months.
Miss Miller was born in St. Joseph nier.t that wireless broadcasting of
hn.ir .n- ti-.o -unty n
uuoiüi.i mil, n'u . , ., ... i .... i.
spent ner enure me iure, rmu i survived by her father i r.d twf sistcrs, Mrs. I. S. Morse and Mrs. H. C. Uovener, bith of this city. Miss Miller was a member of the Indiana Avenue-Christian Church V. 11. C.
,, . . . . : and oi tne MinipnaKfr .Mninors ciuo.
uai.as m. .-peer, an abator oi s -m- j, wiU ,)p ,n 1Hl;,llan(1 ceme. note, at the field opposite "Sunny- i r,f1,. ,,., .,.r,r,te
iv i j vun i t i ' i c 4 i tu iiiii' .ii-. mo have not been completed.
'Mcrrly a
way Phillip (I. Kemp, representative! of the P. G. Kemp Co., of Chicago.! explaint-d his pi rs nee in S tilth j IJnd when he arrived, . ia aro-; plane, shortly after 1m o'clock Tucs-j
nay morning In the company l
home on i'.
Nov. 1. and had i i oncerts would hurt the musiical and
c'iiahli:s j. cmiciiin.
Charles J.
cast.
'fand ballots would be
.-would t virtua ly a hunflred pprtent vot from th brotherhood's membrs. tcftthr with a vole of approximately lT.O.OOO in the ranks of non-union workers in the malnttnanc crafts who al.o aro partlcirating in th referendum.
REJECTS OFFICE BECAUSE OF AGE
which hÄS n(m. entered upon Its 13th week.
and In view of the enormous and wages and tonnage, past, the present inconceivable lessee in working days, and future In order to limit the increasing industrial and social nervousness and to prevent possible economic disorder," the communication sets forth.
Cregier, 14 years of
age. died at 7:45 o'clock last night at hi residence, 723 Van Buren st. He had been ill about nine months, death being attributed to apoplexy. Mr. Crgier was horn In Closhen on Aug. 2'5, 1S."7, and came to this city IS years ago. He was a member of the Presbyterian church. His vocation was accountancy. The survivors are two sons. Udmund T. Cregier, St. Louis, Mo., and Walter B. Cregier. Chicago; a daughter, Mrs.
i re it .immernian, or this city: a
Cregier, Goshen,
mma V. Cregier,
South Bend. Funeral arrangements have not been completed.
Genend Pleads Aiie as Means of Refusing Premiership of China.
PF KIN. May "When General v. a-- called into
: (By Mail). Wang Shih-cheng th-- president's of-
aekd to Frvo as reconstruction re
tire- recently r-n-1 premier under a
rirn". he d
s rle r-d unus-ial in Chir-.a. Grr.er.al Wnrg serv- d under the Manrhus. ;;.r. uiler ir: - a: !v stacks rf the :'!:!! Ü ' fin-1 on- attmptd to repiHn'n the arniv.
Ir. a f-r rli that 1 o
fo:
country which has respect
si: -til
CAPITAL AWAITS INFORMATION OJS
40 KIDS AVINGS hö
Continued From Page One.)
r.aped Sunday and for hension of his captors.
the appro-
forjvdng a nv
er.il Wang pi id
wat Jhnugb.t proper ns;;:ro responsibility
chint. But Gn1 hi- stx'v-nve
years a- a r-a'n for rot serving and ad de l that education and .training wrr- of the oM chrnl and
theref're ur::hd for bo nw Cb.tna i tilelaskl
H deriarr l th- rourtrv demanded !
yu:r.g and viro-is brains to cuide It and -tegeted tt-tt or. of the Chinese de'rg-?(s to the Wahirston conference. with a knrwledst- of v.orl.l afTair. sho rid 5-ertd. .When G-nrnl W.v: had bft the
r r 'dent" ..lesfd tl
ofV.ce, r. faver:v
w is
con-
URGES MOVEMENT TO ABOLISH CHILD LABOR
it I.. jur.-
PI:oyiii:nvi ally A. P.) A iv'. I th tatr-s of
.MKXICAN OITICIAIS WOUNHKU NRW YORK, June 21. (By A. V.) Official of the Mexican government who are hero negotiating Mexican national debt and oil tax agreements were plainly disturbed Tuesday by the kidnaping in Mexico of A. Brüse Bieaski and the holdin for ransom of 4 0 American employes of the Cortex Oil company, near Tnmplco, n;td threatened destructnon of company property valued at 5 250,000. Neither Anolfo de la Huerta, Mexican minister of finance, nor any of his staff wuld make any oiilcial coirJment. pointing out that all their information thuf far had been obtained from ne-wspaper re-
j Torts. ! Thus far no definite connection has- hern established between the
incident which took place
in the state of Morelos. and the Cortoz epis-de in Tampico but in som.a quarters here it was hlntevl that the outbreak may have been inspired by political opponents of Pr't Obrtgon's regime with the purp so of embarrassing hif reprerentatlves In the conferences now under way here.
Prorertv valued at millions of del-!
bars is owned by American interests in th Tampico oil fields, and fears are fel; hre that unit si the rebels i-r.der Geu, Corozuva. who are hold-
rlde," the Studebaker
Jefferson blvd. I Kemp explained that he had "run! down" from South Haven, Mich., to
attend to some business matters with the Staples-Hildebrand Co., and that he would return Immediately to Chicago, and from tiiere "oack io South Haven. '"We make these little trips frequently," ho said. "And in the future I think they'll be merely a matter of course. I am t xp-c:ing to
buy a plane from Mr. SpceV, who is a representative of the Curtis Co.. in i the near future, and then I intend! to cover my district by aeroplane. I
It's much quicker, and m.uch n-"re brother, George N. comfortable. We made the- trip from aI1( a sister, Mrs. F
south Haven to south lumi in minutes, and expect to make about the same time going back. By train
it would take nearly four hours one
way so you can see that the time saved is really worth while. Mat.rr ot Time. "Same time, and I don't believe that time Is very far off I expect to commute from South Haven to Chicago. Soon everybody'll be doing It." During the war Kemp acted as instructor of aviation at 11 military camps in thic country, and it was at that time that Sneer achieved fame
as a flyer. Since then ihe latter ha.-? j acted a.s a representative of the Curtis company during the winter' and devoted his time to commercial : Hying during th summer iiir-.irhs. !
He is r.ow located at Chicago, v. he;-,
is enjoying a rapidly growing ;
business carrying pass nge r.- wno, wish to rid just for th "fun of! the thing," or who have bu.:ns.-!
INFANT SMITH. The infant son of Mr. and Mr. James Garfield Smith died at the Epwnrth hospital Monday evening at o'clock. Funeral services were held at 10:. to o'clock Tuesday morning at the Forest G. Hay funeral home, Rev. B. D. Beck officiating. Burial was ma le in Highland cemetery.
1
ItOBL A. INKS. F'ir.rral services for the late Roll A. Inks, HO. K. Cedar Ft.. will be l.i: id at 2 clock this afternoon at
J the A. M. Russell chapel. Rev. Kay I Bird otfieiating.
to transact at distant points and who! wish to take the quickest and most j KI.IZAHFTIl WAKTHA. commodious way of transportation.! Funeral services for Elizabeth He has achieved fame as au i-xhl-i Wartha, four-year-old daughter of bition llyer and ha. appeared Inj Mr. and Mrs. Michael Wartha. 237 many cities of th United States, j N. l'agin st . will lie held at 3 According to his companion on this ' f'clock this afternoon at the Gertrip. he Ls thinking srrio-.j lv f stag-J ,,,;,n Catholic church. Rev. J. M. ing an exhibition in South Bend. i Schrrtr othciating. Burial will be Reporter "Goes Up." ir- CIar r'rove Hdery.
Opportunity for experien j r.g the senmtlons of going up and coming I down and loinir a few 'stutts"; while in th. air was offered by tho! aviator, who fron-, the time c-i hi. i
ai'Pvaranc in the tield in the plane
was the center of attraction of ail j the small boys, and many grown-ups! of the can side. While waiting ths; arrival of a supply of "gas"' and i! '
he took up f -vi-ral pascn r, BurdettP Staples. Mis Marde'.I Hillebr.and. and the represent.itive of the Ntwa-Times. Many of the onlookers had expressed themselves as willing to take their first ride. Put a heavy downpour prevented further demonstrations. Although the two men had intended to return at one to Chicago, the rain necessitated their remaining In this city for a time. Thi,y sought covr. but evn during the heaviest part of th dorm their raa-
theatrical industries, Loul.i Sterling, president of a large American phonograph company, has paid that In the march of faience there nver yet was a gTeat Invention that hal not been of Incalculable benefit both to the indutry with which it was immediately concerned and to kindred industries. "When praphophones w-re invented." said Mr. Sterling, "people paid they would kill pianos; the cinema was fully expected to give the quietus to the legitimate Ftag-e; vaudeville was at first looked upon ap the death dance of m.usical comedy. "None of tht?e things has happened. The new has In every case benefitted the old. The more good pictures thv people Fee the greater their taste for the ordinary stas?e, and the more music they hear on the graphophone the greater their desire to exercise their creative powers upon their own piano. Appetite grows upon what It feeds upon, and the more good music the people get from wireless broadeastin? the mor they will want from their own pianos."
BABIES MAKE LONG JOURNEY ALONE
.MRS. IDA G ASK ILL. Funeral services or Mrs. Ida Gaskill will be held at the residence. 4 01 F. Monroe st.. Wednesday aft-
ernoon at .:..() o noclc, Rev. Robert ; Long officiating. Burial will be in
Highi.in-1 ccmeterv.
STATISTICS
f:i..il effort to bring ire the rtez employes are dispersth union into lin i e 1 or captured, other outbreaks are
or was urged
.kriv
T r
f 1 ter
'. Hoover in an addr! h ri;-ht !- fo- e th--- Nat:---r fe: a rce of So-'ial Work. Fa:i.
'.".-tare -.!. amer.dmnt to tb-
ral tcr-tittiti. n was tho only alative to v. rr rn "a bh'jshi that .- 'v.'n;a- is mcrt deplorable
than wa:
CONFIDENT FRAZIER U ILL WIN DAKOTA G. O. P. NOMINATION Continued From Page One.)
R'
:iitv
the prevention
vi child la, or was placed upon th
a-'. :v:
-at s'at'
ir. Hoover, who
d
'dar: ! tha
i.e
tow!
r.on-p'Ttisan votes to get tbr- nomJr.ation. Sora of is staunch?! .up-
whi: ttn majority lad 1 Ifrte,M "lln'1' .:s chances to secure
Mid pro 1 Mili'iM'- ii' mihi. ... i In 1 A r-ltiirtol r n n 1 ... 1 a
was a minor. ty still ' m-v . ....-, ia.vr, tnur-
MiMie Age, in their attitude iUS ai 'rt'l- re-nom,-rh'.MhoM " 1 r-'l''n 11 Nrstc by from f.000 to ' . ! l'.OOO votes. Th non-r artisans e-
IllILDINCi PFR.MITS. On-Siory frame elwelling, 1201 N. Johnson r--t.. F. D. Shade. $.1,:0t. Two-.-tiry frame dwelling, 931 Tenth sc.. o. W. Rande, $3.s00. Two-story frame dwelling. 121
IVahway. William Bender. $15.000. One-story frame dweiiir.g. S2G N. i St. Louis hjwl., Richard Coil. $2,500.1
One-story frame dwelling. 51 S N. ist. Louis . lvd., Julias Greuger, $2,500. One-story frame dwelling. 414 N. Francis st., John L. Worden. $2.850.
nine, covered with eanvass, was surrounded by a group of interested small bovs. ciirg it the most care
ful and complete rf examinations, j eiden'ly looking forward to. the' MOVING PERMITS. time when they would mike their i A. B. Harter. SOT Ashland av. to business trip t soci.il calls x l th'Sl.f N. Cashing st. air route. j Fred Sherman. 12S 1-2 N- Walnut
st. to 1 ). t . HUAV St.
Mrs. Tilly Razwarski. 917 W.
Two 15-Montlis-Old Children Taking 15,000 Mile Trip Unaccompanied. CltrCAGO. June 27. Bawnga and Bokesi, aged two and a half years and 15 months respectively, are 'making a 10,000 mile journey to California from their home at Mondembie. a Congo village within a day's distarvo-e from an insurgent trlb of cannibals. According to the children's m!?ionarjr father. Dr. Ernest B. Pearson, these cannibals eat the Belgian soldier they capture both to erpres their contempt ft-;" them and to show that it can be done. Basanga and Bokesi, whos Christian names are Mary and Paul, were born In a Jungle-rimmed villige and until they started on the three-months' Journey to America neither rene-rnbered ever rcfir.g another -white child. Mary speaks ICiidundo, a P.antu dialect, as well as she does English, and Paul has learned no Enlish as yet. The children are viewing with little interest the things that they see on their trip. Automobiles an1 trains are new means of torture for them, as a horse was the only mean-..- of conveyance known to them 'in the Belgian Congo. Their Afric?n names were given thsm by the 'natives, -who eccording to their custcm (f calling parents by the names of their Mrt child, dubbed Dr. arrd 'Mrs. Pearson Is Asanga and Nyang' langa (Father of Mary and mother of Mary.) Mrs Pearson said that the natives rail their women minslnaries "msma" as a mark of repect. but-that some of the- single wc-men at first object to th honor. Pajamas are the latest style In street wear at Mondombie, he said. A woman who left her husband In the Congo recently was punished.
i j according to Dr. Pearson, by being j tied in the path of driver anta. which
stung her terribly.
i
forward lacking laws ir.
thcr
KEPOKT 21 HAVE BEKX KILLED IX MEXICO
CALIIXICO. 7aiif.. Jur..
7 .v. . nty-cr. ?r.cr. hi? killfl In iid "ro'ir.1 Mf-ltnli, Iiwor f'Alifrrn! i. In th lat two weeks, in-ctrdinj to ,-.ffi -ial rt"ortM in
! lieve. however, that B. F. Baker will i tive Nes:o a clo.-e run.
The general belief is that Netrv will ioVi a much heavier vote than MeOimbcr.
ib
- -
. -ross interna
tional l'.r- T'tis cr-::piIat!on was .made Tuesday follow ire th discovery erly th:a morning of eight dd Mexicans, two anl a half Tntles e.": c? Caiextco. one of the bodies being in an Irresration ditch oi. the American fids cf the boundary.
.SAYS LAWS I5EXEEICIAL TO DISABLED LACKIXG WASHINGTON. June 27. (By A. P.) A heated controversy developed on th floor of the house Tuesday -luring consideration and passage of a hill to increase from JIT.
month the mix Ira urn
sampie
to 1110 Woodward, a v.
Divi-
a
Stepiun J. Gyeng. 411 W
sion st. to 110 Woodward av. S.:th Sto. kn.m. 2102 Pleasant st. t- 2214 ivendail st. Ignius P.uszkow ski. 531 S. Warren st. to 2512 V,. Dunham st. Harry Bunn. S2C 1- Prairie av. to 703 Ja-iUith st. Art St anion. 1233 Bruce st. to 2 2Ö1 Prairie a v. F. E. Ferguson. 17 22 Douelass st.
NEW LIBRARY PLAN DEBATED AT MEET
to 1122 E. Indiana a v.
wmirm.wvs nirsifiN.xTio.N. KLW'O. N.n-.. Jt:r. 27. fierrge Winarlel.l, whr. r-sigr.ed several we-ks ago as republican national committeeman for Nevada, owing to 111 health, withdrew his resignation Tuesday, when the state convention adopted a resolution, reet'.ieftir.g him to do so.
A thing of beauty Is a Jcy forever.
to ?.'a
amount which can be paid diib1 f-rmer servie rn-n who require the constant "distance cf a nure or at t ndant.
R'-p. Hu.ldlestOR. democrat. 'Ala- j Peter Gr aar. er. t"
bama. a member of the committee. ; it 17 W. In.iiana av. charge ! the bill was a "srxt-hair I Michael Poczr-y. 150 and the "purest piece f bunk ever (to p. land ar.d Meade ts.
put out:" that few f'rm-r 5rvlce j William Nfl. 1S men would benef.t hy it and that I to Lapcrte. Ind.
congres-s wa- not "furr.hir.g the A. W. Beeman.
leg.s!aUon whMi disabled soldiers; to 10 X
need." ' ! Frank Horvath 1217 s.
22 Chapin st. to
Orange t.
W. Lasalle a v.
122 W. Garst st.
College ft.
No dimwit :or. n ji.n-o of th biJI deve-top.ri rn the f.oor and It r.jw eoe to the senate
Kendall
STIll'CK BV. A11X1. III4 INDIANAPOLIS. Ir.d.. June 27. Ray Allen, sir years old. was killed Tuesday when he was struck by an automobile while crossing a street near his home here.
st.
st. to 2123 W. Washington a v. William Kim-. $42 Dunham
to Mishawaka. Ind. Charles A. Tyler. 311 N. Michigan st. to 100 2 S. Michigm st. Isrnatius Wroblewskl. 1709 Longley av. to 70 D N. Johrsoa at.
Think think.
and rcvad and ' re-ad and
New Indexes to Aid Scholars Recommended by Library Association. DETROIT. Mich.. June 27. The cteation ol new Indexes to aid cholars and Investigators tvas recommended to the American Library Association at its meeting hre today by Harry Miller Lyder.berp. chief reference librarian of the New York Public library. "We have no Jndex- ? to perfoxlical arfekslea in the nld of Industrial art." ml3 Mr. Lydenbrg. "A union list of periodicals and a record of fbound files of nrspapers available for invf-etigatorf are two desirable enterprises. "In the pint the punishing board had the need of the cr.lller circulating libraries in mind; opportunitnes for cooperation wlt2a important helps for chplar and Snvwtigrator have ben neglected. "If funds are- available for ex-
Store Opens
8:30
Closes 5:30
Saturday Open Tiil 9:30
The Week Of
July
1
B . S
rourt
h
r.
r. o V o tt i nn c
tuui Uli.UiiO
i
Holiday Attire In Special Showings
Capes and Summer Coats. $10.95 and $17.95 - Reduced in price just at the time you want them for over the holiday. They are all wool and many of them are silk lined. All sizes. SuitsTweeds and Tricotines, $15.00 and $25.00 About half the original prices. A splendid opportunity to get a new Suit for the Fourth. Tweeds in light colors.. Tricotines in navy. Sizes to 42.
Pre-Holidav Sale of Dresses
An event which means much to you because it brings you pretty Summer Frocks for all occasions at extremely low prices. Domestic Ginghams $5.00 and $5.95. Imported Ginghams $7.95.
d Normnndv Voiles
an
Printed
$10.00. Fiench Voiles $12.95. French and Normandy Voiles and Eponges $16.75 and $18.50. Crepe de Chines $16.75 to $50.00.
T T
3 port Mats
To add the finishing touch of smartness to your holiday costume, $1.95 to $5.00.
Have You a Sweater to Wear on the Fourth? These -garments arc indespensible on such a holiday. We have liht weights for day time wear in the warm sunshine and heavier qualities for the cool evenings.
Pure Fibre Silk
Tuxedos
Small and medium, block stitch flat girdles dark and light shades $10.00. Imported Mohair Slipons Sleeveless several beautiful colors to choose from $2.95.
New Sport Skirts Now is the time to get one of these attractive skirts. Use it the Fourth and the rest of the summer. In Silk there are many attractive styles to choose from. Striped, plain and block patterns. Materials are Sport Silks with Satin stripes and Roshanara Crepe $10.00 and $12.00. Gabardine Skirts are of excellent quality. Plain tailored and button trimmed $4.75, $5.00 and $7.50.
Am'L l Aul I t i ' 'M
CITIII
JCFFCRSON BLVD.
Is not GIVING UP what you want. It is one of the surest
and best methods known of GETTING what you want. $1.00 will open a savings account and we pay
interest of Arr horn July 1, on money deposited on or before July 10
v
.
The Bank Awad
TRUSTöSAVI?TGS--Li 3 JL
NEXT TO POST OFFICE Service-Stability
THRIFT
Ann .
i
u H 1
