South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 186, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 5 July 1922 — Page 6
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THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES WEDNESDAY MORNING, JULY 5. 1922
SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morning livening Sunday j. m. sirrn v. v n. i'u!'"'f. M
Associated Press United Fress International J News Serv ice- American Newspaper Publishers Association Audit Bureau of Circulation j Newspaper Enter, ri - A nation. j MOUMM. l.IMTIOV I
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rvrviNO r.DlTION United Press International News Service.
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M'. rr.tr.,: nn l Sund it. rn ri""' rv:t". er yr.ir - - ; J" All Mhr hr mill' - - - - ' ' " F.r'.T' A at :t'i T'.-ad I'. r Of?i n Se-r.I CIi4 Mall.
JULY 5. 1922
LEAVING A FORT V NE. NV'.v:-..ir.T. and ln1 : v ;.lua.I-. 'piite reru-ra'Iy, hive critic;. th; f.i'-t tint v. hen Will. am Iloekefeller ö Id, h' L-iv" no j.art of hi-- two hundred millions to i inn:y, rr.!.fy make the surzestion that failure to dtr:Vl 'i- Izri?'- to th pu! lie in Ihates ?ru,- fault of mind or heart. ;j-jt why shoull a man at death do something thiit hf hnd r.o sp'oi-il in 'r. -t in during his life? Us ji matter r.f fact th d .?po -itirn of the RockfiKrr fortune, for it ;s turned rv r to liin chili . ri. indicates how litt!" ..f u-.vr.fr.-liii is in tho f.A' to m?ny millions. Whit th l'ite Mr. Itockf- Ihr really owned was tUi few doll ars which he u-d. Tho vast accumulation was nut hi -it all. for it meant nothing to h jn. rrh provrrnmrr.t. h'rau' It r.ed mony anl I h'i -an so thrf a rrn-.vir. f-v ntmu nt at?alnt any wealth pave that whih H rarn-d will stp In and tsVcn ponr fdxty rf th two hundred millions as irhria nee tax. jThiO r sf rror s to hi dauehtrr.s who married mn who a!ridy hav moro millions than thry can I4rd and upon whi h tlif- Inf r t and dividends arp far in rxcfs' of ar:y personal u e. ,Vhat happens Is that tho rfrtificato to oil and 1-ir.k and railroad ?t-ck will h turned ovr to tho f a:p!oy.- of th hufhands who will v.atrli for dividend days and th-n deposit th- dollars with ov'irs taken from pitnilar poureo. s nokf II" -r wa a man of coral -aratively impla ! tJl.it CH. f t Ho could ride In only one automohido at a tim So it' mant nothing to him that h. mi.ht nave purciiaEfd a hundred. Ho could sleep in one bed., Th ,o(her.s he owned meant nothing to Mm. 'The amount of fond that lu- was able- to aimlhate vn exartls' that of any other man who passes hia ht!eth birthday. .The.o were the thine that he really left when h rtid, not the vast and unthinkable fortune which la passed alons? to othr-r. That thte rhould any criticism for failure to esilow hospitals for tho pofr and tl unfortunate. tMat he l,-ft nothing to libraries, that he dreamed fif -lrram i"f jorptuatincr hi fame ly c-arvintr Iiis ri nie on oma hus; pile of stor. only Indicates an cpe tation on the yublic for plfts. .If tber- b any responsibility-, moral or otherwise, f-5r uch frif is. public sentiment should ris-1 to the pc-iiit where they are demanded as rights, not expected as charity. The.-o dollars v.hich were listed in hi? name are vork.'nt; today exactly a.4 they did a month apo. His PÄf-s in?T has not changed the product of an oil well niul ha. rot rcduct ' 1 n ?In?!e pallon the output of a refine rj. No engine Ftands idle on a railway trick f.f any lino of which he was a director. Creat wealth really means only the power of direction. It may be so hupe as to havo no personal lot ar.ir.gr. .Takinsr out huce chunks to satisfy pomo craving fcr eternal memory misht he a blow to the people t:no would receive- Its bencMt for uft'T aü, men oTn, really own. but little. Only the use to which do'ilars are put count. Kxpectirtt chanties is really a most undemocratic lcipule, tho fan:e emotion which our ancestors in the days of the feudal lord and ?Tf.s felt when thy witched for ihe p.t?.in of their owrors as th Ifr.al for distrihution of favors. A world built upon th private Inclinations of its pow rful is a rather un-tah thine. A lind which is mile of nun and women who Wvpect notltinc 'xcert that which is paired by their errn efforts i'iite 2:k ly to be not only happy but a' very alert and progressive nation.
o-
TV CIHEX KU I.
JTad you happened to bo born in China instead of this country, it is quite probable that you would ha e stone, yesterday to the slirine of Tu C.hien Kul and burned a jo stick e-pe-ially if you happened tt be on your way to or. of the numerous prize f.,;h.'s or a card rtame. ! fThat happer to be the name of one of th 525 worshipped bv the Chinese. It is the pod of '"''.blini; and the oriental mir.1 believes that this divinity uireots t!u fort'.iiio of tho who ro!y i:fon cjtanco for profit5. It founds foolish to t!".oe who have ben educated tb the tel'.ef that divinity and omnipotence aro It.terchar-iTeablo terms, to bIi'e that power Is ihvided and that there are supernatural forces at wrrk which have th"!r f ia. vocations and interests in mundane affairs Yet, is it any r.or fcol.sh to believe in a pod who controls ?amblir than to 1 elvt that any cool can come from farthhr.n: at nil? Wall street v. as ."tartb d the other day when on
PiUr.re.-?. caul:
in
he Vattle with other
gill m lors. lost a few mil'.io.- through the manipblatiop. of the market. Tills particular car.-.br in sti-v-ks ! tvrical of his kind. A bricht youth w.th an aptitude for n athemaTtcs, he had become n clrk m a bi:- ket r:;cp at IT. At Zl he had "won" a fortune by his trad-.s upon the marke. At 4 .. he had won und If. st three fortunes and had hi.s fourth. "Durins: hi.s entire life lie had r.ot planned a new c 11 well for any company in whi h h own-d ftock. hid r.ot contributed :;e thought which would rer?uco the cot of operattrjr a train over any lir.e in rhre securities he parce led. Iii- never held an ottice jr. any company and he never produce a firr rnd of cotton or a bushel cf what. All the do'.lars he ever ht'.d b.o pot by pambi.r.ir Cn i rices. UT.er. other ramblers of Va'.! Ptre-t took away
1,1s million-.
nev
dii not take anythmp to which
hi had a moral title, l'or he had p:ven nothing in feturn r'or any money that he had ia bank. 'Unfortunately the farmers, the cotton growers, th merchants T.ho paid freiprht cn railroad linJ ur.d the ustrs of ta.soline do not get back the dobara
he flJehod from them hy hl part!elptlon In iramrl.ns activities. If thero bo any ethics in business. h!- career nould be th be3t argument which Senator Capper ran P.r.1 for pafinff th measure he has for pro biMtintr rambltnsr in grain exrh.injM on food tuffs. I'erhaps fom" day some man who defends these xrhar.ee? m?y explain Just what eervice this man rendered to the world that he phould be entitled to many millions. But until he do"-, tho putdie which eats bread end the farmer who raises wheat will wonder whether this nation Is not at heart Chinese and ha not raised its own Tu Chien Kul to which the people ray tribute throusrh gambling1 mandarins. o THE POWER OF THOUGHT. A n' w fad has .'truck London and Paris and now threatens to invade America. This time it is not a shortening of skirts, a bobbimr of hair or a new st3'le of face paint. It comes under the label of auto-suggestion, by vhich people arc 1m1 to believe that thought is the only motive power in the vrorld and that man become what he thinks. It prang from a book written by Emlle Coue, a rather distinguished French scientist who brings f .rward the theory that you may become what you t II yourself you are. He reduces it to a doggerel formula of "day by day, in every way, I'm getting better and better" and If you walk down the Hue de la Palx In Paris or the Strand in London you are quite likely to hear a dozen men and women mumMinj? these words to themselves. It becoipts the modern incantation and harks lack to the practice of the Indian savage who beat the tomtoms and pounded on the hollow logs to frighten away the evil spirits. There is, however, something engaging In this new theory that thought Is power and that If you tell yourself often enough the thing wlilch Is in your heart that It becomes true. Some new strange things are happening In the world of metaphysics, and its serious study as a fcience is gripping the minds of thinkers with Increasing force. Whatever opinion may be of the stories of marelous cures and miraculous physical changes that come from a repetition of these words, it cannot bo denied that the latent fad has lesj of danger than have other things imported from these nations. If you have some high ambition, it might be well to remind yourself of it each morning. If you have some real aim In life, remembering It will at least make it more probable that you will put forward enough effort to attain it. The new fad may be worth while in th realm of diplomacy, and possibly the statesmen of these rations may in time formulate a little poem on the payment of debts to Jhis country which will lead them to returning the vast sums raised here by Liberty Bonds.
THE UNKNOWN. When annoyed by summer heat, you fcowl at the sun, uncomfortably conscious of its dictatorship over life on earth. Up there on the sun, the hydrogen flames are so fciant that some of them rise to a height of 500.000 miles. The heat of these flames is aboitt 7000 degrees centigrade. That is 70 times the amount of heat iH-co?ary to make water boil. One of these flames Is bad enougn. You pet an idea of the combined terrific heat traveling toward us when you tdop to think that these giant flames are all over the pun's surface and that the sun's diacu'e'ter Is 866,000 miles, against tho earth's diameter of about 8000 mllea, With powerful telescope and1 pectroacope, scientists are uncovering knowdedge about tho sun lrom the safe distance of 92.S30.000 miles. The human brain is getting somewhere when it can ferret out information at that stupendous distance. While one branch of scientists Investigate the far-off. another branch finds equally marvelous things here on earth, so small that the human eye cannot see them. At N'ela Park laboratories. Clevelard. bosclna bugs so small that 1000 of them. In a straight line measure only one Inch are placed on a lantern slide. Magnified by microscopic lenses and projected on a movie screen, theo. bcsclna organisms are observed viciously attacking each other. Other bugs, only a twenty-fifth of an inch long, are flashed on the movie screen and shown cuddling their young. Another minute form of life Is shown feeding Itself with a sort of paddle-wheel under Its eyebrows. What science ees through Its super-mlcroscopea and telescopes today seems wonderful. And it is. But It is crude and primitive to the discoveries that will be made by future scientists. Nature is like a candy box with millions of layerf. So far, we have uncovered only the first layer. Other layers will be uncovered, each more wonderful than the one before. Usually, when science finds something new. It i-s regarded merely as an interesting laboratory ex Itrimont. Later it inevitably is put to practical use. Thus ach one of these discoveries affects man's ways of living. The future of human life is unguessable. but It ccrtainlv will be bizarre, utterly unlike th 'Jves we live today. Mentally we are barbarians, slowly moving toward knowledge. Compared with our far-off descendants we are like oysters compared with the best human brains of today, though vanity makes this hard to believe or admit.
0h.9TZdliov3Thm 0 urn why arc up? (Philadelphia Public Ledger) Schoolboys will remember from Xenophon' account of how he brought the Greek army to the ea that the historian who found himself at the head of the expedition wanted tc lie down and .'jeep late, but conscience stirred and would not let hi'.n, "for with the dawn it is probable that the enemy will come." So. instead, he jumped up and trirt his robe.- about him and went out U the snow and chopped :;rewcod. thereby shaming into renewed activity the soldiers, weary, faint-hearted end rebellious. Thomas Arnold, of Rugby, the saint Pandered in j-trachey's "Kminent Victorians." said there was on4 tiling he never could brlr.g himself to do with ri a! alacrity, and that was, to rise in the morning. The Hilde warn.1 against the awful fate that over-ta'rif-s the p'.uggard who Insists on still folding his band in slumber when duty clamors that he hould be up and ioinjr. Why should one rise to the cares an l wo-s of the earth when one might repose and dr. am. and leave the toil to the rest? There is the old Hindu saying which tells us "It is better to pit than to stand, and to He down is better than either." Some have caught at it. arho ,jre eager to seize any pretext for their inertness. Certainly nothing is easier in the wo'ld than to r.dot the negative attitude of those who refuse to co-operate. One !s almost readier to like a pullback than to approve of one who simply lies down in the traces and refuses to pull at all. We must co forth to face what the day brings and life Imposes. It was only on those terms that we were put Into theworld.
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SAYS BULGARIANS SHOULD HAVE SHARE IN RUNNING NATION
i
and wiull have the'.r r.t'.re rip - I niun!.ts have c'.'i Ir.to th eeuB-
; ort." ! try. but th-y i.av bcn ccaTertfrl Matn!.i-.!ifky is a man of mas-1 to the ccr .tr.m prir.c'p!. cf rerysive frame an I tremor.. '.o :s energy. day life r y cent a - t v.ih cur otr, lie has a lar?e round fa . ru li ; Industrie .: vi la-.c-al ! '.in? peasoom; b ;..::. an : : p: : r r I ::.uta rb.e, ; ar.t, a gr'a shoe'- of ;- ' Sr-j c ;r"v . ha- anl small' dark v'yes that ex'-! Th Tr-; r revive I the report ; and only wh r. his svn.b;l;tir-s are, that King Iri might ror. visit the arou.-ed. His er.-.:, s F iy that in hi Ur.itf d St".-? r.-.i t-'- if th! cam
Ctood morning to you. Well It's mighty nice to see that there are a few of us loft that didn't pet killed yesterday on the glorious Fourth. Our business manager can i;t on the rear feat of the Lincolntte and see more dangerous hills and bad curves ahead than Charley Sax aas w hiskers. The busiest man in the middlewest yesterday wa3 Pill IUid. the mayor of Barron Lake. was busy but not too busy to cuss the weather because it was a tri.le cool for bathing1 and there wa about two square yards of water out in the middle of the lake that wasn't occupied by swimmers. .Like President Harding. Jake Heckaman epent the Fourth on a motor trip. Jake was at Indian Lake for the day. where the distinguished barber owns a cottage built on a bluff. We laughed when Jake told us this, causing him to reply haughtily. "Well, it isn't any bigger bluff than some of the others put up that patronize these here surrounding lakes.
Captain Welch's new house continues to progress. We are looking forward to the house warming which will probably be adjourned sine die and unexpectedly when Neighbor Pill Temple calls the police. It's too bad the dek soldier boys at Healthwln haven't got a broadcasting radio set as well, go that they could heckle congress occasionly about the bonus. While he's back home In -Marion, Warren better keep away from the corner grocery store, or he'll be in for an awful panning. In case the South Rend men that are up In Wisconsin fishing. George Robertson. George Wheelock and Fred Bryan, are unable to purchase any more fish to send to their friends, they'll probably start shipping home canned fialmon and sardines. Owen Davies must be Tost In the
Wisconsin woods. Weeks ago no promised to send us a mess of fish and we haven't received them yet. Oene Miller promised us the same thin? one time, hut we suess It must
have slipped Ir- Miller's mind because we know positively he's been back home for at leas: two years since b.o made tho promise. We'll bet that tired out and worn as h must have ben aftr the trying ordal. Thomas Jefferson didn't havo to go to five or six places to find some real beer after he gp? through signing the Declaration' of Independence 146 years ago yesterday. The National IIooo convention is now in progress at Ruffalo. To our knowledge this Is tho only convention that will bo heb! in the United States this year that Johl. Pc Haven. Neimen Jones and Fred lyoughman do not t'an attend'.; It's funny, too, as they seem to be eligible. Schuyler JJose, the .affable coal mn, always makes us think of a locust, as he reminds us that winter will &oon be here. John Ellsworth will soon be back in town again. Art Hubbard says that John is just like a kid. Whenever he lands back In town it takes him live or sit days to pull himself 'ou-othei. but after he smells the lir-n r.rd calico over at the store for a little while, he soon gets back into the harness. N. It. Feltes and John Ilaughtcn were talking together in at Jake's. Turning to the distinguished Mr.
Heckaman, Mr. Feltes said: "Jakej I don't see for the life of me how j you are able to monopolize all the j publicity in tho Tower." And Mr. j
Haushton broke in, "That ha:n t publicity: that's noteriety." Andy Weisberg entertained his brother from Tlttsburg over the Fourth. Andy showed his brother a good time by letting him wear his narrow rimmed straw hat on Michigan street, and the poor brother narrowly escaped being shot in the fracas. Tom Itrandon is back from New York. (To Compositor: Kindly keep this line set up and Obligo). Evelyn enjoyed her firecrackers so well, she erid to have some of them saved until next Sunday, when papa would bo at home apain.
Premier Advocate Letting People Name Policies of Country. SOFIA. Bulgaria. July 4. "The people of Bulgaria do all the work, and therefore they should have the dominant voice in its government." Premirr Alexander Stambou'.isky said today to the correspondent of Tht Associated Pres?. who questioned him as to Bulgaria's future. The occasion followed the recent Peasants' congress, vrhen Stamboulisky warned King Bris he could rign but not govern, and that if the intellectuals secured control of the government, a republic would be declared. "Thf present frdenoy of ths world," continued (Jjie leader of the Agrarian party, "is toward democracy and rule by the people, as you have it in America. Bulgaria with its tyrants and oppressors is dead. The people now rule. It may be that Bulgaria one day will have a republic, and If so wo shall make King Boris its first president. He is a very democratic, modest and earn-e-t young man, and I think lie would like the job. lb- 1 held in grea: affection and est em by the ptnp'.r
formidable. physi-'iU" and t'.virdT-
r. vo: i:-. than ;r. his
v .- - c h r.a t he r !
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trs c. :
about he wc :'. aretr.rar.y him.
Howev -r,
re.--. Kir UcriB. 2 :th th ppr ar mcs
tr.u.'t have a c.- i' fund c f native i
irk- bv a -v. men-
commons. r.:-et rractxal w.sdcm.
and ur.usu-ul c or.strucliv.. ability, for v'";5 a -: '
he has guldr I his country fcr thre ' t ." years ihrma-1, the most precarious no re. .v.;.,- and .cw fr.ends tr. , , x . . . Sofia to c; e .;; ad or nt ue period in its history. :. . , . , .r On the ;v.istion of foreign re'.a- ':s fc,v;-li " : " "';r; ' r' 'c'''l tion. the j.nsant premier sail Bui- j ch xfv :ri - f r.s f-r garia was sincerely anxious to hav "; , ' v ' ."' ",
1 . . : -
a closer understanding with Justi- .' skavia and nicre intimate contact ll' ,!
with her other neighbors. Rumani w- -
and Greece. Ri-ferrin? to the rap: 1
.inisters anl
' o ,1. p 1 '. 1 ry 1 1 f
rccocry of h:s country from th war he dedar d ItuU iria had no v.r.
According to t'.- re. rds cf th'-vvc-ith'T t urea.:. 1 w.st relativ-1
employm.ent proj.ci:i.
Indeed. ).
hun.i.litv is fou-
parts oi
said, Bubtaria lacked sufficient lab
and gae work to thousands of fuct-
,. ; Arizona.
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i'.t h -.: c 1 : :t p '.'.! that
t'-e deserts !:i
v.-t;on- r
r, o r e
tivts fi"m the lost provinces as w .i
a.- to U'inns of Rns-kan rfuree:
Asked whether there was any dan-' 'nWfr !,A?A ger of th'?o Russian immicrant ":' rowing tii" seeds of holsh-vm. .
F-tamboulisky said tho pro ! -t would find little fertile soil in Bul
garia to cult i ate their extreme ..o--.
tr
1
our practical and commonense peasanfs w h.o ha e little -ympithy; for arv ?-.o'.icv ex.-e pt that of lat.or j
i south e rn r a'.ifo-.--. . v w here there are
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han Ariz-
1ACATION
vor Bur.rurn, Mtes, fcrener.s, rincs. "The bolsheviki." he ex- J pcison ivv or srmtner eclds lainr-d. "ar- strongly opposed by ' r r r "4 ,m
V VapoRud
and if
tri;e some cor.i-
gr? TjSct
1 TKrt SaTS'A
lMlOC.KIlSS. I am the dream of tomorrow, I am the better way, I am the Mower of the seed toiler are planting today; I am what men haven't done but often have wondered about, I am the problem unsolved, but young minds are working1 me out. I am a field unexplored, radiant with visions and dreams. Mountains made low for men's feet, bridges flung over the streams; I am the rhance for the boy etlll at his fair mother's knee, I am the poal he may reach, I am the man he can he.
I am the road out of strife, the unbulldcd castles of men. The peace which no war shall destroy, the beauties of brush and of pen Which canvas and paper shall know in the days that fihall make up the years, I nm the joy that shall be In spite of the cynic who sneers. Slowly but surely I rise, smoothing the way of mankind. And always the better I build, leaving old customs behind; I am the hopo of our youth, the pplendor oT dawn and the run. I am the dream unachieved, the tak whioh fhall some day be done. (Copyright, 1922.)
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Titian POQtrij
o.ve lruxDRur and foutv-six YUMtS OLD. He doean't go 'round with a chip on his shoulder, , Hunting excuses to fight any more lie's getting a little bit wiser and older; Fond of his comfort, and weary of war. He isn't as boastful he isn't so breezy. Nor half so convinced that he cannot be wrong. He's got in the habit of taking things easy For old Uncle Samuel is getting along. The pastime of setting tho eagle to screaming Is almost forgot' en; he takes moro delight In sitting around in th? twilight and dreaming, , Somehow assured that the world is all right, lie isn't so quickly aroused to resentment, Nor nearly so eager to reach for his gun: The'thing that he hankers for most is contentment
And time to reflect on the things j he has done. , j i He knows he has wealth, and an! envied position . i
the glory He fought for and won In the brave days of old. He lives upon dreams, going back through the story That, somehow, he fancies Is fidready told. And yet. if the war clouds should gather abovo him If ever his country by foes Is beset, Ho'll 'rouse from his dreaming the old man, God love him! Will suddenly find there Is fightin him yet!
un 1 1 u alti i ruii placi:. Let us hope Ireland's new constitution is a rugrged one, otherwise it will neer survive in that climate.
ir in: dousvt iuiilwi:. United States Judges are given life terms on the bench and it begins to look as if the same blessing was soon to be bestowed on Mr. Babe Huth.
GOING AND COMING. Between tractors and detractors Henry Ford is kept pretty bnsy. '.Copyright, 19::.)
VERSE O' CHEER By Edgar Jones
I. MYSULF AND MI'. Jut I, myr-lf and me. we throe Are always right, we all agree. And neither of us e'er will do A thing that grievt.s the other two
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Enough for an old man to ask for. iV'V ' :lilllA V' . . fnftn,h For when on- sashs all of us sigh
What need then for nursin- the restless ambition That stirred in his breast in the
days of his youth?
And when one smiles, all of us smile, In real co-operative style.
j I've never .seen three pals that ppent
What need, as he muses, with lf-i Their time o blissful and content satisfaction j Ar.d -happl.y a do we three
On the place ho has filled uponj icgf-r, i. i.qm-u. ana me. history's page DFVTITP V For the old boyish craving for tur-l n 1U1 moil and action? r. Oren. formerly of South Bend. ttot. h,tpr the leisure of retfi la associated with Dr. Carson in
old age!
He Is getting along, for he dwells on
his new location under the firm name of Carson and Oren at 125 W. Washington av. Phor.e M. Ö4 3. 143.
YifYMAH a CO.
co.mi: and us Store Hours: 6:30 to 5:30. Saturdays, during July and August, close at 6:00. Announces the Happy Medium in Corsetry
race Girdles
S2.00 to 8.50
These Grace Girdles are something new showing an individual and exclusive design and a thoughtful selection of pattern and material that makes them the ultimate in
up-to-date corsetry.
A Grace Girdle gives the uncorseted appearance, with flat hips and complete flexibility yet gives the proper body support. They restrain the body muscles just enough to give long, sweeping, graceful lines but with complete body comfort and suppleness.
Because of the four exclusive features, given below, this new Grace Girdle assures you of a greater comfort and ease than an ordinary girdle, yet with a permanency of graceful line.
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Exclusive Features in Grace Girdles That Appeal
to Everv Woman
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1 A defined waistline, for perfect fit.
2 Ventilated back, for coolness.
3 Waist line fullness, for comfort. 4 Re-inforced patches, for durability and wear.
An added feature is the alternating material, elastic and coutil or elastic and brocade, which makes them far cooler than an ail-clastic girdle.
On several models you will find a diamond shaped "patch." This i-s an exclusive feature and an important one which takes care of tMe natural bulge of flesh on the overly plump figure. This patch also serves to kep tho shape of the girdle.
EARLY CLOSING We hope that ycu will not mind regulating your shopping at Wyman's Saturday to sometime before six. We are closing in order to relieve our clerks during the fatiguing hot months of July and August.
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July Furniture
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At Our
July Furniture
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Union Trust Company Safe Deposit Boxes with spe. :ial facilities for the privacy zi customers.
ADLER BROS. On Michigan at Washlasto hlnce 1SS4 tiic sTOitn rou men and DOYS
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It Beats As It Sweeps As It Cleans
Cr?i
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Donald MacGregor, MgT. Colfajc, Between Michigan and Main 5t.
