South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 266, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 23 September 1922 — Page 7
SATURDAY MORNING. SEPTEMBER 23. 1022
THE SOUTH 5END NEWS-TIMES
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WHAT WONT WIRELESS DO!
PrMicon cf tr.p future pos:bi:itif cf radio aj- rur.mr.i? will. Ser Ifforc in tr.e h'tory of Any ti.' r r.'nv 'ien' hive 10 many ap-
v.;rr.f ;-. it uns ren r-a
It as tori
v. f, . tha
Tf.ilr.u of the rych.; In its ever-
in..rsT.s;nir I.n of u.x. Ii f-r;:s pvr ry t:m an "exprt rr 'authority" rr. :k rjh-:t Fays i-wurihin,; I."- f.r.'.I some r.e.v U5 for r-v";o. Many of th' app'.ica-
But the
tior.s are obvious to the layman, there are rome. which require
Tvoinlest flights of the imagination to co.-.ceive of their provability. IoM!ilit!o. Fo-n predictions already mal for r.vlio ar:
That pi.yFiriana will d!a?noe dis-!
n . from afar. That scliooi will be- kept And srrror.s dilvered by rndlo. That licht, heat and po'er will b dTivd from radio frequency waves. That h!p. ubmarlnea, automo-
to h.ivf their work li;hte-r(i a far ui poibl?. Why could not radio i :e adapts to kitchen ue? Jost a a.iiy a.s having- th wave run a tractor: H oa u-n on Karth. Al.o, a far-seelr.a: Pone de Ieon mi?M discover the ral fcruntain of youth In th mysterio" bu!b and coiiK and motors thtt produce tfue v.;iv!efl waves. D.ir.gerous cijnd op'rat;or. would be unnocefsury and the a:;e of Methuselah would be revived. Let your imagination fly a little higher and otxvrve the real kingdom of heaven on earth, when the blind will bf able to fee. the deaf to hoar and the lame to walk! Perhaps that's too far-fetched. D-t, r-omir.j down a pes or two, wouldn't the blind be made to hear what others see? Like the movies, for Instance And the deaf ml?hi he permitted to teo the distant radio concerts that others hrar! Aa for the lame, with oae's Imagination at euch heights, it ousht to bo t-asy to conceive of a radio machine that would furnish every person with a pair of sood, strong, equalized less!
MP
bilr in fact, every moving object will b controlled by radioThat the next war will b fought by wlrele.es. That farmers will employ radio waves to do their htvy work. And ?o o; But would It not be Jut as eay to go a Ftep or two farther with th--s predictions? For in tan'"'. honwive.s would be glad
400 IiUOADCASTFJlS. Within nine months the department of commerce h-as Issued II tensea for the establishment of nearly 4 00 radio broadcasting stations in the United States- This remarkable growth In the popularity of radio Is ö'olng on at the rate of three newstations a day.
RADIO IS AVIATION. Radio is Included In the course ot aviation schools throughout the country. Government schools, &s well as private, make this an essential study for coming pilots- The future, it Is predicted, will see every airplane equipped with a radio set. In fact. England Is planning to make this compulsory."
MAIL RADIO STATIONS. Every on of the 1"j air mail Rations in the United Stales is radioequipped. It is planned to provide a fpv of these with radio telephone, as well as radio telegraph, service.
PRAISE, CONDEMN LEGISLATION 0 F DYING CONGRESS
McCormick, Simmons Laud and Deprecate Accompliliments. WASHINGTON. Sept. 22. (By I. N- S.) With the American poplo waiting to rus.s judgment at the j.oüa in November, senatorial leaders of the two major political parties tod.iy issued statements on the legislative record of the 67 tli congrer-a. Sen. mmin, democrat, of Norih Carolina. po.akln ffr the minority, charged the republican ennsrvs.: '..-Ith failure and declared its legislative record was "tainted with the Influence of Wall ftreet." At the sam time. Son. McCormick. republican, of Illinois, declared the legislative achievements of thia conzrer have reduced the national debt Jl.OCf .ruü.fOn and lifted the nation
from industrial paralysis to the path of prosperity. Their rival btat -ments follow: McCorinlck? Statenicnt. Fy Sen. loCormick. chairman of republican senatorial committee. "The congress found business dead, agriculture prosirate and Ave million men out of won:. It has written Into law the Kc!iogg agricultural credit act; laws for control of the packing- industry and the grain trade, the limJtation of immigration and tho MoCormick-Good budget act. Under Ihfc budget act, it has been possible to bo drastically reduce outlay that the national debt was reduced $1.000,000,000. "The annual amount of taxation and expenditures have been slashed a like amount. In the civil, military and naval rvcrvlojs of the government thero has been a, curtailment of SOO.OiCO men, who have returned to productive Industry. Th president by agreement, and not by ruinious naval competition, has established the United States as the equal of the greatest naval povrer, and by treaty has substituted accord for discord in the raclfic. Helped the Farmer. "As a result, the farmer who harvested a loss will malte a living:
Radio Concerts To Improve WASHINGTON. Sopt. 22. (By N. H. A ) High c!a53 broadcasting entertainments will be assured if the plans of the department of commerce are included In the contemplated radio laws. These plans are that radio broadcasting stations which come up to certain ' specified r quirernent3 may transmit on a higher wave length than is now accorded them. The requirements are such that many ot the 400-odd broadcasters of today would be automatically eliminated from this classAccording to the lattst plane, a special 400-meter wave length would be assigned to those stations with from 500 to 100 watts power, special modulation and other required features, a studio and a supervised program. The matter of daily program would be under the special supervision cf the local wirele,s in
spector to Insure only the be?t con
certs and lectures obtainable. This new arrangement Is being planned so that at first there will be only one broadcasting station of this type In each city or section of the United States. Licenses will be issued to those that qualify af soon after the new law is passed as possible. "Where two or more stations In a single district Qualify a schedule will be arranged dividing the time for broadcasting, so as to eliminate Interference.
the man who had lost his pla.ee will find a job; the manufacturer whose furnaco was cold can find a market. We are on the road to prosperity, while every other country In the world Is burdened by dobts and deficits, alarmed by armaments and threats of bloody strife between rivuj powers. "Who would turn back to undo what has been done; to put aside the ways of peace to resume the way of war? Who would put a?ide the security of America to plunge with the Wilsonian democrats Into tha League of Nations?" Simmons' Statement. By S-en. Furnifold M. fcimmons. democratic finance leader In the senate "The republican party came Into power proclaiming its superior constructive ability and efficiency in enacting salutary and remedial legUlation. It proclaimed it would be,
in common parlance, a "get there J quick" administration. It promise 1 '
a tariff, bill without delay and i was to provide adjusted compensation for the relief of e-oldiers. The tariff bill which was passed in a miserable, matoe-shift, unscientific, unbalanced measure, violating every productive principle of the repubiican party. It la so clearly a purely profiteering scheme of legislation that it wo-uld justify being knovrn as the profiteers' adjusted compensation bill. It deals a murderous blow to our export trade upon which the prosperity of this nation Is largely bacd. It will impose greater burdens of taxation and enormously Increase the cost of living. nays Hon us Hjprodsy. "Its treatment of world war veterans is shameful and Is marked by evasion, hypocrisy and finally, by betrayal. "The falsity of claims of retrench
ment and rMuetlor. of exper.res N concluively irvswercd by the fl'n.ii statement of the preider.t m ve-lrm the fcMier bonus bill t'.iat th treasury was confronted ly u d-t of JS-,0, 000.000 during 1?2.. F.ut for the heivy receipt? from the Sale of war material, the treasury wo:.i ! be in a state of practical binkruptcy at the pre.--nt time. "More than ever In cur history, the country tod.iy L" in the grip of favored classes. Its indusU"y controlled by organized monopolies, and its financial policy dominated by influences centered in Wall street."
WALKS A HOUND Till WORLD i E. F. Taylor, a faithful night-! watchman in Richmond. W. Va., j his in the last 10 years covered ai distance equal to the circumferer.ee
of the globe in his nightly rounis. If. is safe to presume that Mr. Taylor ia r.ot troubled with rheumatism. Thfre are many in .h:s community who would be equally agile were it r.ot for rhuematic pains. Thes can be relieved and permancr.tly benefited. as hundreds of others have, by a trial bottle of LANDON" PRESCRIPTION 1303.
Trice $1. Write Drug Cj . Mich. South Eend.
or call. Landon ani Wayne sts. adv-26o
New Fall Stock ?t J. J. Kreuiberger. Merchant Tailor. S0 Dean Bldg. Adv. 273 -tf.
THESE PRICES SHOW WHY so many Mothers buy shoes for their ch'.dren on Beitner's Clearance Floor And they know that these prices are low because they "serve themselves and save the difference" and get a good, sturdy shoe, too, HIGH SCHOOL SHOES
$1.95
A Youth's shoe, in either black or brown, has a wide comfortable toe and a high
top.
$2.45
A Boy's shoe in brown calf is $2.45 and is made Blücher style.
,85
For a Girl who wants a good looking and yet comfortable walking shoe this shoe at $2.95 of brown or black calf made on nature last is "just the thing."
Jf&-? BAT. Lit ft
111 South Michigan St. Clearance Floor
i
HPIL
aiser s
Ow:
William IL, deposed German emperor, has written in his exile an autobiography of extraordinary interest. He has presented his own side of the case, of course, in defending his position throughout the course of events culminating in the world war. Many of his statements cannot be accepted by the American reader, but none the less they are of engrossing interest. His style is clear. His sentences are not involved, as a rule. There is little formality in his way of presenting the story, which at times is conversational, almost gossipy, especially when he describes the mannerisms, habits and methods of his advisers. Many intimate reminiscences are given, and much correspondence hitherto unpublished. Secret meetings with the Russian czar and the English king are described in detail. The governments of the allied nations are assailed continuallj The United States and Woodrow Wilson are blamed for much, as was to be expected. The German
attitude is, of course, defended, but mistakes in Germany's diplomacy and various personal errors of judgment are admitted. It is a story that will engage the absorbing interest of every reader of history and current affairs.
Publication will begin Chicago Daily News on September 26.
in The Tuesday,
It goes without saying that the demand for this work of world-wide interest and consequence will be very great, and orders for The Chicago Daily News should be placed with local news-dealers without delay, in order to avoid disappointment, as the supply will doubtless, in many instances, be inadequate to the demand. Readers who prefer to receive the paper by mail may send $1.00 to The Chicago Daily News, 15 North Wells street, Chicago, and receive it, postage paid, for two months.
GARDNER NEWS AGENCY Phone Main 1666 Distributor Main and Jefferson Sts.
Each style must have value; each value must have style else neither is correct.
117 South Michigan St Correct Apparel for Women
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Vc n o t on'iv talk
v a 1 u r hcrr at th? Frances Shop we think it and work for it constantly.
Superb Offerings in the New Autumn BAodes
' COATS $m.75
HITS
fV75
FROCKS
Hf
A dvanced Fall Models Authentically Styled and Reasonably Priced
3 mßiM, feig I v . ty v If J 8 Aai h LL 1
The Spirit of the New Season Is Crystallized In Frances Shop Garments
THE COATSLuxurious, wrappy coats, fur trimmed straight line, tailored top coats in fact, any style that meets your desires. The fabrics Gerona, Fashiona, Marvella, Volcara, Tarquina, Panvelaine and other favored materials. Other coats and wraps from $25.00 up to $275.00.
THE SUITSWhat pleasure you will find in selecting your new fall suit from this shop's wonderful showing I Fashiona, Marleen, Tricotine, Poiret Twill and Duvet de Lainc have been fashioned into modes of distinction and charm. Other suits and wraps from $29.75 to $1 50.00.
THE FROCKSNew flaring skirts, new sleeve design, graceful long panels with here and there an artistic, touch that proclaims distinguished authorship thee are come of the nrw modes that are to be found in all wanted materials. Other frocks from $39.75 to $150.00.
Its success prompts us to continue our SALE OF NEW FALL FROCKS at two special prices
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-Satin Faced Canton -Brocaded Canton -Georgette Crepe -Crepe Romaine
Canton Crepe Tricotine Poiret Twill Satin
-All Wanted Styles
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The Frances Shop
The Frances Shop
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ilMEÜSTf &ÄLTFEI1D
S7&jE STO&tz: or
LESS RENT LOWER PRICES OME BLOCK SOUTH
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LINCOLN
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Beautiful Basement Restaurant Starting Saturday Evening and Continuing Each Evening. THE HOTEL LASALLE ORCHESTRA 6:307:45 10:0011:45 Appetizing Menus Congenial Surroundings Informal Dancing
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rash wont heal it Attempts to conceal ccmplexion blemishes ur;alry fail, and oniy serve to draw attention to the defect. Ur.drmeath caoet unaitraaive $Vr.t is a cear, pteajinj complexion a'.l that is needed U the propertrearrr.er.tl It surprising how often a brief use cf Risinol Ointment ndRer.noS S-ap will ciear awav blotches, rednejs ar. J roughness and' g'we the skin ill balaril rehncs -r.d ciiar-a. k yva dr. tc-il lor RtiLoaL
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CCi5V5EIS ?rx0SYCTS
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iCGJISWIERSSSRSiCIJ COMPA33Y i
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HOTEL LASALLE
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