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MONI.Y, MAIICII 2::, IP! I THE SOUTH BEN NEWS-TIMES. SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES THc NEWS-Tl.WES PRINTING COMPAvNY. 110 West Colf-tx Avenue. rfcuth Bend. Indiana i 1 1 i Entered ai eecond cas matter at the Poatoir.c at South Bend. Indiana BY CAKRIEtt. Dally and Sunday ia dvan-'-, per Dally and Sunday by the week. .. 12c ysr . $5.10 Dally, Ainele copy 0 Suudfty, single copy 3e II Y MAIL. ZrJ!y and Sunday It. advance, per year $4.00 fccJly, In advar.ee. per year $3.00 If your ncme appears In the telephone directory you ean telephone Lour wa.it "tcl" co The News-Times olhce and ft bill will be mailed after Its j.ertlon. Hon" Rhone 1151; Bell phone 2100. conk. loiu:nzi:n & woodman Foreign Advertising Representatives. SIS Fifth Avenue. New York. Advertising Building, Chicago STATESMEN REAL AND NEAR UY FILED G, KKLLY. THE MELTING POT COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US. : . - - fl' tri ' '.t .7. I -- ! sot tii m;n, ixdi ax . mahcii 21. mi 1. pnsTl'OM: IT. CilKI.S. 1 it is hoped to counteract tin- usual The following 1 1 1 r was ( ived ffects of the first year of a new ad from two lit 1 1 - uirls recently ami ministration. fhows hovv great is the nerd of : ill j In this instance it is b iieved the c e nters wIkt" 1 0:1:11; folks f an congre-; wisdom of the legislation passed is .so j at and get a 'pialnted. Social een-; manifest it will materially aid in j ters have ) ' n established in-several maintaining, if not .-t; ent hening the1 middle western cities and increasing president's influence with congress. attendance and enjoyment, ly lot h The fall elections will inevitably deter- children and parents, are evidence of mlno to what extent the policies of' their success-, j the president have the support of the) This is the letter: "P.ar Kditor: people. 1 Do you think that girls who flirt have j a better time than those who do not? that srmxci fkklim;. ! When this feel of spring gets into j the air, isn't it about time to go intoj the country and cut a cane 7 j Any kind of cane will do an alder stalk or a wand of hazel. Then climb We arc H and 1.1 and are attending high school and see a lot of flirting. We have behaved ourselves and acted like ladies, but it seems that boys do not rare for girls who do not llirt. Though we are not boy crazv we would "Im tno nUl f'nct faoin- th un lik a good lime and to have boy friend". Wouid you advise us to wait until a chance comes, or can you sug- W.SIIIN(JT(J.V, March Uep resentative and Senator-elect Itobert l P.roussard of Ijouisiana is kin to about half the people In that state, or at least, about every other man ho meets in a campaign calls his 'Cousin P.ob." He speaks Ijouisiana French, which is a language entirely distinct from young-ladies'-linlshing-school Trench or I arn-to-sp-ak-French-for-JlS French. Speaking their lan- kiiay as he does, "Cousin Bob" has; a ctronir hold on the people of his I section of the state, and their main religion is to ote for Boh Broussard without question and without stint whenever he runs for anything. When Broussard was running for the United .States senate. Representa tive James B. Aswell was peeking election to the lower house of con gress. Aswell was talking to a man in the section where Broussard is best known, and asked him for his Vote. "No, I'm going to vote for Bob Bob Broussard." said the man. "That's all right. You can vote for Bob and for me, too," Aswell ex explained. "We're not running for the same thing." The man shook his head. "So," says he, "I'll just vote for Bob. Then if you're entitled to have an ottice, Bob cat- appoint 011 to it." rst some way by which we eould be come acquainted with some nic e boys who would respect nice girls? XV. 1'... The "other girls" may think they and you may think tlu are also, but don't let that bothtr you as much as how good a time you're Koin.g to have 10 or 20 or 20 years from now. While the othT pirls are llirt'r.g and appar ently having a good time now, you can be filling your little heads with as much knowledge as they will carry and at the same time have a pretty good time, even if the boys don't cut a very big figure In your tun. About four or five years from now would be time enough to worry about the boys not paying enough attention to you, but if. in- the met ri time," you have built up your mind and body to a healthy, happy young womanhood, then you will not have to llirt i in et the boys. (let acquainted with all the boys aid Erirls who can now and play with tlu m like the children ybu ;re. Later tha.se same boys will be "ailing all c.er themselves and t;U:;ying on each other trying to w in your, respect and atYeo- tion. shine and whittle it smooth. If there's a youngster in the family, take him along and make a bark whis tle for him, or a boat to sail on the millpond. Down in the old swimming hole un der the beech trees at the bend of the creek the chances are that there are fish waiting to bite chubs and suek- i ers and maybe a few redhorse. It would be a bloom 'n' shame not to ac commodate 'em, with worms so easy to dig. And, though bony, suckers are not bad eating while the snow water's in the stream. If you prefer flowers, it's about time for arbutus and pretty soon there'll bo wiiuergreen berries and the fragrant rtots of the sassafras. A nibble of sweetfla. too, mightn't be bad for the blood grandma used to say it was better than pills. The sweet young sprouts of the pokel erry are as good to eat as the first tips of cultivated asparagus and there's nothing in the old notion that they're poisanous. But if you're scar ed of 'em, it won't be long" until the fields will yield tender young leaves of plantain, sourdock and horseradish, which boil up into excellent "greens." Whatever your tancy, get out of doors and close to nature it's what spring is for Representative Simeon I). Fess of Ohio neither smokes nor drinks, in consequence of many years as a school and college teacher when he feared to set a bad example to the growing youth of the land. When Representative Watson of Virginia the man who presided as judge over tho famous Beatty mur der case set out to study law, his father gave him one piece of advice. "Keep out of politics," said his fath er. .So Watson went at once into poli tics. When he was years old he became a state senator. WHY? On the hrst page of a daily news paper is printed the picture of a girl. In the explanatory note below it is stated that the girl left home two j weeks ago anil that she is seventeen years old. The further information is added that the girl's mother has been ill eer since she left. The fa.-e of the girl is fair, the features beautiful, the brow serene. Masses of dark hair somewhat se dately parted in the middle crown the picture of youth and innocence. There 5 no guile- in the large, lustrous eyes. The eyes are calm and truthful. A study Of the face shows unsophisti cation but no lack of character. It N the face of a child to whom th The wreck of the Olympian train on the ,t. Raul road was the result f a plot several times failed to wreak revenge on the railroad company, re gardless ff consequences to passen gers, officials believe it to be the ;work of a crank. The guiltv person must be either a degenerate or a defective. Ten cities have been selected for a trial of the extension of the parcel 1 Tlict til f ! mi w1 irn t.1 ... ... ..... successful there it will be established all over the country. Tn some degree this servile will supercede the public market. After all, Iuck, or Chance, cuts a good deal of a figure. Take the case of Iuils FitzIIenry, member of con gress from Illinois. FitzIIenry start ed out unknown and practically pen niless to huild no a law nractice. It might have taken him years and years to pass the starvation perior except for Ijuck. Within a day or so after FitzIIenry was admitted to the bar, a good friend of his employed by a railroad company had a leg cut off. Knowing that FitzIIenry was just starting out and needed help, the friend kindly employed him as his attorney to sue the railroad for contributory negli gence. That case gave FitzIIenry his chance. He won it and then got many many more damago cases. Nobody thought of losing an arm or a leg without retaining FitzIIenry for at torney as soon afterward as possible. In that way he quickly built up a reputation as a good damage law yer in his locality and made a good deal of money. But he knows himself that it .was largely luck. If he hadn't had the good fortune to have a -friend hse a leg, he might have struggled along in obscurity for years and yc-yrs. TiiKorni Tin: yi:ak with IOX(;it:llow. Come. rul to mo some koiii. Some simple and heartfelt lay. That shall MHjthe tin rr-tle-, fevl ing And hani-li the thoughts of day. Xot from the granii old master-, Xot from the bards Miblimc. Wlioe di-tant footstep (rim Through the eorrhlors of Time. The Day K Done. It is noticeable that ninety p' r cent f the outrages against fore'ners in Mexico, listed by Senator Fall, are ' i alleged to have occurred durincr Taft's worhi is a place of wonders. It shows administrai ion. But mavbe Fall did no signs of cither moral depravity or ; uol inU.m, t,K(t be . mental defect. What could have impelled this loe- ' conditions in the hardware trade lv. innocent, trusting girl to !. ave ; at e reported improved and a good bus home? Was it repeli.uit fortes from i In ess is expected all year. This means within or seductive influences from 'that building will be active and that without? What misconception of dutyjthe building trades will be busy, on the part of parent or child, what; Kan lor .Marconi: Three rahs for j Marconi. He's operated his wireless 1 telephone over a 4o-mile circuit. Won't life be a joy when there is no Representative Claude Weaver, a bright-eyed little representative from Oklahoma, rarely turns a book agent from his door empty-handed. His of fice looks like a branch library and the books are learned books. None of your George .YlcCuteheon and Harold MeGrath for Weaver. Moreover, every book on his shelves has its pages cut. Weaver ha books to read and not merely to take the place of wainscoting, or to impress visitors. He probably has read more books for each year of his life than any body in congress, because he got an earlier start. The first book he ever read was Burton's . natomy of M jlancholy at an age. mind you, when his playmates were just begin ning to take an Interest In the Rollo books. Hy the time he was 12 years old Weaver could repeat nearly all of Siiakespeare from memory. too iiATi:: I'ut the cover on and come away, let her rest: Leave the weary hands crossed upon her breast. . Let the broken body lie In sweet re pose; Place upon the lid the flowers she chose. Try not to pay to Death the toll of life, The toll she earned as mother, and as wife; Too late, your tribute fails to touch the mind. Where peace passeth understanding for mankind. WK have always felt that there was some good reason for those beds that sag; in the middle beim; uncomforta ble, and now Doe Kvar.s. the health crack, has told us. Perhaps von read it. "A bed," writes the doctor, "to be comfortable, should permit the body to lie in a straight line. To do this it should be constructed so as to con stantly maintain an elastic plane. This will prevent the straining of the mus cles of the side and bacV- and abnor mal pressure on vital organs." It will also prevent much profanity and hard feeling. XV K have known a bed of the con cave variety to break up a lifelong friendship and to cause an estrange ment between husband and Avife. Such a bed is not fit for one person to sleep in, let alone two. One person on arising finds himself warped in mind and body. Two persons suffer the consequences of too persistent proximity. THF injunction to "Lay over' can not be enforci d. TAX GO MAD.. The whole world fs goinj; mad About this tango stuph. Why even "Ma" an.l stiff old "Dad" Are netting mighty rough. Dream Waltz. Grapevine. Hesitation. Have a wondrous fascination; We've sure joined hands with every nation To demonstrate each new creation. E. K. "BUT." inquires R. D "how are you going to cancel a parcel post stamp on :n egg without breaking the egg? That, wo reply, is Postmaster Gen eral Burleson's business. The Mexican Shooting Gallery. GSenor Whereto, Proprietor.) One President ,....10 cigars One General ." cigars One American '' cigars One Federal 1 cigar Cincinnati Enquirer. T1IFRE is a period in every intelli gent masculine mind when it becomes impregnated with the socialistic bug. and it is probable the Prince of Wales Is passing through that stage. The odds are it will not last long, but may outwear the prince's present exile. Exphive Knslish Humor. (London Chronicle.) "Let me tell you this," said the Fluffy Person, pompously. "There's nothing' like married life for keeping a man straight." "I don't know so much." objected the 'unny-Faced Youth. "How about a boil on the back of the neck?" THERE are two Pages in current history which are being much discuss ed with a view to establishing their in accuracy. The attempt seems to lack success for the reason that the crit ics are prejudiced against the author. We Would Like to Have Said This. (Toledo Blade.) It doesn't seem possible that there are people in a certain seotion of the United States who make potpie of robins. We'd as soon think of eating a spring poem. AS" long as we did not we eagerly give it a place among the choice bits in the Melting Pot. APPARENTLY we need a wider discrimination of this sort of senti ment. .STILL, we must remember that there were cannibals, among us. C. X. V. 10c a can i i. v i - noil- :zjr-vr. 1 . ii; 1 z-, is.. ' j W " ' 'J t w. , .. .v--V.4Vy-? 7' . . ' 3 for 25c 1 10c Saves the Expense of Re-papering It costs quite a tidy sum to paper even a small room. Why fo to that useless expense? With a single ten-cent can of Climax Wall Paper Cleaner you can clean an average size room. It restores dirty, sooty wall-paper to its original beauty. Climax will work wonders with your window shades. There's no experience required and no hard work to clean with Climax. Just draw it lightly across the paper or shade and Climax does the rest. Easy, isn't it? Start the Climax habit today. To be had at Grocery, Drug, Hardware and Paint stores 10c a can and 3 of 'em for 25c! . 1 1 ! - 4 1 1 II WHAT THE PAPERS SAY , hi o n n eeoriciu it A Tin: i:xi:.mm;s or msii;ss con iini;ci:. XVc cannot resist the impulse to re vert to the topic of non-employment in this city to which attention was especially called in the Herald yes terday morning. The "calamity howl ers" and th promoters of protVssion a mendicancy in Fniversity Settle ments, ami, alas! in some of our churches, have put forth day by day as a sweet morsel the statement that there are .'!-.". uun persons in this city who cannot obtain employment. The lieu res as corrected b,y the police force. show that the total number of idle 1 of aloofness from their fellow men and loner to get down from their hieh 'state to mingle with the herd and discover just how they will be treat ed when separated from their otti elal identity. It has been the fash ion of some of the despots of an cient times and of very recent con stitutional monarchs to seek relaxa tion by assuming either a disguise or an incognito and gfoing out to mingle with the herd. Some of the best tales af the Arab ian Nights are descriptions of t he night wanderings of llaroun Al persons who cannot obtain employ-. Uaschid about the ment or who have not obtained cm- These excursions 1 ruel misunderstanding of the possi- ; bilities of ife forced or drew this ten- ! dr bud of humanity from the shelter ing care of the parent iree? It is ditlieult to anticipate tlw weak ness, the strentch, the vagari'-s of human nature. They are nest under stood in thrir manifestations. Tin more "wire's busy?" A fashion artit says slit skirts will be out of date next summer, but that Uu feminine form will he more on best that an he done is to take pre- - , ;Mi , .. wi,.Jt ..... ,u ji ispia. liat are the gowns to be cautions against tht.se Influences which ! ,;atit, of isinglass ? contrast the weaknesses or e.i ite ih! vacaric?. l'ate often turns on slight With Oreatnritain spending $14. eauses. S..tn.- trivial thing, doubth-ss. j o0i).oou more than last vear on her na broueht the turning point in this girl's . vv it ,0(,ks aj, if that ttw sw?Uon life, but to )ur exangcrated vision it j about disarmament was becoming Mmed important, ital t u r wel- j t rayed at the edge?, tare, her happiness. j : ! Kepeal of the free tolls elause of fi HI! "0(iKIsO.VIi (.U.";. j the eanal bill H due for favorable 'hicaeo is to p. t!'.- renter f Pres. aetion in t!ie house this week. It is Wilson's tight for a eon revs that will j apparent to th fdir minded that a support him in b; progressive policies j mistake was made. without the nee-sity .-f crarkiiu the! . --.- , . nas uiscovereu jsirtv whip or pei-;(iin his energies nnd selt'.sh purposes i,r the seient ist sa ? he Maurice Splain. after 30 years of lo'ig. hustling hours as an astute and painstaking Washington political cor 'espoudent. found himself the United States marshal for the District of Columbia. The hours were short and the work light. For years Maurice had thought how nice it would be to hold a job that paid a comfortable salaiy without much .to do. Now he had just such a place. Along toward 9:C0 on the evening of his first day in office, .Splain met his friend, Hast ings MaeAdam, of the St. Louis Re public. "Come on." Splain greeted him. effusively: "let's go and have a little lunch and a. chat." "Lunch! Watchuh talkin about, lunch V" said MaeAdam: "it isn't 10 o'clock yet. If I were like you and didn't have to work for a living. I would, gladly. See me at midnight when I'm all through for the day and I'll be pleased to have lunch with you." "You're right, you're right." mut tered Splain. "I didn't realize It was so early. I'll meet you when you're through work." ' Hut," he added, gloomily. "I don't see how I'm going to put in the time for the next couple of hours." ployment is 1m;,ooo. For many weeks the figures ::.",000 have gone the rounds of the press, the pulpit and the platform. Yet they constitute a libel not only upon the city of New York but upon the United States. The publication of these false and misleading figures is at once a blow to prosperity and a noose for public confidence. What discouragement these figures, until yesterday uncontradicted, have brought to hundreds of thousands of business men! How many enterprises have been retarded by the display of this lie regarding idleness in this city retarded because if there were ac tually 3J"i,0UO idle in the city of New York it would really mean that there had already set in great business, de pression! We trust that the figures furnished 1 by the police census will be as widely displayed throughout the country as the false figures were and that they will imediately be spread upon the pages of the Congressional Record in both houses of congress. New York Herald. city gave of Bagdad, him relief errors i that a man stunir In- :i hd n-m .... In personal appeals to ft. rue: personal' iT , , , ' .again look a t-'la. if .-.-.- i ha f. r t a r.ll . there's a tin for :hf- hrnliiii!tinnL.u good. ; - . The president ha selected Chicago! I'reaeher in Walla Walla. Wash., I'cr'r.if" it I.- iu- center of progress c j says we're right :uar the end of the ntimcnt in the Fnited Slates. theu'M And think of al' the fish we'd hub of a territory whieh lias few r-igjl binned to ca'ch w ,1 acatio.n! Lit rts to serve and, in which the I . ... , . . .. , , . , J 11 hr interesting to v.tch the people have attained a breadth and 1 " l" ...... . , , , ! progress of the f:rt hin trouch the liberahiv of Hiiihi unexampb-d in anvi,. 1 1 in- . " 1 anama car.al with th tv.o e-.nres ther section, 'ihe ;r.Mt cntral it:., , , , t.-pr- : for the go r rr.innl T.ist. lat and I all th time and t'l-'pient has I 1 '"'-'i Kiu .1:1; iioo- ,,1 11 m 1 ne ; orink. I,:,.ni2li of an : : n w ; ! 1 nv ' on a perfectly Renresentative Samuel K. Winslow, skate-maker of Worcester, Mass., is said to he the best af tr-dinner speak er in .x'ew Ihigland. The chances are that h is also the best in Washing ton. He is one gf the f-w after-dinner speaker.-, we ever heard, who. in manner a;vi language, is really and trulv funuy. (Copyright. HO 4. by Fred C. Kelly. All rights iesered. The rainbow is the i..f. . , Xew Yo;k l.ar niglit. loyal suppoit ivm h.ii::. lie wants : fallow see rainbows more af th;.- .xintl t mate: i.ti tn - r. grex and com-s to rite central west to eet the lar-'t r share i,f it. j wenty Years Ago ! 1 1 minder Front llt Coltinias I f Tri? Inlly Time?. j Th. progressives seem to The east 1- o: v,.,.,i with u sui.s;. tn-ub'e in-osressing away from Ihe dies and spt-ei.il piivib gi.-. It is inea l"''ial privilege in the mnai tolls pable f urn-l;. suly surrendt rjr.g thc:n i ' 1 - lor the has no .ike f the giioral good. it rupbs against printing at tiie expense of t h-- n - th. Co;;:.!l V. :ur- The far wet has jualiy s i?c pO.-eS m lew. 1 he mh:! jj "r tbe t.triff. sliieh h.is liit its sagar iiy concttitriit;!. cn the central wot 'i'Jii- volcano in FIster sleeps. It n. ay become active at any tnovem.tt. A di!o(iceil Mon mlcht set it off. s p.-eedi ''on, ord. Mass. may demand a re- ""'iia'. l ank aft r Harry Thaw gety that U'-f. m a next montu. recuh'i ions In the potoffice were wyrryir.g I'ovitn.stcr Crocket! -uk' pn7Tling the inspector, finally res .i iriu in the arrest and con. Ttin of . 't'k. Tlie Central W. (. T. F. held a Dow celebration at the ChO.-iiaa church. Mrs. Robert Westphal died. W. R. McCracktn was elected sec retary of the Central Labor union to fill a vacancy and A. C. Snoke ad dressed the meeting. A lively discus sion followed. .Vis. L. II. Uakcr tnttrtairud at invasion or wiiiti; liorsi:. The betrothal of another daughter of the president is an event of appeal ing interest. 1 1 will be more dis cussed because Miss Fleanor Wilson is only 1 1 and anil her atliarcod hus band. Secretary of the Treasury Mc Adoo. is more than twice her age, and one of his six children is older than his promised wife. However, the grounds of sympathy and interest between the secretary and the serious-minded fiancee are readily discernible. The secretary is a south erner and the son f a university pro lessor. S:ie is the daughter of a southern-born professor. The secretary was born in Georgia, win re Woodro'w Wilson began the practice of law. The- success of Wilson's campaign was due to many aides, and one of these aides was William O. McAdoo. vice chairman of the democratic na tional committee. The approaching marriage will re mind many of the most famous of all f:mons weddings of the white house. 'June 2. 1SS0. when Frances Folsoni. a radiant beauty not yet 22 years oiu. was married to President Grover Cleveland, aged -U. These two also had a deep ground of interest which traversed the difference in their ages. Her father. ear Fdsom. was a law- partner of Clover Cleveland, anil on. hKdc;;th in 1ST." made Mr. Cleveland! j the guardian of his child. The world i knows with what distinction he ful ' tilled that guardianship, and one oft- j I quoted remark of hi was that in. ; whi' h he described his married HfoJ as "one grand, sweet song". j ! There could 'e no happier benedic tion for the newlyrbetrothed couple 111 ' Washington than the hope that they will be as happy as the Cleveland fam- ' ilv who were famous for their gen I eral domestic peace. Grand : Herald. j from the sycophantic homage he re ceived when his people recognized him. and it gave him a true view of the state of the publi- mind in spite of the lies of his courtiers. Louis XT, of France, was much given to wandering about Paris in disguise, for he was alwi.ys suspect ing conspiracies against him. One of the most notable of these royal mixers of a 11 time was none o ther than the late Edward VII, of Eng land, during the years preceding his reign. He had a few intimates with whom he could lay aside his rank and become a mere Englishman of ordinary human tastes. Robert Louis Stevenson indulged in some fascinating- elaborations and exaggerations of the edventurcs of the Prince of Wales in a series of tales beginning 'vith "The .-uieide Club". This desire o f President Wilson's proves him to be a perfectly normal individual aid. not a cold, passion less, calculating thinking machine. Man .is a gregarious an.mal. His natural association is with the hu man herd and whenever he shows a tendency to get away from it, it is cither because fate ha.s been unkind to him or because he has become an abnormal person. To be a president or a king seems very line, nut either case is but little removed from a state of slavery or imprisonment. The indivilual ceases to live for himself and to act freely in accordance with his own will. He loses some v)f his confidence in his own judgment and feels compelled to seek advice of the wisest men to b found. Sovvral monarchs whose names are written large in history have earned their reputations by inviting the ablest men of all callings to their courts and making use of their talent?. The re sponsibilities of high othce. instead of swelling the head of the normal man who appreciates his own limitations, makes him feel timid and dependent. It is pleasant to read this burst of confidence from President Wilson be cause it proves him a normal in dividual whose greatest ambition is to be a useful man among men. It r Will insure your health by keeping the air cool, clean and pure your family against accidents from fire, burns, explosions, or injury through falling. Now that Spring is about to be ushered in you will be cleaning house. . Again you are confronted by the same old problem of repa pering those rooms and buying new decorations and so it is every year, so long as you use an inferior open flame illuminant that is blacken ing and blistering your ceilings and walls. When you have electricity in your home you have the only clean and convenient as well as the safest illuminant that has ever been put on the market. The tungsten lamp has made Electric Service so economical, that every home, large or small can a(ford it. Our special housewiring plan makes it easy for every housekeeper to install and enjoy elec trical comforts. We are wiring houses and furnishing fixtures at actual COST of time and material required, allowing twelve months to pay without interest. Furthermore we give THREE MONTHS FREE light to anyone wiring an already built house. Call 462 either phone and ask our represent ative to call. Indiana & Michigan Electric Company 220-222 W. Colfax Ave. i:or(;ir o.v hand. Rapid; 1IK.1I '1- thi: ccmutio.v or PLACES. Wrv fr.irklv nml with much ff' ing Rreskb-nt Wilson gives utterance to sentiments that are very com monly entertained hy m n in high cthVc. 't is only row and then that a chief executive of a nation, a com mander in chief of an army, a king or h n mperor takes himself more. seriously han he taV I considers the 1111 a ' paid him is his j his p ronaI oualitb s .Most ut thvsc mcu Rook Agent My de.r friend. wouldn't vou like to buv a copv of .cotf 'T-adv of the I-ake"? ;es his othce. ar.dj Fatmer Nn. I guess I've got il respect that is enough of Hcott's stuff or hand. ly 11 TITLE INSURANCE Here is a new one. We will furnish the abstract for your lawyer to ex amine and cruarantee his opinion to he correct, provided it agrees with the opinion of our leal department. Our guarantee is backed by SI 00,000.00. INDIANA TITLE & LOAN COMPANY Title Iluilding. Corner Main cV Center l llnint' Phono .VS. :teli Phone I :i ."-'. LADIES' READY-TO WEAR Corner Michigan & Jeffcrscn. 1st due be. -atsso oi heck! fin re v. nz a fciler along hete hist month sold nie twenty dollar livu lonely live Aurtb of Scitt's Uinulaiuu' Try aN ews-Tinies ant Ad 4 ri 1 1 1 3 ! I r 1