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i HE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIM-. Theaters Pictorial Review Patterns June Sale .nt.M.Y, .irxn 1, ion QobGrtocn Orothor'e Oompony I I . I " ' I I II I 1 " I " Eo&arfooo drote's Sompany : at tin: oinnr:rM. The Winifred St. Claire stork com pany t-oiran a two w ek.s' encajp'iivnt at tne Orpheum yesterday presenting a otfvfr written t'rmdy. "Mrs. Tem ple Telegram."' The play k: e the Irentinc cast fin rpp-ortunities for th tirlrni.it Jon of polite comedy types and the prt'dut tion waj lirst olas?. Mirs St. '.'I.un- has a charming per rrial rt a. id easily lilted into the role cf thf. jealous wife who i al-surdly deceived hy h-r L-uy husband and hi-" prevaricating friend. !!-r protrayal f tho part of Mrs. Temple was most intere stirpr. Alonff with youth, an adequately pleafdnfr stase presence and full meas.ire of natural ability, fh dressed thf part in excellent taste and mad a mo?? pl-a!np imprf s.-ion. Mii-s St. il i 1 ro supporting com- i pany. In of uniform excellence. Hilty Itretz mad' a most capable If ad in l" man and carried his part cf a cho r ful liar with hfcfmin zfst. Harry f Candalc, as thf faithful friend, prov- . ed an able assistant. Htrtha Allen ! contributed an anr;sin?; rharartfr in an uncouth, but susce ptihlf . matron. ! Nola Mercer and Jarn KyU-y. in juvenile 'overs' parts; Frederick Iyle, a a talkative butler and vari ous other small bit were well played. ( The delay in thf arrival of the com- i pany's scenery, which appeared to lie. J of elaborate proportions. held the curtain at thf matinee ov r half an ; hour which passed quickly, ho.vever, j isin to the thoui:htfulne.-v of Man a'er Allardt, who had the drop cur tain raised and permitted the audience I to witness the detail of setting the 1 tane. ! An added .attraction was- KIsie Cole, a vaudeville songstress, who is mo torintr across the country. She san.tr four popular selections entertainingly between the arts. at Tin: snuKisn. Today's attraetion at the Surprise theater will i, u two reel Felair drama entitled "In a Persian (Janle.n" with Mildred Bright. Helen Marten, Wm. Sheerer and Fred Truesdejl. it is the softening notes of a violin, in this Ftory that quickens love in a girl's hrea.st. The prirl, the heroine of our Mory, becomes a slave to it, for the master who produces it she sacrifices and suffers and it is the familiar strains of his violin that, in the end, hrin?s her hack into duty and into her own. You will tind it easy to un derstand and to appreciate. You will find it easy to sympathize with this Rirl. uho Kives up riches and social position to follow where the heart lead., to l.e near the man whose hand finds on his violin the responsive chord in her nature. An the linal working out will appeal to you. It's x his climax wrought with delicate sentiment and human facts. ,shp left the man as he was poor and because she felt a duty to her child. Hut he returns for his violin and her out' in a elirnax that if? caught with pathos. "l orced to he Stylish" is a Princess story that Is full of fun. Tomorrow w ill bring a splendid program of pictures, the bi feature j will he a tv o reel Thanhouser entitled "A Woman's loyalty." A Thanhouser tragedy depicting the depth of a wo man's love. featuring Marguerite Snos, Harry Henhun and Kilev Chamberlin . The Universal Animated Weekly will be shown with its late interesting events and a Sterling com edy, featuring Ford Sterling called "Papa's P.oy." KATIILYX IM(TrHi:S. The eleventh series of the sensa tional picture "The Adventures of Kathlyn" will be the feature at the Auditor! today. Thrills and excit ing situations abound and will de light the manv people who have been following the daring ho are anxious to see woman comes out in Alaskan Interlude" i Kathlyn and how the clever the end. "An an ITdison drama with Ducan Mcllae. May Ab bey. Clement Faslon and Pobert P.rower in the cast. IPs the story of a miner and his wife in Alaska, who becomes discontented with their hard life and who are about to misapprop riate frovt-nimcnt funds left in their -hare and lie repays them well for their kindness. "The Taint of Mad ness" is i fine S lig drama and "Slip pery Slim's .trateucm. is a Fssanay western comedy with Victor Potel and Margaret Joslin in the cast. Tues day's bill contains "The Acid Test," u two reel Vitagraph featuring Mau rice Costello and Mary ChaHeson, the -Sol Ik Wet Iky of Current News with a number of interesting war items, "Dorothy Danbridge. Militant" Vita raph featuring James Morrison and Oorothy Kelly, and "Miser Murray's "Wedding Present." :f: sfs CAREFUL OF BODY BUT NOT OF MIND iiv iiifm: WI-2STOX. There are people who would shrink from inrticting the slightest injury on the body of a fellow being who will yet lightly do Irreparable harm to a mind, and think no more about it. So material have our views of life be come, that punishment, swift and sure, will follow on tin dealing of bodily blows, but the man r th. wi- man who would do harm to the deli cately constructed mind of man may follow their courses with the com torting consciousness that they aie free to work their v ill so far as ma terial punishment is concerned. That I may leave you in no doubt as to the trend of my thouhs. let me ask you, "which one of us would w ill ingly stand by ami see a child brutal ly ill-used, and yet which one of us dreams of exercising tin same care ful guardianship o r the minds of usual child acquaintance?" It is not m intention to deal with this matter as it com erns chibhen alone, h'lt in the illustration I hae ied you will glimpse something of the lelative values the world piaces n mind and on body. In the wonder-years of childhood impressions bite deep and curve the diannels of future ideals and ambi- r r r a r . I . . . , i t . , , . . 1 . ..... . I . , . . . .'""i .mil in' ami v I'l' 100 i(. - ng. no loeliness too spiritual and Lippealing to be placed before the at hent!e eyes of a child, for the feed- ng of its retentive mind. But a.s the ears go on th- mind Vnust ctlll have Its fool. Its dally sus tenance, even although :mpreslons ffcome more fleeting ami lack the :raven permaneiue of thos- which I ome in youth. And here I come to a view of my iinject which 1 would emphasize with .11 the force of which I am capable. Tell me. have you never found an inpbasant impression, an ugly idea ingerlng in jour mind to the exclu !on of all the gracious thoughts .hich jou have erstwhile delighted i? Beauty and Koodr.e.--. grace and i.e. sem t' th. ir abode in i t m!n!s of men a a richt. Thev i re there in their rightful home, and 1 325 Copyritht 17T4 Tte 11. tlick Co. tluences seem to spread and permeate quietly and unobstrusively. Put with evil and unpleasant things it is otherwise. We will suppose that an ugly fact, an unpleasant occur rence, a painful thought, comes your way. The wisest thins to do, if it does not lie within your power to alter the fundamental facts, is to purge your mind of the influence. Xever. never, never. If you have any sense of your responsibility in the world, pass on the Influence. Keep the unpleasant thing to vourself, and at least be sure that its un- healthiness does not mar any life other than your own. Once you have liberated an evil in fluence, neither you nor any man can say where its stopping place will he, but you can be certain that it has up rooted the flowers of peace and livli ness in some mind or another, and made room for the planting of deadly and noxious weeds. A & xJU v V V "" 'i T t ' i OUROSITY DOESN'T DRAW ALL CROWDS V v f v 'C . v by MAix;n AUTiiri; A few days ago I had a glimpse of policemen carefully carrying a man's inanimate body anil the face 1 saw in my quick glance was terribly unbeautiful. You may smile at me that I shuddered, but I was tilled with horror' at such distortion of one of Cod's humans. As I left the scene I asked myself many questions and searched for their answers. It seems so dreadful, so miserably morbid, that the hundreds of passers by should stop and stand there to gaze with eager eyes upon the horri ble. And yet the answer came to me, solid and complete without denial, that if one took a million average people, scarce a dozen could resist, or would think of resisting, this strange and unlovely curiosity. It must be natural, was the next thought that crossed my mind. But this peculiar desire to witness and to gloat over physical unhappi ness and destruction is not of nature. Therefore it is unnatural. Taking the whole matter of this gloating over the ugly from another side, its gen eral existence is only possible in minds lacking in or devoid of imagi nation. Curiosity (the preat and essential basis of all mental activities) will ac count for the first desire on one or another's part to stay watching the fi uesomeness of a street accident or affray. But if that mind is developed and keen, it is sensitive and imaginative, so that not only the true ugliness is perceived, bt a conception Is gained of the physical suffering imposed on the man or woman injured, and the mental and spiritual agony in store for those near and dear to this un fortunate center of a spectacle then it were impossible to stand normally and drink in further draughts of the horribly ugly. It would not be normal, but alto gether abnormal. And so it seems positive that the pursuit of this unhappy curiosity de mands an idle mind and a vacant im agination. It proves a low state a bovine complacency a mentality so sluggish and opaque that clear, keen vision is denied. Bet me carry the subject a further. v Here is something essentially and unpleasant which arrests holds the attention. Vers well! step j I uly and ? Now j answer me thi.. Would Uh purely beautif ul possess and exercise the same power of attraction? i l.efore replinR to this, doubtless; you would like to surest that the ex- ; ample I hac taken that of a street ";Weident forces one's attention, in : the first place, by its spectacularity. i t That, 1 think, is no answer for quite apart from the rlrst moment, oii cannot help admittii: that this UKllness holds a hundre times more stronply than the purely beautiful And at the end let me drive 'this home. Not one in a hundred thou sand of us cultivate the love and appreciation of beauty, not one in a million understands and s stematical Iv Mrie to fcain the irrv.it Joy of life o tair.aSI- in this w iy. Why? He eal.s. we look at thinp md people with Mow and uncompr-h.'nair.?r ees; b ca ts w e see r.o further iia: the ends of oar noses; bee iuso we, mot of us. are utter failures in :h ue of our imagination and spiritual and mental conception. SO LET YOUR LIGHT SHINE Will 1k Topic For DUoiwlnn at the Hound Tahlo Mot'tinc:. W. K. Uimnort will he the principal sp-aker at the meeting of the Hound T;;Me Wcdno.lay niK'ht ;it the Oliver bot l. Mr. Lamport will spak on the topi '. I.et Your I-icht .h',ne' alter which the meeting will turn in Great Jane Sale of Suits All tailor made Suits in our store have been assembled into 4 lots and we have priced them for quick clear ance $8.95, $10.00, $12.95, $15.00 Values not less than $ 18.50 and up to S40.00. Alterations free All Silk Suits included. FLOWERS SUBJECT OF CRONBACH'S SERMON Self -Sacrifice Anions Things Symbol ized by Flowers Miniature of Universe. The feast of Shabuot was celebrat ed yesterday moraing at Temple Beth- i:i with a llower service. Tlio altar was profusely decorated with llowers of many kinds. Iiabbi Cronbach spoke on "Flowers." In part he said: "Self-sacritic Is among the things symbolized by llowers. The flower is sweet, the llower is fragrant because it lives not to itself alone, but to the larger life of the world in which it is placed. Needless to tell you that these llowers plucked and placed upon the altar are now perishing. They -are yielding their lives that this occasion might be graced. We who abhor the ancient custom of slaughtering ani mals upon the altar have at least this much regard for the old doctrine of life that we consider it fitting and proper to slaughter llowers upon the altar. The ancient slaughtering of animals was supposed to be an atone ment for sin. One is strongly tempt ed to try and dig out something for an atoning efficacy about these llow ers. If looking at these precious llowers we can make our own life sweeter and purer, then may an aton ing efllcaey well be ascribed to this fragrant holacause. v "The flower is a growth, a develop ment. The llower is thus the minia ture of the entire universe, which is a growth, a development. Nothing in this world is ready made. Fruition ; of all development, the human soul. is a development. "All llowers, no matter how sweet et IC ill and fragrant, are rooted in the dirt Many a fair human llower is rooted in the social dirt. No one can do much visiting in the poorer neighbor hood of a city without finding many a precious human flower. It is one of the sublimest revelations of Cod's of Cod's tiful and;! wretched j grace, the number of beautiful noble souls that grow up in and degraded environments." SOME NEWS NOTES. Davies Iaundry. Both phones. Leslie, the optician, .101 Mich. Dr. Stoecklcy. dentist, ,"11 J. M. Peter the Great loathed the sisht of j water. He could scarcely he persuad ed to cross a hndse, and if compelled i to do so would sit in 1iis carriage with closed windows, bathed in perspira tion. There are 210 makes of autos on the British market. Valuable Suggestions Hy Mrs. Nevada Briggs, Exfonent oj the A rt of Iia king as taught by Mrs. Janet McKenzic Hill Helpful Cake MaLlni Hints Always sift flour and KC Baking Powder at least three times. The more sifting, the lighter the cake. Remember that! To cream but ter and sugar quickly, warm the sugar slightly. Beat yolks of eggs with rotary beater. Whip whites of ceres with flat spoon whirx Water makes lighter cakes; mill: 1 makes richer cakes. To mix a cake, first cream but ter and sugar thoroughly, then add yolks, if used. Then alternately add moisture and rlour that has been sifted with baking powder and stir until smooth and glossy, adding egg whites after thoroughly mixing. Alivays vse A" C 'Baking Pczi der, Biscnif Helps Always 5 if t flour and KC Baking Powder at least three times. Have shortening cold and firm. Mix dough as soft as it can be handled. The softer dough goes j ... . . -v .1 into tne oven, the lighter the j biscuit when it comes out. It is easier for K C Baking Powder to I fin itc u-nr I- in cft b m i. -4cf I W It Vt V 111 OUIl .4lv.lt lit llli dough. Mix biscuits very little. Do not knead. Stir up with spoon or knife and press in shape to roll on floured board. With K C Baking Powder re sults are sure and certain. Ask your grocer for K C. 39 For Vacation Trips, Week-Ends, or for Porch Wear at Home. Come Now Frocks ummer $2.98, $5.00, $6.00 Cool looking and cool feeling just the thing for wear on hot, sultry days ' Linens, Chambrays, Voiles, Crepes, Ratines. The S2.9S dresses are astonishing values for the opening of season Made in latest Russian Tunic effects. The S5.00 and S6.00 dresses are copies from Import Dresses with materials equal to qualities of the foreign models in Pinks, Blue, Blacks, Whites; all sizes 14 1(3, 18. Women's 36 to 50. I J i i y I iv ti i n )i ii ii n ii rv u .1 r- If you buy this 10c brush '-We give you FREE ? our resrular 15c can of m Park oQ.tff DARK OAK STON VARMSH Tfl '.CH,CAGO.M0NTjyj in i i i 17411 ttc I. W. LOWER DECORATING CO. Znr. !b--rir r-nr3f -var DO YOUR OWN SHOPPING 1 r Ony, x Gives the BEST VALUE for Your Money Erery Kin! from Cotton to Silk, For Men, Women CMliren Any Color and Style From 25c to $5.00 per pair" Look for the Trade Mark! N Sold by All Good DealerO, Lord & Wholesale tit. . , IM)tji.j'M.yiy MM'MMtl- J "HIVT1 lijl'j j'j'Pj'!'! i " i'l i ! ! !j ii j !j i r- rrs&n r &fr -1 t-a f t" i ..i TV !&l K W ,Y i r v. No Dream About This The most substantial and realistic thing a woman can have in her home is the All-Gas Kitchen. A clean, convenient and economi cal Gas Range to do the cooking and a quick and handy Gas Water Heater to supply the whole household with hot water. You don't need a coal range to heat the kitchen. We can show you a far better and more economical plan. You may buy a Gas Range from S 12.5() up'and'a Gas Water Heater from S l3.5o up. Hasy monthly pay ments. Inquire at our office, or ask us to send a representative. GAS C ? 215-9.17 S. 1.51OT. ST. for Mi sses I jw A a jrv. . f- . i for Floors and all Woodwork Kyanize "will make your floors and furniture look like new, and cloth with warm water will keep nlookingspickandspan. Kyanize is the most durable finish ever made. Clear and seven popular colors. Take advantage of this offer; we give you enough Kyanize to rennish a favorite chair. You 10 cents refunded if you are uot delighted Vfith the Kyanize. Hosiery Taylor NEW YORK TT-1ES31 3E T -'-P ii VVif r -.4 si:y-::t: 3 ft' V Oris ANY A Great Jun Sale of Coats A beautiful lot of Cloth Coats priced in three big lots for quick clearance. $5.00, $8.95 $10.00 Values not less than sio.oo and up to S22.50. TMEAT1E TODAY "IN A PERSIAN GARDEN Featuring Mildred Bright. It was a dream that came from beautiful music. She was rich and beautiful, but the violin mas ter wins her with his music. She marries and sacrifices, but in the final working out she is forgiven by her old uncle, who realizes that love is supreme. FORCED TO BE STYLISH Princess. TOMORROW "A WOMAN'S LOYALTY" Thanhouser Two Reels. Featuring Marguerite Snow and Harry Benham. ANIMATED WEEKLY Universal. PAPA'S BOY Sterling Comedy. COOLIJST SPOT IX TOW.V TODAY THE ADVENTURES OF KATHLYN Series No. 11 (Only Two More) Three Other Good Pictures A Fine Pleasing Show 2.0c 10c g 4 Feature Films of HIGH CLASS MOTION PICTURES W"3 rti - J 31 Tonight "The Search for the Casta ways." Wednesday "The Heart of a Police Officer" ' V We rirry a full line of Ko.laks, Cameras and supplies, the Iarjret s-jtuck In northern Indiana. Fine floplnj? and printing promptly done, and at modrat pr!ct-?. All a ork Ktiaranteed. South Bend Camera Co. Willi J. liurke & Co.. opikiuu. 220 S. Mlchl-ari St. ii. Cn- YAUDKVlLJLi: or QUALITY NOW PLAYING VTXIIItr:i ST. CLAim; stock co. In a now ami varied rviertm of mxl--ni nietlics and drama.s. hill chax;i-:i IATIV. Ihonin S:J5 MM 10c 15o EVE 10c 15c 25c Untincc Daily 2:Z0 llvrnlns 7:150 to 9 SUNDAY Winirml St. Ulalrt Nev Jersey, Indiana & Illinois R. R. Co. mn: tallk so. a. Effectlre March 2nd, 1914. SOUTH POUND. No. 1 No. S Fonth Bend 6:30 am 10:L5rn Kirer 6:47 am 10:32 am Whartons ...... C:37arn 10:42am Rwwneys 7 a!n 30:.1 am Pina 7:15 am ll;0nm NORTH BOUND. No. i No. 4 rine .L 7 :C am 11:4' am fwconeys 7:.r7ara ll:.r7m Whartoas fc:01 nm 12:Jpm Klzer 8:15 am 12:15 jm outh Bfnd 8:30 am 12:."0j)ia No. 8 2:1' pn 2:3. pia 2A2 m I r.i VjM 3 :00 p;a No. fl 2 :?" pra 3 :37 pia 3:40 pra 3 : ". p ra 4 :10 pa All trains daily except Sunday. This Company Rp.servs right ti fary from this without notice. II. J. JACKSON, Commercial Afnt. Dancing Every Night at Dreamland Springbroolc Parle EYES EXAMINED FREE GUiifi ntte4 at M.dfrste rrlceu -btifbtln (jutriitrH - . -- '-- - - - k K J J M. l . ' " DR. J. BURKE & CO. OptoiDiritji and Manufaturtnff Optician 239 6. MICHIGAN ST. Rnniay O t 18 T Applntmt. puns dr. -v "vttr b PU& iheta. SrLes th pieces. SAFETY FIRST Wlit'ii Spring Nd Art I i- lit ut CHAS. B. SAX L 00. The VTtritc Hon ol SfortcTn Home Fiirnllirri S06 to 310 So. -MlcJx. bu Public Drug Store New Location 124 N. MICHIGAN S'l. o 1 i o o pelr refreshing and health-irivmir in- to a discussion of adverti-HlnK.