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THE SOOiri BEND NEWS-TIMES MONDAY, MAHCrr 1. 101.". 5 O BEST LAXATIVE FOR CHILDREN When yo;ir i,iy is cross nnd fretful ii;-t;i.l f tiif ha;;jy. lauuhir. littl- tjar rj arc ac us trml t. in all j roba bility tin- li ;o.tin h.M.s b r,me drraiu'ctJ and th bi)'.!M lied attention. ;iv it n niiJii !axatio, lb;j--l th- irri tability an.l hrini? b.u.k t!u- happy content f tiahyhoo.l. The vry ), .st lax.niv.- for hil-dn-n is I r. aMw.-HV yrup j in, lcta:iso it contain.-? n iat' or narcotic ilru;,-, is ils .'i-mt t::-t-incr and acts gently, but r- irIy, tvlhout crjjin r tl.rr dtrrss. Dnu'Ki.sts yell Dr. Cald-.vcir.s ;-y-ruj Tcjisin at fifty cents and ono dollnr a bottle. For a free trial bottle write to Dr. V. II. Caldwell, 4.'2 Washington St.. Montieello, Ills. WILL KEE D BODY FOR II FEW Father and Son at Last Mo ment Decide Against Inter ment Simplicity Marks the Funeral Services. NEW YORK, March 13. John D. Rockefeller and his son, John D. Rockefeller, Jr., decided at the last moment fr?unday they could not com mit the body cf -wife and mother to the tomb at present. All arrangements had been made for temporary interment in the vault of John D. Arehbold in Sleepy Hol low cemetery. A hearao had been en Kayed to take the body there at the conclusion of services which were held Sunday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock. When all -was ready the father and son tearfully pleaded to be allowed to keep the body as long as possible. "We were not here when she pass ed away," said the elder Mr. Rocke feller in broken tones. "We want to have her with us until the. last mo ment" Their wishes were respected and the body will remain in the palatial home at Pocantico Hills probably for several days. It was stated Sunday night at the mansion that no arrange ments had been mado for the inter ment. The Fame simplicity that was the dominating feature of her entire life marked the funeral services for Mrs. Rockefeller. Sixty friends of the family were at the services. 3lr. Rockefeller, his face tear-stained and trcmblinp with emotion, took his phvoe in the library with the others aa did his son. Their prief was pitiable, A quartet from the Fifth Avenue Baptist church rendered the following hymns, all favorites of Mrs. Rocke feller: "Jesus. "Lover of My Soul;" "Oh, Thou That Will Not Let Me Go," Sands of Time Aro Sinking." "Near er My God to Thee" and "Now the Day is Over." The great pipe- organ in the home was the only accompaniment. There were two violin solos by Richard Ar nold. The Rev. Dr. Cornelius Wolfkin, pastor of tho Fifth Avenue Raptlst church, of which ?.lrs. Rockefeller was a member, read a scripture les son, aftor -which ho spoke in tender words for the departed. STEAMER IS TORPEDOED AntL?tc Conscll Was Round to Rouen "With Coal Carjro. LONDON, March 15. A dispatch from Bordeaux says: "The steamship Aujruste Confeil from Rouen "with a carso of coal, was torpedoed by the submarine 17-29 off Start point near the southern extrem ity of Devon on Thursday afternoon. Tho crew of 28 men was picked up by the Danish steamer Excellence Presko and landed at Falmouth Sunday." rtRouGirr to kautii. LONDON, March 15. A Central News dispatch from Havre says it is reported that a German Parseval was brought to earth yesterday in the en virons of Tyrlemont. east of Brussels. GLADDENS "Tir SORE. TIRED FEET Mo puffed-up, burning, tender, . sweaty feet no corns or callouses. lUppyl - vr T1Z" makes stf. burning, tired fet fairly dance vrith delight. Away ro tho aches and pains, the corns, cal loupes, blisters, bunions and chil tialns. "TIZ" draws out tjj0 acids and poi sons that puff up your feet. No mat ter how hard you work, how long1 you danc, how far you walk, or how long you remain on your feet, "TIZ" brings restful foot comfort. "TIZ" is map Iced, fa-nd. wonderful for tired, ach ing, swollrn. ."martin fet comfortable, how happy Tour iet Juflt tingle for never hurt or jem ti-ri:t. Get a 25 cnt box of "TIZ" now from any drum;:t or department ijtore. Knd f-.ot torture forever T.-far Fmnllr -hoe-. kfp y. ur ft Jreh. h'.vct t anI hap; y. Just th'.nk! t0 whole year' fuot coxuf t for only 2E ce&U. I HIBERNIANS HOLD ANNUAL BANOUET Ireland's Important Part in the Affairs of the World Are Re lated By Speakers Helped Build This Country. Ireland's important part in the af fairs of the world, the loyalty of her people to their country and faith and the virtues of the sons and daughters of the, I-:moraId Isle were praised by the sinakrrs at the :;0th annual .St. Patrick's banquet held at the Oliver hoUd last night by the Ancient Order of Hibernians. Sketches of the trial.-? and tribula tions which the people of Ireland have endured for centuries and tho manner in which they have borne their burdens with the predictions for a brighter future composed th( great er part of the addresses. The prin cipal speakers included Rev. M. J. Walsh, vice president of Notre Dame university, P. H. O'Dormell of Chlcap'. and Rev. John F. DeGroote, C. S. C. of tt. Patrick's narish. Rev. Patrick J Carroll, C. S. C. of St. Joseph's Cath olic church, acted as toastmaster. Pre ceding the addresses dinner was serv ed to 200 guests in the main dnins room of the hotel which had been dec orated in green for the occasion. La pel shmrocks were presented as favors and the menu included various Irish foods. "Ireland's Prayer" was the subject of the address 1 Father Walsh who told the striking story of thj Irish race and some of its accomplish ments, lie portrayed the sufferings which were undergone by the people of the Kmerald Isle during their pros ecution by the British government and the manner in which they held to their faith through all their difficul ties. Tells of Contribution to America. That the Irish race has contributed much to the stability of America was tlie contention of ,the speaker who named distinguished sons from the lit tle island who have become famous by their deeds and actions on this country. Father Walsh related the names of Irishmen who contributed to the constitution of the United States, signed the Declaration of Indepen dence, fought the battles for libeity from the bonds of England and took important parts in strengthening this nation in its infancy. He showed that the Irish have been foremost in all matters of state and religion and in closing expressed the fervent hope that Ireland had passed its la&t sor row. The faith of the Irish and its effect upon the standard of citizenship which resulted from Catholicism was the principal topic of Mr. O'Donnell's ad dress. This nation is a Christian na tion asserted the speaker and as the Irish are a Christian people, trained from infancy to obey, to know punish ment for violation of religious princi ples, and to regard authority, these sons of the Emerald Isle are therefore good citizens as they know obedience to law. Father DeGroote took as his subject "Irish Mothers." His address was a beautiful tribute to the women who rear Irish children. He said that these women raise their children for service to God and their faith, this being the predominant purposo when train ing their offspring. One of the pretty features of the program was the folk dances given by eight children from the Assumption school under the direction of Prof. E. Mann. Arthur Carmody entertained with a violin solo while Miss Rosie Beckerich recited "The Irish Exiles Farewell." Prof. John Drury and Master Edmund Luther gave vocal solos while the Misses Gullfoylo closed the program with instrumental selections. good ror that matter, "Wealth in hu- I man hands only is a power for weal or for woe. Wealth distributed among the many is harmless, but it becomes powerful and dangerous when con centrated in single hands. The first and greatest peril today Is that of con centrated wealth. Is.s than 25.000 people possess today more than half of our eountry's wealth, (me per cent of the families of America own more than the remaining 9C per cent. The enormous wealth controlled by great corporations as a rule is direct ed by a very few men. "Rut what danger or harm can come from such wealth in the hands of a few men? Simply this. If in the hands of evil and selfish men it will clog up thos springs which alone can keep the channels of our national life pure, the press, the political for um and the pulpit. Who will deny but that in manv instances we have i had a venal press, corrupted politic ians and a cringing pulpit. "The second great peril of extreme wealth is iLs enervating power to the individual and family life. As a rule it is not so enervating to the one who has gotten it together, but to his heirs and assignes. The first thought of the rich man whose barns were full and his harvests bountiful was 'soul take thine ease.' Some l'traairanov. "An elaborate dinner is held in New York where cigarets were rolled ?100 bills; another givs a dinner CONCENTRATON WEALTH A CURSE Results Are Being Seen in the United States, Says Rev. Henry L. Davis Influences Politics, Press and Pulpit. at at Ah! how you feel, joy; shoes Corrupted politicians, a cringing pulpit and a venal press were de clared to be some of the results of the great concentration of wealth in the United States at the present time, by Rev. II. 1. Davis in his Sunday sermon at the First M. E. church. "If wealth has its perils," he said, "then there is no land beneath the sun where so many arc walking the slippery pathway than in our own America. And if tho greater the wealth tho greater the temptation, then we behold among us temptation its worst, for here we see wealth its highest. "We have todav more national wealth than any two European na tions combined. The imperial Chinese commissioner, a few years ago in con versation with a prominent political economist of America, declared that New York city had collected from its then 4.000.000 population more rev enue than the Chinese empire had col lected from its 4 00,000,000. Fourteen hundred of our American millionaires are residents of New York city. "Whence cometh this enormous wealth? Not from labor none would deny for example that the Chinese people work. They are literal slaves. Yet they know nothing of values like ours. Our values have come from our marvelous natural resources, lands, mines, forests, rivers. It has been developed by our great civiliza tion where once our demands were few and simple, they are now multi plied and complex. Intention Creates Wealth. "In supplying this demand the na tion has become wealthy. Invention has made easy the creation of the products which answer to this de mand. We arc conserving even our waste products. Once cotton seed was a waste and a nusiance: today cotton seed produces J70.O00.0CO annuilly in value. Thus wc see pome of the sources of our great wealth, wealth that would stagger the Caesars and make Crocus green with envy. "We come now to the perils of reat wcaith, the iirst of which is that of concentration. Wealth In the Held and mine does no harm, nc? much costing $250 a piate and still another Uives a banquet for a dog. whereon ho places a .$ 15.000 diamond collar which almost makes one feel that he wishes he had been born a dog instead of a man. One New York woman boasted that she was lirst to give a cat a pair of diamond earrings. "In the same city we find such ex travagance as a $10,000 cradle. Jl.Oort hat pin. JTfi.oOO opera glasses, $50,000 piano, $L'S0."O0 string of pearls and a $;no,ouO necklace. Who wonders at social unrest. Who is startled when we arc told that the socialist vote went from L,O.0 in 1SS8 to fsys.000 in Rl:,. "Finally, it is a personal peril. Tf we are to believe tho scriptures, what we pay for material tiiinu: is an ele ment of salvation. Here the stnry of the scripture was used to show that the man who boiiuht a yoke of oxen and a piece of land and paid too dear ly for tlu-m. Anything that we gain dishonestly or in its possession we have harmed our fellow men or in its seeking or holding we wrong our own souls is a peril frought with not only temperal hut eternal interests." DIXIE FLYER IS WRECKED Steel Cars Again Pne to Re Real Life Satcis. TERRR HAUTE. Ind.. March 15. The Dixie Flyer, the Chicago and Eastern Illinois steel equipped train. Chicago to Jacksonville, Fla.. left the track at Shelburn. U0 miles south of Terre Haute, at ' 4 o'c lock .Sunday morning and though four cars were turned over and scattered along the main street over which runs the right of way, the occupants escaped with slight injuries because the steel struc tures kept shape though wrenched irom the trucks. Charles Ralduin. the engineer, was crushed to death under his engine which ran e,00 feet on the ties after leaving the rails at a faulty frog. ALMOST CRAZY ill 1 BURNING Seattle, Wash.. Jan. :".. lUK.: "My face and body were a solid mass of little sores which itched and burn ed me so badly that I almost went crazy. They started in the form of little pimples which opened and formed sores. I could not sleep at night and at work if I became over heated it would Itch something ter rible. I used all kinds of soap?, salves and prescriptions that did me no good. I had this skin trouble for a year or more before I used Resinol. As soon as 1 started using Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap tho itch ing and burning stopped at once and In five weeks my face and body were as clear and soft as could be. I used only two jars of Resinol ointment and three cakes of Resinol Soap. "A friend of mine had a bad case of skin trouble. His face was broken out so badly he v.-as ashamed to go out on the street. I told him to use Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap and in four weeks he was all well and one could not tell he ever had a pimple or sore on his face." (Sign ed) August E. Mills. l'.IOG Elliot Av. Every druggist sells Resinol Ointment and Resinol Soap. For trial free, write to Dept. lC-li, Resinol. Baltimore, Md. Adv. 7 f .o ... i r-J r-l ,( I ttV .- -,v X f V,vc . . - . ,. f ; .... ,... - . vV-i,.- -f, , .... - - ..---... ,..'f.K-- v -.V ss-X f v x-.. . x-. wi ' S'- fr.: :.K i -lr i i ( I - vr':-'-" 1 k . i 5 A IwavsSTAR When Good Fellows Get Together 9 ' V S N- Men Who Chew Are Men Who B0 V THE men who built the Panama Canal thousands of robust, clear thinking, quick-acting workmen, and hundreds of skilful, far-seeing engineers made thinking easier and labor lighter by chewing tobacco while at work. For many rears men from other countries non-tobacco chewing men tried to build the Panama Canal. They couldn't stand the strain, their machines "fell down" at critical moments their best attempts failed. Our American men tried men who aro "chewers and doers." They built the Panama Canal. Men who work with a pick or a pen; on steam-rollers or sky scrapers, chew and boost STAR TOBACCO, THE THICK, TASTY PLUG. STAR is the leading brand of the World. A year's out put would build a road of STAR plugs, 23 feet wide, along the entire route of the Panama Canal, and there would be over 200,000 one pound plugs left over ! 16 oz. Plucs , m 9 LEADING WIN BRAND Km ioc hi 3 i'fV ' i I I lilt vSC-I-iz-v;. ; -,'ri vv-: '-f::..? OB AC CO mmmsmmmmmi? THE WORLD CHURCH MUST REACH ALL SIDES OF MAN Intellect as Well as Soul Cared For Says Rev. A. Decker. C. Ro avir? men economically and intel lectually as well as spiritually was designated as the duty of the church today, l.y Rev. Charles A. Decker in his .Sunday sermon at the First liap- tist church. "The work of Jesus." lie said, "is to save the whole man. And to do this lie must be saved intellectually and economically as well as spiritual ly. And 1 do not think it is too uuch to say that this is the task of the Savior. "Our failure in the past has' leen that we have conlined the application of the gospel to spiritual matters. Whoreas Jeusu has a message that ap plies to these other matters as well. "We have been re: dinp: the gospels more carefully of late and hae dis covered that Jesus really had a mes sage effecting the social condition of this world, as well as a hope to hold out for the world to come. His gos pel has a broader application than the church has sometimes interpreted it. People were lost economically and there was enough dynamic power in the teaching Jesus to chanse the so cial condition of his day had his teach ing been heeded. "Rut the early church discovered the great spiritual truth and preached that with all its miuht, to the exclu sion of the social elements in his teaching. The result was many were saved spiritually but continued to be lost economically. And this condi tion of things obtained through the centuries until now we are trying to apply the social teachings to our so ciety. "Vc iind it hard to change condi tions because they are so old and time-honored. However, there seems to be rea.viji for hope that the teach ing of Jesus regarding social salvation will le heeded and made effective in the days that are before us. "We aro coining to see that a man who is saved spiritually is only one third saved. There are two other sides to this life that mu.-t be c -n-sidered. .Icsus came to save the whole man and all of his relationships." nominee and v in over other possible rival." Thsi prediction wa -Whitman pr.-Ub ntiil soon after the arrival ni-lit bv William Rain.s. jr Wilron or anyf hrown into theJ bx oners eamj b'r 'a::Jj; ROOT, NEXT PRESIDENT Will Re Republican Nominee Sa. William Ramos, .lr. MRS. BALLARD A MOTHER A (iaiuIit'T was i . ' r n t Mr. rival Mrs. Rnauv Rallatd if L' ;isillc, Ky.. n ;il'i!(!a. M.a rii 1 :;. Mrs. 1 i. t la rl was formerly .Mis-; Mar it r :' .Mr. an.l Mrs. !- cit v. t;.-h - i . . ALBANY, X. Y.. Marc h 1 "Rliha Root will b' nominated and e!ecf-d ! president of the I'nited States in l'.)l;. He may prot'.st ill health -and age. but he will be the republican ; iT-ivrjLiJ 1 UtvJ V rite for rroof. Y.y lr. ( mw s;cil l.nxwi ! Nre Tablrt. Dr. ChJvc. 221 N. Tenth Mrrt. I'bdadflphia. l'a. TTSSfi. 1K-SAN-K)S IMI.K UKMf'Dt B .JU (a-3 jr.s'.A'.t r'!n-( in AiiWkJ li2ediryrcrt,rotruiirl'a-A.v;c 4, T. 1 f nnF 1 1 n vi! i . r i H I J l V i I J 1 &r Kca wilt LJa iLa t- i 67H c'o VV v 1 -A-V T 1 . V I t . N. i '1 H V- 1 r. 219 S. Michigan St. In Conjunction With and Over Independent 5c-10c-25c Store. Second Floor. Take elevator and rave money on every pure: SOUTH BEND'S FOREMOST VALUE GIVERS IN PSILLINERY iHD WEARM-IQ. fiS'PfrZL , Most Exceptional Prices in Shoes for Entire Week, Gonrniencing Tuesday Look ! Head! Tlioa Oann r;n:! v.::: 1 Ladies' Shoe Values Unprecedented Wondertul assortment of this season's stvles in button and lace, in patent coltskin, trim metal, vel vets, cravenette tops, etc., all styles. S3, $3.50 an J S4 values. . &i LADIES LOW TAN SHOES 250 pairs tan oxfords and pumps in various stvles, pretty buckles, etc., some in button styles, S3 :nd S3. 5o grades. All week S 1 1 9 53 200 pairs Ladies" Tan Button Shoes, narrow, medium and broad toes, values to S4.00. Choice all this ? week LADIES' BLACK LOW SHOES S3 and S3. 50 grades. Black Oxfords and Pumps, all styles, all leathers. This "g AR TO! pi CidcJii rlen's High Grade Shoos at SI. About 300 pairs Men's Shoes, worth double the price you will be asked to pay here. These are sample shoes and odd and end pairs at a great advantage to you. Come in gun metal, patent calf, vici, etc. Your choice all this week r n n PS A f)P 4 ij gfj ii Boy's, Kisses' ui O!:;-"; Great lots cf )r,y n: . ' Shoes in hk"h and Iv.- en: i : wear in patent leather, am ' ' or lace; good lasts and i.js. pric- ' ; than wholesale, in A lots uii iabL-s ai qw tin ? 1 1: . '1 GREAT BIG BARGAINS IN EVERY SECTION OF OUR STORE. BERT ALLMAN, MANAGER.