South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 74, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 15 March 1921 — Page 6

TITS DAY MORNING, MAUCII 15, 1021.

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

HIE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morning Evening Sunday , Z. iL STEl'IIL.NSON, rubl!hr. V JOHN 12 EMIT ZUYEH. V&lVr.

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Member United Press and iho t v ... International News Servico Mv-rulcj IMUloa. Member Associated Pres Am-viaf- ITpii la ext iL.Urely :.UtIM to th ' , j. i.ri f ali fiv ulipu cred.tM to It or not 0tor-r-i.ib-i la iL racmis lltIoa of tLis pajxr. tau aI i.-.v (Li J Lou-ia. lL!e .lc not appiJ r; fillilua. All r.M of republlcntloa f pUl ia.ra ars rtrej Lj Ue puUaaers AS U ta a

rfcn. Main noo. rrtTite tran-: irluEr. Olr rPJ,Ä-JT tsr. ft ;.-.-. a or jartLat wanjpj. After 8 p. a. au .it tjr:i;i: fri--'-'UO c J i l ,J äep rtineot : Ma!n 210L. vliror; ilalu 21m. bvjKij UUor; il&lu 21U2. circulation - Frns'-rtiPTioN tiateS"! MornTa mi ETpsmar k5,IV!,0.h F!r.y: C. T. :to; hunJaT, IQr. IiWred by carrier la J I'r. I an I Ml!,itiki, Jlo.Oj rr year la adranr. or 0 b, " livr-ilr. or liter. In IMlUons, dnlij IncloJln SanaaCat re J at iL üuuU 1 i- atoffl e aecond ciaal ItAIXii 15 V MAIL. Zon 1 Yr. C ilea. 3 Mit, 1 M. 1 2 K'W U7G fLM t 3 & fl.W 3ii 1.75 i r. vV 7iJ 8 75 2. OU j 1 MO 4.L5 2 25 JO y Ftria It.it. Tl w rr raontii JlDVITTiTIFINfl RATTS: Aek the adTrt1?n; T rUtlTtl rr!jn A'lvertUInjr U'-prsr ntatlres : CONK. HILTON V(hi MAN. INC.. 22" Fifth nr.. .w York City. 72 W. t., CLbo; Arr.rirn 1)1.. Detroit, Vlrtcr bid? . KU1 City, a:i ( .ftlt at!. -n M.lir.. Atlanta. TU Nwi-T1in denort t - V-";) its a lvrt:Mojc rol imnn fr from fraadu3' miar.'.Hfrfnt:if i'.n. Any iT"n d-frati.1ed tbrougb patroaa? et any Ivf-rt'-i r-r In th! ij.r wJll confor a faror oa ta tLak'oUi'-nt Ly rtortlc tf)e f completely.

MARCH 1 5. 1 92 1

JAIL AS A PLACE TO THINK, 31. in, ir. !"!, fr 'iiiT.tly thf moat out of life, tvhi!' nur.'ir:- hl.-i h.nrI.-hii)S. Ah Will Carlton onco E .S i: 'If you v.-.ir.f to teach a man to appreciate h' : v n v II, Ju.-;t L. fo:-. jou to.-.; him in frive him 15 minut in ht II." If tn n Tiv.il woniTi cou'tl only ppo from outside Xiri'on l-irs whit thfy are aomf tlrafs pivon to seo from th- ir:-i5", it wouM clarify their vision mightily, urul crii..- nJ-ht weil-nlh bocomo a thing of h. .m t. A mini nt of ar.r; a fit of Jealous; a passion fur T('u-; th. tla:-h of a pistol, then prison bars. Ar.'l. with th ori.-m Lars, tirn to think, time to reL.iH th- il.iy.-4 f Inn no nt- b'.-furo the glare of the 1 r;'ht (Iiz-zi-d the vision and the hectic nl?ht . ir-il th rnor.il k' tis-:; time to think of the fir.' lif lived back in the old home whore the hom ly virtue mti.ti'-d and contentment reigned. Vtt--, ümc t th.ink of thos- and a thousand other thi;.:'-i th it p,-is in r iow behind prison bar; things that it iv b n drlv. n out of mind in the convivial rri'.l r'Om vh n st rinus thought dared to intrude. Ti::w to v. i:h values anl yco with the horror of . a;r h"v the fh-etint: joys whose pursuit has th m bronrht Into a fclon'n cell, shrink and fade out f f f ibt win n compared with tho sJlld virtues they have -r.nr- d in tlu ir mad chaso for exciting pleasli r i k. Tin- Foütuib- of a e ll brinp-.s mn and women face to 1 -c" with tho tragt dy of wasted opportunity and c.i';-. d th-- tb.Ings they hnvo left behind to assume, a -t"unling jTuportions. Ilbertj- was never ho sweet: virtue v. as Ii- v r - l- autiful; eclf-control was never f!) admirabb-: honor w.us never so glorious, as when iewd from behind the bars of a prison cell. Anyhow that ii the vision of men who have serve 'I time and know. Vi it a penitentiary sometime, and if the -warden will let you, talk with tho prisoners. It will open your eyes. o BETTER POSTAL SERVICE. Fos'tm.ister C;n. Will Hays proposes to humanize the mail tc rvit e: "Tlie po.t otlire department hn been run for i ars. sei far as the human element ia concerned, on j r i r i i i b-s that went out of style long ago." Ilas -.:.- that h( wants the personnel of the post o!!.. ib nt mar.t to feel that their serviced are t-. .:; rhii'.g nmrti than to bo raid for and then for- . r . 1 1 a. lb- siy.s tho j'st (!!ici business Li the biggest bi:.:n .- -i t'neb Sam cndticts. He wants each man of tii- :.i ;,t work in the department to feel that he ; ein illy a i artner in the great -ntcrpri?o, and iini'i? to make v ry man an enthusiastic aid. Jn .-h rt, be want to "get ehe to the people," and to i.ive rvice through the elimination of arcl .tie ar.l ur.intt b'gent methods, this way: 'I want b get everybody interested. Wake up tin jm:; -. M ike fritnds all around. Get a big s. r i e Jörn-., i-h!; goinc. Then what will h ip; '" !.'.' The mail man, instead of chucking a b lit r . li yi'ur doorstep, will naturally and willlnly an 1 carefully put it in your letter box." r.itre-ns f the Unit' d .States post othce want good j o-t.il s. rviit-. If "the big postmaster" cun give it u tlum tie y will be truly grateful, surety. o CUTTING RAILROAD WAGES. Tb.- weil ! w.i.; n-N.rt-'i tilled with John the Hapr .i i: is i" i iy; very little movement hat its : s i :' i re; i.; indlsts, prtss agents, men who come 1 b and I1.- ire the way. How this thing and that i gf.ng te ai'tect tiie popular mind, and how the j ub.i.- i- ueir.g t . r.C'ie th.at thing and thi, is the r: of in t''-n that mad von Bernstein, von I n a:, i IT. Albert famous. The IN nr 1 a rii l railroad's order to cut wages, felb'Ard y a similar a r.r.our.cement by the New Vt:i k J: jitral. is roi- inbd by me government ot!lci..l in t a a with th. j-ituation as intended mostly for lo-b al , :':eet on employes and the public. 1 d : tb' r iri r.piouous'.y in the resolution of tm- I r.-. i ania's beard i'rdi ring the cut wa this i.i:..".i:; v! t !". : All pv-.-.-jure in -ffv:insr uch readjustment of .- -.! ir. t ar.il w..gt. shall be taken in an orderly ::. r aal in s'.rbt accord with the trar.s7 ?i a -:.

b b- i- upn w hich reductions nre ordered t-o.'.iiy from the transportation act. :.. i-rovi-icr.s that tho factors to bo eonw -rt s piid fur similar work in other . ( i ::ig. hazards of employment r. -.' .'.:: . -kill required, etc. Earnings i .;re v. t jart of thLs lais for wago : a 'rl vith the transportation act," ; b .1 a r.:- anin.g through conferences

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c nf.: :;ces with the rail labor board e ..rirg-. involving much testimony . ) - ..f tm.e. The rail labor board has y b. ".d :1; it any ralhoad which accepted : July, gran.tin.g the rate Increase i n b . rtak. to cut wages !o meet a temIri b u .-; r. s.

Ti'a- f i t N t:...: tb... railway executive? themselves ,t i.et .i! h .irr:o u :us to methods of procedure. A m .,'-r;:y . f tl. ir 1 .b r oinmitteo !s understood to li'.vc 1.--, r. -T.;.b.ati. .kl'.y oj-poM to tho attitude and rr.ttlK -U i ur: d by Pr,s't W. V. Atterbury In lann bin. the r.-nipalcn for reduce J wage to rail rr.b'' y . "II." M'-rc-tn linirc-wl inlluenccs back of Atbrt ury. !i j . vrr, t.n.Jly swung hifl opponents Ir.to line of j i--. e agrermrr.t to let him trj' his Land. Th railway executives a faw days ago dissolved

thir labor committer. This was the climax of internil disagreement, and while Jt give th Morgm-Atte-rbury leadership freer rein temporarily In hanlllng the labor K-tuation, it does not indicate any healing of the brrnch. In any event the natural pro-cee-n cf any jrocedur to cut wages under the transportation law will require at lear. two or three "s -inths.

NOW IT IS BOSSIE'S TURN. Henry Ford having r Tactically retired poor Dabbin from the seen of action by, his production of Elizabeth. I now predicting that I'.o.-vi will eoon follow. It Is a progressive age you know; invertive genius seems to know no bounds. No sooner has someone invented an electric milker than along comes another, and would take away tho thing to bo milked. The fact that Bo?sie ha? been the honored fostermother of the human raco for countb-s age-, is given as all the more reason why she should Le relieved of her arduous duties and given a chanc to rent for "an aeon or two." Ford proposes to make this possible. Ho dedans that his laboratories have demonstrated that better milk can be m-ide from the eame ingredients by machinery than Iiode can produce by her time-honored but now obsolete methods. So it If only a question of time when the song of tho milkmaid will no longer be heard in tho land and Bossle may roam the prairies at will with never a thought of milking time. Inmead of tripping lightly down the lane with a sunbonnet on her arm and a shining pall in her hand, chanting the lilting melodies of other day?, the milkmaid will simply turn a faucet and the foaming lacteal fluid will pour forth to satisfy the need of the human race for nature's first and best food. o EQUAL RIGHTS IN SMOKING. That same old question is up again; tho equal rights of woman with man, to do whatever hp. does, and this time they have It in the courts introduced by the mar.. He want? to know if a woman has a right to smoke In public? In his petition for divorce, John Park, of Houston, Texa, himself a emoker, alleges that his wife has caused him great mental anguish by persisting In smoking in the presence of friends. How about it? What legitimate pursuit has man that in denied woman? If it is legitimate for a man to make th air around him blue with the pmoke of his cigar or cigarct, why should the same right be denied a woman? Equal rights for all; special privileges for none, is one of the very foundation stones of our government. Wo know of no other privilege more universally enjoyed by man th3n that of smoking whenever and wherever he likes. If it is good for him, why not for his wife? We are not discussing the merits of the eafc In point; not debating the question as to whether either men or women should smoke; we are simply asking: Hae she the right? If not, why not? ARE YOU AT FAULT? Thousands of human beings are killed, or maimed, by automobiles every year. The number of accidents constantly grows, duo ot two reasons: the increase In population, and the increase in use of the automobile. But the number need not increase, if there is a decrease In carelessness. Most pedestrians will Jump at the conclusion that the carelessness referred to is that on the part of the driver. However Polico Commissioner Fnright of Now York says that his records show that 78 percent of the automobile accidents aro the fault of pedestrians, failing to cross at corners, running past the traffic officer, jay-walking, running ahead of approaching automobiles. If the pedestrian Is 7S percent responsible, and the driver but 22 percent responsible for the death toll, who, pray you, should do more to make his own life safer in th streets. O

Other Editors Than Ours

tiic tkvtii vSUsij:.vdi:d somi:wiii;ki;. (Ft. Wuyue Joumal-liaetU'.) The American people are properly interested in the charge that the French colored troops in Germany have been outraging women and committing depredations of a less serious nature. Eecau-s,.; of this charge meetings have been planned on tho order of that recently held in New York city where the chief indoor sport appears to have been to denounce Mr. Wilson with scurrility. We aro interested, though there Is nothing we can do or have a right to do. America is always against barbarity such as Ls here charged. The point in controversy just now, however, is whether tho ch irge is true. Before the meeting was held In New York the head of the American Legion, charged that the whole outcry is pro-German propaganda and declared that the colored troops have Leen withdrawn. Now comes Mrs. Carrie Chapman Catt, wellknown throughout the world, who recently met the German delegates to the International .Suffrage alliance at Geneva. This is her contribution to the controversy. "This campaign of propaganda has been in progress in the United States for many months. I had heard a good deal of it before going to Geneva. I, therefore, called two Gentian delegates, one a member of the National Iteiehstag and one a counselor to the government of Wurtemberg, and also the treasurer of the International Woman Suffrage alliance. Mrs. Colt who is of German birth, married to an American who became a naturalized British citizen. he had been visiting her aged father at Frankfort, which lies in the region where thj black troops were alleged to have committed atrocities, Mrs. Colt said that the people in the vicinity of the black troops had told her repeatedly that they had conducted themselves with more courtesy and consideration than any white troops who had been stationed there. The two German delegates declared that there was no movement in Germany to ask France to remove these colored troops and that o far as they kr.iw there w-a no complaint in Germ any on that score. These three women promised to make inquiry concerning the definite charges which were being made In the United .Slates concerning these troops and to let me know later. "I :aw all three of them in London in early December, and again they reiterated the Kime statements made in Geneva, which was to the effect that atrocities such as are being described in the United States could ne-t have been committed by any army of occupation without the masses of the j eople of Germany knowing about it. and that they had heard nothing which warranted such charges being made." This is borne out to a considerable xtent by the cfT.cial report cf MaJ. Gen. Ihnry T. Allen, tho commander of the American troops in Germany. ue t lis us that there ha been some propaganda in Germany against the colored trcops- but that the charges pgainst these troops used a the b-asi of the a citation In this country are unwarranted. Rom:r.di..ir us that the racial antipathy so assert iv in this country does not ex.: in Europe, he tells that there have been a number of intermarriages sine the colored troops reached Germany. With this radical disagreement It is clearly important that we have more satisfactory proof of the truth of the atoriea before we become unduly excited-

The Tower of Babel BY BILL ARMSTRONG

IULAW IX)UIl SHOUT OM1S, WATSO.V. Friend Palmer tilts the light wine ba n ; A swan song gift; a boon to man.

i It's changed tho doctor's mission j He cmo prescribed for pains and

ill, But r.ow the men who pay his bills Are sick "with prohibition."

kflb Ji

of PaoAfXlor:

i no ii spots ix in story. Born to Mr. and Mrs, W. II. Armstrong at Findlay. O.. a nine-pound son answering to the name cf Wilber Bay, March 15. 1892.

fkaxk jnrrnuiEs m:roitE leaving noME TO GO TO WOHK. "I may have to work late tonight. If I do, I'll telephone you at 6 o'clock. But when you hear the bell, don't aruswer it you will know what It means, and I shall get my nickel back."

niniiF xpavs or the city. Frank Thorr e has returned from Chicago, where he went in the interests of a proposed Canadian tour tf the Colfax Avenue Glee club. Jake Heckaman sez that If he Is elected mayor, South Bend will have- tho best groomed bunch of men of any town in the country. Jake plan.-- to convert the first floor of the city hall' into a barber shop and manicuring parlor, it is rumored. Imagine the board of public works holding an important meeting, and Gil Elliott getting a neck shave simultaneously. John TVHaven has made complaint that this department has been laying off him lately. It is truo but we've always been under the impression John resented any publicity for himself personally, or any reference to hLi life insurance business. Nelson Jones was lato to work on Monday, the result of getting his

cutaway suit caught on on Park a v.

a fenco post

Tho buMiest guy in the world a public accountant helping a bootlegger fill out his Income tax blank. Whenever we see C. J. Cooper talking to anybody we wonder how long it'll be until he (not C. J.) will be under arrest.

Frank Shumaker, of the South Bend Electric company, closed up his electrical chow at tho Chamber of Commerce last night. Frank sez the next show he puts on will probably be "East Lynne."

THE HYPNOTIC BUGLER. Two darkies in a negro regiment were boasting about their company buglars, "G'long wit you, boy." said one; "you ain't got no booglers. We is got the boogler. and when 'at boy warps his lip around that horn and blows pay-call it sounds jes' like that urn Boston symphony band p'.ayin 'The Rosary'." "Well, if yo likes musik they is all right, but If yo' Is ycarnin' fo' food, yo' wants a boogler with an hypnotic note like we is got. Boy, when Ah heara old Custard-Mouth Jones discharge his blast Ah looks at mah beans and Ah aye, 'Strawberries, behave yo'solves! Yo' is crowdln' tho whip cream; out o' mah di9h'."

Cal Coolidge that New England gent Who is our new vice president Has been right in tho middle Of public notice. Now he's due To spend a term, or maybe two. Just playing fecond fiddle.

Ignorant Essays BY J. P. McEVOY

ON WINDOW WASHERS. While I believe it is the accepted theory to look down upon the window-washer, I fail to find any justification for this attitude. As I see it he is in an Infinitely better position to look down upon us. We should !ok up to the window-washer and, mvariably we do. We should regard him with peculiar interest, for who sees so much of the world's work and fron such unusually accurate viewpoints as the window-washer? Wo may look- out of our offices at him, but he can look in at us and undoubtedly can from his superior vantage point judge us more accurately than we can judge ourselves. lie is tho only modern spectator who not only sees everything from the inside out, but from the outside in. The-re is also a scope and a freedom enjoyed by the window-washer that few of us know. If we should tire of our job.s anel we usually do and wish to quit, it Is more or less of a tedious and painful process. We must tell our bnw, we must gather up our belonging, clean out our desks, and get our wages to date from the cashier. But suppose the window washer Is tired of his job and wants to quit. Supposv he gets tired of It all say, while bathing the outside of a window on the 17th floor is he forced to (it an up all these trifling, wearisome details? Not much. All he need do is unhook his belt and let

go. He has quit the job. Thero Is something magnificent about the simplicity of this resignation. It 13 Homeric. It ls epic. Let U9 consider a few moro aspects. Window-washing is a profession that requires long years of training and no end of native ability. Anybody can wash a windtrw and it

j will be clean, but only a born win

dow-washer can wash a window and leave it looking as f it hn-d never been washed. That 1 genius. That is a gift. That, in short, is windowwashing. And what are the compensations: They aro many, and not all to be reckoned in kal'o or kudts. Truo enough, as in tho other professions, the higher one goes the larger the compensation. And while there is plenty of room at the top, or I should say plenty of rooms, there aro more at the bottom. It is no profession for a quitter. A windowwasher Is like an aviator in that he can lall down on his job only once. Also, it brings him into Intimate contact with the beat people. The wl n dow-wa -h e r has acces to the private offices of the great as well as the small and cm term of absolute equality. And finally, it ls a healthful occupation, for when it becomes confining ho can go out into the open air. (Copyright. 1921.) TYPICAL CONVERSATION. Ycru never can tell what's going to happen to you Tomorrow'.'? "Ignorant Essays" on Lifo Insurance.

More Truth Than Poetry By JAMES J. MONTAGUE

Ol.l AM) ni:w. In congress tcday, points of honor are decided by bets instead of by pistols.

Some forty or fifty years back, Whenever a statesman was stirred To answer a colleague's attack With a shorter and uglier word, Fach went to a gun store and had himself heeled. Enlisted a friend for a second. And the man wh was able to walk eff the field. The better debater was reckoned. There Ls force and directness in lead; Its logic can not b" withstood; When one of the parties is de-ad, A quarrel is settled for good. We mi-ht have continued tho duelling fad As a means to promote legislation, Fxcept for the baleful tffert that it had In reducing our representation. But fighting today isn't done, We have learned to exert self-con-tr-d. The s-.:t';:r.an who reachexi for his gun Now reach's, instead, for his roll.

' If a congressman says that another

o no lies, In his face the long-green will be shaken While the party of questioned veracity crie s: "I 11 I ' i you a thou' you're mis

: taken'." ! I -late ha been shorn of romance: j For we who sit by and look on Are sure that there I?n't a char.ca i For pKels and coffee at dawn.

But though we still thrill as we read of the days When, the gun was an honor-as-sua t'cr, W are bound to admit. In a great many ways. It's wis- r to ficht with a wager. (Copyright. 1321.)

JUST FOLKS By EDGAR A. GUEST

UNTIL SHE IIED. Until she died we never kr.iw Tho be-auty of our fa.Ith In God. We'd seen tho summer rcses nod" And wither as the tenrpeeta blew. Through many a spring we'd lived to so The buds returning to the tree. We had not felt the touch cf woe. What cares had come, had lightly flown, Our burd-ens we had borao alone The need of God w did not know, It seemed sufficient through the days To think and act In worldly ways. And then she closed her eyes in sleep. She left ua for a little while, No moro our lives would know her mile, And oh, the hurt of it went deep! It seemed to us that we must fall Before tho anguish of it all. Our faith, which had not known the test. Then blossomed with its comfort sweet. Promised that some day we ehould meet And whispered to us: "He knowa best." And when our bitter tears were dried. We found our faith -tslb glorified. (Copyright. II 21.)

Naming no Nnmes. J Terhaps some of the late cabinet

crhVers who bought and took away their omciai chairs will now be able to havo them cut down to fit them.

INGROWN TOE NAIL TURNS OUT ITSELF

A noted authority gaj-s that a few drops of "Outgro" upon the akin urrounding the ingrowing nail reduc inflammation and pain and io toughens the tender, rensltive akin underneath the toe nail, that it can not penetrate the flesh, and th nail

turn naturally outward almoit overnight. "Outgro" is a harmless, antiseptic manufactured for chiropodists. However, anyone can buy from the drug store a tiny bottle containing directions. Adc,

E WYMAI Sl. CO

Chmp and yc Us - Store Hours: Open 8:30 n. m. Close 5:30 p. m. l Except Saturday, closed at 9:30 p. m.

fP JO- ,

March 14 to 26 is Peggy Paige National Dress Week and you are cordially invited to inspect our Peggy Paige Models. New Models are coming in daily many have been received within the last two or three days and all will be sold at prices below the market for these two weeks. Peggy Paige Dresses interpret the happy spirit of today. Some of them arc fashioned of soft Taffeta, others are Canton Crepe, made ultra-smart with trimmings of fluffy ruffles, all of them showing somewhere a touch of bright contrasting color. Peggy Paige Dresses are for young women and for women who want to stay young. In the interesting collection carried exclusively in this store, you will find many wonderfully becoming dresses.

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There are tzco models as pictured No. 526 A pay coquettish frock of navy, taffeta and rustcolor Georgette. The lines and color combination are rrench. The style is Pezzv Paier in-

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dividual unu uuuMiai. i icae; .a

notice the grace ot the cordion pleated ruffles, youthful heart can resist

model. No. 704 There's real romance in this adorable navy Georgette creation made up over accordion pleated underskirt. It is embroidered in flowers of deep shades of red and blue. A broad, effective sash ties in back. Every detail, perfectl Veritably a frock full of Peggy Paige charm!

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The New Spring Outfit Includes Underwear In Both Silk and Knit Weights for Spring

Glove Silk Vests, lace trimmed $2.75. Glove Silk Bloomers, lace trimmed to match vests $3.50. Kayser Underwear Silk Top Vests, all sizes tl.59. Mercerized Vests, band top, bodice $1.00 and $1.25. Silk Top Union Suits, all sizes $2.00. Kayser Marvel Fit Mercerized Suits, umbrella style and tight knee $2.50 and $2.85. Marvel Fit Suits, band top and bodice $1.75 and $2.00.

-1 -rf

Carl Gutman Swiss Ribbed Underwear Silk Vests. low neck, no sleeves $2.75, $3.50, $3.75. Mercerized Vests. boch'ce top $2.00 and $2.25. Fine Lisle Vests, round neck $1.75, $2.00. $2.25. Vests round neck and bodice 89c. $1.00, $1.25. $1.50 Swiss Ribbed Combination Suits, round neck nnd bodice top $2.50, $2.75. $3.00 and $3.50. Swiss Ribbed Tights, knee length $1.75 to $2.50.

Wyman's 61ft Annual March Rug Sale Now On

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Specials for Tuesday and Vcdnesday

2 Canr. 2 Cans 2 Lbs. of of of Dry Tomatoes Pumpkin Pop Corn 10c; 10e 10q 3 Large 3 Packages 3 Packages Cans of Argo Hominy Climaline Gloss Sarch 25c 25c 25e

2 Cans Vegetables for Soups

3 Cans Baking Molasses

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Railway Co.

&SOÜTHERNMICUIGAN RAILWAY COMPANY LTJ IlCTini SU.VD.W, ocTom:it it, 1020.

fi:bj'-it to char.e netie. Trains lt;tv.: . r , Indiana. Hast VTest

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11 :) a. B i :f) coca 1XMJ p. Q. P. xa. 2 00 p. Q. : p. m. " P. ra ß p. u. ' 00 p. a P. tn' 11 00 p. 11 0j p .c.

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PURE ICE GOOD SERVICE RIGHT PRICES CASH or COUPONS ARTIFICIAL ICE CO. M. 2221; L6123

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