Hammond Times, Volume 12, Number 172, Hammond, Lake County, 11 January 1918 — Page 4
Mfciiii.;
I I IE TIMES. Kriduv. January 11. 1018.
I -'
' l;,-,iffWBW
THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS
at Gary appears to regard
department ami its ruiniom
as a crime.
- - - .,sc.., , ..-.. . -.. I nose policemen. Know the varum' riiMi;cn;? in 3Y THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING & PUBLISHING ! G-.ry's i-'-hi''; nig population. They' know Hie .seerot of its COMPANY. fore'-.: a tym ,-: ei Day and nishl 1 have Wen on
::u;Md: iatod tl It . I lion- p:;' nit i.-tu iu the I mted
Tie Lake -'in;v T'mes t'ailv .-tti s:unlv a
.i;i. l-.r, it's '-.t at i he .9t.!';i'v in l i3i.nn.'tui. June i Slates tm ernt:i"iit has been shown by (lour vigor in
I
T
1 ml a nn 1 s : -tul'.i. .ii Km
Tti' m-- Ka n i 'ii .i a
S iudv. ruit'-.fu at. t iie- p. .;.: r" 1 v. 1 : I Th- l.nK L'wtit Times
lift'ei'Ml a ' t li noMofnce iu I Ertniniriiii, I'ebiuii'y
Tit- nr Evpiins runes Da .'.y vi-r, !":.) t i!;.. post ol tic ;n "!ry, Apr-, l ;:. i: A! ; uml-v tho h'-t of March ;., :t:i. . I'.fltli'!-
ik.'i mi :
. t ii-'nc-
iuo,
ig munition plots, sup
pressing 'peace moi tuns and ;i p; : elf Piling ovt-v one
Sat ii i da- anl W eV.y Kd.tiou. J thousand tb'sert or.'. Hun pi'opag:muir.t., and militarx
li'-liliiiuon; s They have actualh ticcn important tors t-i the -i a .,-r ii- ,
4. It'll.
Sunday.
end
Enn s :
fc'iWvVil'ri &- i.'i ' Ii f 3 111 1 HI i li n Mini
America Compelled to Take Up the Arms Forced Into Her Hands
By CARDINAL FARLEY
lie.
iir:n; v Hu'.id :ng .
D KHTl'IMi Ol 1 l K.
1 EI KI'UOl. " change U iiatfVfl' de'pH: M!:'
' '. T.. Kvan.-i, !",.-ii . "h
';t "'i'' a ho. 'I'll- Tiintv 11 j 'iTi, T t;'ir iNrv-i l'a('i) ! in i nor ( i;.",irt,"r and
ll'V.l
Ad
. . . r,iO'. "fit. a ii ' ' d. . . . . To'.'l'!i-ni 1 :'.T . T I.-;.in'i'.c ''"l . . . .T-'ri.'H'iK' '-' . I . .T'df ph.-tu- -. .rp,l'i" SO - M 'IV lephi-vi J
Y-! ihoo tra:rd :p'U. offffrs Inn ! rnt i imv'o va ".fft-n Ivuni. in ifi It i :i Mi::ikf. ;iini tii- 1'r.iU'ii Sthi' t !'iw it 'i!i tin- f t1 'tHt'-un l li.'Vint ' '.;-' to th poiifi':)--n that ih 'lie n.-ftinn ill ,Knfit of thrir oNprrirn1 yi t'ins; on I'ncl'' -Sa tit's a r!!
i .1 by cpi iinrf, i I i n l " ol t". isi.-. , : cm !ii'" iii sbo . ; ;n army offjror , (Mill l Jl U to f i VI' I , ' by titniu-;j:if)y j
v. i; r,
'i 1 1 !: d.
tti.i: incus nelliT tarment. '''n ;!! ne .-pr '" a uroat
1 1. . n;
I
1 it I ! .'!' .-"t) t i,. y , a
ili-if huruls
-Id 1" ; h
Imp
W ITl I a pai rut SU the bli'3 tan d'iivf-r
...rallv. V SI'KAKIXd of lt-armnsr 1h Ir-arninu nthr thins:?
i 1 '! ? mi pvrr t hink THAT you'd havp i iiddlP fur
A N ii.
GERMAN FORESIGHT.
; wiiirx :nan m ; i-lin.Nf i of bidr-s in Ars-ntina bavo be- i li'-attl
Larger Patd-Up Circulation Than Any Two Other Papers ctn mi artive rind tb.r l.p.yer? nto oKV rinc si.icli lii::h
f coiitrui tAUp M.-.vt
ln-
; r - i hav. n :;ripdial Tl-.o T.nif-s 'ins .'..':t.- I : 'i -- f ::t i : i ,in , -:! p:-iiil.-.J
n the Lsiumet Regton.
I b I ' f. e t ; . I . K
i otuju'i itoi's
b-atb-
'.!i inly to t
Tiio T.me.i i'.al,-
;;it.jn d- P ' '".: -Tit. ;. n- id' : 'i t'l-1 r"-t.'i! - ir. i v ti i : ii.it. f k !"U lttf: id' g-..-'
l-'-fe t-.-i'c,
THE FARMER AND THE FEUDAL SYSTEM.
Out here in the middle west, tainud's own their
prices thii' Amorivtm and I'rtti.-ii
or .--(or!;--, liavc 'ifen fori --d to tut d nn irii taso in i pvi' ro--ntl' .f U pi r i fn'. "Tho most intfrcsiin j "i-aturo of this Ontim bnylr.j;." s,n. 1". S. t'otincul! General Robertson, "i thai tho Gorman buvors insi?t I
tlia! they aro it ino; fr t lo accouf.i of :h' Gt-rtiian Go rn:nont paopa ra'ory to th eos.ation of hostilities." V.hen f if is evident tliht what opporronts if post-war
tarirr pret.at t'Uness ot tno I nited Mates have to
to the effect that Oernir.nv is indust riullv panilvzod. roust
'be taken a trrain of s:lt. The Ccinans have the! i t :i'.or.e . the oi i-itny.a.t ion and the for.siKht. to take rare i ! of pot-war conditions, and they are fioi:v; ahead and j i doi n it. Tiie Detnoerais avi-r thtit we should wad until!
AM) ntod-s a gooti lauKh 1 I I', j :.t g.ifn to s.imc ! ! .KDKA I.KH r
a.-U hi.,, why fh
! .l.te h.
av i
IT'S a Ldnifi" k-uud tlnnir f i S.M K of the.e Ectrtssis that they AI:K only a upia tins on the screen or
AWHILK I. fore ou
AN" expert?
! ITH'RT awarded an Kantetn woman I ' IjOII-AH a week clunony. I THE wiff raised her c,cbro at tUif ; and i SAIU 'iff i Din. -e inoiicv .isn't anvi f thing in life." ! ! AVHKN" we read some of this war aditie we arc almost
Ins message V ;. sjj
an b e u o ; n e I ; - - - r -
!;
KOR th
KLSi; th.yv vtiiuld freeze to death soalung the
little (! thf.v wear. .
VH KXKVKIL tei'i.'ifij woii.an
I TEMPTED to offer a reward
mr.st idiotic sugeffi,
we hear nf onic e-
ana are prouu or. n. n i;nw oiau a .-r-i.tr wl -- thp war hail besun before discussing tatters of muni-i to be able to say: "This is mine. I shall fertilize 'bis , ,natl.i;t! rrium'e to t.renare now for nnst-w-.-,,-
Compt-tit ion will bo tpiite as effective in!
foo-1 id' foreign gootls out of tho American !
field; I shall drain this swamp: I intend to clear t tits roni!nP1.t.iai
natrh not fall " He knov.-s it navs to iut,-io e tno land j
and that it pays him. not some one else to whom he might by payinsr rent.
Haw r.ianv r.if i-i.'ttn farmer.-, b.ovn in free America
realize the ;uhan:aees they hold over the farmers :r. many part? of Europe? How many have heard the t-rm "Feudal System' as appliil to conditions in Kuropo' The "Feudal System" is a relic of the days v.hen a 'ille of the soil wore a brass or iron collar around his neck and was bought or sold or siven away -with the land when some noble m'de a transaction in real estate. Trn was eight or ten centuries aco. "Cut today, the ons and daughter? of that nobleman on d that same land and many more broa.i ac res acquired by marriage and sreat purchase, and the man who tills the soil, the descendant of the fellow with the brass collar around hi neerk. has but little more chance today to acquire on" cabbage p,,r'1 G an he had rub' or ten centuries a?o. It is true that today he wears no brss collar but he might as well. Tho nobleman will not sell the land ami the farmer is forced to pay such high rentals in the shape of shares: that he can never accumulate enough money to buy even a rabbit for his feast at a weeding. The rabbit belong to the nobleman's soil and to the nobleman and the farmer goes to jail as a poacher if he shoots it or traps it. or el? escapes with a whipping administer-d by the nobleman with his ruling whip. A very large part of Europe is cursed today with the "FetiJal Sy.tem." ' While the American farmer may economize and buy land and fit on the front porch of his home and call it his own, the European farmer is fortunate if his rents do not eat up the profit of the soil. The nobleman will not sell the land, because he does not intend to work. Onl'y the peasant and the artisan work where the "System" prevails. Work is something ignoble. And so the farmer produces the grain and eats not. and prune the vine and. must be content with a tin. red vinetar, fermented 'rem th hulls of the erape. while his noble landlord eats the white bread and sips tb vintaae .in". Germany is caste ridden. There are mote noblemen to the square mile in the kaiser's realm than any otbT part of the tlobe. And every nobleman is reared with the idea that work ia disgraceful, and wbn he won't -work some other man must toil and produce for him. In the mean time, the nobleman holds on to his are and sweats the peasan' ti!!e;- of the soil to the las; measure of heat and to the last shrunken grape. Here is a picture for fhe mind to contemplate; Let. the kaiser's armies, commanded by the.-e noblemen, defeat the American forces in France, sail over to these shores and dejeat our armies here; lay hold of the American farm? and apportion them among these noblemen with the everlasting permit to collect fhe fruits of American soil. What ihen would that canceled mor'cage he but a mere scrap of paper? What would
tip the w-nrth nf p!l the linremitf inz toil that made a rnr-
den of that farm, what the worth of nil the effort that permitted the lifting of the mortgage?
This picture is not impossible of realization.
nnlv w-;iv tn fcpon it oft the canvas and mil nf
keeping a
market, as failure to make any preparation for
tirsi two and a half ears of the European war was
I t-u t-t , i in ivrt'i'iii!; us um ot iiiai war. we want latin
preparedness, and now.
IlllAddlN'i; about making three or four J1KALS for her family out of ene MTTLI-: chicken
,YVK fel a.-i If w would hate like
HO W -tn- win-t he - w ar-line.
.TF.RSl'V wife yays she finds it rife aioim to
f"el he
a.-i If w would hate d"ir arnitnd that huu
WHY GARY IS BUILDING OCEAN LINERS.
toe j si.t:
- i'AX'T you remerr.her
! 1 ITKN" von irrt t.i e,it around the
had place in the apple I'NTII- there wasn't any? A kid has to he mighty dull about
h
kid has tn a
F!!V ute thirds can't be said I Tti TliKl of course tb father is
A TJIT of a wag. "WK too have often wondered Y11V sorr.e guy doesn't cioss ft carrier rdffron
The emergency that prompts the need and the situation that so many ships are to be duplicated in design
aiiows a naif hundred inland bridge and tank sho;3 ! ;o become the fabricating plants for turning out ocean!
uners. I he metal is freighted to the seaboard and assembled a' the nhip yards working under tho direction of the Emergency Fleer Corporation, a government organization. One- of these inland ship-building fabricating institutions is the American Hririce plan at Gary. It uses the steel from .the Gary steel plant and punrnes th plates, shapes and other structural manial. The next
step is the assembly at the ship yards. Besides Gary.'; Indiana Harbor and South Chicago, -which also hivt I plate mills, are aiding in this work. South Chicago. 1 has a shin vard on the faltitnet rlvrr wliicti o-tt,mi.i. i
And launches oceangoing freighters; and all the pl.tt ol NOT DONE FOR,
mills of the region help 10 turn our sidings for submarines and destroyers. A fabricated ship in the words of President Robinson of the Merchant Shipbuilding corporation, which assembles the Gary-fabricated vessels, is one "on which the tork of punching and shaping the plat.es and to some extent assembling and riveting, is done in a fabricating shop, ordinarily employed for bridge or tank work, rs distinguished from the usual practice of doing it in a shipyard punch shop."" Mr. Robinson further adds that "the construction of fabricated ships makes It possible to have the steel work done by those who are specialists in the line of fabricating steel wih all the special tools .and labor-saving devices at their disposal. It relievos the mind of the shipyard operator trom the
SI'AXK Iter husband. PUllKLT a geography al -matter. IT would never do in Homewood. KXPKF.T just in from the front SAYS the war will end in six months. WHADD.TA know about that JUST an we were thinking' of a nice fishing trip those fellows will BEGIN hinting at peace AND keeping us with our ears to the gi mmd. HAVING worn all our XMAS neckties once we are
k people in the face with
arm: to
o tdeat COXSC IENCE and IN'l-IMTi: relief.
a look of
Voice of the People
mul'itude of detail that joes with such work, reducing his problems to those of engineering, erection, riveting and assembling by the workmen, eod by the installation of other units of outfit and equipment. The manufactured ship is a commercial possibility -only if dupl'o.-re ships are built." .
JUST BEGINNING i n i f. tuDt;T or tiik v n. He was a hustler hoy of tender years. Who r'adily o'uservrd his country's rail. True bjavry hod bunished all his fears
And :n a la nous regiment, me m oi ue ; ri.
i
, TELLS Or PALESTINE,
Editor TIMES: How can one knowing tlr history of every ereat nation write an item such as 'Talestine a. Disappointment.' It is anything but this to the Zionists. It Is th realization cf all their hopes that Palf stine should nirain go into the hands of its true possessors, the Jewish peo-
Our country is at war. The fateful hour Ls truck, fraught with morrientous events. Solemn if ihthought of it, aud though reachless still the lixipor! r it, yet inexorable are its demands. Loii and anii-u:: had hoped that our land would not be drawn :. the seething vortex which has engulfed po many of ;!. nations of the "world. Long and anxiously had v hoped that the lurid flames of war would not cast Vbaneful shadows upon our shores. Our govern i-p-:. withheld no effort to avert the pen!, while our presid--employed the whole ascendancy o' his great inte'd'
and his high position for the prevalence of the ideals of a true. per.;:;:. Americanism. But what was so ardently and so whole-heartedly desired was not i be. Our country had to take up the arms that were forced into her harp'-, had no choice but to grasp and wield the weapon wherewith to defend honor, to vindicate the right and the justice of tier cause, and to in? ;: a triumph that will be the victory of civilization and humanity. In the solemn hour, then, when her fortunes are at stake, when a!'; that she has stood for, and stands for, is jeopardized by the hazard o' impending warfare, will not her sons hearken to her call, will they r.'.buekle on the armor of the conflict and, rushing to her rescue, lift hifl. her glorious banner of liberty and justice? Our president having spoken, and our national representatives having spoken, the response to the voice of the authority they embody will be that we will rally around our flag with the completest fullness of devotion, and with loyaleet hearts and sturdiest arms place all that we have and all that we are, at our countrv'j eervice. We will not shrink, then, from any sacrifice in her behalf. We w:!i 3o, in a word, what our fathers have done in this loved republic of our.; from the time it was set up among the nations, and at every time thai a hostile hand was lifted sgainst her in the sweep of her beneficent, g!.rious career among the peoples of the world. Our path of duty lies clear before us. May the blessing of Almighty God enable us to walk in i: steadfastly and unwaveringly to the end.
all.
Sin scarred the bey e r long became. i
And drifted down to life of sained name.
Those who have studied history will
ed States should draw labor from the inlands of the sea and the o rient, and that every business man should stick a nign over his desk reading. "Germany is winning' the war." I wonder what he means. by these statements? From ail newspapers. Germany is losing every Cay, and while it may take thre or four more years to whip the Central powers, the defeat of the German autocracy is a sure thing. The drawing of labor from the islands of th ea and Africa a!on caused a lot of trouble and bloodshed in this countr.v, and if Mt. Gary thinks that the people of this country are fools enough to make the. samw mistake he. has one big think comin? to him. Of course it would be a big thing for the steel trust and other large corporations ti have a lot of isrnorant people whose standards of living have beer, of the lowest to take the places of the workmen of this country, who have set a standard of livina- much higher than that set by those whom he wishes
Cne night retaining from a desperate f ra y In front, line trench; along t'n path he MrugKlfd alona: M'-ttdnks h sttin-.hlm trod the homeward way: Feu hartC Sweet must" b'f'Kniw hirr.
.. . ....... . -u... . v ! the nation without
J n 1 o I II '1 1 OI 1 1 1 II . . I . . Iinini'iii. i;1; ; r . , . ,
JO i'lept. I-Tf entered and at last found rst.
agree that Rome or any other country jto bliDg nere so tnat the profits of the
..oi. n m a oay. At tne disco- ' trvrtt and oth(.r corporations may
ery or America, Columbus did not find the land of America already cultivated, ftcurisliinsT with prosperity, and everything ready for him to take possession of. Ho did not expect this. Neither
na!
sOMi-THlNG else to worry a. out. uhio Stat- Jour-! says: . !
"The income tax blanks haven't come yet and we suppose the government printing office has to at'end tn the really essential things first, such as The Congressional Record and that funny little paper George Creel pets ou'.
"And i tic .
ill his sleep f
ft 7'P'a r . Sees the hotitf n w .
.'ely doth
vision 1
in Scottish villas'
C'.nd sw eet Meed mother always to him
l
ad church w h
WHAT do we fathers amount to an;, how '.' what the Toledo Itlade says; "According to the fe.meini.sts 'the father ;s only a casual aren'.' They had to give the poor fellow some recognition, if only enough to establish roennnsibilif v."
look UP
'al vat .'" Th" souz w nt st tone. 1 1 waking, f
The
i- ,t v iu iy--'!- via in-: i.flini.i tfiuu u'n in .iatiij lp-'tel t "it i
is to bring German military autocracy to its knees I
defeated.
The sanest economy the American producer
can practice is to lend his money to the Government j so that it may be enabled to banish the feudal system
and restore all men to their rights. Money advanced to the American government is money saved against possible extension of the " Feudal System" to the American shores.
MR. WILSON'S peace terms are al! that could be
is too bad lhat be couldn't have slipped
restricting the allies and Teutons
from us-ng garlic.
j LILLIAN RCSSELL. the beautiful, says to live j in the past is To become old. At that we cn't help j thinking of how cheaply we used to get coal two years ! RSO.
UNCLE SAM WANTS THESE MEN.
The city of Gary has had i ; self sternly brought to attention by the war department, which is eager to enlist !he services of twentv-slx policemen, one-third of the department, summarily dismissed Rfter years of service when the new administration wen! in'o power. There is no civil service on Gar and men, trained in police work, backed by earts of service, who have contributed reguinrly of their earnings to the police pension fund, from winch i hey will now derive no benefit, pre ousted without notice. It seems ih-jt their thief offense is that they have been politically independent, which is something that the steel political
; DESPITE their energy the Chicago bank bandits ! do not seem to have gotten in as much as some of the
Chicago beef rcatnates.
i 1 a t'HIIIC I . n w i 'ea I.i To niveau.
The f.jtttt was o'e
dors the Jew- expect this of Talestine.
He is satisfied that his foremost dream I hps become a. reality, that the land j without a nation has been restored to
IxnJ, that he. its
rishtful owner i at last the true pos-
i sessor of his fatherland. Palestine. I The author of the editorial on Pales
tine a disappointment fails to see how we can gt-t enough Jewish colonists to becin life anew in the new- country. Had ho studted the history of the Zionist work in the last twenty years, be would have hirned that lor that number of
i yom.i. colonies have already been estab-
j lished thrre. and that the number of h j Jewish settlers going over there in the f j next years wiil only be limited by the amount of transportation available.
The author further states that Pales-th-tsand i ,,n0 no industries. History tells us that Palestine is rich alone in itg vines, sweetlv J nd fruit trees, to "say notiiine; of the j silk worm culture, growth of wheat, md he Lad ! propagation of geraniums for the i dist i llat ion of perfume. hle.;np i -We. th people of tho Jewish race, are
I wiltins to aive our time, our money, and d and Master. I surrender all!,r necessary, our lives m making Faleslov'ng. tender, all sufficient ! ,Jne land of commerce jni of industry. not rich alone in its storied past, but In j its present, and above all. its glorious
l:ei o dvir.c- lav I lulure.
... - - - ... .
SO d .1 ! . H- sees the green
k n e ct i f j how-: '! heard the old time song.
to The.
Tho ti
My La:
ins.
i ti d In"
wax fat. The orientals he speaks of bringing to this country can live on ulia't a workman of this country would starve to death on, and as the wisps of labor is set by what it costs labor to live, the orientals would be a irood invest
ment for Mr. Gary and oth
of hi!
tv ."I hi
-i t p-ire
lor.p w e i y V'-.1 i t
that
ea
r sea r- hers
ear, he heard
In muddy trench, w-her
found him tinne for! Gone west T
them SAV. Hut he replied, life e'nbi ng fast, eyes Brow-inn dim. 'Not, done for -just beginning gone w est. yes str: f : 1 1 H.m I see. and Mother. I . her,"
Gone to the dawning
a beauteous
IF Mayor Hodges of Gary ran only be bis friends his ror.d will no' be so roekv.
savtd from i lii'im nisy hi men'.ov- live to gjv.It's r-i'iniR":'ti)n! w-e nay sc.- the dawn
That nrtngrth uni . ersal peace and right ; t liv,
hath again. sas sn exchange, i And wl-.en th
the chilblain.-. ! be pant.
. j e l mo t . t
, , . , , ' homo's! last
su. r. la-.iiyi.- seem hi ue onerv;rC tuoic payjess j days than usual. i
ENCKE'S cutiii t And for that mat er
'O ru e
storm be o'er, the strife lies sen's door home.
I .
ETVMONP KINNIGEN.
IjERTHA TAUSSIG. The ahoye writer ha - totally misconstrued the purpose- of the editorial. We ar perfectly familiar with the Zionist movement and its groal, and suughl to convey that Palestine djives no prospect in itself as an industrial and manufacturing country. All honor to the Jewish love for Palestine, but we have yet to be r."fivinced that one of the busy and dominant factors in our national development at least will emigrate to the land he loves aril whose capture from the Turk has caused such joy in Christendom.
kind, who believes that lsbor is a just prey for those who live in luxury on that which labor produces. A man with the Intelligence of Mr. Gary is supposed to have should knowbetter than even to think that the American labor ins men and w omen wiil stand for another period such as we bad in this country before the war of "sixty-one" to "sixty-five." Through the whole talk of Mr. Gary tan the one thought of .profit. But excessive profit in ti.-nes like the world is facing today is treason, and those who are planning and talking of ways and means to make more profit at the expense of honest labor are themselves of the worst kind and the most severe punishment should be dealt out to them by the government. War is a horrible thing st 'ts best, but when men wage war for th s-o!e purpose of enriching themselves, it becomes won than horrible, and even worse than what General Sherman said war was, and no person on the earth ceres to go tn the place that Sherman said was war. Still if there is such a place as Sherman said war was. such men as Gary, who believe 1n making profit out of the blood of the working men of this, or any other country, will only be going to their light home, it they land in the place that Sherman itid war was, and that is hell. W. J. DANIEL.
Lake County 9 s Roll of Honor
Laka Qounty'a dead in the war with. Germany and Austria-Hungary: ROE.EP.T MAKKEET. Hammond; drowned off toast ef New Jersey. Jtvy ARTHl'P. BASEI.EPv Hammond; d; d st Lion Springs. Tex., of spinal meningitis. August 26. JOHN SAMBEOOKS. East Chicago; killed in I'rsno.-, Sept. is. ARTHUR r.OCERTSON, Gary; killed in France. 0 t. ;;l. EIECT. JAMES VAN ATT A, Gary; killed at Virny Ridee. JAMES MAC KINZIE. Gary; killed at Vimy Kidgc. I-MiElMI BIEPZTKI. Ea-t Chicago; killed in France. Xov. 27. HAKKT CCTHHERT LONG. Indiana Harbor; killed In acci-d-nt at Ft. T:li.-s. Texas, Ic. 10. EDWARD C. KOSTBAl'E, Hobirt; killed by explosion in France. Dec. "Z.
6
IMEMORIAIvf
Make It The Last War.
MR. GARY'S SPEECH.
WAR if
a Pi
he sphere of diplomacy.
To The Editor: Mr Garv. head of the great steel r.or-
Enlht In The Woman's Army poration. in an address to the Commer
cial club of Chicago, said that the Unit-
By Cor.s;rvinr Foods.
IT DIDN'T HURT, BUT-
At Plattsburg army camp End Fisher who draws "Mutt and Jeff ' for newspapers and movies, has won his spins as an officer. Uecenlly the. students wee put through hurdle exerciser mounted on the llvliest horses in the camp. Fisher got over the first hurdle in his initial lessin. but at the second he was thrown and rooted up the dirt with his face. The riding- master came up and Inquired with a smile: "Did it hurt you Bud?' Fisher snapped bsck: "No, but it didn't do me an'- good."
BLOOD POISONING Band's Wizard 0JaSaf first Aid Traatnunt How often lockjaw and blood poisoning result from the neglect of a slight scratch or little cut! Hamlin's Wizard Oil is a safe and effective first aid treatment. It is a powerful antiseptic and should- be applied immediately to wounds of this kind to prevent danger of infection It is soothing and healing and quickly drives out pain and inflammation in cases of sprains, bruises, cuts, burns, bites and stings. Just as reliable, too. for stiff neck, sore feet, cold sores, canker sores, earache and toothache. Get it from druggists for 30 cent If not satisfied return the bottle and get your money back. Ever constipated or have sick headache? Just try Wizard Liver Whips, pleasant little pink pilis, cO cents. Guaranteed.
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