Hammond Times, Volume 12, Number 175, Hammond, Lake County, 16 January 1918 — Page 4

Pa err Four

THE TIMES. Wednesday. Jan. lb. 191 S

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS

lair... with on acioid. and they hip not liars. "American soldif rs in France are in es..s mora dancer than they

--. ....... . count ho if m t;ic service in the United States. We BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING Si PUBLISHING : h,io found moral conditions most satisfactory."

The ftfv.'i end - or not - Iier.ts. Pickett should be at

-i:i"ss 'turn spreading gossip of tlie gutter

bom his betters. If lie must 'police'- others it

r

i a . i .n ered at

Tim. Iit .'iiT.i - md-iv. Kr.iere.i in the p.. !n'r IS. 1'i.i. Toe I.HkP V.ur:'. T.il.r:. r'rilif t frm p st i'.. fl. i:1 The iinrv Evening I'tm.

COMPANY.

1 .l .! .

i, ion J.

I .'I ' I"'

T

i I

t :

a i t

M sr.

.1

Ni

le

e

O hi- that

ion , protrsslP... -r din't .mo, : ln! i ;i i ! n t s

can fmd a fertile field for his activity church members lure at home who nre onu' of whom are Peeksniffing around of i u ohihii ion. New York Herald.

f "FT

0

Greatest of the War Kings at His Desk.

WST gMfwjenyrnrtMiww wnsy sgCT-JTivsriptii

FOKKKiV t or Hud. i i nn . .

ADVI'KIMXI. OK Kit 1 :.

DO NEWSPAPERS WEARY YOU?

I li re pi i ib.-C

T);i Kl HONK. lar.im.-m-i rprlva ;e ex, bans1 1' 'all lor iv!iat"ft li-favitii. 'arc 0."r:r Nn-v: A Thompson. V.nii Oh. cage . '"' Evan T'si Chicaaro .. ; .;. r'vi-.ag i. Too T:mv ''".i:in Hrh.ir NVv t ei

! -. 'i : T. .i Harbor Reporter C V!r. mg '-oou !'..--

i i'i ' 1 '' !o' of truth in the rom-

e l ln:s!:.::i .MMcnir Monitor alien it ;

Sere j. wt niire .s attached to the reading of I 1 '!" i:npe;us ill the papers, nowad. vs. Added!

rersors. forifrollt-rs. and all. other officials '(. ;! what j ou are t, do r not. to do. vou find

. Tel . . I

Larger Pnid-Up Circulation Than Any Two Other Pacer? in the Calumet Region.

Tiim

I lie w ay '.V 1 1

in

i 1 '!

!; '' S u . I .(-! l ' a T -.1 ;X

.!! i"

-

'I' sua a ;:..',! ii i o V ; ; t

!!! on a''i' ;i w!.:tt 1 O'i are to do or not to !,- -r fin.i 1

.I'-.U.-nali.-t thinks it !. t-s.ary to add lus hit. The t PuMu . Rood hun'oredly puts up with all this admonition, iiTui rjs- as much heed as he likes. Certainly in

"ccli it intends otng its own --weet I the conversation with militarv terms!

i a i::ini,.n .vorthy of that hle.ised word 5c?opo- j .';oi:if -times it i qure ..;-ver, like ihe pirl sorter I oormi! a; office who addres:.ed her pal cm hl ! Wliy don't J mi speak plain Kns.li.h ? Put tins; !

it!' ii.it ;.u round : our real meanin. : all riRh: een y comes to d"cei in the J

edn't die joursdf in so di p whrn it s kinu to." I

t . .'

. - ; . , Mi i i I ...... .r .....

5

Of F

1 1 k ! m r.

'''.; a ha it,- m I 'a mou fla Re i.-

eilf'hr-... le.it i . on!;.- me on 're ;

Hi

ALOCfiT

K:;)g .Mbri of F?lgiUm i. the hsrd--l o r U r, kirK of s!l the kiti2." at

i This photograph shows him in

lifadiua i fi and it is tiir laiot

pl'' or ii fli takoi of l.u.i.

NEWSPAPERS FOLLOW ORDERS. NEWS AND ITS POWER OF ATTRACTION. Occasionally we l.e-,r bit in? eomment on '.lie fedllow used we are to ?.-, ing our news served up to j oml and state authorities on the part of certain merits mornins ami evenings ;:nd often at aoon and how ch;in:5 because or rules .-.nrf rerntafmn toj.t

hard it is for us to do Teitho-.it it was shown Sunday. ! For most of us. due to the fclizr.aid. we sa-v no j papers Saturday ; it ras a restless day. N U'eer wa j there any rai'.k. On Sunday for some neither milk, j fresh TJKat, movie pictures, newspaper?, ico cream nor heer were to be had. P.ut most people who use those) ihincs got along very well except, doing without papers, j The hunger tor news was unsatisfied. In place of fresh : milk there was condensed milk. Paeon and ham or veg- j efables took the place of meat. The Victrola and warmth j oT home substituted for other amusements. But there is no substitute for the newspaper. Docks travel, ro- I tnance and technical works; magazines pietorial, thril- j

lers and those of the war: each voiurue stood like a

V.'ashington and Indianapolis and dealing with tne eonsftvation of certain food commodities. The com ment grills the newspapers for agitating conservation at tin"- reuuest of the government. Among theso newspapers the Times lias been numbered for doing what if patriotically believes only its duty. The merchants who arc making threats are obviously d 'in; an extremely unwise thing. If they, are carrying or. their business in such a wnv .a not in H. ,n

thes. governmental regulations, they have themselves to blame for whatever happens. The newspapers do noi make these rules and regulations. Thv are printed only at the advice snd solicitation of the United States now in a. stst nf war-

shin ready to carry us abroad or into other enchanting now nrosecnt ir.sr that wr- u-;ti, , '

' ' ' ' rusiriniv r. 1 liey lave

1ST. tr.e.r ouenngs paueu. it was news that was j o other recourse than to print them.

realms.

wnn'ea. After all is said and done, after men have done without food, drink or tobacco, they do not show the

restlessness as when they can't learn whr-.t the world is ' Th Tk;i f'an uriVf their ton dollar and seven dollar doing. That was evidenced by the eaueraess with which j banquets where the food wastage is enormous yet. the Saturday's TIMES, delivered in certain parts o: the ; l'l"r saloonkeeper w ho served a little cheese and crackcounty on Sunday morning, was received. P was ? how n : c 1 s or a '"0' !ln'1 o the laborer who comes in for his on Sunday by the way two thousand men and boys S"5-5 of h'- Il:l,J to cut it out. crowded and shoved to get some stale copies of the! 'n': Ja'oonm;n has to be the goat for everyboJv it

THE SALOONMAN THE GOAT.

MAX is always deriding woman

l"OR bein- v

nn

t WHEN

j Car?

j

1 it

iian j et who i

VET w never j.aw

di-.osn'l

TflY to look like a 17-year-old t KID when lie has his pi"t:te taken, j

NOTE where a younr hired girl has JL'ST inherited $2(H'.H0 FROM a kind benefactress and we sarroe Tlintl' won t br any tiowirte aftei this IN finding a maid who will w..i k FOR $3.5" a week in the hpe OF inheriting somethtnK. r.FINit naturally ftup.U aud obtuse

we would Just abreit s 5.-,

RAT poison. TVE v iolate no uonfitlcm o IN" stating that in a few days au KEN Kornileff will have VI LIMA'S death record beaten. IT may he a cold sluggish winter HUT th- average man finds that will HAVE to move along j 1st as spry he d d

I.A.ST

Made in Hades V'oofldendal letter from thr Deril the Klrr Iln-odfil lr Karrne H. . UlnL-e of Tlte A isrilr.ntrs.

Lake County's Roll of Honor

T

Infernal Palace. Hades. My Dear TVUheim : He fore wo started this war. any arl.cle would sell faster in almost, any country if "Mad in Germany" was

Htamped on it. Confidence in Ihe pro- j d'j.-t and erood w ill for Germany put j the nale across dead .,; . j

But now my dear Kaiser, 1 -. what you hae done. Ti have Plans for world -onivet '.Made in fiermahi " S-rnrped Rei?i'itn Tieitise. ".Judo in Jernian:, " Poison Gases '?.tade :n Gi-r-any" Plans f f r Armenian l!-0;,- fVars "Made in c;rman'''' I,i;s.tan.a M : rders " Md de in Gr-

;:..inv ' Broken Pledge. "Mad in Germany" j Hymn of Hat- "Mad- in Germany') Zcpp'Pn Daby-braimngs 'Mad in! German..-" j Ttarharit-es acainst Prisoners "Made j in Germany" I P.etrayals of Net;'ra!. "Made in Oer' many"

Sink-witho'.t-a-trae Xo!' "Made 1:1 Germany" It's pood work all niht, TA'iiiieim. but

if vcei don t watdi out. you never can I use "Made in Germany" after the war. j An article marked -Made ;n Hades" 1 would sell belt'-r. I'm afraid we've ove-done this lldnt?. what do you thin':'.' i Faithfully your ft '.end and aK . j p. oiz'-. .r,. ; !' ince of Devils and Kaiso of 1 1 a i . .-. !

Lai a County- fland la th war wtta Oermany and, AnatrU-Hnn. rry: P.OBERT MARK LET. Hammend: drowned on coaet of NevT1 Jersey. May 28. ARTHUR FASF.I.IiR, Hammond: died nt Lion Springs. Te.. cf sp'.nnl mentnitHis. August -S. JOHN PAMIIROOKS. East Chicago: killed in Prance. Sept. li. ARTHUR ROBERTSON, G&ry: killed in Frnoe, Oct. St. LI EFT. JAMES VAN ATT A. Gary: killed at Vimy Ridge. JAMES MACKINZIE. Gary; killed at Vimy Rldpe. UOLPII PIEDZTKI. East Thi-r-ago; killed in France. ..'ov. L'T. HARRY" OCTIlHEUT I..ONG, Indiana Harbor: killed m necidotit at Ft. Blif. Texas. Dec. P'. EDWARD C. KOST1 JA DE. Hobart: killed bi ti.piosion in France, De.-.

1

4t I

M EMOR I AM

1.

Chicago Examiner, refreshing nevertheless, for they j in. They even want td put him out of bustnestl;i ridged the gulf that shut these storm-bound people ottMov(' ,hr times when they will force him oui. Here

from the rest of the world.

THE LIBERTY LOAN AND GERMANY.

someUijy comes iilon? and wants the poor man's tlub closed up because it i u.-ing coal. Now the state food administrai o;- lias ordered the

i. ..mum: 10 cvr out serving eggs v.-;a drinks. That's

very well, lie should stop the practice, but wnv

1 pick on the saloonkeeper why not so afer others wbr.

preparations ami Americas pan icipai 101 m o"'Cnlv Tiolat

The military masters of Gerniuny have maintained j a;

attitude of absumed great, contempt for America's J

openly

.it! w a

war. The Kaiser, Ilindenbure. and Ilertling have ail vo.ced this contempt. Vet there are evidences in plenty that in fear of America's entry in force hvo the war next. Spring Germany is massing tremendous forces on the western Iront, is preparing to hurl great masses of men info the jaw? of death in a desperate effort to reach a conclusion before the might of America l"Comcs effective. The two Liberty Loans in this country have no

doubt had a great psychological effect on the German

mind. The ease with which the tremendous sums have j jj,-.rVjCe

loen raised, the entnusiasm of tne workers rnd of he-

forbidden practices?

For instance why not make the barber stop using etgs for shampoo purposes? Is there any more wasteful usage of erg? than breaking them over a man's head who ought to use soap and water to wash his thatch 0

we FAIL to THAT C

tage bill WITIMUT load, 11 prohibition ridr.

THE funniest tl

FN! ESS . nd ejus:;.

WHAT ea!

Ill C.e : 1... w arils

to

d - c ,s n

PP'd on

1 e t ti t n 3 Lac a I

What is a Pro-German?

B j

Herbert quU-k. I nlted tate Ijtm Uai tiuDiilo.

under.

arc llniii--. In u.:ii a c:

portent, not be . ourt.

j c 1 ir.KS a 1 c tijrhtiei

I TV

they are oread".:; things, thin?. t!.ios v hi. h can cllowed to pas a.; of no ao

Gerir.ai - ih pencti .1 tin ;-y c'cit try cf the world with her i.'.red -sp'-and traitor.?. She (i:.-.jrSd:.:n.d tl

i.'.s.ari arv.-..- tci-...i;-. tivirois s

A pto-German is a r..an wl.o. by pri- j the revolution. S.lie knr-v the plau 1 vate or puolie utterance", stands in Tiussian battle before:. an I thro ;:-

the wav cf a whole-heartea pros.ecui.iou iraitors. mi nas v.: ion tM.

with sp:ea and 11 aires.

ed I. W. TV., without

finding fault witn ' r:u..'-rix an..

cf this war -nd the defeat or tue i,er-

r.ian will to conquer.

He may do it b

, .u- ...... tt r-.v At. it ; citizen."

ty impracticable peace arstumer.ts. He I Is there an..- American -may do it through a mistaken policy, lion? for peare. Not one He t.v do it because he is in the pv i there 3 l-ri'on t.y Frcc l

of the German Government. He m.t:-' j do it because he has been befooled and ,

Sue r.a Cn-r loi.Vt. She 1. d'-b;i,;oh. c o

J!

ur.derst ind hew it faf engross voted for the s

iff-

rneau to a woman "t away to size up the

spring about once

i l dow n w i tli a !

i g we I-, a e

long t:me is that

the

THE MIGHTY FALLEN.

The administration has been calling on dome.uic vants. btP lers, footmen, and thel ike, to perform war

u; (he jiortals which open into the sacred pre

cincts of the War Council at. Washintrti-m ar -iHr,,i

.... 1 -I ..c 1 . t. . .. .t .... r-- ",Mt1.

s'i imiiiji'im ami ui, ii-i'iet-o.. i ne note -ai am, aim 1 ne . 0 tne vjsiir(,r b

heavy oversubscription to both loans are evidences that

' tie American people are in earnest, ,na' t nev are oe- .uir, Twm, .. . 1, , . ! 1 - jwnicn i.iojwh Jcuerson detotd his 57 veats of service'' lrnd the American Government, and are iilintr to make Wo ran ??c old Andy Jackfion (rvin, m zat (hj, the saeritices rnuiv.d and to support o the utmost our! p:-0:K!ignadian beauty. Nation fit. war. I

That money taik.-

of colored Colossus panoplied in re

splendent livery. is this the type of democracy to

READ

foo TRADE is seriously considering a SUBSTITUTE AFTER, that we ate ashamed to look at our WINTER overcoat without titterin?. OUR duty to our country FORCE? us to smile cheerfully at the wife

SETS front OF us

SHORTAGI WHO can

NEW styles for

or twite" a wp'k? SOMEHOW cr other though w-e have LISTENED as hard as we possibly could

W

have re

the

t heard as much uian w ho boats about

a plateful of

w heaMe.-ss da .'

r : e b 1 e a d i r I

on

FROM

wearing HIS V. V. V.'s all winter long, as we DID last November. WHEN we look over last weeks exchaong.d which

Itivr lust hccrun to seen in '

WE wonder whether they hae any IDEA what wo have GONE through in going without them for tl-e past few- davs?

Lambooied by those who aie iu Germany' 3 pay.

The German will to espano 0.. conquest mast be broken by defeat. If that rapacious w-.1l be not broken, the war will not give, us peace. In all the history of .the world thre never existed a conquering nation l-. fit to rule others than are the Germans. This is true because the German policy i.i ao brutal, so cruel, so scientifically exterminating. In the streets of every town In German Poland children are falling and dying of starvation. Children 8 to 12'years of ae are being carried through streets by their parents bcause they are too weak to walk because of starvation. The Poles are being exterminated as fast as poseiMby Germany Just as th Armenians the oldest Christian nation in t.ie .-!. Kir. r evtermtnated by the

WOIli"-.c ....1 .

ian or Russian. Gr rr.u a v-e.-'. . 1 ij- the renter e another c!:sno peaie. Jt ruusi man pop!r or

B-Jt

. .lees not ' N.Ht.hr.- j, m a r or I ' s ' -uat rot n gv-at !e;.

t f.-a w e wailing to. Ir must be a re! be made with the Ge--w-ith a r, lined Hoher-

F, :t he w'1,0

3ollern one or the other.

talts par as if he only ionfs for

os if he were only commissioned to make peace, rr.ust want a ditTerent sort of peace from the sort we must lave. Disttutt hi:n. He may be sincere, but he rr.ey not be tru. The world haa irfthe past, been conquered by tiaitors oftener than it was ever conquered by arnt. The Mcicn people fought each other into stavei--to Snain. Let u not be bought bv German gold into slavery to GermaT .

an old proverb, and the voice

and and

of the- billions of dollars representing the First

Second Liberty Loans wa ; heard across the ca r-'i-rC'.-! conviction even to the ol'pc...-srd German. PHARISEES AND HVPROCRSTES. United Ftate. soldiers' a'-cir-i r now- takes ;t back. Methodist drv of.i-"i;-.l adaiits cond'.?ions have beterrtd.--Headet0. Tie is Know n officially as Kesoarch S'-cretary he Methodist Episcopal Board of Temperance and his friends as fleets Piemen. Wheiher h glorio'S

FEED THE BIRDS. The snow bodes Rood for the wheatfiplds. hut it

! makes it hard for the birds. Don't forget to throw out ' some crumbs or a few hie? of suet. The good work of the snow can be further helped t.y keeping the birds 'alive. They'll kill 'lie jnsocls in the summer.

What Ails Germany By 3AMI BI. B. IMRDIMi Proffor of Earopeou History. Indiana I nier.it j. Selections from German speeches and printed utterances showing the state of mind which caused the war. Chiefly from publications of the Committee on Public Information, Washington, D. C.

! Olio in

not appe

:n

0

' ite

a

t'0 honorable entitlement, "reveivnd ' do

bur the episode in wheih he f euro? indir-a no oil eumstapees can be revered. Deets Pickett's Clip Shoot, tent out to

confined an ataek upon American sold jo rs in i so "yellow" as to .'lO-'rve not otbi' eharaetorj

t ban slandei ous. Now- P'oets says lr sorry ho s-?-t it out. as condition:- are re-ally epiit better." Of cour.' 'his belated semi-correct ion r.'-ver will catch up v. j-',.' ih" orieinal attaol-:; a . little thinv like that, hovvov-r. never bothers 'he holier-than-thou phuns'cs who hang to the skirts of prohibition, catnoulaging rs temporarce. ; The met: wlio have been c-.nt 1.,, France t(? fi i.tv' us arc pot angels. P would bo surprising jf --en, o: thorn did not ha e the , mo fa H n her iviniar- lor o. AM ;e sponsible i oiouy shows thjit fj.-mi.:! pi rshini- ! htts his for' e -veil in h-in i. however, and -hat tit-'- ;:: n I who ci;npt-if e it are not dt.-grafurr; 1 l';r ius'-i re -. brclc of j ;re an more t'n;?n they rt ,;. :.. ,. r .. r i ., , .. j whop they uo "ov er the. lop" y :i;ch .- ret n' 11. No j b'sco;- irlbute could he paid to thou, ;ha;i Cu-t c,;.otin.dl in the report of the Prot 'riant am! t'n'b'.iie -h.a plains, i i

i..ptjtd. "W have a clean aim.- .'' t -'il-. t he

HOW t).js? One bratKh of the covcrnmep.t asks us to print stuff that girls are needed in Washington, while another branch has issued a statement, warning ' ni to ke. p a wjv.

WHAT th deuce is the matter with this old world, anvhow? Wars, U-boats, prohibition, and high cost of livin-r sir enough without blizzards. Enough! Enouth: IT seems that if one- is woefully inefficient he has a good chain 0 t0 succeed ns bead of an army bureau iiov n a t Washington.

Mediterranean and the Atlantic. Iii:; tar kms France, will we intend to absorb en after another interests er those of

all the nrovmres wiv.ch neighbor on ; both

i Prussia. We w ill sue e?si ely annex j p's compelled to aitaci

Germans and Turks. v r.y .' L,cau Germany wants the property of the Poles for Germans after the war: and because thev want the property of the

Armenians for the Turks and Germans,

after the war. Their will ran and must be broken 1

j by defeat. It ia not the win 01 tne in- . (dividual German. It is the bloody., 'brutal, cruel, devilish will of the Gov-, iman government and the German rul-, ling class, mis-educated in the school; . which believes that war is the surr.nia- j torn of human good. J I A pro-German is anyone w ho stands , 'in the way of our 'successful pfo.oi- ! lion of th war. Every word that j falls from the trt) f iy American! lor is written by him arrie? ,t'i it a. . 'responsibility Kratr t'lan eve.- fv-1 1 isted in the history of this nation, t-ook ! well to what you pay or . j Germany has in this country bun- , j dretls of pr.pers printed :n th Grrts.an I tongue. Whether this ooeht to ti or i not ... a rave queetou:. If any of these ! papers ate loyel. I do ret know of 1 the-n. Sime of there may 1", but I iksve rot heard of them.

we shrink from attack, they can force j He who is for us is against Germany, us to submit to their will by dipl- ! nf w ho is not against Germany, tooth , n-aty. as the upshot ef the Moroccan ' e nj rail, in this war is not for Amer-

1 neMOiat ,ons shov.. 1 i.-a. I "If wo wish to bring about an at-! You, can tell th" pre,.Gern'n by an-'

f ..... . -. le 1. e i a Po'n.l V,-n.-r. o.-

against l-tussia. h

$100,000,000 a Month Paid to U. S. Warriors

WASHINGTON, Jan. 14. Nearly $100.0fi.f'OQ a month is required to meet the payroll of the fighting forces of the United States. This includes salaries in the army and navy, family allotments and compensation for various services. Family allowances or special compensatory features of the military and navs! insurance ppt arc not Included. The committee on public information, in a statement, shows that i'i December approximately .17,o0.0i was disbursed to the uniformed forrr of the nsiy.

I "Do not 1st us foipet the civilismg main neutral. We :nut. not hope to 1 .... pAvi.ti,' ' bring about t'rs attack by v. sitinc task whtrh ti-.e docre's of r-.ov inti' , .. ,. r, , I passivelv. Neither 1- ian- e nor Russia iiave assigned to us. Tust as Trus s.a , nor EnrfUrid nP(i attack in order :ws det!ned to be the nucleus of Ger- )a further their interests. So long as

JAMES SIMPSON

many, so the regenerated Germany shall be the nu.-l"'is of a future empire of the West. And in order that no one shall b left In doubt we pro

claim that from henceforth our cor.- ,

tinental nation has a right to the sea. tack bv our opponents we must initiate ! other test: If h

r.ot only to th" North sa. but to hisn aetivr policy, which, without a' -j fainst Pa

c.KEATE.ST recrets of some war profiteers is hey lu'vo hijt one country to fleece.

that

A MONTI 1 hence ; ooo'is. Older your

t will be out of 10 Coats earl .

blizaids into

NVHOW. tiiis ;'orm -a era reicl' 'hi r--ti a bou t .

is one mil can loll

our

(Denmark. Holland. P'Ui'im, Northern i ,wifir1and. th-ii Tieiste and Vcnio, I finally northern Fratn e. from the Sarr.- ' bre to tlif Loire. This prezram we i fearlessly pronoun'-e. It i not the 'work of a madman. Tl:" er.-iere we initend to found will be no Utop-.a. 'e il a-.e tend1 to hand Cue mens of found- ; ins it and no cob', lien in the world sr. stop u." ) Bronsart von Se-lietlendoi f. 0 io' d by j 1 1. A. I.. Fisi.e- in The War. its C-iusoS and !sues. f 1 f I 4 .

Piej.liiica her Englitid that

would feel theni-

Oppor-

j is pro-German. 1 The armies and navies of ths pew1 ,.,-s are fighting our f ght. The;.- are 1 dyina by thousands every day to make

is pro-German

SOME mop scorn to have gotten snow

a.

TOO mail

-j:ow slackers.

-le.ivei eeru;i- "Let it l-.e the task tl en of our

! ploiuacv to so sh-'f le the nril.1 that ! hawks and Toi-nndoo.a jnd Racine CarI r may t'" atoe k"d by Fiati e, for ( d'.nals and Uimin squares wtU Toe-et in

t'--e;-e w.'ld t ea.-'e.nabie pros- I j d -.uuie-li. adei ,-t !et. r pa villjon

: (unities for u. h prnewluic are offered j the world safe for de.r o'-racy. If wa i j both in Africa and in Europe." win. we tnnl win boca use they do . Bernhardi. Goru any and the Nest r.iost of (he fighting and dying, while' ' War. (l&ll). ' ,.,-r or.ly do some of it. I i The enemy of Great Pria:n is pro- !

! Football Finalists to : '"- an ! , , . . i The enemy of R-issu

uonunue series .nd anti-Democratic.

; i ;ira?;i I' oo ,c:u j..-aRiic l uirii.sis ;. -s- The enemy of Italy is against Amer- , icrday ast'e-l t" '.-ontinue their el-m- p w. ! inatjon s'-rirs until the champion has The enemy of Fran.e is !o.-! 10 ever-.-j ben det.- ruiir-d. The 1 r.tendei-. are claim of patriotism. j Thorns. I-.gm Su'i 't- s, Raeme Cardi-i I'o not "t these p. , -.-Germans poison j rials. To-rnade.es and Mohawks. Mo- 'he atmosphere in your locality bv

slandering our allies without challenge. It is time to call dow n ii e man who

!v.ti -. ' 5t

I 1 b i.irtr-' 10 1 ui.. urn n.i. ,o.i..i, ui?

I

nn

ecl ti at Russia f 'o

t

'I

re- .-'iitirla

tsots aitamst our armies v:th tongue t pBn. no Tr.stfr what f.tc tbos,-.

Jai"s Simpson, vi e j,: esident of Mai shul! 1 i'-id & Company. Chicago, has been appointed Director of tii Chi. age. Distiuvt F.-dcf-wl Fteseio e baric for th: ee ye. a : s. and lias als11 been made Deputy Chairman of the p.oard of D:re. t'os.

PETEY DINK 'I'lin Way t (id ',nn Is i. ( 'oiiilain 1 the Janhor

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