Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 15, Hammond, Lake County, 5 July 1918 — Page 6

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS

BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING & PUBLISHING COMPANY. The Lake County Times Daily except Saturday and Sunday. Entered at tha po&toince in Hammond. June 25, 105. The Times East Chicago-Indiana Harbor, dally "'P1 FJunday. Entered at the postofflce ia East Chicago. November is mn

The Lako County Times Saturday and Weekly Edition. Entered at the postofflce in Hammond. February 4. 111. rnatea oniv in part

ine wary Evening- Times Dallv exc-pt sunaay. tereci at the postofflce in Gary, April 13. 1312. . . AU under the act of Mr.li 3. 1S79. as seconi-ciasi matter. .

The Huns are staggered at the clas3 of men they find opposing them. Instead of tired troops, war worn with four years of conflict, they meet vigorous athletes, laughingly advancing to meet the great adventure or whatever the gods hold in store for them, but, whatever it is, there is no step backward. That is for the other fellow. And the inspiring Influence on the weary allies of the

presence of these eager American soldiers can be esti-

FOREIGX 12 Rector Bui.diag..

ADVERTISING OFFICE,

.Chicago

TELEPHONES. ,.nl Hammond (private exchange) .'...3100, S101. sioj (Call for whatever department wanted) . Gary Office Telephone 1ST Nassau & Thompson. East Ch'.caco Telephone 931 F. L. Evans. Fast Chicago Telephone , East Chicago. The Times Telephone .si In.l.ana .Harbor Reporter Telephone .s Luker.s' News Agency and Classified Ad ,- tu, 1 1 1 1 - r inri ami Harbor

3 J - -HI

The only regret is that the War Department feeli it necessary to greatly restrict, if not entirely forbid.

mention of individual commands distinguishing them- j

selves, but that will come later. In the meantime, while cognizant of sacred grief in individual homes, we are proud of our boys and the outlook is bright.

WhitingCrown Point

.Telephone

. . . Teleption

Larger Paid-Up Circulation Than Any Two Other Papers in the Calumet Region. If you kjv any trouble getting The Times mi.ke complaint immediately to the circulation department. Tee Times will not be responsible for the return or any unsolicited a'rtiiles or Utters and w:ii nut nonce anonymous communication. Short signed letters of general interest pr.ntea fet discretion.

TO THE PARENTS CF SOLDI ER3. This newspaper is printing hundreds of letters from

our soldier boys across the sea. We are glad to have i

them. e hope that our vast army of readers will not paes them by for they are mighty interesting. There is nothing we will not do within our power for these soldier boys. There is one thing we must insist upon. Wo cannot accept the original where the owners desire them back. They must be copied legibly before being handed in for publication. We fully appreciate how precious these letters are and the desire to have them returned In setting them up they are soiled and sometimes mutl-

THEY ARE

WHERE

Hews of Lake County Boys In Uncle Sam's Service

-252

WHAT

i HERE and OVER THERE

THEY ARE DO UNO

1

THE PASSING

show!

Lake County 9 s Roll of Honor

to ranswDs op the boys.

THE TTJflXK trnmm A&ilv to over a

thousand I.ak County men In tha U. S. A rt - TT C t mi i i

notice to f vnscRiBERS. ; in setting them up they are soiled and sometimes mutl- ! br eV. Xtt,.r

" you fall to receive your copy of The Times i as jaTpd on rack and ook, SO to be on th safe Sido please of 'ettla? the news. It Is a letter promptly as you have !n the pa3t, please do not thin i -i , .. j j . . , ltom homo for them. They want tl o ft ha- been lest or wa, r.t sent on time. Remember that n,e cPies of th for US and don t expect to see them I w. of tha boy. they know. You wit - c i - j- . ... i Tuft l: evcw .- f - vnn a i ah m l o V

s e!',. .... it- ' k th nt movement oi i ui i'riiii me nrM nicm. ior mere are nroisilv srri-f.s i v: 1 "' .

troops and their supplies; that there is unusual pressure j ahead Of yours and first come first served. It is not in various parts of the country for food and fuel; that ( po?sih-ie to eel a! ietters we rerejve the first dav thev the railroads have more business . than they can hand. a , promptly. For that reason many" trains are late. Th k ome.. for they are received literally by the score. He Times has lar-reased Its mailing equipment and Is co- patient and watch. They Will eventually appear. Wo cperatirsg- in every way with the postofflce department must U5e ou coiumns for the promotion of Other war to expedite delivery. Even so delays 'V activities and patriotic endeavors for Uncle Sam and cajfa of th enormous demanas upon the railroads ana w

once in awnue we must print a little news. Especially

anxious is this newspaper to get letters from the country

boys who are in France. We like the

differs from the citv bov's.

will seside with Mrs. Mackey.

her granddaughter.

the withdrawal cf men from many lines of work.

tSs ik

-4 Jt

A

REPENTANCE OR DESTRUCTION. President Wilson's great Fourth of July speech is one that every patriot should read. There is one point that it leads up to that is important, and that Is in crushing Germany, to put her where she will never stir up any more woes. Americans dream of a world federation to follow this war, including all the important nations. British th;!.ittr: in general take the- same view. The French look at the

matter a little differently. They are in favor of such ; league only oa condition that Germany shall be exclude from it. When we consider all that France has sufr'ered n' Germany's hands, it is natural enough that the should refuse any association with Germany hereafter. He: attitude, however, is not based merely on repugnance She i3 inclined to think that it is impossible for hones nations to work in the same harness with Germany, tha no good-faith league could be formed with Germany in it "What head of a state," ,ks P-:mier Clemenceau'; paper, L'Homme Libre, "would ever consent to put his came at the foot of a treaty with that of the crimina' and lying Hohenzollern? Can such a possibility be imagined as the loyal President Wilson accepting from the hand of the Hohenzollern the pen with which' to sipn a pact of the reconciliation of their peoples? Never!" The Paris Temps says, more moderately but in the came vein: "So long as Germany remains what she is she excludes herself by her own act from any society of nations which she cannot herself control after the Prus sian manner. "A shadow of free nations Inveterately allied agalns the powers that prey is a reality which may be fore shadowed with confidence as a normal stage in evolu tion; but to try to create a league in which would bfound freemen and serfs, victim and executioner, thos who have suffered and those who have not expiated thei: crimes, would be a blunder." It is still to be seen whether Germany will "reman what she I?." That is the deciding factor. So far, sh shows little sign of changing. The government voice the same old intolerable spirit of autocracy and conquest and the people make no audible protest. It is plain enough that we can never welcome sucl a Germany, insolent, predatory and unchastened, into iratemity of free nations. Either Germany must change or Germany must remain an outcast. If we are obliged to leave her out of the lnevitabl peace federation, it follows that for our own safety w must deprive her of all power of harm. In other wordr If Germany refuses to make herself a fit associate fo decent nations, she must be crushed. If Germany does not soon repent, Germany "must b-destroyed.

viewpoint. It

The farmer boy who has

spent his life in the country has a different philosophy from the blase town boy. So let us have the letters c the farmer boys as well. The finest letter we have yet rad from the French front was written by a Hanover township farmer lad. Thank you.

Mr. H!( hard Seuatif, Jr., Robertadale, and daughter, Mrs. Thos. Rafter, visited the for inf r'tt ton. Edward Sch;:af at "rrt Sherman. ChiIl!coth. Ohio, the latter part of the week.

bcr's boy to icet to them. Oiwa It to

as icr tnsau iet us keep esca otner They wer very much pleased with the t

X, " , mZ lo " coruagi a u,.t amp there and sav the boy, are treator our boy in the service. Writ M ' , , , . , briefly or call up THE TIS4X3 aa an 0(1 fin'- their only regret being- they act oi patriotism. Do it now. ere unable to stay lonjtr enough to j visit all the Whitinfr boys. Park Superintendent Harry Jordan,) of Oary. received a card from his M'llbnr (louth, Rohertudale. has been brother fJeorge who has arrived safely ( transferred from Camp Decatur at the in Fiance with the engineers. Oreat Lakes Station to Camp Dewey.

! He asks all his friends to call or write i

to him as he would be glad to see or

EVERY once In a while I OUR mouth simply waters FOR a piece of old-fashioned-weddinr ; cake. ' I IT galls our withers j To hear some guywho knows as much ' about ; i ' PATRIOTISM I i AS a eea puss does about the garabed j mctor j

TELL what we ovightlto do to win the

I war.

HARD to see a girl's color come and go these days IT Just comes and stays until it wears

MAY not sound true RUT a certain lady who had to stand up in a crowded street rir the other day AND thought she was hanging on A STRAP was amazed to

SACRIFICES?

TURN OF THE TIDE.

Tber Is no inclination to throw our hat in the air and'eaout that the end of the war is in sight, but it has been checked, and the slowing up process all alon the lina is attributable almost entirely to the arrival on the scene of the American soldiers. The unified command, placing the troops of all nations under one generalissimo, has worked exceedingly well.

People who are moaning and gnashing their teeth in this country because of the war ought to go jump in the lake. It i? positively sickening to hear some people think out loud about the sacrifices they are making. As a matter of fact, the way people are fattening their rocketbooks as a result of the war and are trkin their pleasures as usual one would never think the country was at war for a moment. Let us take a copy of the Vienna Arbeiteneitung and translate an editorial for you. It says; A workmar.s .wife whose husband is at the front and who has to provide for four children was supplied at the horseflesh depot with rot i en meat. Th meat was submitted to us and found to be in a decomposed condition and utterly unfit for food. The sales department declined to hack th meat, the woman being referred to the central food bureau, where, after a delay of three hours, the intimation was made that "no food could be exchanged in any circumstances. "' This is scandalous. It is not enoueh that poor people pre obliged to buy horseflesh at exorbitant pr'.cr-s, but when the meat, owing to neglect, has become unfit for consumption, the officials will neither exchange it nor return the money pa d fnr it. Yet the working classes are constantly ordered to "hoid out" by those who have money enough or sufficient, influence to co'Timancl a food supply that keeps body and soul together. And yet we over here think we are making sacrifices and have the unmitigated gall to say so.

I- rank KtlokoTrakt. a l. . soldier, who returned to Gary several weeks ago cn a furlough and who was picked up by the police and placed in ja;l o; a charge of killing a young Serbian on the south sido last August, has been returned to the commanding officers at Camp Grant. Rock ford, HI. at which place he was stationed before his arrest here. J

hear from them at any time. His pddress is Camp Dewey. Company D. i F:rst Regiment. Great Lakes. 111. j

A card hnn been recelTed from Peter Eelman. a Highland boy. announcing I his safe arrival in France. j a !

FIN'D that she was hanging on our left ear. i WHEN you see a man WHO wants to reform everything In sight Pl'T your watch under yo-j PILLOW if you are so unfortunate AS to have to sleep with him in the SAME room. ISN'T It funny

HOW much business

more about your own j

I'F.HA XO , Ind., July 5. l.yle r.. Stephanson. a former newspaper man of this city, is the first Roone county soldier to be wounded in France Stephanson enlisted in 1917 at Indianapolis '

Paul Klkkert, Highland, "ho expected to come home on furlonigh to visit) his parnt.. Mr. and Mrs. ,M. Klkkert. of Highland now writes ' that he Is about to sail for France . i

SOME people know than YOU know about it yourself? WE are think seriously of HAVING the wifs favorite dress-

WHO is spending a charming week

Henry Olsen. IllKhlnnd, one of the maker

n the Vnited States marine corps and volunteers Iron: tnat place, nas neen !r.-,inci at Pari. T.-.-ir-H ? C Mo o-.rt ci ven i serzeancy in the Q. M. C. at

to France as a member of the ?1th "ma-ba. Nebraska. I IN our midst l " S M ' i lance contingent of soldier, drlv- j FURNISH us with estimates for the

!ng trucks, camped at the Crown Point j sn.pp.ng out or fni- grounds on Monday nirht. The, SIX pair of war paper pants Hod Cross society of Crown Point, ar-j rang-i a dmce at the Floral HaMandj AS soon as wu Set out Flans and the Yank-s enjoyed a pleasant ' two ! specifications

John nenon. of RohertsiJnle, of Fort Sheridan, spent Sunday here visttine his parents. John is pleased with army life.

WAniGTO, July 5. Army rammissions were made oLt to the follow-'

j ing men today: John Walter Shafer. ' j Lafayette and Malcolm Iiyle Sainmes, , Bates ii'.o. captains in thr medical rei serve corps; Ross A! van Cooper. Car-, i me, find Mrle 1 Gwin. Rensselaer. first ii itenant in medical reserve jcofps; Emery Wallace C!'-rk. Tipton, j j second lieutenant in National Army; j I John Vernon Rurns. 602 North Dela-,

hours unt.l taps were sounded.

Mr. ?nd Mrs. Frnnk Reder. of Hammond, received word from their son

Paut., tl.at he has been transferred j from Charleston. S C. to V. S. Naval

Air Station. Camp rtennett. rensacola. Fl-irtda. Tail has received .a medal fo- best marksman at rifle practice. Harvey, another son. who is' at Ellfs Island. N. T.. has been promoted to

jware street. Indianapolis

Heffley. Loprf.nspo;-

Armor ?,mp-

! i. ...... tt- , . I ii-eat'.nc them

Tvnl. R-th 1-oys are' veo-y

til the v. .iv i nr:e i-

much ;m i.'

tenant in th'

air service.

-

I

Daniel J. Prorhaska. the medical detention

of Whltlnc. In f the 61st ensi-

rAMP JHEBMAX, hlllleotbe. Ohio. July 15. Johnny Kilbane, champion featherweight boxer of the w-vr1d. and

PROVIDING cf course we can BE assured convenient fittings. THERE may be some doubt AS to Von Hindenburg's death there

but

WILL never be any doubt AS to where he will go when he dies. FOR sinking that British hospital

SHIP the commander of that U-boat deserves !

SOMETHING cross

in addition to an Iron

neers. left Fort Benjamin Harrison on;fr"wml' instructor in tn art or seirlast Saturday. In a !ettr written on ' dfn5 to tn ,rn"Ps at CamP Sherman j the train "somewhere in Ohio" and t ba!' b"'n relieved from his duties by thrown off the train to be mailed at 1 Major-General Harry C. Hale, camp j

Mannn Ohio he a;r! " I ran't tell vo .1 "nimam -r, itr aisnoeaienre 01 oraers.

BAKERS SHOULD ADVERTISE.

where I am going, because it is against I

iiiles. but suffice it is to say

m!!Ita:

Bakers who have been using space in newspapers or ' ,hat ,h" Erection if toward France. . v,... ,1, . .. . , . I You can't imagine how nice the people other means of publicity should not discontinue their j

regular aavertising campaigns at tnis time. ell directed use of printer's ink is a legitimate and profitable expense, even during this period of retrenchment and economy. Besides" there are always two progressive

Mrs. Annie Perry, frown Point, received word yesterday that her son, I.esiie J. Parry. 3 IS Ammunition Tram. No. 90th Division, now at Camp

bakers ready to take up this publicity work where one Mills. L. G. had been made a corporal.

timid or unwise competitor has decided to temporarily withdraw his name and his good from public attention. Rakers should not forget that good advertising is not intended primarily for immediate results, but that in most instances judicious publicity will make itself most profitably felt in permanent success and a lasting reputa tion. So do not interrupt jour advertising unless you want to start all over again after the war is ended.

BALANCING THE U-BOAT ACCOUNT. The German submarine raid in our coast waters ha3 resulted so far, in the sinking of about twenty ships. For that offense Germany has already begun to pay, and pay in kind. The first direct step toward evening the score was taken by Peru. That country had broken diplomatic relations with Germany last fall, but had taken no further steps toward belligerency. Upon receiiing news of the German raid, the Peruvian government immediately grasped the fact that U-boat operations on this side of

the Atlantic constituted a dirty threat to the whole Western Hemisphere, and that it was incumbent cn Latin America to take measures to combat it. Peru therefore seized ail the German ships in her ports, six in number, three of them passenger ships admirably adapted to serve as transports for troops. This tonnage will now be at the

So far he is the only one of the Lake county boys with what was the Purdue Auto Mechanic Detarhment to he riade tn officer and is graded as motor expert.

John Sallopskl. Whitlna:, of Greet Lakes Naval Training Station, is home on a ten dav furlough. This Jackie Is in search of a goat, being given th furlough on the grounds that he bring a goat to the commanding general to be used as a mascot. He has,en!isted th services of Judge C. E. .Greenwa'd to assist him in finding a . nice tame one who would not object 'going Into government service.

IT ought to be a wooden cross AND when the presentation is completed HE ought to have spikes in his ankles AND wrists and be MADE to breathe mustard gas while SALT water Is forced down his gullet. CAN'T get off this war stuff today. THEY ought to make Lennine and TROTZKY WORK or fight also Debs.

ergt. Major "Iluteli" Rlppe. formerly of the city hall force. Hammond, son of Henry Rippe, is home from Camp Taylor on a short furlough.

HATTIF.Sm nr., Ml., July 8. Plan for training student officers in the USth division have been disarranged by the war department orders. fine hundred end sixty-two artillery students have been sent to the artillery center at Camp Zaohary Taylor, Ixulsville, and it is expected the two infantry companies of the school will be sent to Camp Pike. Little Kock. Ark.

John I. ambers:, frown Point, stationed at Camp Merritt, N. J.. 1n the Medical Department had a five day furlough and spent it with his relatives in Crown Point.

I.loyd fireaory, formerly

mail c?.rrir. who is stationed at Waco. Texas, is on a ten day furlough, spent Monday nnd Tuesday in Whiting, leaving Wednesday for the home of his rarents in Allegan. Mich.

LET'S find out where we are going to

j pay a five cent are

Whltln ! BEFORE we al low-

ways to charge 6.

the street rail-

MARRIAGE also means THAT a man has to stand still three, or four times a dav

Sewst. Thome D. Nenf expect to! UNTIL the wiff picks stray hairs or

leave for Indienanolis tonight, he betntr ravelmgs oft your clothes.

on a six day furlough.

Crown Point wan well represented by the different branches of service during this week, many of the boys in khaki having been permitted to have furloughs over the Fourth to se the home folks. Several of them being home for the last time, before going across the puddle as the soldier boys say.

No mistake wa3 made in the selection of General I disposal of the Allies. Foch. Through weary weeks, while the world looked oa j There are some 75 German ships interned in Chile, and chafed with impatience and wondered, the French I and dozens mere in other South and Central America

soldier thought out his plans. He realized the responsibility resting on him and would not be hurried. His strategy has been described as the genius of patienc. When the psychological moment arrived he moved and moved swiftly. There has been defeat for the enemy at every point. Our men. Just one year in France, are covering therv selves with glory hourly.

Mrs. Arthur Meyer, Crown P;!nt, who has been spending home time with her husband. Sergt. Arthur Meyer, has returned home. Sergt. Meyer having left for France.

Mr. and Mm. Alfred Phillips, of Merrillville. received word that their son William had arrived in France safely. I lent. C. ti. Marker. WbitlnB, left

ports. Some of our neutral neighbors need little urging j last night for Louisville. Ky . to take to follow Peru's example. The present score may soonlu' duties in the medical corps at

be evened up. If Germany continues carrying her '-amp Tay.or. The new home or ieur land Mr? Mackey on Oliver street is

ccinv-i.Kiici.Keit. :U.o Au.trricaa " win do more atH)Ut ready for occupancy. Until this

than evenad. All this, too. without reckoning the greater loss of U-boats End all the direct and indirect intensification of our warfare against Germany, invited by thii

particular piece of Insolence.

Ralph Kramer. Crown Point, who Ik In the aviation and has been out of active service for the rst nine months, on account of a broken leg. has recently been transferred to Rantoul. 111., from Day ton. Ohio.

I.awrenee Mc'Vnmee, on of Mr. nad Mrs. L. W. MrNamee, Gary, who has been a first lieutenant In the ordnance

corps has been promoted to the nation- j ol army and made a captain Captain 1 McNamee. has not been Informed ' whether he will be sent abroad or kept 1 r.t Washington. j

Paul Adams, formerly employed In the I'mpleby cigar store, Gary, nowstationed at Camp Taylor. Ky., is here cn a short furlough.

is fully complete she will be at the j Bert Jewell, a well known Gary home of her parents. Mr. and Mrs. j printer, row stationed at a camp in ! G H. Fifield. after which she will take ; Virginia, is home on a furlough, and up her residence- there. When Mrs. a visit" with his parents. Mr. and Mrs. I Burroughs returns from the west she Jewell. 23sn Washington street. I

olTTLE STACK DQORNER W ILL

SIT IN A CORNER

With r.EALJ his good mother

HA5 PLANNEE1.

She'll fEEO her whole eftooa

WITH THE CHOICEST Of FOOD WhiCHSME Its HER WISDOM

Heb CANNED-

rfSi SSL

t-rr'i ism

ZAka Couaty-i d.at.4 la tJxm ww wltb Qartaanr and AutiU-Eoa. raryt ROBERT MARKLET. Hammond: drowned off coast fof Nw Jersey. May 28. DENNIS HANNON. Indiana Harbor; ptorr.ain pc-iaon. at Tort Oglethrope. Chattanooga. Tann, June 11. JAMES MACKENZIE. Gary; killed In action In Franc while "ratio- with ta Scotu.a '"'; Ma J, 1517. KARL WFLSBT, -Whrtlnr: U. S. I. Died at Fort Sam Houston of spinal rneningiUs, July 2$ 1017. FRANK M'AXLET, Indiana Harbor; killed la Franca at Battle of Lilie. Aug. 15. ARTHUR BASELER, Hamtnond; died at Lion Springs. Tex.. cf spinal meningitis, August. 2 JOHN SAilBiiOOKS. LastCiWago; kilieJ n France. Sept.'. AKTHLK ROBERTSON. Gary; killed in France, Oct. 31. LIEUT. JAMES VAN ATTA, Gary; killed at Vimy Ridgta. JAMES AIACKINZIE, Gary; killed at Vimy Ridge. POLFH tilECZYKl, Eaat.CaJ.cago; killed In France, IVOV.27. E. BURTON HUNDLEY, Gary; killed la a via 110 a accident ai Taliaferro tielUa, Everman, Tax, L-ec. 1, 1317. HARRY CUTHBERT LONG. Indiana Harbor; killed ia accident at it BLsa, Texas, Dec. it. EERWOOU DICKINSON. Lowell; died somewhere la France, of pneumonia, Dec. 12. EDWARD C. KOSTBADE. Hobart; killed by explosion. la France. Dec 22. IHOIUS V. RATCLIFFE, Gary; k.l'.ed somewhere in France, Fb. 24. FF.ED SCHMIDT. Crown Point; died of pneumonia in Brooklyn. March. 7. after being oa a torpedoed steamer. CORPORAL EDWARD M. SULLIVAN. Gary; killed somewhere ia France, March 8. MICHAEL STEPICH. Whitlni; Camp Taylor; pueuinonia, Marcs 14. ROBERT ASFIN, Gary: Co. F. 151st infantry; Camp Shelby; typhoid; March 17. CLIFFORD E. FETTY. enlisted at Hammond. Jan. 8, ia U. S. cavalry. Died at Delrlo. Tex.. April 2. PAUL FULTOj Tolleston. died in hospital. Marfa, Texas, April 6, 1918. Sergeant, machin gun battalion, Sth c.-alry. VICTOR SHOTL1FF. Gary, killed at aviation camp. Sua Antonio. April 18. 191S. JOSEI'T BECKHART, Gary, died at an eastern cantonment; week ending April 10, 1918. LIEUT. IRA B. KING, Gary: reported killed In France, April 21. 1918. NEWELL PEA CHER, Gary; Graves Registration Unit 304, died in New Jersey, 1918. E. BIRCH HIGHES, Gary, ordnance department, died in Philadelphia, 1!1S. JOHN MAGUIRES. Gary; bugler; killed in action somewhere in France, June 15.

JOHN GAILES, Gary; died 4 at Camp Taylor. Ky., June 26. MISSING IN ACTION. JOHN ZBROWSKI. East' Chicago; Somewhere in France, July 4th. WEST HAMMOND. JOSEPH srLIETZAN, Wes Hammond. U. S. Field Artillery. Killed in action. France, April 27. WOUNDED. ROBERT M. BEATTT. Hammond. Trench mortar. France. Feb. 26. R. A. SPARKS. Highland. Trench mortar. France. Feb. 2T. HENRY BAKEMAN, Hammond; tLb. engineers. France. April 7. Kt'Gr.VE M. FISHER. East Chicago; severely wounded April 22, 1318. by shrapnel, while in a trench in No Mans Land. ENGENE M. FISHER. East Chicago: wounded in Ticardy, April 22. JOSEPH ADAMIC. Indiana Harbor. Artillery. France, May PHILLIP PETERSON. Hammond; severely wounded In France, June 3. EMIL ANDERSON. Gary;

wounded in action in France, with

machine gun batallion June 25.

I

w

MEMORIAM"

Better to have War Savings

Stamps in your safe than the blood-

Euy a Thrift Stamp and lick the stained hands of the kaiser's Hun- hordes at your throat.

PETEY DIXK Petey Ought to Have Told Him to Ke cp the Book Dr 1 " . 11 1 -

I CsDFSS FT 5 Vjo

To C AQU MOW

To 5WlM klOW

"THAT IM Twe.

Life-Saner HEise

n

1

By C. A. VOIGHT

II i I TTrrTeZt 7-rC I MZ-lL-CJ I

. s V II vw-T- ' - ' '

" " - ' -v I WPOFUcri To "RCiuc TVIpl I

1 trr a b r 1. k 1 w - rs,wv. Ti.vs v nci 1 1 f 1 v - c 1 - : . 11

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1