Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 69, Hammond, Lake County, 4 October 1918 — Page 6
THE TIMES. Fridav. October
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THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS
V THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING & PUBLISHING s COMPANY. Tha Lake County T'.rnaa Dally escapt Saturday and fuaday. Entered at the poatofnoe In Hammond. Juu
Tha-"'
uada tmbpt
Tha
entered Tha
lerad at the poatofttce in Gary. April 13. ltll. All under the act of March 3. 1S7. aa second-jnattar.
Tllnas Eat Chicago-Indiana Harbor, ally except
y. Entered at tha putotflce In Eaat Chica. 11 till
LeJca County Tiroes Saturday and Weekly Edition.
I at the poatefflce In Hammond. February . Gary Evening flmaa Daily eopt Sunday.
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FOREIGN ADVEIITUINC1 OfVlCK. IH RC?r Building
.Chicago
Hajninoad (private excUn) . . r. 31C0 S101. (Call for whatever department wanted) Gary Office Telephone 1JT Nassau & Thompaon. East Chicago Telephone III F. L. Evana, East Chicago Telvhone 4ZEaat Chicago. The Times I p5t,nI inl Indian Harbor tNewa Dealer) I'Uph. "!!! is Indiana Harbor (Reporter and Class. Ad.). Telephone 1 ss Whiting ... Talephona 80-M Crowa Point '.".'.'.".'..'.'..'.'.'.'.'."' T'i1in.!4
Larger Pald-Up Circulation Than Any Two Other Papers In tha Calumet Region. If you here any trouble netting The T'me make comflaict Immediately to the oircuUM,.o department. Tile Timea will net be respon.vei tor the return of any unaollclted articles or letier and will not notice ,K"1; knoue eommunliatlons. Short a'aned lettnra ef soneraj buermtat prrnted at discretion. TICE TO UDJOUBtRS. If you fall te receive your copy of Tn Timfs a rornptly aa you haea In Ua nast. pleaaa do not thin It fcaa keen lott er waa not sent on tlma. Hetnemhar that tie raUroada are d with tha urgent movement f treopa and tbelr auppliea; that there la unuaual preaaure In rartoua parte of the country for food and fuel; thai the raXlrvaJa havi more buslneas than they can handle promptly. Fcr that reason many tralna are late, Th T)mxs has lnoreaaed lta mailing aqulpment and l ooperatinr In erety way with tha postoffice department to erpedite delivery. Kre delays are Inevitable betiuae cf tha normoua demand cpon tha railroad and lia wiUiSjrawai 0 rooa r mar of work.
SPORTS? NAWI
One of our gallant soldier boys overseas who writes that when he geis back to his billet after a hard days work and finds a bunch of Times there addressed to him. he thinks life -worth living after all. "But," he adds, "You don't have anysfporting news any more. What's the matter?" Bill, "there ain't no such thing" as sports any more! You boys took it all with you, and since you've gone nobody has the heart for any. Of course there is a kid ball game now and then and we believe we chronicled the fact that the Young Kosciuskos of the north side or something like that won the 13-year eight-months-old championship. We noticed the fast Magnetos o rwas It The Carburetors working in an empty lot the other night getting in shape for the 70-pound football championship, but outside of these sporting news is very dull. Once in a while Judge Ames goes round the links and i hoots the pill for a few holes, but says it's no fun as waen a man turns down 2,000 caddies that's all the work he wants in an evening. Every now and then soma old guy comes In Melvin Monnett's for a package of Home Runs, spits on the floor to be sociable, asks Melv "What's the sporting news?" Melv wonders why they don't keep the gates locked at Dunning and says "Our boys are certainly hammering hell out of the Huns in the Argonne," and the nut says, "What league's them Argonnes in?" Sporting news? Why Pop Clabby, sore as a boil because they didn't extend the draft age to 55 Instead of 45 so he could get in, is going to the Red Cross next week and roll bandages. Frank O'Rourke is so busy dealing sugar cards for nothing a week and find himself that sports Is just a memory to him. Sports Bill? Again we reiterate, "There ain't no such thing." We have nothing to do over here but work td win the war. Everything has to give way to winning it. Honestly, Bill down in Washington the order has gone out that the size of kid's diapers must be cut down. If war isn't hell what is? Imagine trying to pin up a husky, kicking kid on your lap with a didy no bigger than a ladies' handkerchief. Why our sporting authority, Cross, says, "Men, it can't be done." Sorry Bill, sports is passed up for the life of the war. When you all come back there'll be something doing.
IN NINE MONTHS.
Charles Edward Russell, the great socialist and student of human affairs, says we are on the last lap of the war. Nine months more will see the end of the whole thing; but there must be a relentless pushing of the war through these nine months no monkeying with armi slices, peace proposals or diplomatic confabs. The allies have it in their hands to whip Germany well and good in nine months and they are going to do it. That Prussian dynasty will have to give up and get out and take with it its military autocracy and divinity of kings. There -will be no treaty to leave a bit of these standing and it is an insult to our brave soldiers to think that such a thing is possible. This German kultur is wretched, inhuman, and cruel and there must not be a trace of it left on the globe. In nine months comes our next Fourth of July. Then we will celebrate.
DON'T BE OVER-CONFIDENT. One of our esteemed friends thinks we are altogether too pessimistic in our views on the possible length of the, war. He says the boys will be home by Christmas or soon after that. We hope he is right and we are wrong. Other well-informed newspaper men hold the same view, as we do, however. The Muncie Press says in regard to optimism: "But don't get it into your head for a single minute that the kaiser with all his millions of highlytrained soldiers and his unlimited supplies of munitions is going to quit fighting merely because Bulgaria has. About the time the allies begin thinking that, they will have millions of Huns upon their necks. Germany is unquestionably worried and she has had some bad reverses, but she has had these before and has arisen from the ashes of defeat to go forward to new militarytriumphs. The man or nation that now thinks Germany is ready to give up or has any idea of doing so now or ever, is merely fooling himself. "The only way that Germany can be made to listen to reason is by jumping up and down on her collective
neck until she has been rendered helpless. "We have sounded the cry, "No peace with Germany by negotiation and no peace except by victory." Thai being interpreted, means that Germany's millions must he disarmed upon the soil of their fatherland, and that for this we shall need our four mill ion American soldiers rh addition to those of our allies, and perhaps several millions more. Lot us not, at this critical juncture and while victory is se n to be fairly on its way, deceive ourselves by sitting down and imagining that victory will route to us instead of our having to go to victory."
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THE REAL TEST. People are too much inclined to lose sight of the far) that there are thing- of local importance to watch out for as well as things on the other iile of the water. Some people fly so high that they lone sight of the solid ground beneath tlietn. Much like them are those people who are very grandiose about tiie national aims and duties and forget all about their obligations to the town when? they belong. They see The Star Spangled Banner waving in the zenith, but fail 1o observe the old lady being run over
by an auto down on the crossing. Now, there can be no I
true national spirit without a municipal spirit. The love j
of country is based upon love of home. There are men who make themselves conspicuous when it comes to r.i tior.al matters, but who dwindle into mere wisps when i: comes to city affairs. They are for good government at Washington, but don't care a snap for it at homo. The real test of citizenship, after all, is the interest one takes in home progress in promoting order, decency, quiet, cleanliness, unselfishness. The more interest one takes in these matters the better citizen he is, no matter how much he shoots off his mouth. You can look around you and see both kinds of citizens in every town around here.
HOW THE DOGS TREAT OUR BOYS. An American correspondent in Holland announces, on reliable authority, that American soldiers recently taken prisoner by the Germans have been exhibited in Cologne, in a glass cage, at 10 pfennigs admission fee, for the benefit of the Red Cross. Placards posted up in front of the cage bore the inscription: "These are some of the very rare specimens to be found in France." One purpose on the part of the German authorities was undoubtedly to persuade the people that Americans actually were scarce in France, and therefore there was nothing to fear from them. Knowing, however, how Germany has treated military prisoners of all nationalities throughout the war, we cannot doubt that the chief motive was to humiliate the captives and cast contempt on America. Such acts of pettiness are not the crowning Infamy of Germany. Actual atrocities, of which we have had innumerable examples, are infinitely worse. But what could show more clearly than this the contemptible attitude of the German mind? asks the Lafayette Journal. The allies have scrupulously treated German prisoners with the decency and courtesy required not only by international law, but by the common dictates of civilization. "Noblesse oblige." A gentlemanly nation cannot be other than gentlemanly toward an enemy. Germany reveals this fine principle turned inside out. Her own lack of nobility obliges her to treat her betters ignobly. WILLFUL WASTE. Apropos of all the agitation in official circles at Washington for saving of this and the conserving of that, let it be remarked that the most flagrant illustrations of waste are to be found in the bureaus and departments at Washington. In the purchase of office furniture for the temporary offices during the war emergency the war agencies have selected expensive furniture that would last during a war a half century long. In the bulletins that are issued from day to day for the information of publishers and the public more than half of the paper is wasted. There is no possible way of checking up on the facts, but it is a safe assertion that in the employment of clerks there is a waste of BO per cent in time and effort. Saving, there certainly should be, but it should begin at Washington.
HOW HUNS DEAL WITH SLAVS. "What shall we do with the Slavs?" was the query put in a recent speech at Windisch Feistritz, in Styria, by Deputy Wichtl, a well-known leading member of the German party of Austria. Immediately he answered his own question. "We must exterminate them!" he declared. "In the four years of the war." WIchtl said, "we must have disposed of many millions of fighting Slavs. That Is good! The only way to deal with these Slavs is to destroy their race so utterly that it will not be able to recover within perceivable time. We Germans have already annihilated Serbia, Montenegro and Russia. So shall we also stamp out, root and branch, the Slavs of Austria-Hungary." Wichtl's speech was made before a friendly audience.
The Styrians are the best fighters in the Austrian army, and they are also the most faithful to the Austrian cause.
They are mostly mountaineers, shut out from the world and poorly educated. Like their brother Teutons in
Germany, they show a disposition to swallow, line nnd
bait, everything told them by the ministers of the government. Germany's cleverest move, according to Wichtl, was the way she carried the war on to foreign soil. If the war were now carried to Czech soil, he declared, no German would regret it. The next step, in his opinion, is for Germany and Austria to take all possible measures against the formation of a Czechoslovak or Jugoslav state. As the artisans of a Greater Germany, the ministers of the state must reduce these iSIavs and dismember them. Not until the Slavs are wiped off the face of Eastern Europe will Germany's hopes be realized. "And when that time comes," said Deputy Wichtl, "there will no longer be two states, but only one Great Germany. It will be one big German house, where onlyGerman will be spoken, only German ideas thought, and German battles fought. Then we shall wage a new war. We shall deliver three mighty blows by forcing our way fo America, subduing the whole Orient, and establishing German power over Japan and China!" The dispatches say tjiat Wichtl's speech was interrupted with tumultuous approval, applause, and cries of "He is right! Listen to him!" The incident is significant because it shows the way pan-German ideas have been sowed even in such remote places as the mountain towns of Styria.
THK nvimhtr of rlups WHO went to school with l'crshing IP almost en many AS the number of o'ul darkies who USED to valet !eor$re Washington
AN' after thought YOir never hear of anyone bragginsf OF how he used to go to SC1IOOI, with an editor. Hi: saw one V-neck yesterday that rather ST AddCRED us ami though it embarrassed us i'ONSIDKKABLT we took the. dear girl by the HAND and tried to (.how her that In these WAR times we did not think a person should put ALL. one's money on one's hack. WE have been given to understand THAT If we do not stop DISCUSSING things of a delicate na
ture with THK neighbor women SUCH as the delights of Morrhonlpm and CONSERVATION of diapers V A NEW set of divorce papers will probably be FILED in the Superior court REFORE long. WE don't ever expect the time to,
come when EIGHT will filter through CERTAIN' patient German skulls east of the Rhino r.NTlti our glorious allies OPEX up a crack or two. AS far as we have been able to ascertain THE mail does not seem to be flooded with LETTERS of condolence to Gene Debs. WE understand that the bartenders In NEARBY places are suggesting the use OF horseradish and salt to put a kick In the near beer AVIIAT'T the matter with the soap, hard tobacco and molasses solution? "HAVE You Seen the New War-time $1 Hill?" asks a headline. YES, we saw one, it was In the hand of a fat German waiter AND he only permitted us to look at it. A NEARBY teacher was somewhat jarred WHEN on asking her rupils the hardest thing they ever had to do in their lives ONE of them said, taking castor oil. IT is pitiful honesty, the wiff Is so determined to win THIS war that we don't have enough gravy TO let a drop fall on our vejt once in a while.
Where They Are News of Lake Co, Boys In Uridt? Sam's Service
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Mere and Over There
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Are you doinse your bit? Are you writing: any letters to aoliller boys? know one man who work ltf to IS hours a day, "ho llnris time lo write 5 or 10 letters n week to soldier bo Ira France. How many do you write f No not to relatives. Jut to soldiers! The Times has published the names nnd addresses of over 200 Lake county soldier boys. Just pick out a few een though they be strangers und drop them a few lines each week. Show your Interest in them. If otbera can ttnd time can't youf Some write a letter a day. Appreciate these letters? Men and women, you don't know how much rood letters do soldier boys. Write to them often.
C. F.. Monihan. with Co. C 112th Engineers. Is now at Camp Devans. Massachusetts.
Henry J. Kinsr Is Hammond's latest addition to the marines. He is with the S69th Pat. H. Taris Island. S. C.
Itermon I.lnd, F.ast t hlooito. In trainIns at the Valparaiso University, with the truck drivers" corps, was here a few days visiting his folks in Euclid avenue. CUrence Forshers nd Carl Dalk, two more Indiana Harbor l5oys, were here for similar visits.
Two Fast Chicago boys., brothers, Carl and William Lippe. of North Magoun avenue. East Chicago, write their parents from their respective assignments. Carl is with the signal platoon corps, 36th Inf.. at Camp Stevens, Mass.. and has just recuperated from an illness believed to be the lnfl'ienza. William is wit! Co. A. Bth Training: Regiment. Camp Grant. 111.
Joe Wlrtr., of East ChlcoBO, familiarly called "Doc" by his friends and who made his home with the William Hubers here, writes front across the seas. He is with the. truck drivers unit.
Letters are Coming to THE to write him at Training Co. 16. Block . . . House C 1025, Camp Johnston, JackTrirrc x -. a.ta-a.ic- in tha tier ...
limr-o liuui uvcistoj u iah. sonviiie. r la. lie expects to receiv mail by swarms. Our friends must his diploma this week from the butch J ... pis' echool. He savs a butcher neve
have patience. We'll get them all in. Just watch. EDITOR.
ers' school. He says a butcher never I.nows hew to cut meat until they learn it from Uncle Sam. He knows how if anyone does. He states everythink is lovely but the weather and it is hot.
w - Dr. Cieorjse F. lllcknpll, one of East Chicago's best known physicians, whj enlisted in the medical services, has been notified by Washington that he hs3 been commissioned as a first lieutenant In the medical corps. Osrnr Ahlgren, ou a furlough from Cornell University, where he is at the U. S. of Aerial Photography, will speak to the younsr men of the Congregattlonal church on Sunday morning. All young men are invited to hear the talk. I.leut. E. I.. Scliaible and wife have arrived in Crown Toint from Ft. Oglethorpe. Ga., where Mrs. Schaible has spent the past two weeks with her husband, who is in the medical corps. The doctor has a ten day leave of absence and will spend the time here with family and friends in Gary where he recently closed his office to Join the army., He reports that the Spanish influenza has reached the southern camps, but not in as serious form as experienced In the north, where the death lists are increasing daily. . The Indiana commission for regis- ' teiin and voting Indiana men in
lake County's dend la tha war with Oennany and Atistria-Hanrryi ROBERT MARKLET. Hammond; drowned off coast N. J., May 28. DENNIS IIAXXOX. Ind. Harbor; died at Ft Oglethorpe. Tenn.. June 1L 1AMES MAC KENZ1K. Gary; killed in action France. May 3. 1917. KARL, WEL.SBT, Whiting. U. S. I.: died at Ft. Houston. July 2S, 1317. FRANK McANLET. In. Harbor; killed In France, Battle of Lille, Aug. 15. tRTHUK BASELER. Hammond; died at Lion Springs, Tex., August 2G. FOUNT SAMBROOKS. East Chicago; killed In France, Sept. 16. IRTI1UR ROBERTSON'. Gary; killed In France. Oct. 31. LIEUT. JAMES VAN ATTA. Gary; killed at Vlmy Ri jge. DOLPII BIEDZYKI. Etst Chicago; killed in France, Nov. 27. S. BURTON, HUNDLEY. Gary; killed avia. ac. at Everman. Tex.. Dec. 1317. 3ARRY CUTHBERT LONG. Ind. Harbor; killed at Ft. Bliss. Tex., Dec. 10. r;-YDICKIXSOX' Lowc: died somewhere In France. Dec. 12. 1317. Piv?? KOSTBADE, Hobart: killed by explosion In France. Dec. 23. THOMAS V. RATCLIFFE. Gary; killed somewhere In France, Feb. 24. f RED SCHMIDT, C. Toint; died in Brooklyn. March 7, on torpedoed boat. CRI'L. EDWARD M. SULLIVAN, Gary; killed In France, March 8. r!t' STl':P1CH- Whiting. Camp Taylor; pneumonia. March 14. mt ropnSri'V' Gary' - F' 15151 lnf Cp" Shcn,y- typhoid. March 17. LL.lt FORD E. PETTY. Hammond; V. S. cavalry, died Delrio, Tex.. April 3. PAUL FULTON. Tclleston; died Marfa. Texas. Arrll 6, 1918. VICTOR SIIOTLIFF, Gary; killed at avia. camp. San Antonio. April 1918. JOSEPH BECKIIART, Gary; died at eastern cantonment, April 20, 1918. LIEUT. IRA B. KING. Gary; reported killed In Frar.ce, April 21. 1318. NEWELL PEACHER. Gary; Graves Regis. Unit 304. died in N. J.. 1318. E. BIRCH HIGHKK. Gary; ord. dept.; died In Philadelphia, 1318. t. MISKELJICII, Hammond; Killed on Balkan front. May 25. 131S. PAUL GALL. Eagle Creek Twp.; killed in action, France. June IS. 131S. PVTE. FRANK TUCKER. Highland. Ind.. Engs.; killed. France. June S. JOHN MAGUIRES, Gary; bugler; killed In action. France, June 25. JOHN GAILES. Gary; died at Camp Taylor, Ky., June 26. A BR AM FRY, Gary. 1S2 Aero Corps; killed in action. Fraccc. July 21. 1918. II. PERCHOCKI. Gary; killed at Rochester. N. T-. R. R. accident, July 15. HARVEY HARRISON. Hammond. U. S. Navy; drowned In sinking of torpedoed U. S. Westover, July 11, In war zone. LEROY S. CROWNOVER. Hammond; killed in action, France. July 14. CRPL. GEORGE ALLEN. Gary; killed in action. France. July 14. WILLIAM STENDERSON. Lowell. U. S. Navy; drowned at submarine base near New London. July 13, 1318. HAROLD GOODRICH. Men Hlville; killed in action. France. July 18. '318. CHARLES QUIGLEY. Ind. Harbor; killed in action, France Julv 13
C. J. TEUNONES. East Chicago; killed in action. France, July '3 1311?
"""'" mum. -ary. o. u. i&tn. inf.; died or" wounds. Franco Julv 20 Strnd: lied of wounds -cci-d .rlLll BLRGT. MARCLb ALENTICH, Gary; killed In .rtm r.-
1318.
July, w ounda.
, -w4l. D,viA. wniung; Killed in action. France, July 1918 I- RANK BTANISLAWSKI. Ind. Harbor. Tp. F. 7th Cav.; killed iu auto accident in South Chicago while cn furlough. Aug 9 ms OSCAR E. SHOVER. Indiana Harbor; U. S. Marines'! killed in action. PLIEZO TSIOKIAS. Indiana Harbor; U. S. Infantry; killed in action!" J. Z. McAVOY. Gary. U. S. Engineers; killed in action June CHARLES BOCCA, Gary. F. A.; killed in action July 8 1 A T T I I tfT TtlATinn r. .. -
. i l i-uiiuiumi, uary; oiea in .trance of disease, July H. WILSON, Gary, with Canadians; killed in action. France
mir..n.ri JuuLii, iiammona, u. s. A.; died from "France. Aug. 1.
STEVE STREPI. East Chicago. Co. L; killed in action July 13. ROY NOEL, Indiana Harbor; killed in action in France, July 13 191$ JOHN COLV1LLE. Hammond, 1st Can. Bat.; killed in action. Aug So' PAT TON DAVIS. Gary. Co. F; killed in action in France July 18 GEORGE R. BRANNON. West Creek. Great Lakes; pneumonia Sept IS WALTER KLEIBER. Whiting. U. S. F. A.; killed in action July 15 ' CARL A. G. CARLSON. Gary. U. S. F. A.; killed in action July 15 RUSSELL WALDO COON. Gary; killed in action. France July ig THOS. LISTER. Hammond. Q. M. C; died at Camp Sherman Sept' '5 ARTHUR O. WISHMAN. Hobart. Co. K. F. A.; pneumonia. V-p. Sheridan THEODORE SCHAEFER. Whiting: Great Lakes. Spanish Infl.. Sept 3o' E. J. HAW-LEY. Hammond; R. C. overseas worker, Spanish Infl!, Sept 30 LLOYD COLEMAN, Crown Point: Spanish infl., Pugct Sound, Oct. 1. MISSING I IT ACTION. JOHN ZBROWSKI. East Chicago; Somewhere in France. July 4th KARL DUPES. In. Harbor; enlisted July 1317, In U. S. marines parents notified July 16. 1918. E. MASE. East Chicago; missing in action In France, July, 1918. O. A. DUEPPE, Hammond; missing in action, France, July, 1918. CORPORA L JOHN NESTOR, Gary; reported missing Aug. 5, in France. GEORGE BEAL, next oX kin, Andrew Kocalka, Gary. JOHN GEN1CIANKH1S, next of kin. Wm. Elisa, 1056 Grand St.. Cary. WM. PAPKA. East Gary; found missing since July 21, in France. HOMER FRIEND. Co. L, East Chicago; missing since July 13. STEVE SZITAS. Co. L. East Chicago; missing since July 16. SAM TODOR. Indiana Harbor; reported missing, France. July 19. LEON ANGOSTINA. Co. L. East Chicago; missing in action. July 15. STANLEY POSWANKI. Co. L, East Chicago; missing since July 15. MILOS M LA DEN. Gary; missing since July 21, France. ANTON OWERNS. Indiana Harbor; missing; since middle of July, Franca. CLEMENT BEAM. Crown Point; missing in France. July 24. WEST HAMMOND. JOS. S. LIETZAN. W. Hammond. F. A.; killed In action. Franca April 27. FRANK MIOTKA. West Hammond, U. S. Field Artillery; died at Douglas, Ariz. Jan. 17. 1918.
the military service has sent a board to Camp Zachary Taylor to register any Indiana men who have not had the opportunity to register. The board began work today and will stay through tomorrow.
Thirty conscientious objectors, convicted by a general court-martial for refusing to obey orders and sentenced to from ten to twenty years in prison at Fort Leavenworth, left Louisville today in a special car attached to a regular passenger train. Lieutenant Gilbert Reynojds. of Jeffersonville. and eisrht puards accompanied the men.
Sixteen deaths from Influenza hart occurred at Camp Zachary Taylor ir the last twenty-four hours. Include tmoas the victims was Forrest Flusher, son of James Flusher, of Woodburn. Ind. This makes thirty deaths ir ten days of the epidemic and 6.001 cases in all.
Mrs. Marine Davis of 232 Lewis St. Hammond, has just received word that her husband. Private Cloyd Davis, hss arrived safely overseas. Private Davii left as a mechanic in Evac. Amb. Co No. 15. He was formerly employed at the Newell Taxi Co.. in Hammond.
Marion IHipes, F.ast Chicago, brother to Karl Dupes, who is a prisoner of war. has been accepted for military traininif and special course at the Chicago University, Chicago.
iconic li. Jolley, son of lr. anil Mrs. J. W. Jolley. writes his parents that he is well and happy and that where he is stationed they are having delightful weather. His address is as follows: Co. It. 4 1th Engineers. A. E. F.. via New York City.
I BIG 1 SALE f
C. R. CAV
South Chicae-o
BIG
$1
SALE
yt j Commencing Th(
Friday, Saturday and Monday, Oct. 4th. 5ih, 7tii
Doors Open at 9 A, M.
This is the S&So you are waiting for Vqisf
Boiler EB&ubles its bu&iting poivar at this safe
Harold Bowmnii wishes his friends
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A KISS To THE.
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To "Suv AThouSAki
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( to -be a law St!iw2y M: V A At vi Vr TwaT j L7MLyjf ( WITH ALcTHU ' , 'Mr
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Petey'd Throw a Fit if He Could See the Salesman. By C. A. VOIGHT
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