Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 236, Hammond, Lake County, 19 March 1919 — Page 4
Paje Four.
THE TIMES.
THE TIMES' NEWSPAPERS BY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING & PUBLISHING COMPANY.
. : The Lake County Times Daily except Saturday and Sunday. Entered at the postofnoe in Hammond, . Juna Z, 190S. The Times East Chicago-Indiana, Harbor, daily except Sunday. Entered at tho postoftioe in East Chicago. Nov ,nihr IS. 1913. ., The Lake County Times Saturday and Weekly Edition. Entered, at the pr-stofnce in Hammond. February 4. 1314. The Gary Evening Time Dntlv except Sunday. Entered Pt the postofrtro in Garv. April IV 1912. All I'.mler the act of March 3, 1879. a second-class matter.
roKEisjT ADVTRnswo omen:. G. LOGAN PAYNE & CO CHICAGO.
During the war gTest latitude was given to producers and !
distributors in the matter of making prices. The public is now told that the business and industry of the country are going through a period of readjustment 'that has cauped fear and alarm, ujd it is added in a Washington press dispatch: 'Officials here believe that normal conditions will not have fully returned until after adjournment of the Supreme Court in May or June." "
' TSLEPHOHIS. Hammond fprivate exchange) Stn1. 3101, 5103 ' (Ca'I for -whatever department wanted. Gary Office Telephone 13T Nassau Thompson. Kn Chicago Telephone 91 F L. Fvum, D' CM.-srro Telephone S4!East. Chicago (Tht Ttmbs Telephone SSI Trid'ara Harbor i w s Dealer) Telephone Rf2 T"'1i"i Harbrr (Reporter and Class? Adv. . Telephone IS Whiting .Telephone SO-M Crown Point " ..Telephone 42
tAHQEH PAID-tTP CTRCTJI.ATTOW T3IAN AWT TWO OTHIB PAPERS IN THIS CALtTMTET SEOIOX.
If yen have any trouble eettlng Tub Timps makes complaint Immedfatelv to the Circulation Prarlmil
Ths T:mes will not he responsible for the return of any I it is up to you to get off away off that list at your first
"'""ti-a arTicies or ;eirer an -will not notice anonv
GET OFF THE SUCKER LIST! Are you on the sucker list? If you are It is probably because you are NOT a sucker hut a patriotic citizen who has known the Liberty bond to be a good thing. Get-rich-quick swindles have been the great American sport for. years. The sharpers who sell fake stocks saw their game endangered when Uncle Sam started his great Liberty Loan campaigns. But they are smart these gentlemen who lire by their wits. Instead of complaining they Jumped in and put themselves and all their employes to work trading their fake stuff for Liberty bonds. If you have a Liberty bond or a book of War Savine Stamps, you are a "prospect" for fake stock. Your name is probably on the flicker list of the oily tongued sharper because over twenty million patriots bought Liberty bonds. You are not to blame for being on the sucker list, but
jf-jous communications. Short signed letters of general '.merest printed at discretion.
NOTICE TO StTBSCKXBZXS. If voy fan to receive your copy of Tim Times i promptv as yon have In th" past, please do not think it bns beer ! or was not sept on time. Remember that the mail ?ervic Is net ivh.it it to be and that complaints art general from manv source shout the train and mail service. Thr Times as increased its mailing equipment ana is str.vinsr earnestly to reach its patrons on time. Be nrompt -i adv. sin us when you do not get your paper and vve will act promptly.
Y fUj s fM!IPW& ? MAW
s
AFTER all there Is no need FOR any one to be disappointed AT the result of the war GERMANY wanted what -was coming TO her and we'll say that's Jt'ST what she (rot. CHICAGO Clergyman 'says that the time IS ripe for a great rellgous revival EFFECT of Billy Sunday's RECENT great efforts there evidently worn off. LATEST ground for legal separation at least AT our hoiis IS ribald and shameless husband's REMARK made to wife's dressmaker a bou t
ft, lt 8 1
NO BONUS FROM INDIANA. In answer to a. number of soldiers who have been mustered out of service, this newspaper writes to state that the bills introduced at. the last session of the Indiana General Assembly providing for the giving of a bonus to soldiers failed of passage and there is no chance of their setting any bonus from the state. A resolution was passed. howeer, recommending that the next session of Cengres3 give six months' pay to the soldiers and sailors, bit only time will tell what will be done by Congress in regard to giving an additional bonus, besides the $fiO bonus which the soldiers may now get by sendir.g in
their discharge papers to the srovernment at. Washington
opportunity. The American people are paying out some half bil
lion dollars a year to the support of worthless stock!
schemes. The people reap therefrom $500,000,000 worth of thin air. That is not a wild guess. It is the estimate given by the Capital Issues Committee of the V. S. Treasury. And. the committees assures us that it is conservative. Moreover, the half billion represents Just the cold cash that is turned in EVERY YEAR by otherwise levelheaded Americans seeking a milk and honey path to quick wealth by the fake stock certificate route. It does not take into account the vast economic loss Incident to
! broken fortunes. Impaired effort of discouraged investors
and to the diversion from legitimate busines f enterprise of new productive capital. The Capital Issues Committee, charged with keeping the nation" investment dollars on a work or fight basis during the war. has made a searching inquiry into the devious ways of fraudulent stock promotion. Its conclusion Is that never perhaps in the history of the country-
has wildcat promotion been so flagrant from coast to coast - as today.
i
' i A F.OCT equally between ad ising our A SIDELIGHT ON PERSHING. j friends to making the lest of their
The divinitv that hedges a king is absent in the case troubles
of Gen. John J. Pershing, the gallant commandor-in
STEEN weeks ago which he forgot almon AS soon as he made it. YVE know people who LIVE to be a ripe old age becaure THAT'S all in the wide world THEY have to do. "CERTAINLY a lot of bard-boiled eggs in that house" SAID an agent the other day "ABOUT the only thing there that w ill BITE on an thing is the dam dug." AVE watched a guy toing to put one over the other day and with old Abe Martin WE have concluded that there's many a ulip TWIXT the suit case 8nd the lip." SOMETIMES it seems as if we divided our time
the
HEIR to all our fiefs and demesnes
fearful citse of sleeping
before school time evtry
HE has a sickness SHORTLY morning
EXCEPT Sunday. WOMAN captured among cides
CONFESS LD that she men
Voice of the People
LETTER FROM A STUDENT Editor Times: 'I "he in. .st rinu vie?tb.n that confronts the mother and fr-thers of jn. uiana Harbor s a place f,,,- tiwir sons to congc-eate. In n : b t i, s together facts we find that b.. who Hie
mn me age --r eighteen
In the first place we were not drinking, and second. Chas. Shine was dr'ving the car. and I was holdmj; my little boy on my lap and was not
J -Tf I'lim?. for t'-e car will not go over j 35 miles, per hour and I know it was now hero wide open. As to making our I getaway, we did not try to pet away. I went to the nearest garage to get
ngregating hem to pull my car out of the water
in Poolrooms. Ami fmm then I b' fore it t!lit tn., rf.,rv A rl,
- ....... i . -i. v.- v. i i. e-i. 'Jiii I adapting themselves t - r. 1 ! forms of ; i i ne a. who was driving his Ford j vulgarity, and what's more, they ha-.- 1 trough Indiana w ith a 191s lfnse the Sparta- j rvn tone as far ,,s allow inc: thes,- '" w bis lights pretty bright tnd
youngsters to gamble, vitht.'.'t anv r- i ,("'r man half of the road, hooked jStriction whatoever. We al-o know' "iv ,''ft front wheel and burst the tire hud killed - j that the policy have been v.-rv len- i nn b'nt ' u" front axle so bad that ' !' nt with the poolr.o.n owners on th: ; " "'" my car right over the road
ft" RE. they are more deadly than the i.iatter. The present male. ! u re uments set up by t s ! follows: First. tipproH OUR beloved pastor admits he hns ; ma nnPr..w,. v been greatly fooled .ero.md Po. ! . oo.r s ' .'. HK has got so used to ine hell else n.n i K.-,in2 to l,
b ' y s n hl!:l '. r
or I
when he thought of the kn!cr the late war
'lin ing j S.v"i what
THAT he Is finding harder than
great denl
HE thought it would be to break the
HABIT and say nothing worse THAN Vlamphool." FORCE of habit is unusually strong
is on iv open oneshall 1 d' with
! n ig h t .- I i-sn'i go i . i n ie his hbo'ci t . jf t
j Now you ran see one of ff I sons w hy a. yotitiesi. ; the pool rooms. No w
lame o n someone. ''-in
row n? Yes. Weri, w is The town consists of tl.e , liniliii rs of the town. I" "lub, this l an orKa ti iz.it i
f i.
AND if we should get 1he 1u and dir j ing t I fairs WE suppose our loving wife , ' may WOULD charge to our account at the j izer.s florists j izens
! zen
(nilf tl'e ay 1 1 1 1 erv
as h .- '
to ... ,- h ini; . sw e, . v.'h. -n o ' : t - Tli --"! s ' a week., Cl e r.ti'f- ; X I he s!i..W SIX i i !i i onot '-nou ?. j ' : i e v.- y n y re a - 1 l - -i nirs a rrom'i ; ! t's p-i t the 1 1 !! it be t ')P is the town?
zen:- nrni t he civic ' : e r t h i n - '
!'n tin p"o,i in sf. t-it. V 11 tl.e -j j,- ,!jb' yo u n g 1 f i s sr' no! cit- ) Well, they ITisv r.of be.. (
into the ditch, so I would like to know win is to baine. Please print thia in one f,f jour worthy oolumr.s. Yours tru'y. MARTIN E. CAMTRELL. Wilcox ave . Hammond, Ind. 'The Tinics an'iiiint of the accident 'as taken from polb.e reports and t!ie p.ii.--o say they were as given in bfj-e . oiumns Ed.toi.t
THE beautiful tribute she would i-Tid !
s s
Very well. They ; n t e . i a . And if v
i to be real
let-
INTENDING to settle with lis
PEOPLE are beginning to realise WHAT th? war rost find j ou wilt
probably
t
r I the po ! ma jo i i
I
citizens
i oorn s The
ipaign for pse it breeds
HEAR some kicking FROM those who don't think
take time t)
I whv no; start a room rju est ion
j the poolroom
until tney c'i ;r c; : ; : : e v a : e j-. d i.-e a e.
r H ii ; pa n o
You al habitue nine
v.-. 1 1 be c i i i - ! "i want them l t lie in out of I
reach their j waged a i V. I .' Be j
Weil, then
11 t he pool - J e. 11- w that!
t imes out :
chief of the A. E. F. An interesting sidelight on the life
: of a man about which few people know as much a they SOLDIERS' ROMANCES. ! -ull like is given by Lieut. W. A. Rankin, for twentyi three rears a T. S. soldier and formelr a sergeant in
manv foreign hririocs to hemmc a eimiia t in tbo rnxt "Black Jack" Pershing's guard. Lieut. Rankin says:
American melting pot. Turkish. Belgian. French and English girls in large numbers are comins: home with ihe boys whose charm? they fell victims to. Indeed these international romances are in many cases of a fascinating favor. Canada is to have a "Bridal Boat" to take home her newly-weds of the army who have taken unto themselves wives in -various countries.
Something lik six hundred men who have been mar-; t ied over there are now collected at the Canadian Dis-1
charge Depot near London awaiting for a liner to take them back to Canada with their wives and children. The wive- and children ar scattered all over England and will meet their soldier husbands at Liverpool when the boat is ready to go out. i No one has suggested yet that several "Bridal Boats'' would be required for the American soldier-bridegrooms but they will be. Everywhere the armv has gone, and the navy, too, the men have taken unto themselves pretty young wives. There are English brides. Scotch brides, Irish brides. French brides. Belgian brides and there is constant gosip that there are a considerable number of German brides. From the general reports one hears around, it is quite possible that the United States will re-pn'rr a "Bridal Fleot." To the routh of us. Rensselaer i agog over the re-tu-n of ono of it? --oblier berries who found a girl in a cavured Gf man dug-out. and made her his bride. GREAT HONOR FOR M. C. Wit;arr G. McAdoo, former secretary of the treasury and director general cf railroads, passed through Michigan City at 1:20 o'clock Sunday afternoon in a private car attached to Michigan Central passenger train No. 13. He is enroute from New vork to California. As his car nsssed the local M. C. ''P"t Mr. McAdoo waved his ricjht h?nd at the men i - "'e ticket office. Michigan City Dispatch. We suppose that stop net the whole works foe the rest of the uav. r"a a sood thir.r William didn't. hake V i- fist instead of w aving hi -, hand.
"Do you know that General Pershing's left shoulder is lower than his right and that he always has the left shoulder of his uniform built up that is, padded in order to maintain that superb flgrue of his?" remarked Rankin when asked to give a personal picture of the American commander. "General Pershing talks to a buck private as if he were in the ranks himself. He likes best those men ho
i don't shiver after taking an icicle bate. I ve known
him to take blankets away from officers to cive them to his men. If you ever went through one campaign with
Pershing you have a friend in htm for life." "Pershing is a man who does thing? and doesn't j talk about it. It makes me laugh when I read about him
hobnobbing in social affairs. I don't believe a word of it. When I first started soldiering the General was a brigadier, but it was just as easy for a buck priva'e to go up to him and talk to him as if he were a buck. If you ever went through one campaign with him you are his friend for life. "I!e doesn't want any mollycoddles around him. He ikeB the kind of fellow who can sleep on the ground in ero weather with their feet toward a fire, get up in tine morning, take off their shirts and wash in water that is so cold that icicles form. He likes best the men who don't shiver after such a bath. He's the greatest opet fighter in the world. Why. I've known Pershinc to take blankets from his officers and give them to hio men I never knew a soldier who wouldn't go the limit of human endurance and then some for Pershine. Pershing isn't strong on paper work and does very little writing. He was hardly ever known to have a pencil or pen r paper in his pockets. When be w rites his initial? the Js is a perpendicular line crossed at the top with .t
sort of horizontal crook to it."
AND makin? the worst of our own. WE arc much CONCERNED over the condition of
WHAT it would have co t IF we hadn't won it. MEN who hae little desire can find
PERFECT with
contentment in
room
THREE or four w remarks
urn. a few c
IS all that is rxpec'ed from him.
TENTI'ON! Here's Buddy!
of ten develops i t a row.", an ill it - i i crate person and one that handlesthe American language rs relcssl;.-
And if this is not a disease, I ,j liKe to know what is. So t.. the rijc club please look into this matter; keep the boys that are under ace out of the
I poolrooms : find a different place fo-
thern to assemble especially on Sattirdnjs) make the police r bey the
nical I rule, find punish th r-onl room own-
l.t woo vio'rites the law. I would ad- I 'vise ii.itn e ij ; at e net ion , 1 an. a high si-bo-d st-ider.t who sees t
v if ;.ft:-'ii ;? not ta:v"ii at on e. ; -.u Mire I .-.n ba k-d by the Hoard! Education and the f.n-ilty. j
STUDF-XT. East Chicago.
t TTT li " m
Aiiey won l tome iner
Editor Times: You nil wh;t- fo;ks need ns fear of o n- colored population moving in jour ii'-irg district, as such is not desira'iIe for cur people. We do not care to live around coal ye ;!. and such as our ladieu would in unable to do th wash, but think some of our white ne-iihhors might call a big meeting and try to stop it, and force us to take our case before the j'-'iee 8t Indianapolis, to quiet them drill. No s r. w e are very ma. h satisfied where we are row located. where
j there is no d'rt or noise and we hope i to keep it so or some of our colored
chbors might advertise their place sal" to some white trash. ' RASTCS JOHNSON." Morton Court.
I
Mayor Hodtra, f.urr, la la receipt of p.
a letter from Lieut. John W. Scott, a former Gary attorney, but now with the 2Hh l". S Inf., in the army of occupation on the Rhine. He is stationea at Mendt. the most advanced post in Germany. The Gary soldier lias no dea when he will be homeward bound, fie has been wounded several time during the war.
A ltter to II .G. Hay., Jr.. president if the Gary State Rank, tells of Major It If. Hnsir.fr and Major Tom Cutler meeting in France. Roth are Gary men and their meeting was a glad one Roth the Majors are looking fine but neither of them expect to see the T'nited States befo-e May or June and Major Hosmer expects to be sent to Italy. Major Hosmer also writes of seeing Captain Corl Roardman. former Gar- specialist, who has been in France since last October.
iigust Hrhnell. 'WhlllnB. returned home yesterday from Camp Knox. Ky., havinx received his honorable discharge.
2!fh Inf., Fast '"hiiago: Private T
H. Gillman. Co. P., 2S t h Inf.. Hammond: Private Frank L. Johnson. Co I. Urtth Inf.. Doha it; Corpora! Raymond L. Tortier. 40th Eng. Hammond: Corp Albert G. Pcheunaman. Co. I. 4th Inf., Gary.
e hiuidrril slity-eTen papers were filed in County Recorder Johnson's office on Thursday, making the largest number ever fled in one dav in that office. The returning sold ers ere having their discharge papers recorded which makes th work very hea y in t'na t office.
Figure" made public h -r the Wnr P.partmfnt today showed that 4 70. 73 sifficers and men of the American Expeditionary Force. had' sailed for
Says He's Net to Blame. Ilsnimrnd. Ind. March K. 1013. Editor Twr.es: 1 notice in 0ne of the columns in the Times that the accident that I had cn the Iike George h'jilf-vard with John N'eiring, in which our car was knocked in the lake, that we had been drinking find that Chas. Shendle w arguing which one was driving ami that we both got away. That statement is not true: not one word of It.
l. me up to March 13. That number i f presented 24 percent of the strength of Gen. Pershig's forces on November !J and left 1.478.5n in France.
Of the total returned home or on the way. 17ti.nl; were casuals, neludiiig sic"? and wounded. out. of t7.074 Infantry in France in November, only Si',4:'4 had been returned, while the field artillery figures showed 7rt..",s sent home ,,ut of 213.-
WABASH J. Hamilton Lewis. of Chicago, former t'n'ted Sfttea entor will be one of the speakers st th WMsrn Day celebration to be held here ,pri! JO, by the Eleventh District Democrats. Pensions will be held in the afternon and evening, with a bano, in in the evening. SEVERE TEST SHOWS HOW TOJAVE SHOES "A molder in our foundry wore a pair of shoes with Keolin Scl3 every day for ten months and two weeks both in the foundry, and to and from hi? work and they are just worn out." The Sessions Foundry Company of Bristol, Connecticut, makes this report on a pair of Neolin-soled molders' thoes given them for test. Neolin Soic3 have none of the shortcomings of other soles. They do not bum or crack under conditions such as these nor do they wear out quickly under the grind of abrasive materials. They are made by Science to be especially tough and durable, mil stand the roughest kind of usage and so wear longer and save money. Moreover, they are comfortable and waterproof. You can get them on new shoes in many styles fcr men, women and children or as re-soies They are manufactured by The Goodyesr Tire &. Rubber Co., Akron. Ohio, who also m3ke Wingfoot Heels guaranteed to outwear all other heels. Heolin Soles S.tda Mr IU. L . S. Pt. OS.
STATE ROAD-BUILDING. There has been an inexplicable slowness on tho part of the states to avail themselve sof government roadbuilding aid. Federal 'appropriations already available for use in co-operation with state efforts amount to nearly $."0,000,000. and there will he S20ii. 000,000 more
available during the next three years. The government
NOT GETTING BACK TO NORMAL. has given its approval to 7R0 road building projects in I The
The Christian Science Monitor finds thnt: "Certain j various parts of the country, entailing an expenditure ecoromic facts nr be-coming more clearly self-evidon j of $21 ,000.000 of government money, and involving 7.ST0 'o the people of tho T'ni'fd State- as the months roll b-- ! 'tiile.'; of roads. And yet only 4.7 miles of highway have
Nick Krahos. Whiting, was home from Camp Sherman, Ohio, on a threeiay furlough. The bntlehlps iouh Carollnn and Leuisinana. and the transport Arcadia, have arrived in Hamilton Roads, w ith returning troops. All the men on the South Carolina returned as casuals, among them being companies from Irdifinn. Il'.'rtols. Maryland. Texas. Ic wa and Ohio. Ralloon companies D. r. and F. and a surgical unit were among the Louisiana's passengers.
Arcadia brought home the 11th
Ammunition company, a Texas organ 'ration and several casual companies.
I 'vlnr xponcs tire excessively high. The pric"1 ! 'Ten constructed so far under the federal plan.
i
ohprted for necessirv commodities r out of proportion
c the- cost of produc'iou ''-r''l sale. Wages and taxes arc hiir't. but the perccitage added by manufacturers and dollars to meet increases in these particulars are no' justified. Price? are maintained at a high scale very largely because consumers consent to them. Insufficient excises are offered for advances in articles but slightly f st all, affrc'ed by eeneral conditions. There is too much profiteering. "It was recently announced in V,'.: hir.g'on that there could be ro a'tenipt by the government, throuah the Department of Justice, to call up for derision before the Supreme Court, a thi ses-ion the anti-trust cases that vpre postponed for the duration of the war. Some of i!ip;p rase;-, have a direct bearing upon the cost of living.
There ought to be a scramble for this $21,000,000 -nd "'or whatever part of the J2o0.000.ooo appropriation
ll itKenclon Interested In hniinar tj... 15 1. t.h fie'. 1 artillery the tloos'er Rainbow regiment demobilized at Ft. lii-njamin Harrison. ar to he orcanlz-
i- ii In- h scecial committee of tlie e-
will "necome available this year. In most of the st;.teS t r,tiv, board of the Rainbow- Cheer cood road? are r.eeded more than any other fn prove I Sn. itv and all possible efforts are to ment. It is desirable to build them now, particularly ! nlmu' Ul influence the war drpa-t-because their construction till absorb labor at a critical 'nt ,lav; "Innout brought home for the mustenn out time, and because the paved highways completed within J f,f ,,,, rrjment. whi. h win soon start the next few months would play a big part in tlie ex- l-.ome from Nennahr. Germany.
pected business revival. The states can get money to build roads easily enough. Prices are high; but they may not come down; and anyway, to offset the expense of marepials and labor there is the liberal contribution of the government. Any state not taking full advantage of this opportunity is woefully short-sighted.
British Officers Like American Cooking, King George Finds On Visit To "Y" Hotel
He Gets Assurance Hit Men
Are Not An Annoyance
. m J' oil,. . i yiJim.jSJUj jui winwr i n
Because They Happen To JiitM& Drop In At Mealtime lf&:&$KJ&" i , x' K i If the peoples of different nation- i TtfcV-.iA ! ?tP ' alities can be brought together at . ?fi Z VSt 1 I T?
dining tables, there won't be any "Z " - - C'l" V!v--VflkS -o1- ! need of peace tables, iu Ihe opiu- l,. VA 4"f 3 " vS 1 ion of King George V. It has been 'WeW' 4 ,he King's custom recently to go ) , C V:'r A' ?
Bhnnt meeting American otneora i u i it . . . .'- . r i.Jr j
The follow Inn I.nke eounly aoldier wounded in ait'on. he .lust retimed f t om Fran'-e. and w ere sent to the I'. S. Arn.y Hospital at West Raden for t tea ten-iit. all of whom however, were able to walk to the a mini la ncc conveying them to the hospital on Sunday last: Private Andrew Yerrth. Co.
and men at the camps and i.m.l.a. j centers in England. On a vis.it tn M
the Washington Inn, the American ' J'l officers' retreat in London, he re- i" -
marked to Stanley Ross Fisher, th i i ' Vivcr
"Y man in cnarge oi social acuv- ? r ,
ities tnere
"You men of the Y.M.C.A. are do
ing a great that a good
frequent this
meal lime. I
the way."
"Not at all.
like the idea.
"Good," said
as American
have their knees under tho same
table, we needn't worry about international complications." The King and Queen are more familiar figures to thousands of Americans in England than any President has been. They have viiiited nearly every big hotel and "Y" but ia. England and Scotland.
:ii-
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S. - -3 "rr v t C 4?
:e
i
L ! -
. .. : e- i .
iV?..Ci ZTr ;v-.W-.. I - je J , l-Ct it t f 4
I.
work. I understand , i 5 ., T -t. -MpV , tpJli 4 many English, officers ?rtSt- ' ' '"f.'M A A- "-rl
place, especially at ; Crt - '' ' 3? .--s
hope iney are not in r v 1 ;v-.'-.---.i '-----3 4? '
" replied Fisher. "Wa A p . t i ' H ' , t ? t : W f
the King. "So long t ; Ul ? Ar'. r;' i.t-i' 7v 1 r I i 1
and British officers H.S, .J-Tii -C. 'tr'"' M ?UFU
c 4 Jtej,t Vkw a-Ct", Jfen? ir J
" r . .r
R4
The Wind Shows No Favors in Choosing Hats.
JST)
Some: fa)s. Dahet's ) Nahetre Make a Hi t
v
Gy C. A. VOIGHT
2s r
f f
on Tmamic ) Voj 5o Much PETeV dear' j
i
it' m
M m I
: ' ) . uMA
