Hammond Times, Volume 13, Number 255, Hammond, Lake County, 10 April 1919 — Page 4

Pajrc Four. flll-LI l-JILI. I III

THE TIMES.

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS Y THE CAKE COUNTY PRINTING . PUBLISHING COMPANY.

Th Lake County Times Dally excert Saturday and Sunclny. Kntered at th postofflce In Hammond. Juna i. l?0o. The Ttn es East Chicaito-Indlana Harbor, dally except Sunday. Enured at the postofflca !n East Chicago, Nov ember IS. 1913. The Lake County Ttmea Saturday and Weekly Edition. Entered at the p?s'ofttca in Hammond. February 4. 1914. The Gary Evening Times Pally except Sunday. Entered at tho postofflce. In Gary. April IS. 1912. All under the act of March I, 17S. as aecond-clas mattar.

rORKION AD TT 21 TIKI IT O OTTIOB. G. LOGAN I'AV.NK & CO.. CHICAGO.

TEtlPHONKS. Hammond fprlvate exchange) 3100. 3101. 3101 (Call for whtvir department wanted. Gary Office Telephone 1JT N'8nt A- Thompson. Fast Chicago.. . Telephone 931 K L. Evans. En ChW d". .Telephone 54I-4. East Chlcafro (Th- T:mfs Telephone 3HI Indiana Harbor (News IValrl Telephone 801 Indiana Harbor (P.eporter and Class. Adv. ). -Telephone 2SS TCntting- Telephone 80-M (on Point Telephone 4S

WKOIR PAID-TV CIUCnXATTOW TKAJ ANT TWO OTHIB PAJIiS IN TO CAX.U1EZT UKOIOIT.

If you have any trouMe itettlnf Trrr Times makes coreplaint immediately to th Circulation Ipartmnt. The Times will not be responsible for the return of any unroliclted articles or letter and will not notice nonj moua communications. Short signed, letters uf general interest printed at discretion.

NOTICE TO STSBSCltXBZKS. If ynu fail to recelva your copy ef Thi Tisrrs as promptly a you have In th past, please do not think it hns been lost or was not sent on time. Remember that the mail service is not what It used to b and that complaints ar general from many sources about the train and mail service. Thb Tikis has increased its mallinic equipment and is striving- earnestly to reach its patrons on time. Ba prompt in advisinr us when you do not get your paper and we will act promptly.

H n

KEEP SCHOOLS FREE FROM IT. Tiie right of a teacher in the public schools to use ber restrum for political or economic propagada is involved in a fight against the suspension by the school board of the city of Washington of a teacher of English who has been treating her pupils to radical political riews. If the public schools are not to be wrecked they must be freed of all political, economic and religious propaganda. The citizen who Is required to pay taxes to support schools in order to have some opinionated teacher thrust partisan arguments upon his children has a cause of nievance which perhaps would stick in the courts. One thing that Is ailing Germany is the use of the public schools for propaganda. Let the propagandists go hire a hall or start a newspaper or take a soap box. To take the people's money for the purpose of giving instruction in facts and then to use the time carrying forward pom private or party or class or other agitation upon a conscripted audience afraid to talk back is a fraud upon the public. , There is a wide-spread, organized, powerful movement to rrostitute the public schools of the country to economic and political propaganda. It Is reflected in text books, school papers acd in the partisan views handed out by many teachers. The schools should not be used for Republican, Democratic, Socialist, or any other kind of propaganda. The text book In "English" used In the District of Columbia high schools is almost entirely a compilation of President Wilson's speeches and messages. That was a fair start on the school room politics that hos brought protest from the school patrons who object to having the political education of their children taken over by those who happen for the time being to control the schools.

PANSY'S OFF AGAIN. Secretary Baker now sails for Europe to join the other merry makers of the cabinet who are rollicking around the old world capitals garnering gobs of glory and incidentally a number of desirable presents from nations that cherish the very erroneous idea that the way to reach the heart of the American people is through paying honor to their public officials. Pansy is a little late getting started, but let us trust that he will return with as large a pile of plunder as any of the rest of them who have deserted their duties here to pose in palaces and absorb l abulum from the plates of princes and potentates. Fort Wayne News. We hope that See. Tiedfield will decide to go. He deserves a Junket a3 -well as the rest of them and those side burns of his would create a profound impression cmong the alfalfa raisers over there.

HAS CLEMENCEAU RESIGNED? A Paris correspondent of one of the leading New Tork papers, in a dispatch dated March 19:h, stated that he had been told by a high authority that Clemenceau, the French Prime Minister, recently resigned his office but that President Poincare refused to accept the resignation. There has been no official confirmation of this rumor but the story Is current In Paris that after President Wilson's return to France, on Friday, March 14th. he stated daring a talk with Premier Clemenceau that America could not and would not enforce the full French demands regarding the disposition of the west bank of the Rhine and would not support France in its efforts to prevent Germany from annexing German-Austria. Subsequent to this conference, it appears, Clemenceau presented to President Poincare his resignation as Premier and also as delegate to the peace conference. In refusing to accept the resignation. Poincare Insisted that Clemenceau retain bis official status and obtain the best terms possible at the peace conference, even if he could not secure al lthat might be desired. The action of President Poincare in the matter seems to have been influenced to a large extent by a feeling on his part that the French nation needs the support of America in connection with after-war matters and must therefore accept President Wilson's views as to the treatment of Germany. 1 MT. I " lli III

DUTY TO THE PUBLIC. A Jury at Topeka, Kan., has rendered a verdict, in favor of the State Journal in a damage suit brought agafX't that newspaper because of Its publication of official reports showing lhat a local tteatre was unsafe. That the publication of this information caused financial loss to the plaintiff seems not to have been denied; but the factor of public service involved outweighed private Interests, In the view of the Jury. The Jury found that there had been no malice in the publication and decided that it bad been the plain duty of the editor, Frank P. MacLennan, to publish the facts. The Issue involved that of the right of a newspaper to protect the public even at the cost, of Injury to private interests has often been threshed out in libel suits. And, as a rule, juries have decided that the lnrgr interests must prevail, as they have decided in this Kansas case. It costs a good deal to defend a stubbornly fought libel suit. But th end achieved almost always justifies the sacrifice of time and money. In Topeka, for instance, nobody will hereafter doubt the courage and the gen sense of public duty of the editor of the State Journal. High as he has always stood with his neighbor. Frank P. MacLennan stands still higher as a result of this libel suit.

WE MUST PUT IT OVER. Patriotic Indiana newspapers are thoroughly awake to the need of putting the fifth loan over the top and are losing no opportunity to awake the people who think that the war is over, when the bills for that war are not paid. The Indianapolis News says: Great preparations are being made by the state for the coming Victory loan. Workers ar pledging their time and efforts to make it as much of a success a.i previous loans. All the work will be of little avail if every citizen does not go over his accounts and make up his mind in advance just what his dbt to his country is, just what his share Is to be in this work of honor. While the boys were in the trenches there was a great appeal to the heart, a great play on the foelinps; talk of fighting, talk of deeds of heroism did much to boost the loans to tremendous proportions. The actual fighting with arms is over, the boys are coming bark and taking their places in civilian life, and the tendency is to let down on the coming loan. There is a feeling that the war is over; but the debts of this country are not yet paid. Secretary Glass in his address to the loan workers meeting in Chicago said that the Victory loan depends entirely on the patriotism of the American people, and that the nation should have no debt to the 6oldier or to" the world unpaid. It is time for the individual to take stock of his possession to see just how much he can lend his government to help pay its debts. It is not a question of how much we can give the government, but how much we can lend, at a profit to the lender; it i.s not a question of what the neighbor, or the employer or the co-worker is going to do. The success of the loitn depends on how much the individual thinks of the honor of his country, and how much he feels he owes the men who fought for freedom. Now i8 the time to begin thinking what this country stands for, how much we want to lend to help keep the United States at the top. and how much we appreciate being American citizens.

BMBSgtu II ItuegPT -wrUHjgyw

Ihursday. April 10. 1919. mjswmjl. ism . mmuisjia.1 u-uajgg

i,n mi if

THAT mlstfortunes never come singly to the wets IS illustrated by the fact THAT a schooner has been sunk oft of tho coast of

CAROLINA ruin.

with 20,000 gallons of

to see where

about

musing

SO fur we have failed

any employer IS advertising for a good driver of a "water wagon Bl'T then there is plenty of time we guess BKFOni; July 1. SOME of our readers wonder how we can

Hl'X on in our silly -a ay

Orn ttirl friends without

tome domestic ruetion j HIT wo suppose it is because a worn-

an witn In ir sure intuition FORMS a pretty estimate of his veracity WHF..V he gets to talking: afttr ihe's LIVKD with Mm trn ycn-s. 11 note that the troops in VIRGINIA ate guarding four prohibition t A;i:.TS treated with murder Tilt; worm MH turn dire, tly

certain'y never can tell these

TERSEVERENCE is the root of all prosperity. NOTICE an agitation for 'Own Tour Own Homii" T1IASSALL right but a lot of

PEOPLE are going to wait awhile tol

see WHETHER the country is to be

TI'RNEX) over to the Bolshevik! first or not. A HOLT all the t rench that most of the br.ys ome.

TIMES Reporter Says "Souvies" Are in U.S.

France and Germany Are Almost Cleaned Out of War Trophies, Bear Drive Says Stars and Stripes Hits the Market, German Factories Made Them.

HOME with blanc

from oer seas is vin

By CP I.. X,. J. PARRY. Tim Reporter With atmy of Occupation.) OS ANN. Germany. March 16 Ynu ask me ahout .souvenir?. V. ell. Here ain t no su -h tliiiiK here, that is war "Fouvies." You've jrot th in all over

. . , .1 - .... .

" 1 ' armor '!. i :ie story )&,t , an, i .-ttai. as well as the -Stars and Mrij"" do-, i J:i-mk. ',

i .-o , oiiiwc ji. for ;r gives toe suhje- j som

i inorougn explanation.

n?tols, but these, somehow, disar-p. are ryst.-nosly lllvUy Hf.r , doughboys maroh,.,, illto ,;f.rn.iai,v. th- Cnnans look away all the leather th-y .-ouM carry so th-t all that

n-1 i in siifin ion to a lot of

a t ins, v ho-h

parT help but

YOl

days. HERE'S a ror who took pl'-k-d up a

a chance and

Pi 'KKTIiOOK April first

off the sidewalk on

THE SEAT OF THE LEAGUE. There is sure to be prolonged debate over the selection of the proper place for the seat or capital of the League of Nations. Any country ould covet such a. honor. Americans naturally would be highly pleased if the peace conference saw fit to establish the new inter national headquarters at Washington. There will be little insistence on our part, however, and no hard feel ings when the choice goes elsewhere as it almost certainly will. Paris might seem a natural place to choose, in some respects. But Paris, like every large city, has its defects for such a purpose, a fact clearly revealed in the progress of the peace conference work. In Paris there is too large and active a body of local public opinion. Too much influence can be brought to bear on any international gathering. There is too much propaganda, too much effort on the part of newspapers and other influ ences to stampede delegates. London or Rome might be a little better but some smaller city in a smaller conn try would be better still. The Hague, which was chosen originally as the ideal location for an international peace organization for the very reasons given above, is no longer viewed very favorably because of the pro-German leanings of Holland during the war. Of all cities suggested, Brussels seems to meet w ith most favor. The majority of Americans would probably vote for it if they were given a chance. Besides having many natural advantages for such a purpose. Brussels would seem especially appropriate becau.se the honor is deserved by Belgium's heroic record, and tecause it selection would teach an eternal lesson. The capital of the little country, crushed umer heel of the most brutal military power in history, would rise to the dignity of an international capital relegating militarism to its proper place and giving peace to all the world.

AM) found it full of money. MANY a man who thinks he is marry in k a COOK finds later on that he's marrie.1 a detective.

NOW and th'n one girls

of the (harming

AND c'e?t lfi guerre. HOW could Mr. l ord'

be funny "H ITH a hired man named Tipp running it?? AVE have just in our evening reading finished about the TOWER of Rahel AN1 sometime whn we see our dearly loved pa tor v E are going to ask him if it wasn't a great place. FOR the people who believe that evtry man ought to say just WHAT he thinks in his own way? COME to think about it IT is hard to remember a single mudslinger

neient fire-

were or fullv r,,n,

K'.ie.l. was the follow-in : haver.ficks. infsntrv' rrW

of deakin. some of i-ifi , -

of dogskin, some of f.taixkin- tuJ .'

dry r'litark of flu American of- i t no one s-nn to want thel .....!..

fief- in Trier that thre are more ;er- i weapon?), .u grmd-rs hoot

' loo o .-3irt(v i.'ihm j u a r u . r'ors. tipjtiif' ovi

iii-r.; are n i ne enure Kais-ress rath- to- field. STpe for dress

erland has more than the customary j maneuvers: snuff

111 i ruin in it. l n natt lenelds tent :- . tent

have been swept clean. and though j goo there may be a few warehouses in in- ' kinds.

terior Oermany as yet untouched it prob- 1 'lie tti4,:

: rs. some for

occasions and

a rid - i uhbi ) boxes

pole- and pins, (verv

material, too), harness of all ai.d a!' made r.f paper, including

spiral puttee. ,1,,, ,r ,.an...

I "- '"i? o.'ior" in-ir contents j :i--s? Kit forks and spoons, glass and j i!l be on their way to occupied t'-rri- I metal cant rrayer hook, v, ltfl tory. ready for sa! to the first Yank or ' covers and Testament. with black env j Allied pur.has. r that happens along. ; ers. w tjnd medals (Mack for one and

j Although it has not been off, . -jail v re-

i vealod tha

t here

are factories in ;er-

WITH clean hand?. PAKIS demands open sessions peao count its HT all means

of

two wounds. Silvfr for thr- or four, ard gold for tiv. or more there are no

many turning thejr lathes and machines ' rt! -re r.ilv r or gold medals); saber for no other purpose than to satisfy the 5tncts- 'ivriuan Ti1 Cro5 arn bands. Insatiable American cruz for souvenirs, i Prisoner of war arm bands (yeii-w with it is known there re several plants !rprl "HeriniO. various insignia, such as turning out little things nmh rings j eresser) flHgi cf Signal Corns, w ith miniature Iron Cresses on thorn, j ,he capital F of t he field t leplmne batI buttons, ash trays, etc. (.me of these j ; talions. and the snaky range insignia at Essen, w hile others are sf a t tered i r,f th(' Medical Corps. about in the vicinity. Frankfort, also,! And then there are the coffee roaster.

factory making j 1 " -'?rman "coffee brans" used to he

issued raw. and had to he roasted in : the field. There are also cheese cans i which need no comment exempt to add

that the O- rmans d!1 issue lmc-se chp.

Till: i,eop!e who in I h' to nay the bill

is believed to harbor e

a specialty of war mementoes. The plant near Ersen is said to be going strong- on rings made out of gun metal, and brightly burnished to look

long run have J "K P""5- i"'i'vi.

...Jl.Tri. ni K i'l til

WHO like th" wi'h-hone goorR- t tf s I'EOI'S in to give u? an item

effect

A N T ;i s vv e we always fe

look into her love y- eyes 1

AKE entitled to gaze on the ruction ANT decide who's to blame. WE remark d to a dear girl in a fatherly way THE other day that duty is a greater thing than love Bt'T just the same we saw her not long affr

LIKE say ing girl is bare"

the It'iu without the

AND the nearly so.

girl even with the item

AND if you think it all over

AND not having the dear girl even to "WIPE and put them away.

B. I". Ilopklna, nOn of Mr. and Mr. George Hopkins of IS Ogden street, Hammond, returned home Saturday from France. He was with th 65th Engineers.

ing some word from their son, Karl,

a released prisoner-of-war and not '

heard from for more than ten week. According to all reports and letters previously received here by him it was underftood that he would be gail-

ilwi-t kl i.rliTHh k. .rrlrrrf U . i? lor home at an early oate, Dut

Fiat from France where he was In 'there has lceti,a ion? time intervened

tli? service for seven months. He is.sne then and no word from him. Ad

expected at his home in Hammond

Thursday morn'ng. He is the son-in-law' of Attorney It K. rtoone and wa associated with him in his office in the Hammond build ne:. O

many Yank pur-

imprestjon that these

rings are tf gold but the only gold In Germany, if German authorities and newspaper are to be believed, if it is rot in the to of pome stocking or in the pot under the fireplace, is in Gorman banks, or on its way to pay for damages. ISSUE IKOKT CROSSES. When the war began. Wiihelm dr Zvveite had millions upon millions of

j news ana rut nuckles. tons upon Ions

OFT walking with a second lieuten- I f,f Iron '-"? and wound medals, butaJJt j tons, epaulettes, and all sorts of other j ordnance supplies. Much of this vva. WHILE her mother was washing the I left over when the war ended, even thr; dishes Iron Crosses, though, as every Tank

j knows, they were distributed as a sort i of regular ration, like slum or C. C.'s.

j And it Is these leftovers that are now j being sold.

If the traffic keers up. i won't need an edict of Allied and associated powers to prevent the Germans from having an army. The cloth is being made over into clothes for children the Germans are inherently opposed to race suicide while the rest of the st." is being gold over the counters. A Get man army without iron crosses, and other pretty and glossy baubles certainly can't be expected to fight, not by resolution of radical Rhine republics, at least. There are no iron crosses for sale in

j Coblenz. that is. not officially. There

was a great Teuton hue and cry over this traffic in one of the foundation stones of kultur, and the shop keepers withdrew- them from their windows; and they're rather hard to get. WAREHOUSES CLEANED OUT. The big .German warehouses at Metternich. across the Moselle, about whose contents fahoulous tales permeated even unto the hinterland of the S. o. S., and which proved such a Meci a for officers, seeking, one and all, at least one shiny helmet of the type sent to America to

be used as prizes in the Victory Loan 1

contents of those warehouses, be it

And all this is in charge cf the SOCrd Advnnoed Ordnance Depot, members of which eat. sleep, are entertained and do their guarding all within the precincts of the warehouse enclosure.

1

; w'i,i jt'f.; iiit V-'t'?T'.'A'g?'Jfl';l3

HIGHEST MARKET PRICES and accrued interest paid for

TENTION!

& iCl G O UUUU V

LIBERTY BONDS

U , s nt? then fcncl no wori from him

it r s i r t :i: 1 11 r n i v i n v i r '7 ni.v

CJMP THORNE & CO. SERVICE AT WEIS' DRUG STORE 575 Hodman St., Hammond, Ind. JOHN PORA CO. 3462 Guthrie St., Near P. O., Indiana Harbor, nd. NASSAU & THOMPSON N. W. Cor. Forsyth and Chicago Ave, East Chicago, I no. TRIBE OF K 675 Broadway, Cary, nd.

the encouragement that he I possibly awaiting; transport. Karl had been confined to the Get man prison for so manv months that his general health weakened and he was recuperating, aocordinsr to letters forwarded here.

but the long drawn out weeks with ! th

no tiding from him are again occasioning his folks uneasiness. Indiana Harbor has long been awaiting his re

turn.

NO "RIDERS." The American people are opposed to "riders" placed on legislation in such a way that an undesirable pro vision must be adopted or the whole measure defeated. We shall hear from the people on the plan of the- presitho T.onB-ii of Nations a "ridt.'r" on tho

peace treaty in such a way that the lea.?u" must be adopted or the whole treaty defeated. And the people will not approve of trying to force one measure tliroush on the merits of another. "Tubs on their own bottoms," is a good rule to follow.

"HOW dry is a bone?" asks the Baltimore Sun. Wait, brother, until you wake up some mornin? feeling as dry as a brick kiln, only to find water, water everywhere and not a "snort" to drink.

Seven more I m nspnrt one at them a "honeymoon and stork ' nhip. have

sailed from France with more than no tiding from turn are again occas- repeated, are merely ragged shadows of; 4 ' offi ers and nesrlv 7.000 enlisted irn!n'; fr'Iks uneasiness. Indiana I their former shelves. The helmets are!

men of the American Expeditionary Harbor has long been awaiting his re- j "kapoot." And if you so much as v his

fore the war Ho.:n!m.ni announced turn. i per the word "souvenir" in a sort of

v sirrdav . The Pla 1 1 hn rg. which is Z j wistful, hungry way at Mett--rn;ch you

due at New Yo,k April IS. besides of-! """m ' 1 '"rnl avenue. ,tro apt , be masse cred in ice rW

. , . - .11 " '.luiiK.. nas reiurnea nome trom blood or if He ir 'erroiree is feelinir nc r and l.vy.t men ik bnnirinir lhir-1 " i. n u n'riOK'i n ieei,,ig

tv-seven .o I a i laiiiirj ! overseas where he spent several particularly jov:al. you will be referred

w ives and five ' child-en. The other i '"on,h,s- the greater part of which j to n American sold:cr's helmet, r-gulu

vessel., are: Rnchambeau. New York . " Cwnnnea ,0 - ""P'"1- Hon issue, suspended on nail behind

. .-. , . ... c, l"U to innesa. the commanclinc: offiier-s desk, ami he- i

urn i.t ' r.rr cr a mi Aim m e n - .- . i . i 1 -

v,... n r I ... " . . i neath which

' " o'o .-ikon - . -..c v,.-, , mrenee janes, vviillinK. la home fi.er and 23 men; Dante Aliheri. New- frcm port Clinton. Ohio, on a ten riay Yoi k. April 14. 74 officers and t,77 fprtouRh. visiting his parents. Rev. men; 0kavva, New York. April 14. jand Mrs. Georpe .V Jones. He is ltwo officers and eisht men; Zealan-J t ed at the Eri Proving Grounds, dm. Charleston, April IS. 1!9 officers : where the R-uns. which have been

and C.:;:l." men and the Pasadena. NewYork April 22, eight ofTicers and l'Jo m n.

ma nu factured.

are beinR

tested

11. C fshtfr, formerly j'lerfc nl the

Victoria Hotel. Gary, has returned to tcrday.

Gary after more than a year overseas in the ordnance department. He was mustered out at Columbus. Ohm.

barteK Pederaen. Wkltlnic. Tho han been in the hospital corps in France,

airivea saieiy in -ewport News, yes-

I'rlvnte llonnrd !. lm la apenilinK several days with his parents, Mr. ar.d Mr.:. Emery Adams. Tyler street in Gary. Pinee his return from France last Jenuary. he has been stationed at Fort. Porter, New York, in the medic.il service.

HEADLINES tells of court in which the magistrate J

once sat as clerk. That's nothing, we once knew a judge who used to tend bar on the corner.

Seraennt W niter H. .H1. who h been stationed at Camp Taylor for the past year !n the utilities detachment .. M C has returned to his home in Gaw-. Sprt'oant G il is a son of Mr. and Mrs. Martin Gill in Massachusetts treet

Grorce Prltrhard. Whiting, nhn hna hfen with the 155th Aero Squadron, overseas, arrived home yesterday.

ItrlnaliiK home 4.792 oflicera and men. including Britr. Gen. John H . Sherburne, of the 51st artillery, hri-

ade, the transport Mongolia

at Boston today. Scores of harbor j craft load'-d with relatives and friends of the returning soldiers, frave! the bier craft a noisy welcome as she j

came up the harbor.

are printed the- words:

"This is the only kind of helmet we ! have for souvenirs." And even that i

i dgn may have to be (aki n down pretty

soon. i As a matter of fact, much of this i rd- ! nance material is already in the S. O. P. : or on its way to Airfnoi in fulfillment of a G. H. Q. order to th? effect that the ' government had taken a hand in the . souvenir game, and that it wants every-, thing it can pet. r'o- historical, photo-

j graphical and experimental purposes. !

Three classifications were made of the ,

stuff in the warehouses. Part of it froea 1 to the salvase deparrment nt Tours fori photographic purpose."-. Twenty speri- j mens of every ohj-ct found were col-! lected for the etiKinerinc collection at! Is-sur-Tille. from w here they po to the j

arrived i Mates. Alia tnen irere is in-i nistori-

cal collection which was shipped first to Gievres. and then to America. There were many Infers and Mauser

CRYSTAL GLUCOSE for Fine Candy PROMPT DELIVERY Telephone South Chicago 920 AMERICAN MAIZE PRODUCTS CO.

Hotel Hammond (TJEJCT TO MONC2T DEPOT)

Mr. nnrl Mr. Itupes of llr afreet. Indiana Harbor, are anxiously awaitI 1 11 . . i 1 . .

leinia.. Maryland. Delaware and the I

lldstrict of Columbia and was released!

I

have been released for preparat ion j sion. national gruaid icfn froir south-' for return to the I'nited State. the tern Pennsylvania, is effective April I port f'f embarkation at Hoboken iiasjand that of the .13rri, national guard! been informed. The 2IUh division the j troops, from M:nneso-.a. Iow a, NehrasBlue and the Gravl consists of nation-I ka and North and South Pakota, is! aal euard troops of New- Jersey. Vir- effective April 12.

Rooms S1.G0 arxd up Special Kat by the "Wk Hot and Cold Watei-. Steam Xoat. Siiower Batba; JU1 lC.oC.aja. Coo7eniBcea. Popular Priced Lunch Room and Xastaarant la Cobbm. tioa Special Dinner 50c 11 A. U. to 3 P. It OPSSr ALL NIGHT

J. T. STAFF, Jr., Mgr

3

Petey Wound His Smoking With a Bang.

By C. A. V01GHT

I ( OH H Huw! ) ( TUoocxrr I fT jSHowETWj -y Mao -SMokep up J fM fx U ( Awe TUtL Otas I S I j i Hap u TUc Moost- I n 27 " T" Y I - i 9

PETEV ( ACREEDTOWJT, CtSAQ WAS AU -7 UP ALU-TVIE CIGARS J OCAftTHAf rRA VHAOklTHE I MAUt LEFT Y I I f yfft'?? V2v?V?V J tM'yit'f-2'l ) i