Hammond Times, Volume 14, Number 32, Hammond, Lake County, 25 July 1919 — Page 4

Page Four.

THE TIMES. T-rMav. Julv 25. IHIH - " . .- -1'!' .

THE TIMES NEWSPAPERS

EY THE LAKE COUNTY PRINTING COMPANY.

4 PUBLISHING

The Lake County Times Daily except Saturday tol Bundn.y. Entered at th postoHic la ilammojU. Juris . liititt. The Tin r a East Chidffo-Indlana. Harbor, dally except Sunday Entrrtd at the postoftlca in Last Chicago. Nowmbtr IJ. I'jl3. The Lake County limes Saturday and Weekly Edition. Enterrd at the pDstofflce '.n ilammonJ. February . 191. The Gary Evening- Times Pallv ex.-ert Sunday. Entered bt the postofiice in tiarv. April IS. 1912. All under tlie act of March 3. 1573. as second-class ir.atter.

roariopf advxktistwo othcs. LOGAN PAYNE & CO CHICAOO.

Hararaond (private exchange) 31cn.,3101. 3102 (Tail for whatever department wanted.) ?ary Office Trlei'hnno 137 Vassau ft Thirarm. East Chicago Telephone 9" I F L. Evans. Eat Chieasro 1 Tr l-nh. tie .142-11 East Chicago (Thb Times Telephone 3S3 Tn.1i.ma Harbor ( Vews Dealer) Telephone MV! Harbor (reporter and C!.is A1v ) Tei hone Whiting Telephone SO-M Crown Print Telephone 42 If you hsve any trouble renins The T'mes maes complaint im-nedtatelv to the Circulation Tlerarfment.

ike times wi:i not be r

turn of their dead. Away back in the beginning of history the patriarch Jacob, dying in tun land of Egypt, called his sons around his bed. "and he charged them and said unto thorn. 'I an; to be gather unto niy people; bury hip with my fathers in the rave that is in the field of Lphron the Hifiite.' " Anil

many days later, after the period of mourning, his sons i rurrioil him mi intn thp land nf Canaan anil Imrind him as I

they had been commanded. From that time to the present, and as it will be, doubtless to the end of time, the with of the human race, not excepting the savages, has; been. "Bury me in the land of my fathers." And even as the sons ot Jacob carried him out of Egypt and up into the land of Canaan, o have the sons in succeeding generations transported their dead from far distant points to the final resting places as had been wished. Whv not hrine back our dead from France? A great

and trying task, of course, but all things are possible with a nation that fed the armies and civil populations of th,' Old World daring the war, that transported huge armies j and vast amounts of supplies over submarine-infested seas, that fought the enemy in the skies, in the trenches j and in the forests and fields and that finally brought ; about the overthrow of the despotic power that han nu n- ! aced the entire world. Considering the stupendous nature '

!-:SUki'..V.Vi''r-"-.--4ir V,i;-1 "t '.J..'! sj U- I

j iiri'1 .-If pt thro ! I. is brother M

I 1 1 if her ! he - I f ind!y the n'xt in I ' I u a vv h" re t h' re h,

hout tlif rKhf with M t ! ',' n -:i ii ; . wf n ; in

r n n i b. .

.-

t: u isb the hud Mdtlil to sll- bovv

put

IMs.l on til-

Ml I'M niote the obi K- lit.

i !:-.-) h-- know.-, tlian

A MAN i-an vvfai whiskers A.M-i b'- a huinan 1., nitLIT there is n..t mn a hope 1 w THE feilow uh'i is so fend "'' HIS wlnskfrs th.t put. i"irnn: on them

lellow n h eau so inb- ;ib .,;t

i! H l ; i :i

i-; nt if

I'.MNTKIi . r be abb

WILL HAYES 010

NOT SEE LETTERS r- At- ! ; Republican National Chair-

n.brst n ml tint th 'it y a f ha m 4 s ! i

! h.'ii

hu' v. ! unit.'

INI.!;;

ill

1 It

Mir kind t-nip t h' r bustru-ss

i up

irlnslhto fnr the r,'turn of any

tinsolicited articles or levterp and will not notiee nnonv-j ot these achievements, the removal of our dead from

- -- vu.iiniuiip.iuus. priori Mtinea icuerr ui licium

OK thr

iheni THAT ;. mii for bn-aklast.

an 1 1

"terest printed at discretion.

LAXOTR PATD-U? CIRCTTT.ATIO?r THAN ATTT TWO OTHSR PAPERS II? THE CALtrMTT BEOIOIT.

France to their homeland seems comparatively easy. la very many cases, of course, because of the ciiTumstantte?

in the vast

MY v if-1 liny: our 1I'ark IT if a cinch to s,

b

Bht fill Lake I

!ill?

Tnr: Hi

I .' ' iKS a i Mi ' K i N'( ; tl' km. : i i "m j

old-t'ashi

USed

lied man

n t the

it th.'

mis

j i i.'b rs"

fr-'-m

man Knows Nothing of Reservation Letters.

j -'N. :tivr the . riK'-riil nor atttr cop: I thereof have i . n K;Ven or shown ' , ;.n( :ie b. ne n. . r be anyone ronnct: : i in nny vvav with 'he omtniTtce. j I liotuin "f th'-ir P'jbiiration. ! 'l have 1 on in touch by correspond !!!:. and t herwise with I 'resident Tal' : ' ' ,"- oeiiter. of eourse. as well n , vjth thr- others in the effort ii help d -;'..b;g'e .-elation of the situation i:i 1 'he ruht wt. y. but these particular lei tors I have never .ofn." i t. 'ha i rr.ia ii li;ts bc!med to specula'I on lie "Pal,-" in making the letters pubj lie and weTji.i make no comment on ih i action of Senators t.odsro and Krandeg. . j i-'os aftc i noon in connection with th. Ain. rican-Hritish-I-'rarco pact tdedK'"r

(aid to France in c ase of unprovoked t

l

o rr a il '-"

of death this would be impossible, but no

majority of cases. ! "I.b-KASHI ON ED ? a It will be generally admitted that the people of ; a"y ,IU'r' Vi-anr o at least thfi present generation, vsill tenderly care j TC can't see a red

that !h'

1 ! n.

:; m i ; v i i' ' hi,

on t t

ba of

uel er

!..r !i

f INTER MATtONAL NCWS SERVICE; IN'ni.WAI'i iEIS. Ind . . fi. - tiial thai lii' had seen letter- t.. him from forme,- president. Taf't. proposn.g si..

reservations by the cmt" in ratifying ! can

me tr.-aty or poiO' . was made here I

MANICURIST WANTS MORE

i n-

: : i a i . of t ! i e. iio ai -, b- en Riven me.-i-.b. r of

,-d

1

WOTICTE TO STTBSCP-rnERS. If you fall to receive your copv of The Ttmfs as rroinpt-

. - ' lucaae ti3 not m n ( it ms neeir nd

- ... ...... ,,t , uinp. r;ememner tna tne tnan j jor Uie graves oi me Aiiifiicnu ut-ioro hhu .en iui mv.n.

reneral fr m m v ,Z '-k 1!? a.r n,,t the neonle ot the United States want to care for th

'ce. X HE TIMES h iil-rii. it. 1.1 ., . A1

- -r. ........ v .. lcaul i , s .,H i rons tin I nf. tbi

dead, that we may miry meni in ine lar.a i rai.- is ouig ui

1 . WE shall take

welt

- I I J 1 . I. .-. . t

Is strtvlne- rn, 7. IVa i, '""m" 5"u"' ! Own mariyi'S in tne Cause m worm Iieeuoin, aim uiri - ,

. " v w iva i-'M ii nils un iiiur. c ' prompt in advising us when you do not get your paper an4 ' "lirlng back our . will set nriimMlv

of their fathers.

OF the beach to the elm GLAD to hear that the-

1 1 1 : u -in i.o-1

I'.' 1 "

lib rstoo : : IbpubU-j

! le a dqua r; r- a New Y'.' r Jav at 'er his deparlure for

A N ! I.' iX'

' .-i lb: b. that, tin

d.-ia l;t.-rs

f fun-

4 p ? g i m

NOTHING ELSE FOR HIM TO DO. There was nothing else for Judge Martin V. S:n::h in do but to stand nat on his sentencing of the Tolleston

There Is only room for one flag in Lake county ar.diharik m,lrrtprers The defense was not able to show him

I

AND refuse down again.

to

he hint nev. i f. die un1.! tlb y

AS M c clui our v a V to See

. hat Mill e

tion

all

any law why he should set aside the judgment of death. The four murderers confessed their guilt. They com mittcd a heinous crime and admitted it after being given twentv-four hours to decide on their plea. Mawkish sympathizers will find a cool reception in Judge Smith's court and the law, which provides death for those who slay in cold blood without any justification whatever, will alwav? be upheld there. Judge Smith has the highest regard for the sanctity nf his cinrt and the sacredness of the law. He took an

oath when ne assumed tne oince aim iu uwun uai n , jannw,,nlp

costs he will live up to that oath. Justice is meted out j

.swiftly by him. It is idle for criminals to expect ueia.; j George Bates, a negro, on Wednesday evening vented his! brutality on two defenseless women in Hammond and. Judge Smith sentenced him to 5 to 14 years in prison yes J ,.-, nioad oMiiltv tIipup sentences are deter- i

IC1U.1 n uru ii v 4' . . " - i rents to crime. They are already having their weight, j The name of Smith is going to be a terror to evil doeis. ,

that is the Stars and Stripes. There Is room for only

one language and that is the language of the people cf the United States. A SERIOUS SITUATION. The great trouble is people don't always look on both aides of a problem as they do on one side. It is easy for us all to take one view of the medal; the obverse side we seldom take the trouble to glance it. The ultimatum presented to the street car companies by the car men from the standpoint of the companies' offers only one solution the public must prepar for higher fares. The operating companies are entitled to it and they cannot give wage increases unless they are permitted to charge more than five cents for fares. It simply can't be done. It is foolish to think that the company tan run street cars on a pre-war basis. Now let us look at the obverse side of the medal from the car men's point of view. They cannot live on the wages they are getting. They perhaps can exist from hand to-mouth, but who has a right to ask theni to do that. We discussed the situation with a hard-worked conductor. He has a family of seven six of them healthy mouths to feed after more than his share of doctor bills to pay in the past two years. Just let him give his side. "If I could live as I did when I w.as married fifteen vears ago and could buy a fifty-pound sack of flour for 75c. I'd be happy. The other day I had to pay $1.00 for a peck of potatoes. How long do you think my wage.', last in feeding my family? I need a new uniform almost every two months. It costs $30 and is nothing but shoddy. Look at what everything costs. You can't lay up a cent for emergencies. It is just a case of having to fight to live. What's the use? If prices were where they were a few years ago, it would be different. What's the use of living if you have to fight to live?" We leave it to anyone if he didn't speak the truth. The car man, like every other worker, sees prices going

higher and higher. He sees the government permitting I marketed surplus meats and other food stuffs the season

England and Canada to come down here and buy up fooc', ' will be entirely over before housekeepers are able to buy stuffs. He sees profiteering: galore. What is there for j any of the government stock of sugar. him to do but to protest? But nothing seems ever to cause prices to go downJ ward. It is announced that the blackberry crop is one of JUST WATCH THIS. the largest in history and immediately blackberries soar Th" millionaire owner of a hosierv mill in Durhai- to unheard of prices. Pasturage becomes fine and up goes

V AS a b"au U ful tion garden

'kin

A 1. 1. Pre it in thWASTEtfAKET. A FIVE foot H 1

N'T lo,, like

1 " 'l is i-.f h v. mi: D! "T riintli

day by Will 1 1. Hays, chair Hi publican national eoiiiiiei:

' ' f'-il that, t he b t lel-S bad 'or shown to anyone by any tne national committee. part-) He said, however, that be

Ithe letters lnd been rec

i can r.a not 1 on Vedi:r

1 :id ia tia.. J mails I In statement issued it rtepuMiea n j i state head'V.iartei . Chairman Hays said:; "I have in ver see n the letters from j

"iio- s i i, -mo. nr latt n.eo", ..,! in ta.i Washington rj.-;;.atchc. Tie v had not b. i n received when I p t't b r the . m Mm Tuesday, but I understand they were

I'ooive'i noini.iy afternoon (at national headquarters) and have been fo--

INTER'TtONAl NEWS SERV lrF. i INDIANAPOLIS. July 2b. No lor.K"-

ttie tired business man have h:

nails pared and polished and b.av -half an hour's dishlsome conversation thrown in. alt for fifty cents. Th. I" - B. M. has received another blow m the vital spot the purse. Manicurists here announce a 50 cent ra.se :n prices to meet the mountine costs

FALL OF WHEELS INTO RIVER

'INTERNATIONAL NEWS SERVICEl SOL'TH I 'END, Ind., July 25.

-.v : n

nest il.ojf-r.,

! I'rai.cis Van

Lend u h n plur.g. river.

Er-

1 -, was drowned and Vie.-3.. 1 1. 5on of a So

bills', narrowly escaped death the bicycle they were riding. 1 off a bridge into St. Joe

h-

j v ardr d to me. t rear bed me.

The.

ha v.

net

y e I

The Trmr.s?

w lien mi

WE liKurrd it out that

EE'S hair fb ma ;:! s a!! 1'.'

I NTIL she pels h-r first io AND from then her shape

HEK attention. NTH!N; humiliates us m.

THAN to run a nice picture

e,l,

of some

THEM that hi sell i ! E s i ( ms a in -i a X 1 'K '.!:. re vv a s r V. !1 i did not car HETHEi: his h',ba r

ink.

W$ II Household Hint

z nt rie old e'nuj.

t h'-j iii'iii' t "i wen

MEM' HINT. Breakfast.

THAN fin.vbody i!m

Ol III. in the pa p THAN to have look

bbi- on tlie j.

THE i who A? etal L'.'L'J f:o ,-d

s or r.oi. tn v e bavi

the A u?

AKIANS

w a s

AS if she had brtn all : of. vi as su:Tnn; fron

:hoi up

'MAN who used Ir:t'NKEN liusb.'ind.

v( i t h a

! ezp-s and melted shortening:. Heat ; muffin tins, -rrease, put tablespoon

on,.ei o c.i x..:,. . "' .L' u, i.ahi; twenty or twen-

" """" .-; i -coi:rr, tpiTS ty-five mtr.utfs

i vast orroe Luncheon. Vegetable Soup Ora'cm P.is.-uit Banana and N'uc -ilarl Steamed Caramel Custards Oatmea! Cookies Dinner.

t.h" Cutlets Roiled Potatoes tr

Ciie'ir.ihr Silnoi Raspberry Betty CoiTep

ft

NOTHING COMES DOWN. Neither can the Muncie Press figure it out! Neither can anybody! The Press says: "Almost simultaneously with an ad vance in prices or sugar to the consumer, comes the announcement that the sale of :i.'tfO.00O pounds of surplus sugar held by the war department has been authorized by Secretary Baker. The stocks include 1 4,000,000 pounds in storage at New Orleans and 7,00n,pno pounds at San Francisco. The price is to be fixed by the Vnited States Surag Equalization Board to cover the cost to the government. "Secretary of War Baker, according to the announcement, realized that a shortage of sugar existed in the canning season and decided vo give the American public tho benefit of the surplus. "The canning season for many fruits is already over or nearly so and unless the department puts the sucrar on the market with a good deal more celerity than it has

TENTION! Here's Buddy!

CAKES AND COOKIES. Mar.le Sutrar Cookies One

"ramuated

cun

siijrar. ore cun msio!"

in hot oven.

Coffee Cake One-half cup of sug-

r, iour tablespoons of shortenmpr, cr.o errc, three-quarter cup of water, tvo c:;;,': cf flour, three level teasr "cr.s cf baking powder, one-half tenspoon nutmefr. B. riA to rr.ix and then pour in wellpreased par. and spread smoothly v.hcn p-rcasinrr. Now prepare the cru.rr.bs as follows: Six tablespoons cf brown -suear, four tablespoons of :;our, two tablespoons of shorteninp. Rub between the hands until crumbly and then spread evenly over the cake. Bake :n a moderate oven for thirty minu'.es. This amount

w:u serve eigtjt people.

TO THE POWERS THAT BE The Boys Want to Come Home! Get 'Em Home Toot Sweet!

and :: ,t tswe, t" for borne. which he had not seen for over a j car. and toohim e v e 1 ' It .fi v asleep and

sue-nr. one cup hutter substitute, twr. ; well-beaten etrjrs. two tablespoons1 "'(". two tea.-roori; V'ak'r no'vder' !

-.d5,.-:ent. flour to roll out; 1,. o':;''k oven.

Chrxolnfe V.'sfers Ore cun hut

tor sunsr tu'e. wo cuos stirnr.

e-rs. twelve rake chocolate (bitter). ; baking dish and a laver of vour fa- ? rrrri ,!,?n rn- j- 4. continue

-. i t-vcm-vroi -a. i, one u-nspom uriti i.ish is full

TRY THESE Cottage Fruit Puddine One crrn

ijri sujrar, cne tablespoon butter, twe

i eg-p. tnree cups flour, one cup milk, bakinK powder and fl

fnt'T i r .1 - .

1 i ul. a aver or inp mivrnra i

N. C, has been hearing a great deal of late about social democracy and equality of interest between employer and Tiiploye. He has come to think that there may be something more in all this talk than meets the ear, so, as an experiment for demonstrative purposes, he has democratized his mills. "Our works," he says, "are going to be 'irned over to the employes immediately, to be managed by them through an organization patterned after the government of the United States. The body of employes will constitute a bouse of representatives, the managers selected by the workers will constitute a senate and the owner.s will constitute a cabinet. Regular meetings will be held to consider details of management and all matters of moment effecting the mill community. Tbr whole procedure will be along lines followed by the two houses of congress." Why isn't this an experiment well worth watching by other owners of industrial enterprises?

A DISQUIETING STATEMENT. "There is little chance that the bodies of Americ?..

aoldier dead buried in France will be returned to thi.- i acceded to the appeals and the old landmark will not

the price of butter. Warm weather comes, when hens lay their best and ergs ascend from two cents apiece to four cents.

"It has come to be that we almost shudder when we i hear there has been a good crop of any kind or a great j surplus anywhere of necessaries, knowiing as we do that j for some occult reason the law of supply and demand ! now has come to work exactly backwards. i "Some encouragement is now felt by the householder ; over the news that the wheat crop may not be as large as

it was first thought, but the most alarming reports an? heard from the corn belt where it is thought the corn crops may break all records in quantity and, presumably, '.n t'ice." SAVING A LANDMARK. Learn from Chester, Pa., that so many requests have, been made for the preservation of the old Washington House, in which the first president ate and slept, that Edward Margolin, the new owner and proprietor, has

be

han. Jnmrox, t ho went with Company L of East Chicane, writes that be expects to be home shortly as there aren't very many hoys -left over there, ("has. also mention: that he has been promot. d fioni (.orpo' a! to sergeant. -A t iirt'r Ilonovnn, brother to I'ontiiianter Donovan, residing at 414 Earing r.ven'i". East ( h'.-at;.,. ..no of the first to en'ist for the per:..,! of the war. is now on the h'irh seas, homeward bound William Donovan, a brother, arrive. 1 home three weeks ano. and the com in of Carter will hrinij the whole family t "S t h. r. v .. leleirram to Klre J'lilef (irnnt from his former secreiarv. Dave 'Irand. announces his afe ari;val on his Rid from overseas. He was ent to Camp Mills and will probably be ba k in Gary m a few days.

ail b

be

i 1 : m h . d in a window

SMART WRAP FOR THE MOTOR TRIP

.lumen I'otee, Alvin I'otee. oi this side from vii e overseas.

on nt Mr. anil M r. Tolie.-tou. is buck on eighteen months serif e arrived on the t

country," Col. Charles C. Pierce, who has returned to the United States to take charge of the registration of soldiers' graves service, with which service he was connected In France, is quoted as saving. This utterance, whether based on facts or a mere opinion, is bound to have a disquieting effect in the United States, for its casts a shadow upon thousands of American homes to wnich had been given assurance that their dead would be returned to them. This promise was made some months ago when the government, through one of its bureaus, sent to ihe bereaved relatives letters and blanks to ascertain the wishes of the mourners as to the final resting places of their beloved and lost. According to newspaper announcements some time later, the answers to these letters jhowed that an overwhelming majority desired th-? re-

demolished to make way for a proposed new tTieatre and ! -1'-''.

Jiotel.

fv S. Kabnoi. He is a member of the Sev enth Enjr neers. ' 'o D. and w a s e;ass"d and shell-shock..! in the hattle Cf St Mlhieb 4k Major Krnnk Merrltt. In France for the past viae, has arrived at Newport News. V:i. Major Mei'itt if a former Gary surgeon, as assistant at the Cary hospital. He received his early tvafnine at Eoi t Itiley. Kansas, and w as commissioned to the rank of lieutenant and when upon arrival ov .: .-r:i. be wa'i promoted to t ie rank of ma-

it Camp in Gary

Glad to know this. Mr. Margolin has some hari and some sentiment. Of course, there are many places where General Washington stopped. Then, on the other band, there's the Connecticut landlord who advertises "the only hotel in the state where General Washington never slept." But that's persiflage. We commend the stand of Mr. Margolin. Only sad thing will be picturing the sanded floor and neat little place full of bright tavs and noggins and quarems and other metal measures and highly polished pewter muss and wondering how it'll look henceforth. It'll be a relic and a landmark in more ways than one.

i Grant

tne

lie w'U be discharged ar.,1 expects to arrive

present week

Mr". John Mrllenenmp of eeymoiir, :s most ready to turn f P'ri t ua 1 : st Her son, Pii' ate Albert M e!'.t-na :i' of th" A. E. E.. r. turmd home Ia:M n:-?ht.

PHONE 6-44. SUITE 3C0. DR. J. W. ACTON DENTIST HAMMOND BLOG., HAMMOND. INDOffice Hours: 9 12 a. m.: 1:30-3 p. m. Evenings: 6:30 to 9 p. m.

.V- , . 0 y- ; a .' M rwy. .......... -vyi K. .'7 y.y: v-wm sj.. S A J i, v- Si ? 'i'.iC ? '- s ill -ii i f 3 " , v , VJl t N I I." ' . i j i K' ' s S Z . ' ' ' ' ' ' I , ' O ( V I i ' t, ' . ?, t, -v t v. tC: - s.- ' . -.; . ,J : :--af ir ? s f t v y i . ' ' -.- 1 v t v. arv y V

vrniila. two runs nonr

Beat the butter substitute ti'l soft pd c'-enmv, add t!'. ujrnr anrl continue beat'tip- Add the errors on pt a time. Have the chocolate melted nnd readv to mix in as soon as the flour with the salt has been mixed. Then the vanilla and nut's. Bake by droDninrr about one dessertspoon on cookie tin: rather hot oven.

Crum Muffins One cup flour, two

layers too thin. Bake. Raisin Sandw iches Spread fresh praham crackers with seeded raisins; pres tvo topether to form a sandwich. Crp poda crackers mav also be used, or white brown -bread. Rice With Cheese (Meat Substftute) Steam one cup of rice and add cne and one-half teaspoons salt. Cover bottom of buttered bakine aieh with rice and dot with small

ieasToons nsKmc no wo or- two -iiro ' .

, , - ' . . .. ""'-' "uuer sprinme witn a sta.e crumbs one and one-half runs : pratinp of cheese and a little cavmilk and water, two epr-s. one table-! enne peppier. Repeat until rice has spoon shorteninp, one and one-half ; been used and nearly half a pound teaspoon salt j Pf cheese has been added. Add milk Soak crumbs ten minutes, sift cnouph to cover nearly to top of flour baking- powder and salt and j dish. Cover with bread" crumbs and add to crumbs. Add well beaten Lake until chec-e is meed

TERRIBLE TESSIE

very smart and eomfo.-t-v.-hu-h will delight tha

1 lere is able wrap

vcr-iiui who is to spend her Summer niotortr.p throuph the mountains. It made on lone;, loose lines of double faced material, navy on the outside nnd plaid on the inner sice. The lonr stole collar and deep cuffs are of French him- knitted wool. Looped woo! fnnpe euires the cuffs and tha

She Jce:S THE RicTHt TMiNci- AT THE W'l?ONiS TiMlT

ia'": a.a,i:' ,Mlaaa'ia:'ii.i

,t LA

jr TELL VOljri FATHER

that vJOE TRiPP CALLED

'An 3 US ABSOLUTELY Thc

LfST ATTEMPT CM GOING

TO MAk'E TO PAY OACK THAT

TEN4 6UCKS I OWL. M!M!"

nY FAT HELP 1SN T

AT HOME WHO SHALL ! TELL

HfA WAS N TO rr C LI I M ?

w t-- I O . "

mm.

- - -i- r -A -' - ,

... - - . '. v .m

'a- I

5;'av

i. -

MAD AKIOTMtR FlCMT W'Tel 1m Wlirf, MANiT

Le fCfc M--T"sl; s

ItFC WITM THfct

HANK and PETE

.INSTEAD OF HELPING HIM - THEY HELPED THEMSELVES

By KEN KIMG

VtN61 ? TM.VtS JU1 lUt '.A 1 MAD ')

t4 HtN D, TOO ' TJll, FtUOLl ICClS iw ACiCrt Cl D 3AKH - C AO R.V HS CRIP

Avj' -n' mav SLIP Oi

THOif "t-0

rClAAO

This I.t siK

' 1 Meet -V.-

i s'ree o:;cc i t-a hc.c

l,tNNIV JH1- V

I with Hl'.K ( IawiHUiU M - J

11 Wfc Cf HAIHi, IP TAe VfcO I S -Z ( -, CA.Tt .,.r v. I

J To A eiMC WtrtWC HtUiC I I ,...,) I ' I 14 MINI) TOO TJ, KUOlJlCOlS l't

II.. .. . . . . j . . - -r I I Ttw . tA;i-T 1AI I ' V c V 1 f-,r. CJ I I --

r M-.M.i.e SMC necas V 1 1 AT ' ) MtsSui VttuUCS

II J l" "V

- -i I AT Mf Ml s i . I Kl)AOMM Vint .f f 1 (

v r r v-' t s i r , i i s v i i k j

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