South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 72, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 13 March 1915 — Page 4

SATTRDAV, MARCH 13, 101.1.

THE SOUTH BEND ' NEWS-TIMES

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SOUTH BEND XKWS-TXMES THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY. tlO Y7et Colfax Avenue. outh Bend. Indian "Entered aa pccond c&?h matter at t he Poatoffice aX South Bend. Indian

BY CARRIER. Daily and Sunday hi advance, per Dally find Sunday by the week,..12o yar tl.00 Dally, single copy 2o Sunday, single copy..... So MAIL Pally and Sunday In advar.ee, per year ; $4.00 "Dally, !n advance, per year .' $3.00 If your name &rpara In the telephone directory you can telephone' your want "ad" to The Ne5-TIne otttce and d bill will be mailed after 11 insertion. Horn phone 1151; Bell phene 2100. CONE, LORENZE.W & WOODMAN Foreign Advertising Repres entativee. 125 Fifth Arenue. New York. Advertising Building, Chicago

SOUTH I1EXD, 1M)L., MARCH 13. lUir.

I'LIUJC OPINION AS A LORRY ixm tin; pi:opij;. The lav.' parked by the legislature the famous Hou.vo Bill No. 4? permitting property twncrs against wlmfc estates special improvement bonds have been issued, to pay them off in advanco of maturity, became effective Thursday -without gubernatorial approval. .Exactly why the measure t-hould have .such a hard time getting through la not difficult to guess. The purpose of the law was simple enough. Jt was calculated to a..-ist the less wealthy Individual, Fhould he acqulro tho ability to pay up and save, a little. Rond-holdero naturally preferred that tho indebtedness bo left to run through the full period. It works out this way! Under tho olj law, property owners unablo to pay ca-sh for certain improvement", were permitted to elect to havo bond Issued against the im- ! proved property for the amount of tho assessment, payable in ten years, with Interest semi-annually. The city became guarantor of the bonds which wero turned over to tho contractor and disposed of by him at his liking. This rule continues to pretil, but with tho proviso that if, after one year the party whoso property is assessed wishes to pay up, ho can do so at the end of any six-month period by prepaying idx months' interest in advance. Under tho old law he could not pay in full until tho end of the ten years without paying the full ten years' Interest. Sen. Summers, Reps. Jlagerty and llcpler, and with them tho senators and representatives from all the second class cities of the state, worked hard for the passage of this measure, and with it a number of others of principal effect in such cities, but most of which wero lost somewhere in the shufile. Not only the bond-brokeri?, etc., appear to have been busy about the legislature, but the manufacturers of asphalt, concreto and brick, may not have been without the presence of more or less oily legislative counsellors and agents there on the ground. There ia u. lesson to be drawn from the situation. Cities wishing improvements In their fundamental rights, to be granted by the legislature, would do well to have such plans whipped well into shape before the legislature convenes, and in addition, see what ran be done toward creating a public opinion favorable to tho desired changes. Of course, it would perhaps, at tho e.ttne time, serve to create a more determined opposition, but as was evident at the recent session of the asfembly, the morning of the day lias dawned when legislators arc Koing to take more of their tips from the public opinion back homo, and less of it from legislative counsellors and agents in the employ of special inteicsts. What is needed, therefore, is a healthier, more intelligent, public opinion back home. (live the members of tho legislature something of that sort and they'll feel It more than tho presence of tho paid lobby. It will also serve to imbue the senators and representatives; with a healthier, moro Intelligent conception of home need?, and why they are necessary. A healthy, intelligent public opinion, is very best kind of lobbyist for tho people, possible of conception. SAVKI) OIL SlIAVi:i 15.V TI-XTINI-CAMTIIIS. Technicalities are, indeed, dangerous things. Every little while we read of someono who has contracted trouble through a, series of such entanglements. It also sometimes happens that a man escapes troublo by the samo route. It is when the letter of tho law rather than the spirit of it, becomes tho ruling force, that the technical has to bo most seriously reckoned with. Krir.stants:" t'ouila Bend has a Jadkjo of Its city ov.rt who is so long on tho old le'-ral liiaAUH iauiiuivc v t i t -v ouscth no man." that he makes such "ignorance" well-nigh the chief crime on his calendar. lie needs to recognize tho maxim too "every man is presumed to know tholaw," except lawyers and judges, for to work upon any other theory would be hazardous Ve merely want to call attention to our exemption of "lawyers and judges." who though supposed to ho educated In law are seemingly not suppocd to know anything about it, until they hae been put wise by some court of last resort. Accordingly when this aforesaid city judge was found recently to have acted as notary public in taking the acknowledgment of ;i deed, after he had been automatically ousted from that power as notary by his election to a Judgeship, and that he mUht hae bron liable to a lino of from $1 to $ l.or-o. or hiiprisomm nt of from 10 'lays to m.y months, there wa.s :i different atmosphere gathered about tho Mtuatio.i than, for instance, in tho ie- of the west nd saloon keeper, who it'i his brother-in-law. entered bis sab .en en unda to secure his tverctt It ras a purely technical Molai'or., but of o;:rso the saloon keeper uta ."rtbutd -tu - know tha

law," and be able to dodge all its peculiar angles. The moral is that saloon keepers should becomo lawyers and Judges. In which case they will not be presumed to know any law, and can have their technical violations overlooked.

SOCIETY MAKES ITSELF I SEI UL. A dispatch from Hoc Springs, Va., the famous winter resort, notes that society women are promoting the ".Made in America" movement. "Independence blue," and various fabrics of cotton or other American material are being worn by social leaders. It is an example that should be widely followed. The influence which women of social prominence might exert in this direction is enormous. It would be such an easy thing for the social leaders in a dozen great cities, to pass around the word that it is strictly "the thing" to wear American grown and manufactured fabrics this season. The purchases made by such women easily become a matter of public note. Clerks talk about it to all their customers. The idea spreads from circle to circle and clique to clique. It is the easiest thing in the world to start a popular fad for those in the scats of social power. Wearing American made goods could be made so popular In this country within six months, that women would bo almost ashamed to have it known that they bought imported stuffs. People are governed in their daily purchases by sentiment. There has been a vague feeling for many years that foreign made goods were better. In some cases they may be cheaper, yet perhaps the principal motive for the preference has been the feeling that they are more artistic or stylish. Yet America has the brightest, most hustling business men in the world. It seems absurd to suppose that they let trado drift out of their hands by making an Inferior article. The use of American products, insofar as reasonably possible, would be a move of real patriotism. It would help the home cotton grower and manufacturer and makers of all American textile fabrics, whose business has been upset by the war and other causes. It would put bread Into the mouths of hungry families all over the country, and help bring back a high range of prosperity. GRAIN' G.UIRLIXG. Chicago grain brokers refuse to let Uncle .Sam see their books, in his investigation of charges that gambling in grain has raised the price of the people's bread. Some day, we are going to treat gambling in grain, Which makes folks go hungry, just as we treat gambling in ivory chips, which only parts fools and their money. That is. we are not going to look upon it as business but as gambling, and suppress it. What has become of the old-fashioned proposition to jail the fellows who sell wheat without any to deliver? ALL'S FAIR IN THIS WAR. They are spraying their enemies with burning oil. Even the nightmare which Inspired "The War of the Worlds" did not vision a weapon so horrible as this. At the same time comes a report of the attempt of a submarine to sink a hospital ship. The man on either side who invents a successful method of poisoning the air the foo breathes, or poisoning the drinking water will be hailed as his country's savior and given a cross of honor, no doubt. And over here wo still harp about the "rules of civilized warfare." ca lam it u s i : i :s i :n v i :. Listen to this little calamity wail by Yanderlip, head of the National City bank of New York: The National City bank has a 4 3 per cent reserve and the biggest line of deposits it ever had. .Money is piling up here and all over the country. We'd like to know how liberal Yiindcrlip's bank is toward would-be borrowers, if it isn't more liberal than most other banks, Yanderlip is threatened with a 14" per cent reserve. ilKill CLASS OLl MAIDS. Lot the American youth of means have his Tuxedo patched and pressed! The war is going to produce the largest crop of royal spinsters on record. Why, there's going to bo just crowds of princesses, and duchessettes and countesses reaching out for marrying men Bryant Howard, jr., says his th.rd wife is "a gem." Having had wives that were vindictive, selfish, jeulous, mercenary and notoriety seeking, according to his view. Bryant ought to know a gem when he sets one. lllessings. young people! and may 'Ma Howard's check book never run out of numbers. The Rritish steamer Thordis reports having rammed and sank a German submarine off Reachy Head apd is due to get the reward offered by the UrAish admiralty. The bounty oa. .tub-

marines promises to create a new industry as remunerative as coyote trapping in w est Texas. If a man would take the estimate of expenses he makes when deciding about buying an automobile, his wife would get a new parlor carpet this j-pring. The high price of flour has led many newspapers to publish articles urging women to make their own bread, but not many husbands have said anything about it.

Although it is very humiliating not to have the new wide skirts of the spring styles, this is not sufficient reason for a girl to absent herself from church on Easter .Sunday. How is It that the zephyrs of March are always able to wait until there is a good number of people looking before they proceed to blow a man's hat off into the middle of the street? Discipline seems to be pretty poor in the schools, as a boy can make tho most inexcusable error on the ball team, and yet not have to stay after school and get an extra lesson. Reading the newspaper in their comfortable easy chairs, many men wonder why the soldiers in tho cold trenches with the bullets flying around them don't get out and do something. Why complain that times are hard, when you forgot to ask for the Congressional Record, the fat copies of which yield a sizeable return from the junk man? Automobiles seem to be selling freely, while the necessaries of life drag a little. The difference is that automobile dealers almost always advertise. After taking around a United States protest to the warring powers, the American ambassadors know about how a spring poet feels when he takes his verses to the newspaper office. The president can't go to San Francisco, but probably a good many people will send him post cards of the exposition. , At the army posts they arc now preparing for war by trimming the hydrangea bushes and the rambler roses. Statesmen Real and Near, By Fred C. Kelly 13 WASHINGTON, March 13. Story books tells us that place of fame and eminence are attained only after hardship. According to the storybook idea, the man who reaches the position of chief justice of the United States supreme court, for example, should first have a mighty tough, hungry time of it. He should have slaved for his keep while gaining his legal education, eating the husks from low-priced boarding houses, and sleeping on bare floors. And he should have waited for many months in a cheerless ollice before enticing in his lirst client. Moreover, the lee from his first client should have been not to exceed $2.30. None of these story-book elements, however, coincides with the facts in the case of Chief Justice White. The moment White was ready to practice law, down in his native Louisiana, a. case came and dropped right into his lap, like a gift from the gods, and netted him a snug little fee of something like $".000. Scarcely was the paint dry on the sign "Edward Douglas White, Attorney at Law," when the head of a bank in White's town came to him with a highly attractive proposition. It seemed that the bank was about to foreclose certain mortgages involving a total of a great many thousands of dollars. The legal details involved were comparatively easy. but the scale of attorney fees allowed by law was rather high. "In the absence of any agreement," explained the banker to White, "the attorney fees in this matter might amount to more than $10,000. We think that would be excessive for the service rendered. The law makes no objection, however, to an attorney agreeing beforehand to - accept less money thxm that." And he made White an offer of $n,ooo or thereabout to perform the work required. , Naturally White was pleased at tho idea of $.".V.OO for an initial fee. Rut the thing seemed too good to be true. It seemed to him thai there must be some trick or catchword to the proposition. So he asked the man how it happened that he, an unknown lawyer, was picked from out of a clear sky to receive a fee that would have appealed to all the older lawyers in town lawyers of influence who could do favors for the bank. "I'll tell you why." replied the banker. "Years ago. when I was a messenger at the banK that I now head, your father was a director of the institution. I got an ambition to be promoted to a place as teller. Your father helped me to get it. From there I afterward rose to a cashiership, and on up. It was my hope that I might some day repay your father for his kindness, but I net or found the opportunity. The best that I have been able to do. you see. was to try to do a favor for your father's son. Frank R. Willis, governor of Ohio, can rat almost any article of fool with a great deal of relish. And he is not only a hearty eater, but a careful shopper when seeking food. He lias an especial prejudice in favor of table d'hote meals, and likes to try new places in search of table d'hote bargains. There Is something about sitting down to a meal with the total cost thoroughly understood beforehand, and then freely helping one's self to anything n the card. That. Willis t nds, is a great aid to digestion. sure sir.: eot mad. An E. TVnth st. conductor offers this one : "My car was pretty well crowded as it usually is and I was doing a football ruih to tet tho company

THE

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'OME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

It wa an edd theory that tin? Iiuman siKt ies i comH-l of two distinct nuvs, tl men who lxrrow and t'w men who lend, and this theory senis to liae worked out In iratiiv. AN' IXOXOMIC MYSTERY. Old Rill Rrown, he lives in our town. An' ain't ever done a day's work yet; He eats three meals an' wears good clothes, Rut he never was arrested for debt. How he manages to get along Is more than we can explain or tell, Rusiness don't seem to bother him at all, Rut he's always got a boss to trade or sell. IF, asks the esteemed New York World, a progressive republican is not a republican, what is he? That's what we would like to know . THE movies having demonstrated that tho heroine may Jump in the river and come out dusty we no longer wonder that a booze fighter may fall in the millpond and come out dry. When the Mail Carrier Is the? (ioab Sir: I don't like to answer letters, but when we are watching for the carrier at our house and he goes by without stopping, the names we call him would mak? his ears burn. At such times wo are firmly of the opinion that he'll get no present from us next Christmas. M. IN the dictionary, which has a constant struggle to avoid becoming old fashioned, annihilate is defined "to reduce to nothing; to put out of existence; to render null and void; to abrogate." Rut if there is anything left of the contending armies in Europo the war correspondents must be putting a new interpretation upon it. The Iiuemgriiitlo of Witchcraft. (Essays of Elia.) I have sometimes thought that I could not have existed in the days of received witchcraft; that I could not have slept in a village where one of those reputed hags dwelt. Our ancestors were bolder or more obtuse. Amidst the universal belief that these wretches were in league with the author of all evil, holding hell tributary to their muttering, no simple justice of the peace seems to have scrupled some dividends. I came to a lady and a little bov. She gave me one fare. " -A ticket for the boy, please,' I said. " T gave you a ticket, didn't 1 7 "'Yes, ma'am, but I want one for the boy. He's 'way over the age limit, and I'll lose my job if 1 let him tfet by without paying. Somebody will report me, and I need the work.' " 'What do I care about your work? Go on and collect your fares and don't bother me.' " 'Rut I've got to have a ticket for the boy,' I insisted, noticing that she was getting madder all the time. " A ticket for the boy, please,' I repeated. Then she jumped up and shouted: " 'Well, why don't you ask him for a ticket? lie doesn't belong to me!' " WHAT SIII-3 LOOKED LIKE. "Did you see that hussy who sued our son for breach of promise?" "I did." "What did she look like?" "She looked to me like a son-kist lemon." Judge. TWENTY YEARS AGO ItemlnderH From tho Colurtara of The Daily TUncs. The second floor of Sam Studebaker's livery barn collapsed and smashed several vehicles. The "Brownies" party at Turner hall was attended by more than L'UQ children. J. W. .Shidler is visiting his brother, Clem, at the Valparaiso institute. NOT MIXTI. Ues Do you think much of Jimmie ? Tess No; only about 2 4 hours a day. Fun. FOR PRIVATE CIRCULATION. "May I- print a kiss upon your lips?" "Yes, provided you promise not to publish it." Fun. GOSSIP. Lou I saw Ethel yesterday, and we had the loveliest confidential chat to- j gcther. Lucy I thought so; she wouldn't talk to me today. Fun. SAY BUYING IS DONE ONLY IN SMALL LOTS Poor Roads and Unsettled Weather Conditions Retarded 1-1-ogres During Past Week. NEW YORK. March IS. Bradstreet's Review for .Saturday says: "Poor roads, unsettled weather or small lot buying in larger lines are probably responsible for the feeling of disappointment visible in many markets. These features contrast with increased operations in heavy manufacturing, diminished idleness, activ- ; ity in ship building, a slight improve ment in spring retail trade at some few centers, some expansion in mail order business, excellent winter wheat Rub Omega Oil gently over the aching nerves; then cover with flannel soaked in the Oil. Putaricce of dry f.annel over this and bind tigntiy against the face. This simple treatmer.t has brought peaceful rest to people who have tuHcxcd agonies.

ELTING POT

issuing, cr silly headborough serving a warrant tpon them as if they should subpoena Satan: Prospero in his boat, with his books and wand .about hini, suffers himself to be conveyed away at the mercy of his enemies to an unknown island. He might have raised a storm or two, we think, on his passage. His acquiescence is in exact analogy to the non-resistanco of witches to the constituted powers. What stops the Fiend in iSpemer from tearing Guyon to pieces or who made It a condition of his prey that Guyon must take assay of the glorious bait we have no guess. Wc do not know the laws of that country. THE allied battleships lying outside watching for the Eitel Frederick are going to be seriously inconvenienced if the German cruiser Is permitted to remain three weeks at Newport News, but as a matter of accemmodation they will wait. Is She Raising: Soniotliing or Merely lUdsing? (Cor. Ft. Wayne Journal-Gazette.) Miss Gertrude Raising returned to Fort Wayne, Monday, where she is attending college, after spending the week end at the home of her parents. Dr. and Mrs. L. Reising, touth of town. IT pains us that tho Portmortemlst should attempt to cast aspersions upon golf by saying that when he comes to news of the gamo he reads the headline and rjuits. Though not Fportsmanlike the Portmortemlst may be excused as his education in the I only really scientific outdoor game has been sadly neglected. WE note bv the N.-T. that it is planned to have a "Yanetian" night as the closing feature of our Fourth of July program. It is not quite clear to us what a "Yanetian" nlcrht is, but it meets out hearty approval. One must have some kind of a night to wind up the Fourth and we don't know why it shouldn't be a "Yanetion." vow tbnt the sehoolma'nms are to be pensioned we trust the men will j not emulate the example or tne women who marry old soldiers -aa a safety first measure. Spring Fashion Week has not belied its name; A week of sunshine exalts the city's fame. C. N. F. crop conditions, heavy investment demand for bonds, a slightly more cheerful stock market tone and irregular betterment in collections. "As shelves, except perhaps in the south, are not burdened with goods, capital is not tied up in merchandise, money is turned over more frequently, but it is likely that buying at and near industrial centers will be rtstricted until tho effects of increased employment are reflected in a substantial improvement In demands. "Money is easy, probably because dealers in regular lines are chary about embarking upon future commitments. Stock market operations and tone have alike improved and fear of foreign complications seems to have abated at least temporarily. Foreign liquidation of bonds is readily absorbed and new investment demand is heavy. Export trade continues heavy. Clearings show a shrinkage from last week and last year, but failure reports show a sharp descent. "War abroad makes for high prices, as shown by English index numbers for March 1, which showed an increase of 2.5 per cent in the general level of prices over February 1, w-hereas RradFtreet's Index of American commodities hav shown a drop of four-tenths of one per cent In the same period. The American number is below that of September 1 and August 15, 1914, in addition, but is 8.9 per cent above March 1. 1914. During February breadstuff's, provisions, hides and leather, coal and coke, oils, building materials and chemicals and drugs declined, while live stock, fruits, textiles, metals, naval stores and miscellaneous products advanced." TWO CENT RATE FAVORED Petition is Presented to tin; Public Service Commission. INDIANAPOLIS, Ind., March The Fort Wayne and Northern Traction Co. Friday petitioned the public service commission for permission to establish a flat two cents a mile passenger rate on all its lines. Stop eating meat for a while if your Bladder is Troub ling you. A 1 vrt TThen you wake up -with Iackach and dull misery In tho kidney region it gnerAlly means you have teen eating too much meat, says a vell-knon-n authority. Meit forma urlo acid which overworks the kidneys la their effort to ftlter it from the blood and they become sort of paralyzed and log&y. When your ki-dnya jret slug:?1sh and clog you must relieve them, like you relieve your bowels; removing all the body's urinous waste, else you have backache, sick headache, dizzy tpelLs: your stomach sours, tongue Is coated, and when th weather Is bad you have rheumatic twinges. The urine Is cloudy, full ol eedlraent, channels often get nore, water scalls and you are obliged to seelt relief two or three times during th night. Either consult a good, reliable rhvir"pn at once or ret from your I pharmacist about four ounces of Jad ' of water before breakfast for a few . days and yo;r kidneys will then act rme. Tnis ramous nans is nviae irorr the acid or grapes and lemon Juice, comblnod with lithia, and has been used for generations to clan and Ftimulate sluggish kidneys, also to neutralize acids in tho urine so it no longer irritates, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Falts Is a life eaver for regular meat titers. It is Inexpensive, canrot injure and makes a delightful, ef fervescent lithia-water drink.

SALTS IF BACH AND KIDNEYS HURT

NILIIS. Word was received of the death at Yp-dlantl. Mich., of George Zwcrgel, a former Niles man. He was horn in this city, 6 4 years ago. He has been ill with creeping paralysis for several years. He is survived by a widow and two children and a brother. Phillip, and Fistcr, Louise, of this city. Mrs. Clyde R. Smith, a sister of Mrs. George Calvin of this city, was seriously injured In an automobile accident. Mrs. Smith was crossing the street when the auto struck her and knocked her down. One arm was broken and she was severely cut nad bruised. Mrs. Calvin left for Lansing today. Richard Smith, a brother of Mrs. Anna Dougan and Miss Margaret Smith, died Thursday in Topeka. Kan., where he ha? for a number of years held tho position of claim agent for the Atchison, Topeka it Santa Fc Railway Co. Mr. and Mrs. Arthur Gohn of Middlebury, Ind., are In the city on ac-

TO SEE "WELL SEE US tST.00 lBJ&CftgW0PTICM Eyes examined free; glasses fitted at moderate prices. Satisfaction guaranteed. DR. J. BURKE & CO. Optometrists and Mfg. Opticians. 230 SO. MICH. ST. Notice We duplicate any lens the same day, no matter who fitted them. Rring the pieces. ECONOMY DEPARTMENTS SOUTH BEND'S FOREMOST ECONOMY GIVERS. 219-221 S. MICHIGAN ST. ENTRANCE IN INDEPENDENT 5 AND 10 CENT STORES. PA TENTS And Trade Marks Obtained in all Countries. Advice Free. CiKO. J. OLTSCII, Registered Patent Atty.. 711712 f-nudebaker Rldg., South Bend Ind.

TEE IDEAL TRIP and TIME Visit the California Expositions

Weather Delightful

IN

7 Cruises through lhc

PAN AIM

LARGE AMERICAN TRANSATLANTIC LINERS r:: "FINLAND" E&p"..Tr "KROONLAND" CUISINE AND SERVICE TRANSATLANTIC STANDARD From New York MAY 1 From San Francisco MAY 26 and RrolHr Erery Third Week Thereafter CIRCULAR TICKETS ONE WAY WATER. OTHER WAY RAIL -m PACIFIC LINE, 9 Broadway, HEW YORK. i$&KtA

P1ROP

O o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o o

OWN

Modern houses are more in demand every day by families renting, and they find that houses which re equipped for electric service of a better class than those without Often times thev will see a porch light that will induce them to look over the place, that otherwise might be passed by. A house may. have bath and furnace, unless it has electric lights it is not modern. Our wiring proposition makes it possible to place vour house in the modern class. e Call New Business Department. Indiana & Michigan Electric Co. 220-222 WEST COLFAX AV. Bell 462. Home 5462.

Muessel

Tin: quality mxiL iioiut; tiiom: A055. ninji 55. The ISIuessel Brewing Company

tount of the lllnes? of hrr sister. Mr.'. Relic Weiser, who has typhoid fever. Mrs. Ci. W. Noble of Oak Park, 111., is a Ruc-st of her son, W. A- Noble and family.

iineissiialLle eve ir In the treatment of Rhnmndf Verer many pbyMclan employ purintlTen. but Dr. M. P. Creed thlni th&t a mild laxative is better. When the patient is biiiou hlY calomM In small doti. one-nfth of a ernln every hour ntll a KraJn hat b-n taken. Then after four hours he gives the -patient; a half ounce of citrate of mar.iA. wltli syrup of lemon to diulne the tat or ha keeps the bowels open with the mild laxative "Actolds." The diet nhould he hht. and all animal food should b excluded a far as possible from th dietary. Kor th pain and fever be has found nothJns eiaal to Antl-Kamnla Tableti, glvlnc two tablet every a to 8 hours as required. The? tablets may be) obtained from all dnifflgt In any Quantity desired. Ak for A-K Tablets. Unexcelled lor Headaches, euraUia. and All Pain. s GLADIOLUS BULBS LEADING VARIETIES Maplewood Floral Co. Home Phone 4151 R. F. D. No. 1 HARRY L.YERRICK Funeral Horn Directo Ambulunre Carriage 114 JT. TV AK3XN GTO N AVE. TJvT Tho Expositions Fully Completed

LA CANAL

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