South Bend News-Times, Volume 32, Number 349, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 15 December 1915 — Page 6
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THE SOUTH BEND NEWö-TIMIä
SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morning Fiveninq; Sunday. JOHN UPNKY ZU VHP.. rTdi.or. v. iio'.vAr.D i.oni;m:v, ikvjn s. pouc. Clxvul-iti-.n Mir.isrr. Adv.-t tSltu- M;Pfir.
NEWS-TIM HS PK IN TING CO., Publisher: Otf.ce: 210 7. Odfax Av.
Home rr-ne 1151.
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THE HAPPY PLANTER. P. Willet. agrieuitural writer for the Augusta Chronicle, tells a story of a farmer in hi vicinity who . ";,ftr litnintr to the various preachments on crop liversit:-. this year tried it out." Ho ha! never before crown anything but cotton, am had learned nothing about transforming and converting the crope, so he
finds himself with produce on his hands which he may not be aide to .sell. "The man who has not learned to transform farm
m i t i , . i : i I',.. . t it . i n Q i
j Tops iiiio reei, spart'-rius una eiucKt-ii nu m. ".v.
f.ir in :iL-riri: lire. said MT. lllet.
r,-.-. ., hlvf.v..r m. nnv. H c.ivs he "feels this ,,e oaia
"I had ,
THE MELTING POT COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.
Till nt t?-. f !T! r r r P f'T dr;-.qrt!:.r-r:f "A ;i f Lit A i eon r f ! cr l'.,r u-i ,lv
rh' rn. .j:rx-f..rT 1 III ill ':id!M :tft-r l'" -r t: .n. Ipe.rt The man. however, is happy.
ii-,ft.T.t:..n t., !.-,!'.. !;.! e- x - t i . P"-r .'i iTfry r j thoiisiml times better than last year.
p.-'r-r. h.id t' ; r.. n.-.-v'f. it-, t l.e-i-I : .:-p'mii.e-n w -t-i . ' " , , ' , T . ,.Ä r.f.-h v., -i nr.- ,!..-,:!.?. NVA Tr.iv t '. i rt r( r n-1 k , n, M no fl((),i jn the bam or cellar, but today I na e lUli " "f ' r.'S.-.r,.! t . Ib :iv rai,e ll."l a:ol IMl j n , , . h fo(),j ln om, lnes lo iast my plantation for two
Certainly I have on my
srnf KII'TIO.V 1CTK:
:t!.d I".M-nl:ie Pd:t!r.'
I could only keep it.
rule ( '
I..rr
;u- 1 .y. I r.i t ir or i.v. in -g . ... , ,e t ,r, f,i for r u-Vinlo venr's wants. You
elidr. In, Pjdi.-c S.ir;!..v M- mi!. :,.'' I i,':v"1'r'" "1"' 1 ' v,-,.- " . t IiiverM hr rr.rrir i-i s .jt. I- '- ! md Mi.- h.iuaka. f " "r j 1 . .i no idea," he continued, "what a burden and load yea. ln rdiaiue. or 12- t y t!.- -k. j has ,il (n Hfte(, from Jny min(1 thLs year a burden that .fVi:r.TIS!NO ItT: A-:: t?.- .,.i.TtNb'.rr .lp;-irt ! ..s ih.-d -xceedinlv heavily and sorely a year ago. I SÄtt . f """" I had retchedne,, a CJ.b;ig. I f ar a so. My ei-rht or nine bales of cotton represent Tl.e .n.Tlrr.e t e.dn v 'J t-. k r-p ! .V;,'., Jm i to me ejear prolit. and I can ko into the work of the trralherVl'iln ;' favi.r n t!.e 1 lu.w yt.r unafraid and independent, and with absolute
The inability to et rid of rotton in 1IM4 was a blessing in disjr.io to many a southern farmer. lie had !.ii hearing "various preachments on crop diversity" f..r years but so long a.s he touhPmove his cotton, they f. 11 on deaf ears. Brought right up against want by last year's financial difficulties, he has begun to take the rond which leads to real prosperity.
Ot!j -!jr!.t-"-!:i:nn
Northern Indiana's Grcalist Newspaper.
r n 1:!.'.;.!!. etlUM
Irr .rvl.-r f,.r i'IltP.r. hlitT-.
post "ffP-e rn oond las
Average Dailv Cirail.V.irdi Fnr Weck Erding Dec: Uth, 15.586. Hook Open to Adven;ers. DECEMBER 15, 1(M5.
a '!.. i ,-v. I ... r !n i :s . i ;. i r r
on all i.ii. Siin.!:iyn ati.i iPli'T.n -t.ii fl i'',c"
.n.i'.l.
"KEEP GOIN.G" A PROFFERED RULE FOR OLD AGE. "I have known many m n." -ays h:uin'-ey M. D-Irv.. ";h. rctirtd from work, as they yaid. f. enjoy life. As a. rule. aft-r the lirst y ar they are bored blue. Then
thrv Poirlo t. think more of 'lair health than
else. They imagine they hae all the di.- ases they ever heard of. Thin tl.y all the doctor, take the medicines, ard then they die. "To keep the mind and body :.rtio j., events worry from getting into the on.- and ill health into the ether. The greatest mistake anyone in make is to stop work- . . - . - ....t . 1...
along the lines of his I.U'S o eupai 10:1. unif. u-
PAINFUL TAXES AND PREPAREDNESS. Certainly American business men are for preparedness. I?ut th moment they're inviteil to help pay the expenses there goes up a chorus of painful Fhrieks. Kveryhody recognizes. f course, that th cost mut be paid. Hut everybody would lP.:e to see the other f How pay it. It's a way we all have. Tiie automobile industry has benefited largely from
.nvthing I war orders, am
manv
hi.i time and min.! which
in
can find something to oca upy
is equally Interesting." "Keep a-goin" is his motto. At the nge of l, he says he clor everything he eer did. and enjoys it just as much. He Is busy from 10 o'clock in the mornimr until midnight. lit doesn't limit his prescription for longevity to mere work, though that's the chief thing in his opinion. He doesn't believe in a man. espeviaily a man of . t ,flrf.t,- minilin ' his own business. He
laaiuie eais, m -' ....
might be supposed more willing than
other industries to bear a considerable part of
our own war burdens. Hut when it is proposed to tax automobile horse power and pasoVfne, the industry bristle with indignation and prepares to resist. The pi iron business, too, has been a great beneficiary of the war. Trices have risen higher than for many years, and every furnace in the country is working. Hut at the hint of a tax on pig iron to help arm the nation, leaders of the industry get together and is-
t sue notice that they expect to make "one of the great
est fights ever sr-en in Washington." These industries are not peculiarly selfish or ungrateful. Hvery other industry that finds itself a mark for special taxation will do the same thing. It's the old story. Corporations, like individuals, won't pay any more taxes than they're compelled to, and they'll let out a groan with' every dollar. We're all patriots until we be gin to talk patriotism with hard cash. And
i . , t . i m- v i 1 f i . . i r. intcrovt i ii ovrrv I v I ;i ft IP i n t I
: in- on a the world aiKl 1 " '"' " " '
!)ig. r.ew things. Such affairs keeps a man
re-
of life, and know
know the men who are doing th an interest in contempram'ou:
permanently young in spirit. He Hficies a. frb nd who is retiring from
sponsible btisira ss position at the age of 7". Commode. re Vanderbilt. he points out, made more tlnn twothirds of his big fortune between the ages of Tu and SO. (Iladstone. won hi.s Greatest politb.il triua.ph after he was SO. The most successful ge-neial- in the present war are anywhere from '.o to M years dd. Joseph Cho.Ue, at the age of M. he says, is the ;uost xe a Uent and soaht-for speaker in the I'nited Slate-s. I're.s't I'.li'-t of Harvard, past mi, is recognized a.s ejne e.f the nation's fe great leaders of opinion. And all becaus- uy ' keep a-Kin" The- -sler idea, it se. m, was wrong. Martin Luther was right when he said "When I rest I rust." There's no reaon why a man should be .-.ntent to rut. until h-'s in his grave, and no reason why soeiet h.ubl let him rust. Tim number of ejtiv. lias mighty pule to do w:th it. It's an invigorating osped for t!i"- who imagine they're prewing obi. It's also a aluab!c hint to a generation that is elisposed to pa y blind honiage to inexperienced youth, atal discriminate unthinkingly against the man past 50.
of sav an extra $300,000,000 a year will meet with
general approval until the bill Is presented, and then there will be about ;;00,000.000 objections to it.
i
A CASE TO RECORD. A boy and his girl wife, as mentioned in the dispatc hes. were practically Marving. For four long months they had not enjoyed one square meal. They both were willins? to work, and were capable as well, the y could net secure employment because of the sbabhiness ef their clothintr, which they had worn out trumping the streets looking for work. Hungry, eleperate, they yielded to a sinful impulse and planned to defraud a department store out of some ehdhing. Hut as the trick was about to be turned, the boy's conscience awoke. He returned the package to the store' and in so didng was arrested. He made no denial of his intent to commit a crime. Following all established precedents the cruel proprietor should have prosecuted them to the limit, sent them to prison, as an "object lesson." Hut he didn't. The heank-ss detectives told him the; eireumst an a s. The couple was released upon their own recognizatu e; the department store the lad sought to rob will ive him work. The future Ls not so dark and dreary, the world not so bleak us on yesterday, for at least one pair of unfortunates. If the recording angel doesn't score a great bi,g credit mark for that lepartment store head when he closes his aecauints for 1915. then there should be a hook-
ke ping vacancy.
HAPPJLY, sugcets a friend with a polished dome, it is a mark of distinctiem, rather than a elisgrace, to
Enter, he says, an assem
bly of the men of hicher mentality, and a surface view suggests a mosaic, in which white predominate5, punctuated with black, brown and yellow. In other words. lie impresses upon you, the ivory' top prevails. The physical fact canno: be denied, and it must be admitted that hair does not flourish when underlaid with brains. OUR friend, of course, speaking ef the male of the species, and there are also exceptions amont: the males, where hair grows luxuriantly, seemingly in defiance of the gray subsoil. If. as alleged, hair is a vegetable, why not submit the problem to the agricultural department of Purdue? IX Terre Haute a jury of business men has decided that shaking dice for the tlrinks or cigar." is not gam
bling. This was in Terre Haute, which may account for novelty of tho decision. "VILLA Not Dead." Headline. We feared the report was exaggerated. Immortals Cather at Tx's!n. (Cor. 1't. Wayne Journal-dazette. ) TOCSIX, Ind.. Dec. 10. Mr. and Mrs. John Steavons, Mrs. Kosa Steavons, of Ohio, Mrs. Klla Oilliland, Mrs. William Howards and son Itobert. Mrs. Rosa Steavons and Mr. William Sowanb. ef this place were guests In the home of Mr. and Mrs. Raymond Wasson Thursday. CHICAGO is to be chosen for the republican national convention next year because it has the "Roosevelt atmosphere." which reminds one ef the reasons the g. o. p. presents for its return to power. WE do not comprehend the philosophy of the man who kills his wife, his mother-in-law and then himself. Prudence would have prompted him to leave his mother-in-law on this side or send her across alone. X. D.s All-Hall Champs. (Xotre Dame Scholastic.) On the second team we aave placed Oberwinder and Windoffer as ends thinking that they would equalize each other and even the team.
As tackles, we have placed Ford and Abbott and have Car as a substitute if Ford should not be able to go. We have placed Sharp and Speare as guards because of their ability to pierce the line of any team. Pearson will substitute for them. Girlick is the strongest man on the
. .1 ...,.1.1 V T 1 v.:.- ,
team anu UVWi those who Maze the wav for e.cciand drive back his man. Lightfoot dental science wIH accompli5:h snnu. is our choice for quarter and we thin of lmperishatlo value to man. have placed Lamb and Wolf at the kjna
halves but have been careful to put
tendon mean the same thing. The inevitable result of sich ignorance is that thousands of Chinese bear the marks of untreated diseases. As China has a large and
congested population, and as little j
a nenn sanitation is known there, it is obvious that the physiological conditions must be "ad indeed. Te young physicians of an adventurous spirit China is an inviting thouch not a pleasant field. Western doctors who practise there must have the strength to wage a long, hard
fight against prejudice and tradition.! They must have hardy constitutions' or they will themselves succumb to !
the insalubrious conditions. lint !
Shepard between them so that he will be near lamb and keep off wolf. WE see by the papers that the jitney bus got by the council, and tho circumstance has aroused our curiosity as to what the jitney bus ordinance is. THE camera men missed a great opportunity when P.ushman and Payne were thrown from an automobile and rolled down an embankment in each others' arms. But. of course, the stunt can be reproduced. What's Tills? What's This? (From South Pend's Greatest Newspaper.) "It micht have been expected that
as the years pass the decision of the
MINIMUM WAC.i: LAWS. (Pricklayer, Mason and Plasterer.) Agitation fer mirimum wage laws has met with opposition from labor leaders, and consequently the enactment of such laws, or the proposal to do so. has bee a the subject of considerable discussion. Organized labor Is against such laws because they place a premium on cllkiency, which works to the disadvantage of many persons who, through age or other infirmity, have had their ability impaired. Iabor leaders argue that with a minimum wage law in force, the employer discharges the less capable, who automatically become more or less elependent upon the state for support. Others who claim to know declare
commission would result in a de-ll"ai ir-m l"e J,oini OI wew i crease in the volume of this work. I taxpayer it would ae cheaper to care, but it has not so developed." says for the inefficient than to rare for ( the commission's report. "The ratejtho? incapacitated by poor wages., structures between various commun- Which side is right is still a debat-j ities are now more often the subject ,able question. j of complaint than was the tT.se In '
earlier years. The decrease in the number of complaints tiled during the year has been more than offset j by the complex nature of the cases' problem but that it leads only to los? and misery? Must more lives be crushed and wives and mothers hereaved that Europe is bleeding tc death and that the grievous woum.
must be staunched?"
k" Ii i Tl 1 ruth-
k mm t amarjR
XEGLECTIXO preparedness, safety lirst and other things' the prudent resort to the manager of the Ford excursion finds his forces split in twain in the middle of the Atlantic. If persuasion fails to heal the breach the peace promoter night have the, disaffected thrown into irons or shot for mutiny on the high seas.
I
MAKE father's present a one.
useful
GIVE home.
him something for the C. X. P.
THE McMAHILL CO. Formerly Mnntconicrr's 321 S. MICHIGAN ST. I Ladies Suits, Cloaks, Etc.
You Pay liess For It Here. Investigate.
With Other Editors Than Ours
'Mheist-ornfA -tj vrnture W
130 X. MA IX ST.
In advertising honesty is more than the best policy it is the only policy. If a concern expects to stay in business it must be honest in its advertising. Misleading advertising may sell you once but not twice with the same concern. We are m business to stay we sell the same customers over and over. Our's is the electricity supply business we sell electricity in small and large quantities on the satisfied customer basis. We are at your service 24 hours every day we have been at your service 24 hours every day for 35 years the I. 6c M.
Indiana & Michigan Electric Company (No. 4 This is the fourth of a series of talks on 1. & M.)
THE CUMMINS' RESOLUTION AND WAR TRUST PROFITS. Sen. A. P. Cummins' resolution introduced in the 1'iiit d states ter.ate. that congress undertake an investigation of tlm feasibility ef government manufacture of its own armament and ammunitions, in its prepara
tions for war. is significant. regardless of whether it , WQfr: GERMAN ARROGANCE. Is calculated to sene as a breakwater for the Tawnnor Jt is an axj,,m ,,f unwritten International law that resolution to be presented in the luu;e. ar not. P''-'any country n ay request the recall of any attache of Ta-niur, following a course i"aotcd by Sec'y Paniels . a ftIt.;Kn tMnbassy without disclosing the motive thereof the navy department, wall I'l't"1 that the govern- j for ment proved with the- manufacture' ef its own anna- j ,.1Snn fe.r this is self-evident. The I'nited States, me nt and ammunition. We- all know what an "ines-.m lH,Iuim,n with other nations, maintains a secret servtigation of feasibilities" made by eamgres.-, means. it ; ;(( urt.a,, the efficiency of which depends largely
HENKY I'OliD'S WIL1 (iOOSi: CHASE. (Knoxville, Tenn.. Journal ami Tribune.) In a life of ene wlm has never been distressed in that way, one cannot tell from exeperience how a man feels when he is loaded down with more money than he knows what to ele with. Henry Ford has to bear with an affliction of that kind, and so has Andrew Carnegie. The latter began years ago, after telling how it is a disgrace to die rich, and he has spent millions in a commendable effort to banish war from the world in which we all make our nresent homes. What has been
nr ronit.lUViPd is seen in what lias MEDICAL PllACTICE IN CHINA.
been going on in Europe for a year (Xew York Globe.)
anei o er inree momns. A remarkable report regarding
If in his effort to become poor be- the condition of surrerv and thera
fore death might overtake him. what I j,eutics in China was lately made by he has spent in his war against warsji;. ( Davis, past assistant surgeon would have done th world about mf the I'nited State s navy, in the the same real good, as if he had i United States Xavv Medical Pulletin
the wilel peese along the northern lakes to stay where they are, that it's not geung to be much of -a winter anyway. If the kppsc ceuld talk they would tell him he didn't know what he was talking about, and would have proceeded with their migrations all the same. If those war-crazy European rulers say anything to hl;n and those who may prr with him, they will pay something similar to what the wild geese would say if they could. Put Henry will go on with his automobile making, and people who contemplate buying will talk about him. Clever bit of advertising.
delay a putting euf of the !
attaine'd. until "profiteers" ha e reap-
usually means e r.d seuight to
d their reward The Cummins' idr;i of asct-rtainit'g the ability of the government tee tmtain raw material for the manufae'ture of war mare-rials, is, so far as m i e ssity is coiit erned. rank non.-ensc. f th-' armament and amiauni-
upon the sources of its information being kept secret.
When it is considered what ha.s been accomplished by occidental science, the state of the ealing arts in China appears as astonishing as it is de-
taken some millions of his wealth
and cast it into some unexphrable sink-hole in old mother earth. Xow Henry Ford, having sold
i iei e -lon-re ui;u rigiu 01 iuihums, mi ucu.inr as m-ih j enou gli automol lies to maKe him so plorable.
non grata, the' representatives of other nations, has : rich that if his wealth was converted 7j10 Chinese physicians use the m-yer I..-. n questioned. into five dollar gold pieces, it would ' crudest remedies, among them being The elemar.d ef Germanv that this government fur- take him years to eount it. He pre-j dried insects and reptiles. Surgical nish f-idene.. ui.on which it bases its request for thejsurncs that he he :,Mo to ! instruments are rough, and only the
(r,,,ov.-:l of rat.tnins Pov.Eei and Yon Pa teen is ar- 1 1 " " 1 s; m p. est operations are attempted.
: o . er n 1 1 tent
i log. int. insolent and
'hen Cncle- i It implie,
a gross breach of international
a douot as to tne sine
tion trusts can obtain such materials the
can. There Is tu need to worry. ln-n
takes it in his head that he wants
no power under the sun, save superior force, to stop j .,na rf.,t, ,cts qpem its national honcr in a very grave him, and this is especially true when it eomes t tnat- ,r;irn,r j( js tjlr VAOsi irritating incident of a series iers deeme.l of militaiy nea e-if . If we are going to j ,,f irritating incidents which our diplomatic dealings be a militarist government. :is the armament and n- , u .itj, tile central powers bae evoked since the war
j com me need.
of
the government to take' oer tb.e plants of tlms" protitpbad.ing patriots. Sen. i'i;mmi!.'-r solution, and the reasons gie!i for i:. savor no re l.ngely of false-pre-te nse than of sincerity. It is the game of politics that he seems t be pi. tying.
a hundreil men who are responsible
i The- Chinese have only a general idea
" ifor the war to stop their foolishness. ! of anatomy, as they do not practice
em oi -shake hands across the bloo.lv chasm dissection Thpv make
tiietmi,-, in it ! this countrv in its expressions or absolute neutrality nd emit
He might just as well have tr-ld
for example.
no eiistinction between venous and arterial blood, And to them nerve and
munition makers seem to want us to become, the reno reason why we should not measure up to 'V in ! full sense if th word. It is -en With.n the power
H. t.V lor lu-.sl
boaste-1 that he hadn't taken a bath in 0 years.
Mrs. Mary Ttmpletn. t aiem. ore., in suing, lioree. Some women may stand an unwashed; .iTol for 00 venrs but there's no ladv who will '
taiul Id.s bragging abemt it.
rathe r than f st.itesf..an.-hip. Tru th- la-rde of ..v-
I
ernm-nt emid. s in th.- -o rnm -nt plants might all become work.il-!' cg- in s ;:'. polu:cal naachine. but it toildn't be mi! h wot-,. tb..n it is no.v with th" intimidation that praat- mt : Uta. t ai is uuploy ,,n th.eir ludp. for political purp- w hib' as to tlie gr al bill of expense, that tai-ht be . asy n..ugh to ,'araile. Wlwn we f. i;,!. r that the- I'nited State-; h..s b. n paying th. e arn-amtnt "pa'rb''s-' ? '. -i p.-r ton for ,ri:icrI . t - that '!'.- s im- "p:i 1 1 i s" w -ta- .it t he s.im- time celling to K;:ss-a for 1 ss t!bm , .:to- p r toa. th- .h:Ter--nt e wi',d g" 1"!.- as toward making up th.-- e-v-p. tis,. l;!:. s.:. h has i . eu v:r lot Her sin the .si;ir.i-!i-.!!.i t.r.iii ...r. ;e f.o t tb.at a' C"-.in:s fir the fact th. it w h:b v.i- ha' .- b, . n spe Pa'.ir.g enough money for
Now Austria is asked tei disavow the attack upon r h- Aiaona anI punish the commander of the IT boat. That's easy. Just lay it on the Turks. Xolody seems to b able to bluff them any.
A Jt '.a t woman
..id ih.en fainte-d. Xi ucii 1. beilies with a
kissed a colore-d Pullman porter
wonder. The idea of taking
i.man porter. it s nothing1
I, o,
X 14 I
-hort of b
-ill:
te.
Tub.
alosis U'-nns ofte n enter a person thre.uch tlm
ski:: a. ;d fr.-t;Uent bathing keeps the skin pores open, suL-.-t sts a -.t ra tloctor. Put we don't go to bath- 1 ir.gr with a vacuum-cleaner yet.
pr-
: 1
w
a t d n e - s' for it. w
the "p: f ar d :-
t-. ;.' . I t.r., : 1
Tl been
th-u
we o ; : g b
l e' ! t U! e,l v. a rd f.-r it.
to hu n- "thin.:.
something t if w- i a a take need to be par-
Senator Works openly repudiates the preigressive party. An.--tb.er b!ow for Teddy and HI. ln't the scriptures say that "Py our "rks ye shall be judg d" ?
: 1 v t.r.
iii mam-:;t in -s'U-atf d
1 ut S-r.. r.::u!i;.::-
a real a :.sw r. " ! tation p!.e - d Up.-!1 ten-! d to jir-! -.- or at b a: f- r a t: : f.ate.l draft ap- n. Vpirtdn sm" 'ruituii
and by c is t
n. .;:ut:.-ns -rafts lia.e alre.uly -ngres. T!.- answer is pi lin. .: g to .lo.'.,.- iath-r than n-nd- r a.n b- r.o oilier logical intcrprer -'j'ion thnn that it is m--r .ft. to continue, ind. Mrute ly. ll-.i iiKe of 5 p.-r t.-n t f in-
Puv voiir Christmas pus.nt for father earlv! The I ' " i pn-. tiling i l-a e.f a prosperity '.ao has pretty near i.:-t ti-'1 i. 'id man l -.u lied. 1
I'-t ten t'cr.ts that "personae non grata" didn't come
te tear expressing what Pob Lansing thought t l'.o-i:d and o.l Papen!
m
ti- -,:: . w h.le ; executed.
o
.r "pre-
Xe W mat.ia.
York and Chicago have developed a fckatir.t That's Letter tLa-a tangoing
Grunwald
r
.XL
Cast! Store
Home Phone 7120. 1624-1628 S. Mich. St. Bell Phone 270 Staple and Fancy Groceries Headquarters for Quality and Quantity. Week End Specials
H a n d PickeJ Northern Spy Apples, peck 25c
H. S: E. Siiirar, !i lbs. for. . .59c With $1.00 order or over.
Fine Head Rice per pound, onlv 5c
Gloss Soap, 8 bars . .25c Fine Cranberry, 3 qt. 25c All Pancake Flours, 3 packages 25c All Milks, 3 lare or 6 small 25c Grape Fruit, 6 for. . .25c "Sure Pop" Pop Corn 6 pounds 25c Dry Beef, 3-10: glasses for 25c
Large Grandma Washing Powder, 2 for. 25c 2 large cans Pumpkin 17c 2 cans Tomatoes .... 17c 2 cans Sour Kraut ... 17c 2 cans Baked Beans .17c 2 pkgs. Rolled Oats. .17c 2 Kellogg Krumbles. .17c 2 Farina 17c 2 New Figs and Dates 17c
Headquarters for Quality and Quantity of All New Figs, Dates and Nuts.
'About as near pc
fecticn, I suppose, as
they make railroads.
Thomas A. Edison
Mr. Thomas A. Edison recently made a railroad trip across the continent. Commenting on the roadway of one of the western railroads in a newspaper interview, "the Wizard" said : 'Their trucks are like the New York Central's and that's about as near perfection, I suppose, as they make railroads,"
NerakuB
5
New York Central R.R. (Lake Shore) Michigan Central R. R.
Htm! lines
are
"TJie Water-Level Route' the standard of
'The Niagara Falls Route"
measurement for railroads.
tl..
rmm
-m. r -r m
mm
-vita'"
SIT". :Jst
For the Public Service
Hi
