South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 88, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 28 March 1916 — Page 6

Tri sua y rviiMxc;, march 2h, mo.

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

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SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morning Evening Sunday. JOHN HKNRY ZUVKK, Editor. GA URIEL. II. SUilMF.kS. Publisher.

flXLT AShOCIATFI rRr.s MORMNd FRAXCHIhK i PAI'KK IN NOKTIIKICN INDIANA AM ONLY I'AI'LK KM-ri-OVINfi TIIK INTr.UNATlON.fi, ni:v fr.KVl(: IN olTII HK.vn-No otbT newpapr In tLe mtate protected by two .id wire nlLt and l-iT-n servbes; only

Ißfct-cdii'ui paper In tat outiide Indianapolis. rui.!ipl fTj day cf tii year and twW on all days eirept Sunday and Holiday. Kutc-red at tbe South iiend pcstofllce us aecood ciaa mall.

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Call nt te r.ffbe or tephone above numbers and ask for department wantM-Kdltorlal, Advertising, Circulation, or Amounting Kor "jrit ndv." if yrur u::mp Is la tbe tele-pL.-ne llrectory. Mil will be mallei aftr Insertion. IUport :ri.Tttnitlon to buln-, l-ad execution, poor delivery of pipera. '-ad tepb-jr." Tvir. -P, t' bead of depart ruent with vni. h y-ju re dalir.. The News-Times has thirteen trunk l.nea all (Jf wLih rexpend to Home Pbone 1151 aDi f Jell 2100.

M'HsrHIPTION ItTF.s. Mom ins 5:Tninz Editions. Flr.jcle Cony 'J ; Sunday. .V; Morning or nlutf I"dltion, ''-ily. ln.ludicsc Sunday, by rnnll. $.;.u0 pr la advance: l-llTered by carrier Iji Souti !'-tid and Ml8hivka, lö.OO per ear iu jdvnnee, or 1-c by tbe week.

AfVf:KTISIN(; JlATKS: Auk thft advertising department. ForHjja Advertising Kepresentntives : CUNK, LOKKNZKN A: WOODMAN. 2 tifth Av.. Nw York City and Adv. Hldg.. 'htraKo. The Newü-Ttin-! eudavors to kep ita advertising (cd'irur.a free from fraudulent misrepresentation. -nJ Person defrauded tbrnugh patronage of any advertisement in this paper will confer faTor on the management by reporting tbe facta completely. DAILY CIRCULATION ALWAYS IN EXCESS OF 15,000. SUNDAY 18,000. BOOKS OPEN TO ADVERTISERS. MARCH 28, 1916.

PROPOSING COLLEGE STUDENTS FOR ARMY OFFICERS. The general tendency toward looking upon college students s the test material for army officers, has been aev'tpted without much fjuestion by some colleges themselves. It has been asserted that the average student could be qualified for a commission with only a, little special training, instead of the long and arduous course required to fit the ordinary recruit for command. That tickle the college and the college student very naturally. This view found typical expression the other day at ise School of Applied Science, n Cleveland. Said Pres't Howe to his students, some of whom were contrmpluTin.ir joining the new marine corps of the Ohio naval militia: "of course you can do as you like, but It is my id". i that a colleg? student should be enrolled as a commissioned officer. In case of war. students who enlist now could be only privates. You are better trained and educated than the average private, and are worthy of belr.tr officers." With this utterance the Cleveland Leader takes sharp issue, saying: "The undergraduates of Dr. Howe's excellent technical school are no more fit to be commissioned as officers of any military organization than are the students of a theological seminary to be put in charge of coal mines or power plants. Army and navy officers require .special training as imperatively as leaders In other highly technical pursuits. Had Tr. Howe been giving his students military training all these years as is done, for example, at Ohio State university there might bo some ser.blance of sense in his idea that they are fitted for command. "They could hardly be told anything more false ami mischievous than that college students are necessarily 'worthy of bein-officers.' Tt is absolutely untrue that Case siudents are better trained and educated' in my military sense than ''the average private'." 1'erhaps the Leader itself is over-em phatic. Surely a scientific training gives a young man some of the special knowledge he will need for proficiency as an army or navy officer mathematics, for example. And no doubt a good education of any sort promote. confidence in a man. giving him a groundwork to build on and habits of mental application that make new acquisitions come easier. But there N no use in flattering the college student. for nil that. Tbe difference between him and the average youth is rally slight. When it comes to comooting in any such field sis army or navy service, the ollege man is likely to find a worthy competitor in the m. in who lacfci his advantages. We caar.it look to o'ir institutions of higher learning for all the officers we need for our defensive forces, nor even for a na- ; . r i t v of them.

HEARST AND KELLER! OR YOU .MIGHT REVERSE THE ORDER. As a sequel to .Major Keller's call for a mass meeting to be held tonight to consider the local gas question, witness William Kandolph HearsVs appeal to the clergy of the country for their opinion on the advisability of his takiir-r up a ficht against prize fighting. He wants to know from the big ones, apparently, whether or not it is good sense to go on fighting the

prize tight after the prize tight has already been outlaid In every state in the Union. It beats all how reat minds sometimes run in the .-a. tv :;i.beci!io channels. Mayor Keller calls a mass meeting to find out whether the people are wanting a lowvr rate for gas. just as though he foarod that, after years in clamorinc for it. they mi'-rht have changed their minds and decided that what they were in need of ,s a higher rate. He has a case pending before the public service eon-mission petitioning for a lower gas rute. hut pretends that he needs a few injections of public spine before he can go ahead with it, and maybe he Joes need it. Hither this, or he would remind the 1 deer peepul" acain of how solicitous he is of its wishes. Now ci mes Hearst, inspired to virtue by the WUlardMoran a', air Saturday night in New York, and wou'td seemingly hve us heheve that he had discovered something new: that prize fights are an evil and oucht to be disrouraucd. He supposes that th clergy and the ruMIc have forgotten that the last real prize tight the Johnson-Willard affair had to be held in Cuba because there was no rooni jn the United States for it. It was necessary to evade the law. with the consent of public officials, in order to hold the Willard-Moran "boxing match" Saturday night, and that Is the only way a fght can be held in he Urlted States, even New Mexico having turned them down. Hearst and Keller! A bne pair. For a splendid di;ihy of asininity. and arpeäl to the pallery, we .-uCet that somebody start a new political party and lot them head the tickets as the candidates for president and vice president only, perhaps, it would be better, for the sake of local pride or disgust to place Keller's name first.

Mexican policy which is of different partisan faith than the republican, has received a very appropriate rebi ke from pr--:;-nt. and deserve.'-, it from the people. ! Tli giv.it mass of American people do not giv? an eternal rap for the financial interests in Mexico or the i fat contributors to republican campaign funds, and any effort to plunge the people ir'o war for the sake of those interests will never, when understood, meet with j

the popular approval, we dare say, een of the mass of 9 republicans themselves. More unquestionably than ever, present appearances center the source of Mexican war promotion in New York City, with condemnation of the administration policies addenda. Influences of recent date, since the Mexican expedition in quest of Villa, have been working night and day. with all orts of prevaricating press agents along the border to humbug the news agencies and fill the American newspapers with wrong ideas as to what is goirg or4. if possible, and what the expedition is leading to. There is very small doubt but that the story of the split-up in the Carranza camp, and the desertion of a portion of his troops to the Villa side, was a Wall street invention, though sent out from Columbus. N. M., and mainly for the purpose of furnishing republicans in congress an excuse for a big yell, de

manding immediate mobiyzation of more soldiers and a rush for the Mexican line, the effect of which, if consummated, would no doubt lead to exactly what Wall street wants. The dreamed-of resistance of an American Invasion wluld probably become real; the Mexican tail might wag the dog, and the Villistas taking over the support of the Carranzistas, put us exactly where these Wall street interests, and the republican party for political effect, want us. IJut even this is not half so damnable as the pretense) of piety with which these 1. (. P. senators and congressmen are seeking to cover up their real purpose. We may half expect such substitutions of partisanship for patriotism, on the behalf of financial interests and ingrown politicians, but their pretended rushto the support of certain religious institutions in Mexico, calculating to land the American vote of the same faith by it, mixes politics and religion to an extent so unAmerican that even the people of that faith themselves ought to resent it. Certainly there is no reason why the people of the United States should be so Interested in the religious orders of Mexico that they should rush to their defense when such defense is not wanted all the evidence one needs that the republico-religious fervor runs largely to political poppycock. A week ago, March -'0, to bo exact, the Most Rev. Francis Plancarte, archbishop of Monterey, Most Rev. Leopold Uuiz, archbishop of Molera, and Rev. John Navarette, priest at Aguas, Calientes, all exiles from Mexico and prectically destitute, arrived at the Depaul university, Chicago, direct from the war-torn republic, one of them, Archbishop Ruiz, with a $30,000 reward hanging over his head. What do they say of the expedition into Mexico? Not that it should be enlarged into an intervention, but that it is going too far as it is. Mexican patriots, as they are, with that national pride which might be good for some republicans in congress and elsewhere, their invitation is for Uncle Sam to stay at home and mind his own business. Archbishop Plancarte remarks for America's benefit: "What if the Canadian government would send troops into your country to correct it? Mexico is going through the purification of fire and will come to its own rescue in time without the intervention of any outside government." It is a pretty good hint, in perfect keeping with the somewhat old saying that "people who mind their own business never have any time to mind the businesses of others." We all regret the situation in Mexico,, the destruction of lives and property, the ravishing of nuns, and all that has happened, but if we may judge some of these senators and congressmen, by their apparent partisan determinations, that property, and those lives, even to the sanctity of the nuns, are about as safe in tho hands of those Mexican bandits as they would be in the hands of some of these self-alleged American defenders, especially were it to occur to them that destruction or ravishing would serve their political purposes better. Xo, it isn't the church properties, nor the nuns in Mexico, that are worrying the republicans in congress. It is the Wall street financial interests in Mexico, and the desire to bid heavily for some fat campaign contributions, while incidentally, of course, by pretenses at piety, hoping to rake in a considerable American vote because of the oneness of the religious faiths involved. It reminds one of the scurrying once caused on the floor of the senate by Sen. William Alden Smith of Michigan, when the question was up of refusing to seat Reed Smoot of Utah, because he was a Mormon, and Mormons practiced polygamy. He is quoted thuswise: "There can be nothing but excuse for so many men in the senate being so dead against polygamy. It must be that theirs are not polygamous states, and that they have received instructions from blind and ultra-conformatist people back home. In Utah they practice polygamy, but the polygamist has his limitations, and supports the wives that he has without disguise or stealthily concealing their existence from his other wives. In Michigan, and two score of other states thev practice promiscuity instead of polygamy, and as between the two, virtue prefers to countenance the latter, even to the extent of challenging the vote of every senator

who h;us been guilty of the worst of these two charges. Give up your concubines before you ask any Mormon to give up his wives. Remember, too, that the unseating of Reed Siiioot, will probably serve to drive Utah over to the ranks of the enemy." And Reed Smoot was seated by an overwhelming majority. It was a republican senate by about tho same overwhelming majority. And Utah repaid the republican party by joining with Vermont in 131-, in seeing to it that the O. O. P. had representation in the electoral college being one of the only two states that went for William Howard Taft. Tlv? republicans would seat Villa in congress if it would give them a vote. Among them, no doubt, are those who now appear so greatly concerned over the religious orders of Mexico, xv.'.o would even justify the ravishing of nuns by the bandits of that country', were some of their own comparative sins to be thrown into their faces, supplemented by an aroused fear that the vote of some state might otherwise go astray.

THE MELTING POT

FILLED BY THE EDITORIAL STAFF

STATESMEN GREAT AND AND NEAR-GREAT

Hf lYexi Kelly

its niFn-;i:i:xT. He used to shake his brawny fist At every passing motorist. And then proceed to pick the flaws In all the city's traffic laws. Hanging was too good, he said. For all these auto speeders Whose recklessness increased the dead And stunned the papers' readers. He wanted to be the city's n ayor And figured that with him it.

j He'd cut this speed through air

Down to the flve-rnile limit. He'd place a cop on every block And stop this awful speeding Or else they'd go in hock And stay there with no feeding. He sure was some great bird At the gentle art of talking And said he was of the common herd And really enjoyed his walking. Rut now tie has changed his tune And if you really want to shiver Some real hot day the coming June Just take a ride in his new flivver.

PF.RIIAPS. The editor walked into the drug store and slid a thin dime across the counter in payment for his "coke." Dr. Hill was sojourning at the other end of the fountain watching the candy machine, but came to and said: "Give me one, too." The editor shot back his nickle, but Doc insisted on paying for his own drink, but the editor said he wanted to pay for the drink. "Xaw," said Doc, "I don't want you to buy me a drink. You work for your money."

world and we hate-like the dickens to think of ever leaving it.

"I am a Hero." the fat man said. And he was there with the reason. For the fiy that's now dead Was the first of the season.

We know some men who feel like boiled hominy over the fact that they are making $15 a wek.

Here's a great opportunity for T. R.'s vocabulary to get a bit of exer

cise.

A recent census disclosed twenty dogs to eight babies in a fashionable colony at Palm Reach. Indianapolis New s.

One of the members of the Noon Pool club hit headquarters the other day wearing a new pair of dark glasses and wanted to get in the game. "No you don't," said G. K. "You ain't going to ha.e none of this magnifying glass handicap on us."

SO WOULD AVK. (From the liberty, O.. Press.) In our mail this morning we received a nice letter from a piano concern in which we were offered an $soo player piano for the very small sum of $150, and besides throwing off this $650 we would be allowed to pay for the instrument at the rate of $5 per month; pay as we play, as the manager so aptly puts It. There are lots of nice people in this

A PAULI-:. Once upon a Time there was a College Pitcher. And. believe Us, he was Some Titcher. He threw the Apple with the hand you don't stir your Coffee with and he could put a Iot of the old Stuff on it. too. He was so Good the coach figured there would be no Need for any Outfielders. That's how good this College Pitcher was. He went Rig risht from the Start of the spring Practice. This Roy was so good the other Pitchers quit coming out. In the practice the Ratters faced him, gave one Iook and a, b, c, just like That, they were out. When the regular Season started the team didn't do very well. The Opponents always managed to get one or two Runs off this Pitcher, while his Team couldn't get the Hits in a Cluster and anyway they weren't very good. This made the Pitcher look all the Retter. Scouts from, the Rig show looked him Over and one of them bought him. He went up where they play regular Rail. He got a Kink in his Shoulder. He had a corn on his foot. He couldn't get his Arm in condition. Finally the Manager got tired hearing the Stalls and he sent him back to the Rushes, where he played a couple of years. Moral: They all look good in college baseball. N. R. W.

Well, weli! Another Crisis.

Getting so now, he's one of the family.

Simply another funer?. 1 with Wood row as the undertaker.

We only hope that one of these crises don't spoil in the shipment.

A spoiled crisis is enough to make any nation fight.

With Other Editors Than Ours

Not one Zeppelin having been brought down In 25

j raids. Iird Montagu wants Kngland to have a minS ister of aviation. Rloating up her cabinet seems to be

Rritain's answer e.ery time she's hit on the head.

Testing tire, resisting lath, chemists claim to have

produced temperature of l.S"0 degrees. Meaning noth

ing personal, we do hope that the Old Sol doesn't hear of these chemists.

REPUBLICAN SOLICITUDE FOR THE RELIGIOUS ORDERS IN MEXICO. Continuous uproar in congress from the republican ikld of iL to hw-ivs, berating the nitration

Oil in onions dissipates perms, announces a bacteriologist, but you don't see us loading up on onions to furnish drunkenness for any blamed erm on earth.

Rough riders organizing at Douglas, with the colonel peeling bananas on a Trinidad sun-porch!

Why don't we see Prig. Gen. Clarence Kd wards' gory blade vvAWi ut the head of sJure advancing column?

ii.w i: am: iii:i:v too iiaiid ON HIM? (St. Joseph, Mo., Gazette.) "Beware of him he had an ax to grind!" Thus have we been wont to be warned against the individual who, seemingly Impressed with our personal Importance and seeking only to make himself agreeable, was quite likely to develop a desire for getting from us some service beneficial to himself. We recall the story which gave the "ax to grind" expression to the world. A boy had been pleasantly greeted by a man. The latter offered to permit the youth to turn a grindstone, complimenting the youngster constantly upon the manly way in which he tackled the task. And in the end. the boy found that the man merely had de

sired the ax ground. "Reware the man who flatters you," cried the boy, "for he has an ax to grind!" Well, doubtless it is true. The flattery may be offered in such form as to be scarcely discernible for what it is. The man with the ax to grind may be clever at the task of getting the work done. He ought to be; it is an important undertaking. And that brings us to the thought really in mind. Hasn't the "man with the ax to grind" been rather overabused in all the years since the grindstone-weary boy uttered his v. arning complaint? May not the "man with the ax to grind" be a fellow whose cause is worth a less acute individual's time at the grindstone? What a multitude of axes must be ground in this world! Why, when you come to think of it. there ore really few undertakings, large or small, which can be put through on a straight appeal for support because of what they are. Think of the arguments necessary in obtaining a bond issue for school purposes, municipal improvements, county institutions, state causes, national enterprises. It is not sufficient that the plain need of the proposition be presented to the people. Reason upon reason the more unusual and farfetched the better, maybe must be put forward in successive developments of a campaign to achieve the end sought. There may be doubtless there is some private benefit to be derived by individuals sponsoring the movement. And we have been so constantly warned 'sainst the "man with the ax to grind" that we deprive a community or a county or a state or the nation itself of something admittedly much needed merely for the sake of depriving those few in

dividuals or the prolit they may reap from the turning of the grindstone. It is not comforting to iry to imagine what this country would be today but for tbe man who had an ax he wanted ground. He caused

railways to be builded, telegraphs and telephones to be instated, factories to be created, wilderness to be brought under cultivation, villages and towns and cities to dot the land, education to be made possible to evey individual. He got the ax ground, it is true but see what the people as a whole obtained!

"LOCK STFP" SCHOOLING. (Waterbury, Conn., Republican.) Parents ought to take time to read over the article which appears in this issue about the proposal in California to dispense with the o-called "Lockstep" system in the public schools, because it is the same system that is followed in th public schools of Waterbury and in the public schools of most cities in the land. Fvery child i. affected by it except those who have wealthy and wise parents, wealthy enough to .provide private tutors ar.d wise enough to provide thoroughly trained tutors, who teach the pupil according to hLs ability to absorb knowledge and not according to a schedule based on experience with classes. There is n doubt that thousands of children have lost interest in school and have taken advantage of the fir.t opportunity to break away ffom it because of the present "lockstep" system, but there have been few leaders among the teachers and educators who have had the foresight or temerily to tackle any improvement that gave promise of better results. It seems possible that some state will adopt the individual teaching plan on a broad scale and give the rest of the nation the benefit of its experiment, but it also seems likely that the experiment will prove highly successful from every point of view and result in developing just the right solution for th present great problem of public schools, how to keep up the interest of the pupil until he has really obtained an elementary education iu the "Three R's." Reading. Writing and Arithmetic.

WASHINGTON. March JT. Rep. Dudley M. Hughes of Georgia, chairman of the bouse committee on education, is declared to be the most skilled man in all the southland in the handling of negro labor. He has the best understanding of negro psychology. At one time he was at the head of f Georgia railroad which was built largely by colored laborers. People from miles around came to ask Hughes how he got s much work out of the men with so little trouble. They come to his big plantation, wher; the work is done almost entirely by colored labor, and ask the same question. Theres is nore contentment, less discord and greater efficiency on the Hughes place than on any other farm around. It is a good deal like an o.'d ante-bellum plantation. Hughes is never called Mistah Hughes, but Marse Dud. His wife is always addressed as Mis' Mary. Occasionally Hughes finds it necessary to tap one of Iiis men sharply over thy head with a club. If he needs any help in such an enterprise he can get it from any laborer on the place. Kveryhody Is for Marse Dud rather than for one of their own number. The reason for all this seems to be that Hughes t ats all his negroes as children and encourages them to live in a Lin I of Make-Relieve. For instance, if he learns that a certain negro has been stealing, Hughes never lets the man think he has been caught in tho act, but talks to him about a certain dream he has had in which he saw the guilty fellowdoing the thieving or how a friendly spirit camo down the chimney and told him all about it. A while ago Hughes forbade any of his men to smoke about the barns and appointed one big negro to be sheriff of the plantation and see that the rule was enforced. "And remember," Hughes enjoined him. "this rule goes for everybody, white or black. If you ever see the president of the United States smoking about one of the barns on this place go and nab him."

The next day Hughes purposely went into the barn smoking a cigar. The sheriff placed him under arrest. Hughes entered into the spirit of the thing and agreed to stand trial. They had a court made up entirely of negroes and tho one who acted as judge got that honor as a reward for a Icng1 period of previous good behavior. In the end Hughes was found guilty and fined 15 pounds of chewing tobacco. Thus did he enforce self-government among his men. It has long been one of Hughes' rules that no matter how ornery or low down one of his employes may be, or howmuch trouble he may get into with the authorities, he must not go to chain-gang if paying his fine, or anything else within the power of Hughes can prevent. That fact does much toward reconciling the men to put up with punishment or penalties as Hughes himself sees fit to inflict.

One of the fattest colored women on Hughes' p ace came to him one dny and wished to have an advance cf 75 cents on her monthly wages. She said she wanted it to put in tbe collection box up in the front of her church the following Sunday. "Rut." admonished Hughes. "T don't think you can afford lo contribute so much money to the church. You are doing more than your share."

"Yessah," she admitted, "but how i else could ' have so much fun wif I

my money: ill go walkin up the isle, jinglin' this 7". cents and all the other cullud folks'll be savin': "I'mm um-m! Sho may be ragged, but she's right'!"

m;av soukci: op (j.vsomm;. (Arizona Gazette.) There is one source of supply of gasoline which heretofore seems to have been overlooked. ' That is what is contained in natural gas. The process of recovering it was discovered by a chemist and already a company has been organized, which is producing and selling 120, 0QO galIons per month. The gasoline is extracted from the gas by putting the latter under a pressure of 2G0 pounds per square inch, which forces the gasoline out and it is carried into tan's and blended with naphtha, rendering the gasoline safe to handle and nhip. In its natural state as recovered from the gas. it is said to le more dangerous than nitro-glycerine, owing to Its high gravity. The extraction ef the gasoline does ntA impair the quality of the gas, :J3 t ca.a La

One of Hughes' employes has a large family and all have odd-sound

ing names names like Petruna, j Sanolium. Vermirola or Quillne. i Hughes wondered where such names' ever originated. He found out. "I got me a good almanac at the j drug store," explained the father of; the children, "and I taken the first syllable of one medicine and 'tached I it to the last part of some other ! kind o medicine. Yessah. I don't ! like to boast, but I guess my chil- ! dren's got 'bo it the puniest names' thev is aroun' here."

used afterwards, just as if the gasoline were not taken out. Even w ith this addition to the production, the j rospeet for cheaper gasoline is by no means encouraging, as the increased use of it is simply enormous, and there ar. not enough natural gas wells in the country to more than supply this increased demand. It may, thouch, prevent the price from soaring entirely beyond reach.

' North Dakota is in a sad way. j The prohibition law is po strictly

'enforced that the warden of the?

i penitentiary can't get enough conj v icts to keep the state's binding

twine plant in operation. Wichita 'Kas. ) Raule.

A venireman in the Lorirer trial at Chicago sai l he thought a president ought to know the affairs of a bank. Such radical evidence of ability to upsM tradition must have been startling to the court. Suutb era Lumbermen.

Ii

Low Fares Wes

JL

assess

4 t-VVV vfc '

Colonist and

Settlers fares one inv class will Vc

in ffWt bv the Grand Trunk and

connecting lines this spring. They Include

San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Diezo. Portland, Seattle,

Vancouver, Prince Rupert and points on the Grand Trunk fie Railway. $42.64

Utah, Montana and points in Alberta, $37.64

Write, call or 'phone for complete dtaib" and exact fare to point you want to

reach anywhere in me, west or norm-

west.

r 1 III ' V

Ü

C. A. M I TT. I A. i. T. Ky.

ttlon !outh lU-nd. IMI S3: Home 50"J5.

1

V!

a Ma

For Women Only We will give a merchandise check for one dollar for every name given us that results in a new customer. Every woman is welcome, just call Bell 462 or Home 5462,

I. & M.

T1

CASH GROCERY 1624-28 S. MICHIGAN ST. BELL PHONE 270, HOME PHONE 7120

eeK

Eating or Cooking Apples. 2.c pk., $1 bu.

10 pounds Sugar Tie with $1.00 order or over.

NiCe White St! Potato.--.--. S.le bu.

2 larpe cans 7 Pumpkin X C 2 large can." t 7 Saur Kraut JL As 2 cans Sweet 1 7Potatoes JL Is 2 large cans 7 Tomatoes JL j 2 cans Sweet t J Corn 1C 2 boxes Rolled 1 7r Oats 1C 2 cans Marrow- 1 J fat peas J. C 2 pkgs. Macaroni 1 J or Spaghetti 1C 2 large c.'?ns t Molasses1 1vs 2-1 Oc size Sni- H ders Baked Beans. 1C

We Deliver to All Parts of the Citv.

1 o ba rs Alio-!- Agk an Famih- S- r . T L C

6c . 6c

if

1 0c box Corn

Fl. -ike.

H'c gacs Jellv

1 :,o can Tinrnfo-.d-l f Baking pnwd( r . . . 1 UC

2 ."e box Cocoa pi bars Velvet Soap 2.".c siz- (', 1 Dust r,-.".o bo' S Mustard S.rdin10c size Tomato Sou p . . .

19c 41c 21c 10c ..6c

Sweet Potato---, SZf öc lb, lbs D C

Special invitation extended to all Housewives to attend the Golden Sun Coffee and Perfection Biscuit demonstration to be held here April 8th. Come and have a good cup of coffee FREE.

Producers Union Milk comes to you only after it's Pasteurized and Clarified

Ton Pay Less For It Urn, Investigate.

tJL urn i tu re LQi

iau X. MAIN si.

"SHIMP'S COAL MAKES WARM FRIENDS." Good Soft Coal $3.50 Ton. All kind, of Hard nJ Soft 1 frJ. .lo (OhE I'o.-hntJ IV for nnilrrfe! fnrnw., rl. foal for (jrate and Wood and 1 -d C.I a -mll nl I 111 maW It HOT for yn. W. D. SHI MP 1613 W. U AIIIM.TON A. Horn I'honr 1VJI I'lione 110.

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