South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 92, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 1 April 1916 — Page 4
il-
SATIUDAY AITIIUNOO.N, AI'IUL f , 191ft. THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES -l;:-;;:, -rrLr
Morning Evcnint Sunday.
JOHN Hi:Ni:v 'a:vf.i, iMitor. GA!:CIl-:i II. oUMMKKH publisher.
OXVT ASSOCIATE!) TKF.HS MO KM ft FRAN CHI SI". fArKK IN NOKTIIKKN INDIANA AND ONLY I'A l'KK KM-
FLOYlNii Tili: INTFKN TION L. Sl.W fr.UM( C INjthos agents w e have paid in H yp;irs $ 4 . 4 T 1 . " r? v
Cl'TII IF.N! No other r,cw.;.auT Pi U täte -rote ted j r,f.n fcr ;o Uasp-l wire nisrht ami d iv- n-wm n-z-n: Iii only ! ' '
e'.ybt-f'ltinjn pii't-r In nfi'.c oitM'!" InJi:uapIip. I'm iiI.-d i hav ; irprruatd over f.lfWnO'.erx'
U!.7."V c.a",r. Vi'i r'-' V.", .,,r.":?;V:l"',Lr" I The jnsion proposition is a delicate subject
eist null.
the war t i.l te. 5 rMoo,'Htii. t 'ivil war ponsions
l'r.rlo .,un his handed out 4. 7 1 ! . 1 -'2. AH the II-fiit:tionary war pensions nc have ever paid ;:.rcret'ate $ 7 fiO.f Ol. Mr. Morpan declares that most of this business ha. !,f.fn "worked i j f bv professional pension nirents. To
The
-s of t! pension bureau for the past 11 year?
THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY
Office: 210 W. Colfax Av
Tlnm r?xn 1 S.U.
Call at th efflre or t piioi:- nJ numNer nnd ask for department arite IMit )rlhl. Advrtiniujr, Circulation, or ecountlntf. For "w.mt lolvs." 1f your nan.e U in 1 1- teleryhoB directory, Mil will ! nnll after JnTtlon. Import nttcnti.n f tuiru-s. In 1 -c-utiori, i.r ,de!Uery of paper, tml teepti'n n.-rvi'-, f. t IiMol T deparl nitT.t with wtlch you are tlralinj:. The New-Tlmen .:. trdrte-n trunk liaet all of wLfIi rep nd to lbn.- Phone nui Hell 2M
pension proposition is a leiicate sjnjpci to
handle. TCvervbody wants to do full Justice to those inen, and their dependent, who foupht for their country. Put that the pension industry has resolved itself
I intf. 'a Viiir'th frruft nr...n v h rV i hrwf f llnmTll n'llliim
j Ml fa T t I k II ' M 1 M t - - " ' - 1 ' . ... ,, i harpi's thrive at the expense of th taxpayers is B-!l l'bon 2100
I stronirly suspected. et the averape congressman dares
not even mention a revision of the pension rolls out loud. Some day. may he, we will uet a c'niKrrss with the nere to tackle the j.ih jn earnest.
VON TIRPITS SENSITIVENESS BUT
SrnCR!l'TlfV ltT S l..rr.Irnr ami !vr-nii.- Hdlticn. !
Firzle V.py LV; f?undaj. .V; .Morulr.jr or Kvrniu Edition., ALL FOR HIS CREW'S
Cftlly. lncluaiDp Snrnlny, i-y ui ill. it y;ir la n lHti:e. tiler?i by carrier in South H-Ti'l hu1 .Mialriwaka. $.j.0 per jear ia airane, or X2r. ty the week.
AnVKKTIPINft HAT : Ask t! p n lvorrUlr g depart nifQt. TorHea Advertlsintr Kopref matlres : C(i.i;, LoKIINZKN A: WOODMAN. Z2T Vfth Av., New 'iork -ity and AM v. IM.ltr.. Chicago. The Newa-Time -alnvora t' kct-p its ä1 vprtlslnsc
It's an oddly interesting striry that comes from Switzerland re'ardink' Admiral on Tirpitz. the diicctor 'f the suinTiarine warfare, who recently resigned Iiis ofhee. It is explained tiiat this naval officer, whose ruthless at;ressions against both enemies and non-combatants
THE MELTING POT
FILLED BY THE EDITORIAL STAFF
ADVIC'i;. Tdl me not in noref.il sluml er. That you have another queen. Nor say that I. your wife, c ncirn'rs Your life once so serene. Mention not in idle dreaminp. Things that you've ijone. r with all your art in s heminp. 'Twill l.e me who won. Tell m not that you would kae me Mention not her name. I'or thouch I fear 'twould urie nie. I s ire would kill that dame. fluard thy tonaue hushand dear, Guard it with your life. r u'll liave a time. 1 fear, Kxphtininp to your wife.
. . . . , J , i.: i . a , a t .3..: 1 I . . . , I
Mlr.mn frU frm fP..liu,t i-r..,.r1...r,t uti.-r, V t, v ....i-.ri oae maoe mui UH' mosi cxeiiaieu inoijiiuai oiiiiinivu
- m r u n 4 I Wtil IIHU iUt' Minn on iiMI.I"ii J T defrauded thr'ujrb patroutK? of any adv.-rtNemf ut In tl.isjuith the ureal war, has suffered a mental collapse. fapr will confer a favor ou tLe loariaKt'iijeiit by reportlug . ae facta cempleulr. because of hn extreme sensitiv ene,. He was a man
of mapnilicent physique, but the accumulating horrors
DAILY CIRCULATION ALWAYS IN EXCESS OF 15,000. SUNDAY 18,000. BOOKS OPEN TO ADVERTISERS.
APRIL 1, 1910.
f the submarine warfare weiphed upon his soul until it broke him down. 'No wonder!" the ordinary American is likely to remark. "I should think that the thoughts of all the innocent non-fomhatants that von Tirpitz has sent to their death, find especially the women and children slaughtered by his orders, would break any man down." 1 5 ' 1 1 here conies the odd thinp about the explanation. The story doesn't say that it was any sense of puilt
nu . i . , , ... , x. . . ,t that v.erpdied on the admirals mind. He (lied a vhat na.s style to do with comfort? Nothing at all. tlwuiuiml ih.'i I hu tini'u ihü iv ?if lii.f 111 i i tint nrr"e5-
Itccordlnp to the testimony in a New ork lawsuit. A . ....
tuiiidii nan i iuseii in i'a ior a mess maoe ir uei,
fn the ground that it was im'ly, and ill-tittinir. and alto-
COMFORT AND STYLE NOT SYNONYMOUS.
gether an Instrument of physical torture. A supposedly wel! qualified witness testified that, while al thesv Allegations mijfht be true, the pow n was nevertheless lindeniably stylish, and the customer had therefore no legitimate pround for complaint. Aral the ourt upheld this view. Thtf truth has long been suspected, but it is just as veil to have sartorial and judicial veritication. Hereafter let no woman or man, either make any claim to beautv or comfort in the matter of clothes. If a garment is fashionable, that ends the argument. And many of the late mode-.- lead us to suspeet that the fashicna bleness and therefore the desirableness is Just alout in proportion to the ugliness and discomfort. There are some exceptions, as in the case of women's Hiortened and liphtened sliirts. which certainly tend toward comfort. Itut in general, the rule holds. How else can we explain women's h its and heels.and thinly clad ankles, and men's stiff collars, ilk hats and lon--tailed eeninp coats?
I sarily because of the women and children slain. What
he could not stand was thinkinp of '"the hundreds of splendid young submarine officers who went out to perish miserably under the water." His prief w as not for the peaceful victims, but for the submarine crews. That's a stranpely narrow and perverted sort of sensitiveness.
TOO MUCH "TAG DAY" AND NOW ITS APPROACHING SUNSET. Buffalo, in New York, has fomialh i;one on record, through its chr. ti. er of commerce, as beinp opposed to 'tag days." Umraio's devi.-ion was reached after a tag day held there recently netted but $1:;m for the same charity which rak?d in $11", ecu on a former occasion. Jhjffalo construed this to mean that the people were tired of beinp tapped. They are; in IPiffalo and elsewhere. Once upon a time when "tatr day" was a brand new Institution we looked forward to it. We cut up a half hour earlier than was our won! that we mii-'ht take extra precautions with our toilet. We took the longest route to our place of business. Some time durinp the day we dropped, at least once, into ecry hotel and Lank lobby in town. We had business on the street considerably offener than usual. At regular intervals v carefully divested our coat of all the taps we had accumulated for fear that the "tappers" might take pity on us and let up. Ve wanted to be tupged. and then tapped some more. In fact, we had chanced a t o dollar bill into nickels "with it glad and anticipatory heart the day before. "We were stronc for preparedness even then. for. in thPso days tag day was a hobb. t The very prettiest girls in town turned out in bunches for the pala day. The papers all announced just where the different "crew.V would be stationed, so you could hape your day's itinerary in advance. Kach tag meant a coy smile and a lanpuislimp glance from a pair of Idue. black or giay orbs there was plenty of c;l,-iety
ONE WAY OF SOLVING THE JAPANESE PROBLEM. If a bill Pentling in the Japanese parliament becomes a law, certain classes of Japanese will be permitted to become American citizens. This concession, small as it may appear to us. would mark a great chanpe in the historic policy of Japan. It has always been held out that a Japanese cannot xpatriate himself that the emperor is divine, and lifelong loyalty to him is the reliPious as well as patriotic duty of every subject. And it is largely this fundamental obstacle to the naturalization of Japs in America that has led to discrimination against them. It is natural enough for the Pacific coast states to object to Japanese colonization and ownership of land when they realize that the settlers are liable, at any time, to be summoned back, to their native allegiance. The new policy is said to be looked upon by the Japanese government as a solution for this verv difficulty. The bill in question would grant the ripht of expatriation only to Japanese children horn abroad and tcv Japanese women marrying foreigners. I Jut it would be an important step merely to make the children of Japanese settlers free to become American citizens, and therefore entitled to hold property. It is questionable, of course, whether some of our western states would consent to admitting to citizenship even American-born children of Japs. Hut if they should, it might lead to a settlement of the long dispute with the Japanese government and a more friendly understanding between the two nations.
We are now positive that spring i ; lie re. Yesterday we noticed a young lady on Main st.. with her coat .aver her arm and wearing one of those shirtwaists that leaves the imagination idle. Of course ofovercoat was against the shirtwaisf in an argumentativ sort of way. but we ignore that and confess that spring is here.
We have been in theaters where girls were used as ushers, but understand the one objection to them is that their hands are too small.
Yes. Adolph, you might call Villa the Mexican flee.
What is the present price offered for Villa either wav ?
MORE BILLIONS FROM GERMAN POCKETS' FOR THE WAR LORD. The success of the latest Cerman war loan seems to indicate no lapse of loyalty on the part of the (lerman public The people may hae less faith in ultimate victory than they had a year ago, but they are as ready as eer to give their last mark to carry on the struggle.
j The first popular loan brought in $l,12fi.i.00.0H); the ! second. i2.2."e.ooo.f'nn: the third. $ :5. 1 'J.'.uOn.noo ; and I (his fourth loan. $2.6r0,0f'0fono. It may be assumed
I that the onlv reason it failed to equal the largest pre-I
jioiis sum is that there is not so much money now 'available in the country in the form of cash and neI j gotiable credit. 1 The government, however, will not benefit from these
Tin; mit: or jaki; iii: ka.mav Chapter KUnon. Although he has dedicated his life to barberin Mister Heckanian is still the frend of a safety oner, r.o matter how humble his stashion in life, or how often he uses the pesky thing. Jake tells of manny instants why a man will tir of lh publick shops and turn to the safety raiser as a last- resort. f c oarse he always adds that none of these here objeekshions to the publick shop cum from the Oliver, where he rains supreme. One of these men who weeried of the publick shops Jake tole me about the other day. The feller, sez Jake, started out in Plymouth to get some barberin don Hut the nite of the sheers took so long to give the feller a haircut, talkinp about the European war and other things, that the feller had to wait till lie pot here to get shaved. Here, a barber started to shave him but only got as far as to get his face well lathered when along com a circus pelade. The barber went out on the sidewalk and watched the percession until the caliopcr came by. then hustled ha, k to his urstomer. an he was a curstomer by that tim belief me. Th lather on the guy's face had got like frostin on a cake while the barber watched the perade. Disgusted th irstonier lecided hed go to a basement shop, so the barber coodnt look out. anil get a face message. lie tole the barber he had to be thru in l'o minutes sure-, and at the end of an hour he discovered the barber wa a leaf unit. Ah. t is a sad world mates". AHAM CKOOR-. N. H. I have movt to a new stand, but will be slail to meet mv old
customers same as ussual. Take a slant at th Meltin pot for future ioins of the rite hon. Jake Heckanian and his host of bandit friends. A. C.
She of the chorus who spends $50 r week out of her $1. a week isalary has nothing, according to our view of the thing, on the man who is a gdf fiend and earns mly $12 a week.
Haseball is knockinp on the door. So I cuess we'll let it in. I'or it wouldn't be lonp before We 11 be asking. "Did we win?"
The news editor objected when w handed him press stuff sent out by the Anti-Saloon leapue on the -rounds that it was such dry readii p.
Personally we wouldn't care to stand very high as a soldier in the European war. You penerally have to help make a path for the inferior sddiers and they don't care v.here they step.
Jess Willard's hand was not the only thinp that was broken after that New York scrap.
A man in our home town although almost totally deaf claims he has never failed to hear an invitation to take a drink. He repeated "I'll
buy" to himself so often, that ear became so sensitive that "I'll buy" sound wave always its impression.
his the left
We were talkinp about our youngster the other day when one of our fellow workers, whoso father came, here from F!urope, spoke up and said his vounPster was some chap too. and could speak two languages. Our silence was our answer.
In Clary the school children are wearing wrist watches to letermine their mental alertness?. It might ho a good idea to put ankle Matches on the scientists who are conducting the investigation.
"Somewhere in Mexico," where the t'nited States are now located, according to news dispatches, is about as enlightening in the averape mind as the Avacourt forest. This latter place is where quite a battle was staged between the French and Germans tother day.
When our fat friend said we were petting fat Ave hastened to a scales. We figure! he ought to be able to tell fat when he saw fat.
American soldiers in Mexico had a cabaret performance, according to news dispathes First thing you know soldiers will do the tango while atlvancinp on the enemy's trenches.
.tep back, goose step, and let the t a npo come ahead.
Then the army would be a pood place for some of these herds who say they could lie dancinP.
We know an editor who has a watch that runs backward. He claims the thi'.ig was ruined one day when he was writing a red-hot editorial.
hm:e subscriptions as fullv as the ficures would eetti
as their cute owners fumbled with ur lapel and j t implv . The previous war loans make so large r total pinned on the b. .'. tin. just common, ordinary j that it now requires $."25.00(1.000 a year t pay their Mich a smile and g! in e would cost uni a pair of two accruing interest. Perhaps that sum will be deducted dollar theater tickets, at bast. Yet on tatr day y"i fr,,ni the new loan. Another deduction of $rt50.(Mo,ooo got 'em for a dime ;'iil as often as you wanted which 'might properly be made to allow for depreciation of
heap enugh. a 11 ; ;t.rmaii currency, whhh has reached 25 percent. That
ua.s rather more than frequently
riPht. Hut nMv the novelty has worn ff. Tag day out of fashion, decidedly pas-e. The pretty girls will have none of It. Neither will the public. It is too much of a strain on one's charity to be tacged by a woman with
n. wart on her noe Hravo. Fuffalo.
and a last ear's bonnet.
would reduce the proceeds from the loan nearly $1,000.tifo.oon. leaving a net sum at the government's disposal of only ? l.f.7r..oö.!.ooo instea! of $2.650.000, coo. That liflerence between the apparent and actual procccds from the loan is striking .evidence of the tremendous financial hindicap under which the German nat'on is laboring, a handicap which is lestined to prow harder with the lapse of every month.
PACKERS CALLED THE BLUFF
GENTLEMANLY SOLDIERS ARE ASSET TO UNCLE SAM.
If our punitive expedition in Mexico continues to be j AND IT W ORKED, that and nothing m-re if the Mexican people b not) F.nuland has unofnciall." announced its Intention to Hare up and precipitate war. making it neces.i.-y fr settle the damage claims of the OhicaCo packers by us to raise a big arr.n to subdue them the credit will nndei taking to secure the exporters against loss, by p bo due very largely to the personal q'iahti ? of the ; .ston of long time contracts. The value of the carcoe. American soldier. i seized by Kncland reckon up in the neighborhood of One of the most sigm:. ant things that have hap- ! $2o,e0o.oe0.
pened in onne tion vith this unpba.-.int business was i if tins isn't a pointed lesson
the celebration in Vera 'rur. w lu-n tews arrived tha. ganizatin and ('Operation
our army and the c..n-tit 1.1 i.ui.ih-t army were "oi nc wj.Tl XN 0 s.0 it. While the cotton growers of the south
to coorcrate in huiuir.g down Villa. There was a
STATESMEN GREAT AND AND NEAR-GREAT
II y I "red Kelly
on the value of or-
then we don't know one
parade, and mm h prai-.
for "Uncle Sam." It P no accident that the
The Vera Crura s resent e
f "Ta.
am
ne
who:, the intruders departed they had won the pro-
i'.vere riiiiniipg around in circles hollering for help nnl
the Spanish I lil,;,1ir nothing, the tuckers were iroinsr straisrht to the
j poir.t and cettinP action. With unlimited capital and it in Mexico most ; , N'iierb organization, the American narkers vfrr hit-
friendly toward our enterprise is the city that was (.nor,gh to call John null's bluff when hv threatened occupied by our troops f. r a lone period last year. to conrts-eat? the ?20.j.0eo of American meats. John
the occupation at first, but : rtpin't confiscate: he paid, or is going to.
! Another preparedness argument without an answer.
found respect f the local p pul.it ion. The citizens of -Ver.i Cruz kn-w from t vperieme that our soldu rs would j Tho German government keeps busy denying that it take no life w ithout prov c ation, would ilestroy no j has asked for peace terms, and at the same time keeps property wantonly, would perpetrate r.o cruelty, would ; right on putting out feelers. Cermany has given up fhow no arrogance. And the Mexicans et 'hihu.thu.i all hope of conquest, and wants peace above everyare learr.ir.c the same wl oles.ur.e truth. J thing else. Hut she is handicapped by the fact that Much has been said of the intelligence, energy and 'the bellicernt openly suint: for peace will be at a great
nerit an sol.ber. lie has mner been '.disadvantage in xne peace conierenee. And she is
W A S I II N ( To N , March ::1. Pat Harrison, handsome young congressman from Mississippi and member of the house committee on foreign affairs, started up Pennsylvania a v. from the capitd one evening in a much-worried state if mind. His committee had just been dealing with a grave international problem, but that was not what worried our hero. He was troublel because he hal sinldcnly realized that he was being shadowed. N matter how fast he walke!, a stranger fdbwed about two rods behind him. He turned up a cross street, and woun around back again t Pennsylvania av.. but still the fellow was right on the trail. "A German spy, maybe." thought Harrison. "Well. 1 might as well let him catch "Mp with me and get j good b'iok at him."
T 1 U
appalled at the number of members who have the temerity to sit lose to him. Vet with all his terrifyinp manner. Gordon is in reality as gentle as an ordinary Maltese kitten. Mie can walk right up to him and stroke him with impurity. Tie is one of the most conservative members of the house committee on military affairs, opposed to too elaborate a preparedness program, simply because he is not warlike at heart and does not prow alarmed over the war talk. One day lord on and a member from ."south Carolina exchanged comments on one another in the course of a debate. Gordon spoke to him quite unkindly. "Stet outside and tell me that." suggested the South Carolina man. Members are always asking one another to step outside but nothing ever comes of it. "Io you think that I'm going outside." inquired Gordon, brusquely, "just because I'm asked to by a crazy yap from S'outh Carolina?" And he proceeded calmly -with his speech, without further interruption.
. ry' ' "HI-- - . " ,t
caixintv of the a
civen full credit for what is perhaps his m.st admirable' learning how much harder it is to stop a war than to trait. Whether othVer or private, he j a gentleman, i st'"rt one.
and n:a be trusted with hi country s lienor any. vrhere.
THE PEACE COST OF
TO SCARE IMv'EPAREDNESS" Tnk a peep e.t the.-e pef!-io;i tLgur
Morgan of I,ouisi.tn.t in a recent spe. h. In our v.ar with irin proper we b-t 2
; i-.viaence is given mat ine i. v macnine guns ! wouldn't work in that Columbus fight because full of v jv ENOUGH ' lll3t- What the army needs is a call for .".o ut
or so volunteer nouse maius:
IO DEATH. quoted by lap
m e n
all j a
I Kilb-'i and wounded in the batt'.e tr Waterloo numi be red about ;..1.ooo. Thev'd ct!'. it "falling ba.i. t
more f.woraLle position.'' nvwaiky;.
So he paused under an arc lipht and waited. The stranger came right toward him, stammered a couple of tirr.es-, and began: "You're certainly a fast walker, mister. 1 make a. bet with myself away back by the capitol that you were a fellow who wouldn't turn down a man in hard luck. I need a dime, mister, to buy myself " "Here." gayly interrupted th much relieved congressman, "is ,o cents. C, and hink yourself to death."
The most ferocious lookinc member of congress is Mr. Hill Gordon of Cleveland. He has the burly build of one of the larger sizes of prize tighter, and a voj(t. hke four r five Pig. hoistrus pons all going at once. When Gordon is engaged in debate on the tloor f the huse. he gestut'-s alvas with hi P.st. never with his .pen hand, and visitors ia the eviiierv a.rc fit'uently
A few months ago Gordon made a little trip to California. His plan was. naturally, to go out by one loute and return by another. When th lime came to start back, however, he discovered that th young man who had sold him his tickets bol made a mistake, and lie must return by the same route. He wa disappointed und indignant. Finally one of the railroad apents in California agreed to change the routing provided Gordon was absolutely certain that the mistake was the fault of the man who sold the ticket. "Well." suggested Gordon, "mebby I forgot to tell him -what route 1 wanted." And to the consternation of his friends, he let the matter drop. "I got to think. ng about it," explained Gordon afterward, "and If they had changed that ticket they probably wou! : have come back on the chap who sohl it to me and got him into trouble. He made a mistake of course, but it was unintentional and he was a sallow-faeed little fellow who looked as if he needed the money. It occurred to me that 1 wouldn't like, to do anything which micht mean h:s losing hi.-? job. I can see all that scenery up yor.der on the other route some time again." That's Bill Gordon!
WITH OTHER EDITORS THAN OURS
IWAMZING urn. (Kansas City Post, The inheritance tax as a means of providing for national defense also may be u?el for preparedness, the latter not of the brand of the extreme militarism type. Once established as a method of obtaining federal revenue, the inheritance tax never would be abolished. The preparedness In mind would be somewhat equal opportunity at hirth. Its essential justice would tend toward making it a permanent principal of government. As a means of automatically shaving large fortunes, which are the most dangerous menace of the ape. it would be ideal. Within a few years the general public will see the folly of allowing men with a genius for accumulation to circumscribe human effort all their lives and leave such fortunes that the wealth itself forms a menace that threatens in perpetuity. The measure would in no sense restrict the ambitions of men in their lifetimes except ti narrow their vanities and put an end to that gruesome pride which seeks to break the harrier of the tomb. It is infinitely better that such pride "he confined to the generation it injures. It would be well not to give scions of wealth too enormous at'antages which the incident of birth gives them. Democratic ideals can best be preserved in the wholesome atmosphere of equal opportunity. Xo blue-blood put to the supreme test of individual effort is worth while whether the field of endeavor is financial or martial. A heritage of common pense is far better than one of great riches. The shallowness and the ridiculous assumptions of superiority by persons of inherited wealth and purchased accomplishmer ts mean nothing to either the individual or the nation.
North Carolina spent last year il.000.00O more for automobile tires than for school buildings and repairs to school buildings. North Carolina evidently agrees with Charles M. Schwab. "It's brains that count." Columbus, O., Citizen.
A man who was a messenger for IS years in New York hotels has bought a hotel in Colorado Springs out of his tips. We don't know what he is going to do with the rest of his money. Columbus, O., Citizen.
The Manchester Union dares to report bluebirds present in that city: but throws an anchor to windward by suggesting that they may be English sparrows turned blue with the cdd. Concord. N. H., Monitor.
The I'nitetl States, says Vice-President Marshall In Chicago, "would be soundly drubbed if it engaged in war with any first-class power." Perhaps: but let us not brag about it so much! New York World.
Some men are so inconsiderate. A man -waited until his wife went to all the expense of filing divorce papers before he shuffled off. Spokane, Wash., Spokesman-Iteview.
Start a Savings Account At Once And get the benefit of our APRIL DATING.
All money deposited in our Savings Department not later than April 10th draws interest from April 1st at the rate of 4 percent per annum, compounded semi-annually. American Trust Go. 4' on Savings.
HARRY L. YERRICK
Funeral
uirecior r.
am - a v -
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