South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 162, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 10 June 1916 — Page 4

n.iirniaV Af iT.nXOON, .iNT itf

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH BEND NEWS. JIM ES M o r n i p I: v c n i n S u n J a y . JOHN" HENRY ZUVER. IMitor. CM 'RILL R. UMMERS, Publisher.

only .of i Tr.n rnrss morning iranciiisi. Irru IN XIKTIIKRV I N I I A N A AXI ONLY PATKIt KMn.nux; tiii: international, nkws sfrvici: in yoiTH ni;M No oifcer n'p-iper in tLe wtM- protected ry tw- lad wire n!gM and d,iy nenn rrWs; lo ei.ly et-ht-rnLmin pij:r !n t.t ..uLslde Indianapo!:. Published rry !y nf tJi reirand tie "a I - y ex-e;t Sunday and JI-1idn.T. Ln tired at tLj Suutii Rend postoffice as seconj tlips mall.

TFfF 'EWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY

Orr.cc: 210 W. Colfax A v.

Homo l'hiD 1151.

IWdl I'hone 2100.

good executive. And hmv can he expect to get one for $00 or $700 a year'. He wants the church to do more missionar work at home, in the state and nation, in foreign lands. And those Ftrutjgling churches can do nothing. A church canvass in Oregon shows that his predicament is not at all unusJal. There Is one town of l.SoZ people that has seven religious denomination. An-( other town divides 1.120 people or the church-going part of them among six congregations. There are rive churches in a town of 8 36 population and rive in another town of SO'. And hundreds of communities, nt only in the new west, but in the older sections of the country, are in about the same condition. "In view of all this." says the writer, "as the man who sits in the pew and pays the bill. I pray that the day of church union be hastened, until the fences fall and good men be permitted to sit in one army for the kingdom's glory."

ei!I at the r.tTl'-e or b-'ej.Ijor.e a!)OTo number md ak fer pirtrru-nt wanted IMititrlüI. Advertising. Circulation, cr A-rruntir:Z rr,r "v.'snt :Hv. ' If your nanx? If In tl; tde-

.'i r .11r;-rtr.ry. bill will to niMU-d fter Insertion, uepon natrrntkm '. I,ilnr t.jcl v' nt-n. poor delivery of

n;ir, b.id tfi. i-hn service, en-.. to r.e.id of department wltn h Ten ar- .joaiin?. T!i New M hn thirteen tfinW

line fill of which rpn 1 t ) ll'ine l'hoiie and Doll -lOO

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M IW RIPTION KATL. Morning and Hvniln: r.ditb.n. Sine Cnpr, !'; Sumhiv, r" ; Morning r Kvenintr KdltDa. dill v. In-hiding Sunliy." tv i l!. per year in ndvui'-e. l!-!lvr-rr.I by nr;lcr in S..ut It rd und M!L.n ala. $000 per jvar In udvarre. oi 1; Ly tc k.

ADVERTISING RATI.. Ask the advert iS":': lep-i rtment. T'.r. lrn Adverting Reprsnt ;i tl v : ('ii.NF. i,OKi:N'ZEN it 'imiMAN'. l'J." F if t ti At.. Nmv York 'itr und Alv. Hhlg . 'M.r. The News-Tim ende.i vr.r t keep its advertising 'n'ümr fre fn.m fraudulent ndsrepr ntnti- n. Any person !? rn'!-l tlirugfi atrMii:ig of any iidvertiament In this pipr will otifr a fivur oa the management by rep'.rtln5 b" f.irt.s oniplf tfly.

JUNE K), 1910.

LASTING ALLIANCE. Sazanoff. Ku-i;.'s for-is;n niiiiisttr, announes that the present al-sduto accord lctween I reat Hiitain and Jiussia means an alli.nce for all time. When yo'.i tilit. starve and Meed in a trench with another fellow, um ,irc likely to form a lasting attachment, for him, and. it is po-ible. as .cazanoff predicts, that rnch a tremendous thing as an indissoluble RussoFSriUsh alliance will be one of the great facts growing out of the war. What would a loe alliance Utwcen manufacturing r.ritain and agricultural Russia, backed Ly the biagest navy and the biggest aimy. not mean to the future of Kurope? Posterity will say tilings about the Kaiser, if such an alliance is one ,f the big results of the war.

JAAN LIKES BIG NAVY PLAN. It may be interesting to the jinoists in the two Chicago conventions republican and progressive who nre howlin'4 for meat preparedness with their mouth?, but hae nothing unusual to offer in tiieir platform; it miht b interesting to tho.e jingoists. e say, to Know that Japan is with them, ami that a greater American navy uould Vie to Japan's delight. Here, perhaps, they can muster the Japanese vote, for their candidates anil platform, which may Or may not. be taken as a oj,j pi iment. We take our tip from a;i article given recent publication by Adaehi KinlisuKe, a brilliant Japanese write!-, who has spent all his life in the I'nitcd States. lie puts the matter in a way that isn't complimentary, but plausible and possibly true. Japan would like to see us build a powerful navy because "the indisputable naal supremacy of America on the Pacific would ic the American people a poise wnd calmness of judgment which come from the consciousness of power." Wim us. he sa.'s. as with n other peoples, "panic and hsteria are the most prolific mother or war. Japan is not afraid of mighty and well-armed America. The only America Japan is afraid of H a weak, blufiin-, hysterical America." Most of us. he tells lis. know little about Japan and her position in the Par Past, and .-re read to swallow any wild tales as gospel truth. With the added poise that consciousness of adci'Mte sea power would give, we would regard Japan calmly and dispassionately in any controversy affecting the relations of the two nations. Ami that would mean the assurance of continued pence, because Japan herself will never "start anything" if we don't. A war against the I'nitcd States, says the writer, would be simply "national harikari for Japan." Another reason why Japan would like to see u step into unquestionable naval supremacy, according to Mr. Kinncsuke: "It would let Japan build up her navy a little, too. and in comfort." As matters stand, every time .hc talks of building another worship or two. there is an alarm sounded in this country. According to Admiral Kato. imperial minister for the navy, unless there is greater n;ual expansion han any vet provided for, Japan ""ill be ob'itred to take her place beide China, Greece and Spain." She doesn't want to F-ink into that clas. and would gladly build a few more Fhips if we will build s.i many more than there can't be any question of oispetition. Then Japan would attend to her hu-iiv-s and protect her Far Fastern interests, while we looked after our own affairs. "It v ould be of inr'.nite value to the peace of the Paciiic." s-ays Mr. Kinnosuke.

MAIL BOXES. The postottice department has evolved a new type of mail box. Printed cuts show a rather more attractive design than those now in um with simpler lettering and lines, and by way of ornament a few stars on the front and the prohle of an eagle with upraised wings on the .side. It is good to learn that the mail boxes are to be made more artistic. It would be still better, however, to make them more convenient. A mere citizen would naturally suppose that the primary purpose of a mail box is to enable the public to put letters into it. Many of the boxes now in use seem intended to defeat that purpose. For one thing, they arc usually placed too high. Hut there is an essential defect in construction. Kven if they can be reached easily, they almost always require two hands, one to open the letter-slide and the other to slip the letter in. It is absurdly ditiicult to insert a letter If one hand is occupied vilh an umbrella or a parcel or a bunch of letters It is especially troublesome when it is raining, for the umbrella must be lowered to leave both hands free. Then the letter sets wet and the person mailing it gets wet. That defect is aggravated by the fact that no existing type of mail box seems properly calculated to protect the letters from the rain while they are being dropped in. Surely it isn't beyond the power of the human intellect to invent a mail box into which a letter can be dropped easily and dryly, with one hand.

The Velvet Hammer

Bv Arthur Brooks Baker

j.vmk.s i. .stl'ii:rki:k. The curse of all our western world is that we build in haste. Our feverish activities go up in smoke and waste. With cheap and tawdry, made to sell, pur markets all are rife. On v ork tomorrow must rebuild we spend the social life. So let a poet gurgle forth his rhythmic celebration cf one who helps perpetuate a high class reputation. The Studebaker wagon is a paragon on wheels. Concerning it the farmer never m'urmurs. kicks or squeals; And many other products uf thld celebrated lirm 1- ulfill their sturdy guarantee and serve their promised term. Uncounted loyal purchasers throughout this loyal land Are earnest in their praises of the Studebaker brand. The widely known and justly famous Studebaker Five ' Have left a single specimen, but he is much alive. He's made his mark among us in a philanthropic way; He gave the land and building for the neat V. M. C. A.; He's always willing to produce, in popular behalf, A check that's validated by his welcome autograph. While Jim was young and vigorous and feeling tine.

He hiked across the Is 49. He helped to found

here which brought him in the end. Considerable more than he can lind the time to spend. He pitches horseshoes with the best of luck as well as ahn. And wears the belt as champion of Indiana's game.

continent in the business

THE MELTING POT

FILLED BY THE EDITORIAL STAFF

TACKS. Each citizen should try to w ear displayed upon his face A smile of affability, good fellowship and grace. Announcing to observers that th? soul behind the map Uelongs to a fraternal and assimilable chap Who never finds sufficient cause for feeling bad and blue, AYho sees the good in everything especially in joj. The man who hates this amiable. Jnoffer.siv sphere. Displays a crabbed countenance, ferocious and severe. His physiognomy portends a cataclysmic doom. It fheds a palling radiance of deep and sombre gloom. For public weal and benefit the covtrnor should as The owner of the visage to obscure it with a, mask. The face of strict neutrality, of .inexpressive wood, Impeneterably covering its thoughts of bad or good, Deserves no legal license to parade the avenue ,vnd mystify such inoffensive folks as I rind you. The only kind of countenance that's worthy to appear Is one which beara an aureole of fjith and hope ard cheer.

A. D. Ii.

POCKETS, BY ALL MEANS! Encouraged by the sane and comfortable short, full .skirt, emboldened by the useful and attractive ".-port" clothes that are gaining favor for every-day wear, women seem to be on the verpe of rising to demand pockets regular. usiMe pockets. Pockets of a sort they have had in all shapes and sizes. Put they were purely ornamental. Often they were merely simulated, and offered shelter for not so tr 'ch as a car ticket. Deceptive buttons and tailored flaps looked well. Put their wearer meeklv stowed fountain pen, glasses case, purse, handkerchief and countless other articles in that long-suffering' receptacle known as the handbag. Put the worm is turnins. Genuine pockets are demanded. Xot a dozen or so at first. That might achieve too quicklv the comfort ami convenience of man's much-pocketed attire. A modest two or three would do to begin with, one apiece for handkerchief, carfare and memorandum. And as pockets become numerous enough and spacious enough to hold all the odds and ends formerly crowded into the burdened and burdensome handbag, the civilized world will sigh in relief. It has suffered enough from lost handbag to welcome any substitute firmly attached to feminine clothing. No one will begrudge the ladies this innovation in their apparel. If they have become wise enough to appreciate real pockets they are welcome to them.

WITH OTHER EDITORS THAN OURS

A DIET DICTATOFv. The appointment of a food dictator in Germany inspires the suggestion that such a dietetic tyrant might be a tine thing for this country. We have not the same desperate reason for conserving our food supply that blockaded Germany has, but there are plenty of hygienic reasons. We have been told countless times that nearly all of us eat too much for our health, particularly too much meat and other proteid foods; and yet we go right on doing it. in spite of the fact that proteid foods are the most expensive. We've been told that we mix our' foods too much, having too many different dish.es to a meal. We've been warned against the excessive use of hot breads and pastry, against granulates! sugar and white flour and polished rice and other luxuries low in nutritive quality or harmful to sound digestion. Naturally enough, we have come to be regarded as "a nation of dyspeptics." Under such a dictatorship as Germany has established, there would be an enforced simplicity uf diet that would probably cure innumerable digestive ailments and promote the nation's health and efficiency. Our dictator would operate like a family do- tor, giving orders to a family of KO.OOO.OO" people and seeing that those orders were obeyed.

TOO MANY CHURCHES.

In the Missionary Review of the World, a "man who pays the bills" writes feelingly of the church situation in his little Oregon town. There are four chure'i.s, he says, ami on a Sunday morning the total attendance at the four may amount to COO souls. The fui.r i harches of course require the four ministers. Their eon. Lined salaries probably airgrec.ue $.'.500. It is a strain on the town to raise that much money for the purpose. And in addition, there is the original cost of the land and buildings, the steady expense for rep.urs, luat. bht. etc., and the contributions nev.sary for aiious phaes of religious work. "Why so many hurcht s ?" asks the writer. He would h'-e to ste the Sunday school dourih, and there -re enough competent workers in the totvn to make a thriving Sunday school. Rut in no single church is there ere ugh :nat iial fur -ioo-.l leadership and teaching or enough pupils to jutiiy a good orSanitation. He hktd to worship in a large congregation. The unity cf many minds and hearts uplifts him. Hut in his little, half-tilled ch-r.h he is lonesome. f loves good music, and out of those four churches there could be athrtd a goodly array of singers, and the money f.;ent f-r f;:r small, cheap organs would

I

AFTER THEM! GETTING THEM!

Uncle Sam has put a bi? crimp in one hoary-headed swindle, anyway. Notwithstanding the remarkable spread of prohibition, revenue collections on distilled spirits for the first 10 months of the fiscal year have increased 10 million dollar over IMC. This is due to a campaign against underguaging. equalizing and blockading in distilleries. In other words, the government is collecting more of the revenue on spirits which has been stolen from it in the past; more revenue on less liquor, as it were. If the government will get busy and collect all the income tax coming to it and stop a few of the other steals, akin to that of the distilleries, from the internal revenue department. Uncle Sam can build the new navy without loading a blanket mortgage on future generations. Co after m!

There are 12,000. 000 fanners in the United States. Their farms are mortgaged for about $3.000.000,000. They aie paving in average interest rate of S 1-2 per cent, or $255.o0i000 a year for the use of this tremendous sum of capital. The pending rural credits bill, now sure of passage, makes 'x per cent the maximum interest rate, savin? to the farmers $73, Of 0.000 a year.

buy c:!" c.i ( !! in i;.-t i uno-n

Ret: r music, too. would

Well, it seems as if the progressives had. out their little axes to have a cut at the wood row.

HUMANITY'S Tit M S U 1 111. (Mystic Worker.) With the earth lalrly saturated with blood ami tears, the average nun is inclined to throw up his hands and hopelessly cry: "What is there in religion? What U there in philosophy? What is there, in brotherly love? Are they not all proved shams and failures? We answer: No! Human beings in mobs may beccme wild, it is true, but the heart of the individual is as full of tenderness and sympathy as it ever was, because it is a part of his unchanging nature. All the kindness that was ever in the individual is siill there. Individually, there are fewfellows in the trenches today who do not long for peace and home. If they can still hate, they can still love. If they ever loved their homes

and peace of mind and body, they4

leng for those things even more now. when they have them not. That longing is as much a part of man's nature as any other human attribute he has. That longing in the individual for peace and home is humanity's treasure. It will last forever. When men bind a way to permit tiiat longing, instead of royal snobs, to rule them, wars will be no more. For mankind as a whole is not what any individual would have it. Down in his heart each man knows that he is a part of a whole he does not like. He is one of a herd, driven as cattle are driven. Unwilling, resentful, protecting yet he must go with the herd. There must inevitably come a time, now that men may freely communicate with each other and exchange ideas, when the tender, sympathetic heart will be the guide (f all the men on earth. And the longed-for brotherhood of man in fact will then be here.

A political convention seems to be one demonstration after another. We have never been able to tell why some cheers are referred to merely as cheers and others as loud cheers. o When it comes to yelling the pussyfooter is lost. o Seriously speaking Miss Pena Way of Eaporte was a recent bride. Delegates, it seems, can cheer anything. They ought to make good fans for a losing team. o KKYXOTllS IX C.ItAND OLD PARTY ORATION. Great old American flag. 1 Lincoln, wdio freed, etc. Washington, the peer. Prosperity and then some. Tohellwiththedemocrats. Who fought, bled and died. Morihellforthedemocrats. Our G. O. P. record. Downwiththedemocrats. Forget 1912. Anythingtobeat Wilson. We will now sin? "America." When is a moose not a moose, Has the moose guessing. Put a moose, it seems, is only a moose When he has Theodore's blessing:. MOIU: WILSON. PAR AND HOTEL. CHICAGO, June '.. This is the third day. This was the third day. I'm dictatin this stuff. It's too much of a job to write your own stuff and then. All right, in a minute. So I got a stenographer to write this and she knows how to spell, so it oughnt not be so bad. It's a hard job to find time to work up here. Allright. I'm coming. About time a guy wants to work they call him and he aint let alone Ion- enough to think what he's go

ing to write about. There's a guy here now he insists on me going with him and he wont let me alone atall.

There he is again. Walt a minute

and I'll be there.

Put speaking of thinking you can't do it here atall. They come so fast

that a guy has to say the same or

anotherone. cause he can't get time to think of them fancy names. Shut

up I gota work.

Theres some talk or peace up here, but it aint on the out side. This guy I'm with says he can lick

dra.vv to the church many who do not now attend. 11 lotia's fcr a minister who id a good preacher and a

Wanted Py the Caliph of Pagdad, a bomb-proof cellar guaranteed to hold fortv wives.

tin: im uiati; or ri:.n. (Idaho Statesman.) There is nothing causes more real suffering in the world than fear. There is nothing more surely undermines and weakens character. It is pleasing to think that a man is made by his admirations; but the truth is that his fears enter into the composition of his character to a far greater degree than he may realiz? or care to admit. The terrors of superstition and they are endless have probably caused more agony and actual illnes. especially among children, toan any dozen scientifically-charted causes. It is comforting to know that c.ch succeeding generation sees some step taken toward freeing man from superstition and its accompanying torture. The general dissemination of intelligence is driving superstition out of the mind as sunshine destroys malarial mists. And not until they are completely gone will mankind be wholly freed from the most painful, the most hindering and most degrading slavery under the sun. The child is born fearless. It is only the burnt child that dreads the fire. Ignorant servants and sometimes equally ignorant parents and neighbors continue to fill childish minds with foolish fears and thus make cowards and intellectual dwarfs of them. Fear has its proper function. Wholesome fears are to be taught. Put animal; do this far better than we do. They, living in a constant struggle for life, know fear but only when danger is actual and impending. Children mUht be brought up as free from unsound fears as the ar.i.

any four Roosevelt delegates in the country and he aint been taken up yet. He's from Michigan and says he's for Ford and knows that the little old Ford'll ramble home. I couldn't see his way atall until he convinced me I ougrht to and just between us I aint convinced atal. but I am for Willie Bryan and am what you call a pacidist. I ain't going to fight till they make me, and they got to do some tall making believe me. Remember I was talking about what I seen tip here. Well if you could have seen, bit you couldn't have seen because ou wasn't here, but if you could I bet you wouldn't have written no stuff atall. Put I got to tell you about this queen.

i Course it aint news, but it's a good

one.

She had me going fer quite a spell

and I runned across her here in the lobbie and she smiled and I smiled and she smiled. Finally I edged over a bit and she kept on smiling.

Well you know your Cy and first

thing we both knowed we was talking about the weather.

I says don't you want to go somewheres and get something and she says she would take a lemon's ade. So we went In and I took a sssaspreler and then sh-? tcld me what she was. Course I said I was fer

suffrage but when she sprung that prohibition stuff our little party went and broke up and it's been stags for me since. Don't know what happened today, but I heard plenty. Heard several good ones and woild send them only, well you know. Roosevelt is going to be nominated by somebody Don't know who but he's goin U run if he has to do it alone. Cy. o WHY IS A DMLEGATE? At 4:12 p. m. Chairman Harding sought to quiet the crowd. Anyone lacking a flag made up the deficiency by raising an umbrella and carrying it in the parade. A Fairbanks supporter shed his coat and went into the cheering. There is such a thing as enthusiasm going too far, but luckily this Fairbanks supporter was not carrying too big a load of cheers. o One man who had a drop too much was the only case attended to by the emergency hospital at the republican convention. Late reportstated the man had only stumbled, for he was not a passenger on the water wagon.

mals and birds are, but for the ignorant and pernicious warnings inll'eted upon them. Free children from the dread of darkness and of ghosts, cheer up the despondent men or woman whose fear for the future darkens the present, and this gloomy old world would take on a new glow. For cheer is the brightest thing in the world next to sunshine.

WHAT IS A REPUBLICAN? (New York World.) Many years ago when the demociatic party was wandering aimlessly around in the slough of despond, the World aroused considerable interest with an editorial entitled 'What Is a Democrat?" Thanks to the leadership cf Pres't Wilson, the country no longer has difficulty in defining a democrat, but nobody can guess what a republican is. If Roosevelt is a republican, what is Ford? If Ford is a republican, what is Root? If Root is a republican, what is Jim Mann? If Jim Mann is a republican, what is Lodye? If Lodge is a republican, what is Works? If Works is a republican, what is Taft? If Taft is a republican, what is Roosevelt? What becomes of the pro-ally republican vote in the east and the pro-German republican vote in the middle west, and where do the republican pacifists and the republican militarists get off? Roosevelt and the war have managed to do for the republican party what Bryan and free silver did for the democratic party. In consequence, the republican party today is without principles or issues or a candidate or a character, and that is what all the trouble is about. A political party cannot be dishorest with itself and-r.ot be dishonest with the country, and the republican party is now so intellectually crooked that it trips itself up at every step. The gathering at Chicago is nominally a political convention, but actually it is a political shell-game, with Roosevelt trying to bunco the country. If the republican party still had courace. conscience and conviction, the clash of opposing candidates at Chicago would involve no embarrassment. The only question to be considered would be one of availability. Beim?- without courace. ton-

science and conviction, the part 5- on the eve of its nominations is groping for a means by which an organization that is now fooling some of the people all of the time can hope to fool all of the people some of the time.

CURIOS AM) JUNK. (Cleveland Plain Dealer.) The fad of collecting c urios seems to be hard hit by the ultilitaranism oi the age. It. is the utilitarianism test that proves this. Several collections have been unloaded on the public recently, ard the prices received were not at all satisfactory to the sellers. An exception might be filed in the case of books and manuscripts. Early editions and criginal literary drafts are pretty sure to rouse up bidders. But the curiosity shop collection, the odds and ends of early ages and arts, seem to have little- drawing power. A collection of considerable note, made by a Brooklyn man, the fruit

cf time and travel and expense, was

offered for sale the other day. The authenticity of the articles was well attested, and they represented a great variety of interesting subjects, ranging from an unusually perfect sepulchral vase of the time of the Ptolemies, down to a piece of metal from the first Brooklyn city hall bell 1 he vae brought J 15 and the fragment of bell 23 rents. Then the auctioneer, by way of contrast, introduced CO cannon balls picked up

on battleefield of the revolutionär? and civil wars, and somebody a friend of preparedness bid them in for $26. As for the gold coin?, and th Greek and Roman silver coins, and the unusual array of ancient medals, they brought but little more than their value at the mint. In short, the appeal made by these treasured reminder? of the past, was unexpectedly weak. It shows that the collector who collects for any reward save his own gratification, is doomed to disappointment. In an yge that is short in poetry and romance and sentiment, curios are largely regarded as junk.

THE FARMERS' TRUST BUILDING South Bond's Biggest and BeM Oflieo Bnildinir. will In- formally openil to ihc pul lie This Afternoon and Evening Every man and woman in South Pond should 1 ii:tei ted und attend the opening, for this structure Is a real cied.t ih t:ty. CARNATIONS AND MUMC 1(111 ALL.

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Best in South Bend. Why? BcoausC it is centrally located and in the court house square. IkraiiM it has two entrances; one on Jefferson boulevard, tho other on Main .-treet. Beoauser it has no dark rooms. Every room is an outride iouui. Superb lighting system. IWrause it has wide, well lighted corridor.-. IKcaup partitions will be set to suit tenant.-'. Linoleum or mastick flooring for every room. Bcvaue it has GO, 000 square feet of space, mostly rented; :; modern elevators; best janitor service. See for Yourself Today

Tine Sestt

aire

fflms

Electric Lights arc tlu best lights no question there, everybody says so. Electric Lights are the cheapest illumination the new low rate makes this so. Therefore, when it comes to lighting, the best are also the cheapest. Better have lights put in now while we can yet wire at cost. I. & M.

Top Floor, Farmers Trust BUg. The Best Place to Fat in South Bend. Try one of our Special Table de Dote Daily Dinners, 33c and ."Oc. SUNDAY, üoe and 7."e. A la Carte service and spcobrl steak dinners. Hours 7:3 0 a. m. to 7:30 p. m. 21 meals weekly. i:xci:lij:nt si:kvici: ASSURED.

You Can Have

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COMPLEXION POWDER j An especially adherent powder of 1 thofinestquality; of velvety smoothness and exquisitely perfumed. Enchantment Complexion Pow1 r e , 1 . 1

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The statement cmes from outh America that the states down there will not take offense if the United States r.hould intervene in Mexico. Knoxville, Tenn., Journal and Tribune.

ZLZo So, J?Ua?zf2$m

Try NEWS-TIMES Want Aas

1 t ( . Cremt e -' "1 i

AMERICAN DRUG CO. 133 N. Main St. Open from 7 to 12 daily. Bell 172 Phon? Home 5139

STRILBEL & STEIN EL'S PUBLIC DRUG STORE CUT RATES 124 NORTH MICHIGAN Homo 6C00 Hell f.no

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