South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 187, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 5 July 1916 — Page 8

THE SUUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

COT ITU nrMH MPWQ T7Q I in' or the mall town is plain, wholesome. oM-fa.hinnd UU 111 tJLHU INJIVYO. 1 liYlJLDcoohln scrve(, neatIv anrJ lcasantl without arlIficial

Morning Evening Sunday. JOHN HI:NRV ZL'VBR, Editor. GAIJHIi:!. I! fiL'MMI'RS, Pnbllflher.

only ;.NsoriT.-D phkm mornino rRANrnif k IMI'HU IN MIKTIIIIKN INDIANA AND ONLY TATKR TMriOI.; T 11 K INTKRN ATIONAL NKHS SERVICK IN OITII IIIZM-N- ofi.-r n.--rir.r In tüe täte protected tr tw o ;,.-,.-, i wire night and diy new rrUfj; al onix f izM-cohjT.m ripT In tat ouUHe Indianapolis. Published jtciT :.jj of tr yf,iran.iti'e 'n all daja expt Sunday anil il.lilax 1 atered at the Soutii Bead posto2ico as secood tl-iss i.alL

pretension. And the landlord who will make up his mind to serve such meals, and will 1:0 about it intelligently, will not hae any complaint to make about profit.. His restaurant may be hidden in mountains or the woods or the desert, but the traveling public will find and paironi.se it.

WITH OTHER EDITORS THAN OURS

THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY

Home rboje 1131.

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Cat. at the effle or telephone nhore nnmbers and ask for .lop-Ktrii-nt u ..ntM-IMitorbil. Advertising. Circulation, or ArcaiLtlnsr. r r "v. ant alvs."' if your name la In the telep!i dire tory. t ill will te m riiltr'i after insertion. Ileport in.it?-'jti''.ri btslnem. tad cxe-utiou. poor delivery of p-ipcrs. had te :-.t, irif t-r-rvt. e. etc, to hean of department wlta hua you arc ialine. The News-Omen La thlrttn trunk 21üts ail vf vLi. Ii rtsp'.'nd to Hume l'liune 1151 and liell -1 .rnsrnirTION HAIRS. Morning and Hvenlnsr Edition, su.ie 0pr. LV; Sunday, ."c; Morning or KrenlDjf KdltOn. diliy. iniu liu Sjn-biy. y mail, .1 u) per year la advance. iHlivertr-: bj carrier la Soutli liend and ilisbaw aka. $oOU per ytar ia advance, or 1.- by toe week. ADVERTISING RAT KS. Ask the advertising department. VriTc'.sn Advertising Kepreseut itives : l'd.Ni:, LOliKNZHN .V: UOUMAN. SS fifth At.. New York City and Adr. Hlds, Cblcijr.. The News-Times endeavors to keep its advertising columns fn-e fror fraudulent u.Urepresent.ition. Any person defrauded throu -h patronage of any advertisement In this P .i per whl cor.f.-r a favor ca tliO cjuuayemcnt Uj reporting the facts umpa teij.

JULY 5, 1916.

OUR OWN CENSORSHIP. One of tin- Mro.'iKtM ev idences of anticipated trouble in Mexico of a renl warlike nature is the tightening cf the lines of censorship by the administration at WashirifTton incident to which we are promi.-ed a little taste of our own .soup, .similar to that upon which Europe fed us at the outbreak of the conflict between the triple and entente allies. m Military censorship, under certain conditions, is probably advisable, but as yet we see no necessity for a rigorous censorship in the Mexican situation. It is inconceivable that Mexico, with 'its restricted facilities fr transmitting advice, could secure from the ne'A sparer? information of military movements on this Mde of the line in time to impede such movements. Yet it is forecasted that newspaper correspondents will be hampered in every way possible, should a military crisis arise on the border, by over otliclous underline who merely wish to show their petty authority. There should be some intellicent understanding: between the commanding officers of the Un'ted State? army and the correspondents. There is not one newspaper havimr a representative at the front which would Kiw out info; mation detrimental to the army. If put upon is honor. Hut the American public is entitled to knov what is poiti? on down there and it will know. A senselop.v censorship at this time will only put the correspondents on 'heir mettle and they are a hard bunch to beat when on the scent of new". It is better to play lair and enter into a "Kontleman's agreement" with thetn '.t the start. Such an agreement would likely be kvpt to the letter, while all arbitrary efforts to cheat them, and their readers, out of legitimate news is fore-doomed to failure.

STANDARDIZING DIVORCE LAWS. The eternal divorce question is up again. A Chicago pastor has been urzinsr Pres't Wilson to work for a constitutional amendment to standardize the laws governing marriajre and divorce. The need of such a reform has lonjr been evident. Since the befrinnin::. of this century there have teen 1,400.00-0 divorces in the fnited States. There are two persons Involved in each of thoso divorces. Allowins for those who may have been divorced two or three times in this period, we are forced to conclude that about 2.500.000 different husbands and wives have been locally separated in less than 16 years. That is an appalling proportion of the country's married citizens. The divorces for the present year are expected to total 125,000, addin? 250,000 persons to the list of divorcees. It may be that better laws would not greatly lessen the number of separations, for divorce legislation tends to become more liberal instead of more strict. But certainly the more obvious evils of the present chaotic system coulo be eliminated. It should no longer be possible for a person forbidden to marry in one state to disobey the law with impunity by crossing the state line. There are entirely too many men and women in this country who are legally married in certain states, and not married at all, with their children suffering all the legal disadvantages of an unrecognized union, when they move into certain other states. There should, of course, bp one law for the whole country. And in the process cf standardization it is likely hat both extreme laxity and extreme severity would be corrected.

SOLDIERS' FAMILIES. Congress will be unjust and short-sighted if it neglects to make provision for taking care of the dependent families of national guardsmen. It will be unjust because nearly all of these guardsmen, when they enlisted, had no knowledge or expectation that they would eer be taken out of their own states and even into a foreign land for a prolonged campaign. When they joined the guard, the present law had not been enacted. The privates particularly had little thought of any but occasional service for brief periods, according to the usual procedure, within their state borders. It would be unjust even in the case of men who went into It with their ees open not unjust to the men themselves, but to their families, upon whom the hardship falls. This is t'ae view of thousands of employers throughout the United States, who have volunteered to pay, out of their own pockets, all or part of the usual salaries of guardsmen employes going to the front. Can the nation, through its government, show itself lern fair and generous than th-? private citlrens? It is short-sighted, too, to refuse aid to those who need it, because such a refusal will discourage enlistments. It is better, to t.e sure, that recruits should be men not burdened witr dependents; and it is proper, in case of eholre, to take only men who are economically free. Hut there are large numbers of men needed to recruit the national guard tip to ar strength, and there may be many more recruits needed before we get through. It may not be wise or possible tc refuse volunteers on family grounds, as the regular army doe in normal times. Payments must be safeguarded, and the innovations mus? not be allowed to develop Into a treasury-tapping ibuse. Hut within due limits, it i.- plainly Tnole Sam's busings to ivntrtt'iito to the s-.ipport of these dependent families as a part of hN legitimate war expanses.

PRYING A CORPORATION APART. The order of a federal court for the dissolution of the $80,000.000 Corn Products Refining Co. brings up once more the question whether this is the wisest way to deal with great combines found, violating the antitrust laws. The Corn Producta Co. was found guilty not because it had actually crushed competition, but because It had tried to. It wa shown to have used tho old. familiar device, by which the Standard Oil Co. gained. its monopoly Holling It.s product at ruinously low prices to drive its competitions out of business, in expectation of recouping it.s own losses afterward. The Corn Products Co. did not succeed. Nevertheless, it3 conduct invited punishment, and punishment is doubtless necessary in such cases to prevent renewed offenses and to deter others. But It doesn't necessarily follow that the breaking up of the corporation into its original parts is the logical punishment. The public has gained nothing from the dissolution of the Standard Oil, Tobacco and other great trusts. Tho constituent companies have only found it a little more troublesome and expensive to carry on their work. Tlir-y have passed the additional cost on to the consumer and are making more money than ever. In the case of tho Corn Products Co.. it seems that its organization resulted in a genuine increase of industrial efficiency through the specialization of one plant to make starch, another to make glucose, etc. Its mechanism was good, although its moral conduct was bad. Is it well to keep on breaking up a complex and etflclent industrial machine merely because of technical prohibitions of size- or form when the fault is with the conduct of the men who run it? As one critic aptly remarks, "When an automobile is not legally run, we fall on the chauffeur rather than the machine. With respect to a large corporation it is the practice to let the chauffeur escape and pry the machine apart."

HKALTH MI1WS DOLJAUS. (St. Paul Dispatch.) There are many reasons why all of us should study the ways of healthy living. Not the lea.t important reason is found in the relation that exists between health and the gaining of our livelihood. It might le supposed that everybody would recognize this and would learn to live well. P.ut actually only a small percentage of people pay due attention to the laws of personal hygiene. Some people, to be sure, give too much thought to the question of health. They are forever fussing about their health, and live in perpetual and irrational dread of disease. Indeed, they may actually make themselves ill by their morbid fear of illness. So much do they think about their wSi-belng that they have little time to think of their work. Necessarily, even if they are so lucky as to escape a nervous breakdown, they work inefficiently and thereby keep their Income below what it ought to be. We may be total abstainers from alcohol, we may lead morally clean lives. Nevertheless, in unsuspected ways we lessen our earning capacity by violating the laws of right living. One great fault is to forget, or remain in ignorance of, the fundamental truth that everything which has a bad effect on our internal physical processes has likewise a bad effect on our power to think. We may not make the mistake of poisoning ourselves with rum. Hut too many of us do make the mistake of poisoning ourselves with overrich and over-abundant food. We keep the toxin of alcohol from our brain. P.ut we are not careful to keep from it the toxins produced by excessive eating. We avoid the ccrm infections to

which all expose themselves who indulge In loose sexual relations. Yet often we needlessly work amid dust and dirt laden with equally deadly infection. We would shudder at the thought of spending a night in the stifling atmosphere of a gambling hell. Put week in and week out we cheerfully work and sleep in quarters that are little better ventilated. Then, acain. many of tis err through forgetting, or never knowing, that thinking ability is conditioned by the quality of the blood's circulation, and that this In turn Is largely conditioned by bodily exercise. We live In street car. office chair, and bed. letting our muscles grow fb.bby. our circulation slow. And after a time we find ourselves wondering why our power to p'an. to reason, to remember, to execute, is not as good as it used to be. These are only a few of the commonest errors in personal living habits. They are errors that impair our health, they are errors that diminish nur efficiency, they are errors that keep us or make us poor in purse. Ioarn to avoid them. Tomorrow, the first thing, buy yourself a handbook on personal hygiene. It will not cost much and is sure to prove a splendid investment.

THE MELTING POT

FILLED BY THE EDITORIAL STAFF

the i)im:cTrvi:. The diligent detective gets his daily exercise In learning many things which people do not advertise. Th- burglar has no business cards to hang upon the wall. To sav "This fancy work was done by Mr. John J. Gall." Thf enterprising buccaneers who steal your motor car Get up no printing ink displays to tell you who they are. The diligent detective has a thinker cool and keen. The felon may neglect to leave his sign upon the scene; P.ut Sherlock wisely gathers up the unsuspected clues, Ani aided by the rubber on the bottom of his shoes. He noiselessly departs upon the evil-doer's trail. And with extreme rapidity escorts him to the jail. The diligent detective is a person you should thank. He helps the thrifty banker keep the boodle in the bank Instead of yielding all the funds to men with sunburned necks. Who scorn the staid formalities involved in drawing checks. So if the proud detective should enlarge his happy chest. Let none deride his services with ill-considered jest. A. H. B. o

honor any bills made by Mrs. Q. Spender. Q. T. Spender.

COOKING THE RABBIT. Berlin is at present engaged in dividing up the province of Alsace-Irraine on paper. As figured out, the ex-French province will be divided in three parts, as was Gaul of old. .Havana, Haden and Prussia each getting a slice, Havaria bagging the lion's share. While the pleasing geographical game Is in progress, Berlin might as well go a little further and partition Belgium or even France itself. France is fighting for one thing principally to reserve her lost province of Alsace-Lorraine. Either she loses more territory or he wins it back. The part France has played in the war will entitle her to first choice, when the spoils or war are divided among the allies, if victory perches upon their banner. And that choice will be Alsace-Lorraine first, last and

i all the time.

And come to think of it maybe that is why Berlin is permitting herself the gratification of parcelling it out now, instead of after the war.

FULL INSURANCE. If the senate subcommittee's naval program is carried out. in about four years allowing for holidays and rainy weather I'ncle Sam will be able to wear a chip on his shoulder, with more or less assurance that it won't be knocked off by the first bully he meets. Sixteen new and modern war craft and a reputation for being fairly rapid on the draw ought tc be pretty reliable peace insurance.

THL COUNTRY HO I'LL. An a$H-U:lor. of small hntelkeepcrs. rroo-'nirmg that thtir b i.-i!.,s not paying as it should, asked a specialist to diagnose their trouble. And the specialist alter looking ov er th-- situation, laid down for them r; s t of rubs which this is the first: Do not try to copy the elaborate bi'l of city hotels nnd restaurants. Simple food nicely prepared and jiervc-.i' cK-anly in an attractive place will be ppreiiatcd by ecry one." He hit the nail on th head. The chief reason for the la;se of jocularity of the country hotel is that it has '. e n ap.r.iT th- cit hotel. It has been pretendIn t'' five patrons the same menus thy would get ; , r.rr-T-cl.i.-s metropolitan hotels, althoueh It lacks tho r.e.rt s ir e ;uip:r:it. staff and materials. And ewry tim- fails with an intelligent and experienced patron, ;t :v,.ufs an enemy where it sought to make a Xru-nd. It :s all tie more absurd because the patrons of country h-: :.- don't expect elaborate bills of fare, O-ad don't want t.Vm. What they expect in the coun-

j The director of the Naples insane asylum, an expert I alienist, has been given a place in the new Italian ministry. But it's a little late for such an innovation. jlAcry cabinet in Europe ought to have taken that precaution two years a-o. Then the irazy statesman

might have been detected and put in padded cells, and there wouldn't have been anv war.

I Rockefeller has taken first prize at the Tarrytown j Horticultural society exhi'üt for the largest ftrawj berries. We would advise our lady readers to hurry (and put up their strawberry jam before the rise in ! prices.

Tin: POPULATION or MKXICO. (Dayton. O., News.) Mexico has a jojulation of about 1 . million jeople. Of this number about six million are pure Indians, divided into many tribes and sjeakInv; many different languages. They are descended from the Aztecs and other Indians who figured in the early history of this continent. Then, another six million of the population are of mixed blood, descendants of Tndians and other jeople, mostly Spaniards. These people of mixed breed live more in the towns and cities than in the country. Only three million of the inhabitants of Mexico are white people. They are mostly persons of Spanish descent, and speak the Spanish language. Perhaps not more tsn 20.0.000 or 300,000 of the citizens of Mexico are from other races ot white people than the Spanish. Many of the Indians are of the very lowest, most primitive types, as far down th scale of humanity as the inhabitants of Terra del Fuego. The Seri Indians of Sonora especially, are very primitive. The native Indians in the region of Casas Grandes, where our troops have been operating, are of a higher tyr than any other Indians in the country, unless it is the Xahuatl tribe that lives in the vicinity of Mexico rqty. These latter Indians had attained the highest civilization that existed on this continent at the time of th Cortez invasion of the country; but they are. nevertheless, far below the standard of the white man. Villa's strength was with the Indians and mixed people. Hp made it or tried to make it a contest between the Indian and the white man. He led the natives to believe that he was soing to tnke the country away from the white people and give it to the Indians, and. naturally, the Indians were for that proposition. But, uneducated as they are. the Indians had little idea about how Villa wa to accomplish so creat a task, further than killing all of the white people.

Life's little irritators Trying to put the baby to sleep w hen you want to go somewhere. toli in Tin; iu: Ds. SECOND FIRE IN SAME BUILDING IN 11 DAYS STA RTS I N V E ST I G ATI ON THIRD FIRE IN SAME BUILDING IN 12 DAYS STARTS DOUBLE QUIZ I cannot write a single line I could not do it on a bet. Unless the guy ahead of me Will lend me a cigaret. "Quit Drink or Quit Militia. Missouri Order" Headline. Speaking of driving a man to drink, look how

they have raised the price of soft ones. "Young Woman Leaps to Death lr. Postoitice." We suppose she pot In the wronr shoot. The man who runs the press has Just informed us that he caught a six pound fish while on his vacation. I-ater he informed us it was a dog fish. He said the reason he didn't catch any cat fish was. but perhaps you have it all figured out. Why weep such weeps and slobber o'er with tears? Why shake and quake and give away to fears? Why think of war, near or far, and talk in whining tunes, When all the dope gives you hope there'll be a big croj of prunes? When it comes to inventing newones or polishing up old ones, you have to hand it to the head writers. Yesterday one sjoke if the "Allies Tearing Holes in the German Iron Wall." Another says. "British Of1 nsive Sweeps West Front." o A nr.CIiAHATIOX. On and after this date I refuse to

He threw a fire cracker in the air, And when it lit. he was right there. He picked it up, and we held our ears, For we were filled with plenty fears.

But there was no cry. nrr no shout. l or the blamed thing was really out. Lirirs LiTTLi: o.i:s. It doesn't make a bit of differer.. to me. Suit yourself. I am easily satisfied. Now dear, you know I eouhh: ': get homo sooner. I really figured the cheaper . was the one I wanted. We would have won but for tk umpire. I don't care for a thing. I'd go but. tin: Lin: or jaki: hlcivA.man. Vol. '2. Chapter ?. There haint nothin quiet so unedifyin to a single guy as to here a new father yellin praises about his brat. Our idee of minus in the way of r;din is on one of these h i bicycles with a motor attached that looks liko a water bottle. The poor house has cost the perfession man i good n'ws)aperman. Soldier bo .- who was seized with illnesses about the time the troojs left for the from are beginnin to con va less. I supj'ose theie is a lot of squirrels t be found in Rummy village. Its quiet natural a newsiaperman what has a son born to him the first lstt of the month should name him Bi!i. 'ome men say they dont belief m advertisin then go busted huyin g-:i out of bizaess signs. Mister Jake F. i A. Heckaman is out of the city today testin his new Klaxon horn. W was talkin to a feller the other d;i about tho latest squahle of ourn in Mexico. Sez he i am goin to stait for the border if trouble starts agii. down there. a:id as he spoke h. jdnted toward Canada. As Sherbbn. said in his remarks about war. Ii , balnt in it when compared to a ho'; day excursion. ADAM CROOK.

yet glorified by the riches of the heart. Charity is said to begin at home, but if true charity, it has but its beginnings there to go forth in a continuous stream. No one may tell where charity ends. The kindly impulse, the kindly word you may speak, though it makes its physical impression only on you goes, it may well be, to the ends of the earth, or to generations after you. It Is in the home that these kindly thoughts arise. Family love, family unity, jeace. good will go forth from the home carrying blessings as they go. Training for good character must begin at home and in early childhood. The responsibility of the pnrent does not end when the child is sent to s..nool.

' Each member of a family has a re

sponsibility in making home happy and a place of blessing. Cultivate all the qualities that tend to make the ideal home and it will bring the truest happiness. Hajpiner.s is not fou..d in things or entertainments. P must come from the neart and may bo possessed by the man i oorcst in worldly goods quite as abundantly as by him who hns great store of gold. Cultivate happiness in the home and you will be truly happy.

kan war suddenly juit an end to the rival manoeuvering. The relation of this chapter to American presti-e is not far fetched. It sometimes has happened ami it will happen in the future much more largely than in the recent jtast, that Kurnpean projects at expansion require greater capital than is immediately available or producible at home. Where in such cases is a capital market to he looked for? It is as certain as anything in the future that the hom of capital in the next half century is going to be the United States. The ingenuous idea that this country is to be ignored or that its "prestige" is on the wane in international affairs of every sort is as baseless as it if, sudden, a self-evident invention of the backers of the proposed new militarism.

The Same Money 7111 Mow Buy Ten Times as Miicli

Get this niivtri: Lihtinc; that formerly cost 72 cents now costs but 7: cents. You gel approximately ten times as much tor the same money as was to re had sixteen years ac;o. Let us show yen ask us to prove this point.

L & M. Bell 462.

Home 5462.

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Names of Former Residents of St. Joseph County That an invitation to attend St. Joseph county's great Indiana centennial celebration Oct. 3, 4 and 5 may be sent to every former resident of St. Joseph county, persons having their addresses are urgently requested to at once fill in the accompanying coupon and take or send it to the Chamber of Commerce immediately.

COUPON

i Name

City or Town

Street dumber

j i Street Number i j . i Left St. Joseph county about years ago. j

1 Last address in St. Joseph county was 1 I i

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1 Sent in by !of

Net income of American railroads for year ending July 1. 191. about l90e.ooo.eoo. The interstate commerce commission is mean mouth to announce it just w hen the roads are kicking a! out raising wages.

A hard boded op ned in Juincy. Mass.. contained a tiny piece of newspaper with the printed words u ,-." And everybody in the neighborhood is dvinsi w ith 'eurtositv to know wh u the hen nuant.

A nation, like an individual, rinds !ir "Just one i Mamed ihm after another."

THE SOVKCE OF HAPPINESS. (Milwaukee Journal.

! Small words, words like home and J love, have th deepest and greatest meaninsr. No home is ideal without love. All ni things nre centered in a pood home and must have

thir oriein there. From th home m'.it emanate a'l that blesses the earth irood will. love, kindness, unloshr.ess. joy and peare. In the home the worthy statesman tcts his training; the pubüe benefactor is tausht his lesson in h:s home. The home may lack all those luxuries that wealth can supj'ly: it may ti h'iaibltst in a rna"-i n

pnrsTicJF." and ami:iiican CA PITA Ii. (Topeka, Kans., Capital.) Some light is thrown on the question so much talked about in this country (though nowhere else in the world) of the total eclipse of American "prestige." since th- world went to war, by an account in the recent book of Prof. Millioud of Lausanne university in Switzerland. from which we quoted the ether day, of the reason why Germany fell down in her historic proeram of the Bagdad railway and the benevolent assimilation of Mesopotamia to the Persian gulf. The story told by the Swiss professor is not new. The detail in point is the fart that when Turkish assent to the "Hacdadbahn" and the German project was uiven and the prospectus for the railway was completed, guaranteeing to investors an attractive interest at s" much per kilometer. Germany was unable at home to raise the required capital. Recourse was then had to Paris and French capital. The French, after examining the project approved. ard French money was about to he loaned to the Germans, with full understanding of the political object, when pressure by Kn island and Russia caused the French to withdraw. Then the Kr.irlih and Itussians wpnt ahead with rival plans of their own. includir.t: a parallel rail line, in Persia. What Germany might have done rtnnnt now.- known, for tV Il.iJ-

MKXIOO v ii:mociiatic OPINION. (Philadelphia Record. Dem. "What the republicans dedre though they refrain from putting it into words is that the United States should invade Mexico and either annex the country or set up another military despot who will protect the property Interests of American:) who have gone into a foreign country in order to make money. The republicans, in effect, but evashely. insist that the Fnited States Fhf.ll find a "man on horseback" for Mexico and set him up and protect him with bayonets until he can establish such a strong but despotic rule as that of Piaz. The whole burden of republicancomplaint against the president for not recognizing Huena and aiding him in borrowing money in New York, is that the president would not lend the assistance of the Fnited Ftates to the maintenance of a despotism. If there were in Mexico anofher Diaz the republicans would be satisf.ei, because property would he protected. It is not the duty of the United State to govern Mexico. It is not the perdus of American: m to assist s military dictator in suppressing all movement for popular government. And a democratic president and a democratic congre. will not conquer Mexico in order to pafejrnard property interests. That is the whele case of the rep iblicar: aeainst Pres't Wilson in the matter of Mexico. s

GENUINE VICTROLAS $15 $25

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Sold on $i.L0 weekly payments. The store where you get a new machine and NEW RECORDS always.

The

S.WoOopE

MUSIC SHOP 228 S. Michigan St. Est. 13 years.

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The Farmers Securities Co. The Farmers' Securities Company offers the wage earner" a plan of savings that pays 4 interest while saving and 6f interest for a year following. Call and investigate the newest md bet savings plan. 2 5T,5? Farmers" Trust I Jul Id ins.

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AMERICAN DRUG CO.

133 N. Main St. j Open from 7 to 12 daily. Bell 172 Phones Home 5130 All kinds of Kodak Supplies.

46 YEARS OLD 46

1 1 Kit iii;ntitv. Fora had just r turned from Sunday school, where she had been for the first time. "What did my little dauzhur learn this morning " r.sked the fond fatrer. "'That I am a child of uan." watH Learning reply. ljf.

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Alt Work Uuarsntwtl. Examination lYeo. wiiiti: ii:ntal iwiujks 111 W. Whiiiitnn At. Oer I'rrr's Il'w.k Store. . Iloth Phone. (l n i:enlngH

Directors: Marvin Campbell Myron Campbell Arthur L Hurrarvl Haven Hubbard Fred H. Badet Jav C. Rowsher

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