South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 214, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 1 August 1916 — Page 6
tfksday i;i:mng, ATCrST 1, 101C.
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH ßND NEWS-TIM ES Morning Evening Sunday. JOHN HENRY ZI'VKH. Editor. GAimini K. Pi;MMi:ilS. Publisher.
om.t ..sonTrn rncs morning rnANCiiiT. rI'KH IN O KT II Y. RN INDINA AM ONLY PATER n.4VI.c; TIIK ITKKATI-.VAL XKHä SERVICE IN MtTII lIEM-No oi-r ne;'ifT la tLe täte protected by to IeaM wlro li.jrM and day new rrles; ali only iffM-roluiun piper la tt atide Indiananol!. rnMishel ereiy daj of tr yrir ari'l IwIvh cq all Oay except Sunday and ilIdaja KuUred at the South Heed poitoait J ai ieconj (Uli ma IL
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CIICIUPTIO.N KATE Morula? and F.venlns Edition. f Ingle Copy. 2'", Sunday. ."Vr; Morning or Krenlat: Kdltl a. lalij. lnluttlag Sunday, by mall, fiuu per year la advance. l)eilvercd by urrk-r la So Uta I'.ei.d aud Alunawaka. 3UO per Jar In advame, or 1; by tte week.
AIVI.KTIINO KATES. Ask the edrertinin? depirtmeni. ror-'n .d,er'l!u.: lU-pretetitatives : CON Ii LOKL.NZKN A WOOuMAN. 2Z 1 if th At, New York City unC A1t. Ublst . CLIr.ijr'j. The Newt-Ilmes endeavor to keep its advertising coiuuicn frre froru fraudulent ialrepreentatlon. Any jer.ou tief r.iu l-d tLroufh patronage of a-y adverüai rneut In tun paper u-.il cotifef a favor vu tlv luauatiuut by reporti'ig u.e fait. ouipUtely. AUGUST 1, 1916.
MAMMOTHREPTS. A fair !-'Hi!h-j n student at the Harvard summer hChuol, indignant at having her picture .-napped by un amatear phot a ph r, i.s aid tu have withered tho U'jd.iciiKi.-i ni in by calling him and "itupudent maiaUiothrept." i-fhe l-.-iv Platitude f'T railing public attention to this luH'! and wondrous word. It's really in the dictionary. And the definition is; " a child reared hy its grandmot h r -hence a puih-d child." The i;r;i ndmot hers may i up m arms atcainst the implied hll. whi' h is a old as the Greek lanua from which H tomes Hut mothers and fathers of a f n'u;it;on ien to eient :1b- child i-ulture w ill welcome the term as a n-w and powerful weapon In their endless w.i.-fare aain.-t grandmotherly Indulgence of their oif.-prin. Mer ly calling a t hild a "maninif)thrept'' in the presence of Ms rand-maternal ancestor out;ht to le enough to make L-randna stop her coddling and acquiesce in parental discipline.
whll we do not know exactly what the "secret intri'u't" were, we can see no other reason why we have not whirped the life nut of Knland Ion? aito. for her interference with our commerce, under .Mr. Hughes' interpretations, unless it b that there la some terrible crookedness about it. And .Mexico. A''ain, the 5.1 m eld story. The administration i cursed for staying out. for iroinc In, for getting out. for mobilizing the national guard, for not mobilizing it, and o on and 0 forth; anything to confuse the people and make them helleve there is something wrons. and depending upon it that the le?s sure they are of what it is, so much the better. It is the .style of Mr. Hughes' speech of acceptance throughout. He has about the same depth and breadth to his discussion of the tariff, the labor problem, preparedness, rural credits, woman .sulfrage, conservation; while to his credit, perhaps, because he cannot understand them, he leaves the federal reserve bank'r: system, the child labor law, and much other beneficent legislation distinctly alone. Indeed no, Mr. Hughes has done nothing in this speech to inhante his good standing witn the country, either by way of an exposition of great intelligence on public questions, or great leadership. He stands today just as he stood from the start, T. Roosevelt's and Heveridge's indorsements notwithstanding, as a mere reflection of stand-pat, reactionary republicanism. His speech is a mere re-piping of their dreams, obsessed, as we said at the outset, with the conception from within, as it seems, that he has been divinely appointed from somewhere perhaps along with the kaiser, to reclaim the whole human race, of course, to submission to his will.
AT LAST, WE THINK, WE UNDERSTAND. After groping around for several weeks in search of what Mr. t'harles Kvr.s Hughes may hae meant by "undiluted Anient anism.' we have every reason to believe, at last, that we hae found it. His address of atteptance of the republican nomination to the pre-i ieiicy, delivered in New York last night, furnishes th- text. We mut onfes that we are somewhat disappointed. We hardly thought there could be an American to wh'm so -ti p horeus an "ism," of so many possibilities, ouid mean so little. This being Mr. Hu-'hes' second acceptance of .the nomination he having accepted once, .it the same day he was nominated, by surprise. w felt certain that he had something more that he w.inie.i t.i something more definite; something more exhaustive; perhaps, something new, but it is difficult to tind. My 'undiluted Americanism", Mr. Hughes evidently mejns "unlimited egotism;" that he wants to be president, and in this connection is so e.bseed from without, and conceited from within, anent the superior ntnes.-. of himself and his party, that he is willing to r.-ott to ,iu brand'of sophistry essential to accomplishing his purpo.-e. If there is anvthim; m this speech of atteptance. o'-.t!ed, that is t ither new-, more definite, or more e ha '!' n e, than what the republicans have been pr lür' ii"Ut. cd onl miu- the national conventions bit in adatue of them pardon us for not making the licoery. Add to the Chicago platform a little appendix eah ulated, apparently, to reflect a few appropriations trom Co!. T. Iloosevelt thus, mayhap, to assure the toloml that he is recognized. and you have the New York spec- h in full dress, of course, there are occasional oratorical frills. The song birds of lllens Falls must have lee.) smging merrily in the trees, av 1 if candidate fcr president, jotted down his notes to i.e ne, hoed on "this iii"i!iontoti? occasion." Howeer, there i.s one assurance that we get from this spech. '.hat we must cop less; one assurance, w sh,ru!d -av. of f'c.Ml dimei.tions. it is settled now that the deino rai'c patt is unsafe; that no difference wh it it d"e. it mur . wrong, it-is damned if it tloes. and it is damned if it don't; only republicans are competer,: t. r-ale. to command respect abroad and at home. through the pers'dtp.t. of the nation's huh officials and representative-, not only in Wa.-t.inutoti, and the customs and po-t oitice.--, lc.it bevond the seas. Sublime isn't it; la.t suulinie what? We decline to answer, eomir.g as it ;.- tioüi a candidate for the presidency. Ordinarily, or would expect a candidate for president, to ie aloe svich as.-ininity. but we must not epit too muiJi fron Mr. Hughes. I'eople arc used to .-ut h talk in more, or less jocular vein, from orators of the stump; even from T. Roosevelt and A. RtvtTidg w ho-e egotisms are sometimes taken a- tincture.', with bombast. but here is a man. cr.e too. of -...me "judi-ual temperament', who actually take- hm.- If riou-'y (n the point. It is no wonder, we should sav, that the republican press, not long ago rampant with condemnation 0 tnr kaiser and his "Mvsif and Coussni." has ch-sed up on the subject like r. 1 Urn. It seems to have become a principle of the republican part, that -. if it can be judged by Us lead r. i'rts't Wilsen is rt en.-ih'e for every adverse thing that hi- - one to j as- m the past three years, if Mr. Hu-:h.s has it s.ed up properly. How he came to miss the "Fannuda Hi-'h". th.at his been sweltering we folk, tan . :.! I e ep,ained. in two wavs. Kither the ptt h w as pie; art d m advance of the hotness, or rna be tear- were er.tertait.ed that accusing the president of br:r.i.:r.g such r;.-:ng .ttmephere north would '.r.terfere w:t.u . hurg" of hi- favoring the south; his m ( ti"!".. :i'.-:ii. F it av.vhow, tp... president ha- a fcood s-har ! tb.e w.r in Furop ( ari-wer for; he actually M;r.k the t arti 1. I era ,-e he w a-n't "viceroy of theCJrman tu p t e r. ' w -uppo-e. .4 Mr. Hughes hopes to Lc &rj ihtrtfore atlc to rrcvent it. Then, betides,
"WARS OF NATIONALITY." Future generations will think of our e'esent civilization, in all probability, just about a? we think of civilizations that have lont? pone before us; pointing to a few of us with considerable pride and as representative'? of a "golden age," but to the whole of us as an aggregation of barbarians, and like as not, barbarians plus. Take the world ,as it stands today, half of it in arms, and the other half arming, look back upon it from a hundred, or two hundred years hence. According to (Jeorge Urandes, the famous Danish writer, posterity will say: "That age was one that looked upon the wars of religion as barbarous, and yet failed to understand that wars of nationality are worse. The history' of the wars of religion was a sinister farce". The history of the world-war was a stupid tragedy." There is a wholesome warning in this prophecy. The fundamental cause of the great conflict was the cultivation of a narrow and intense national spirit. That spirit wasn't necessarily admirable because it was called "patriotism." anymore than the spirit that animated the Crusades was admirable because it was called "religion." Most of us are agreed today that the sentiment which hurled Kuropean armies against the Moslems for the redemption of the Holy Sepulchre was not really Christian. Posterity may likewise agree that the sentiment which in our time' Inspired various peoples with Intense loyalty to their own nation and unthinking enmity against neighboring nations was not really patriotism. Patriotic loyalty is a tine virtue, necessary for the noblest development of national life. Rut any virtue may be perverted. Thus patriotism, instead of being a helpful, creative force for the upbuilding of one's own nation, may be turned into a deadly force used for the destruction of another nation. This distinction should he kept clearly in view in giving patriotic instruction to children. The thing to be emphasized is love and service to one's own country. The thing to be carefully avoided is the cultivation in young and impressionable minds of suspicion and hatred of other races or nations. If the world-powers were to teach this nobler type of patriotism for a single generation, there would be little danger of another great war.
"DENTAL SUNDAY." An interesting addition to our rapidly growing list of public celebrations is "Dental Sunday." It might also be called a religious innovation. The National Dental association, which is to assemble next week in Iouisville. Ky.. 5.000 strong, is to be given the freedom of the church pulpits for the propagation of uental truths. It is expected that nearly every pulpit in the city will 'be occupied by a dentist. There is much to be said for the occasional infusion of dentistry into religious services. If cleanliness is next to godliness, certainly the dentists have a good case to argue, for no element of personal hygiene is more vital than a clean mouth. And the subject may even be said to have direct spiritual bearing. What man. whether saint or sinner, ever attained a high state of spiritual exaltation with an aching jaw? It is only when .a congregation's teeth are in so comfortable a state that the owners are blissfully unconscious of them that pure religion has a fair chance to sink into their souls. A wist pastor would probably invite a dentist into his pulpit three or four times a year to throw the fear of defective molars into his congregation.
New York city, after an exhaustive investigation of its various pension funds for municipal employes, finds that there is a deficit in those funds of $20:t.000,000. A trivial sum. to be sure, for a city that boasts of an indebtness greater than our national debt. And yet a mere outlander would suppose that a city with so much flancial talent could figure out a pension system that would come within $100.0o0.00a or so of making both end? meet.
Not long ago Mexican newspapers had the Mexican army occupying Washington and the president and congress hiding in "the mountains of Maine." Which Is just about as near the truth as Mexican journalism usually gets, and shows one of the biggest difficulties we have to contend with in coming to any sort of understanding with the Mexican public.
This Villa mystery is getting on the ration's nerves. There must be some way f learning whether that celebrated bandit is alive or dead, and where he is, and what he's doing. Why not get hold of the hero who carried the message to Carcia. and send h'vn to rind Villi?
Progressive Party Not a Suicide;
W as Assassinated
(&x Savoyard.) In 1 'J 1 2 the bull moose party poiicd 4,1 lJ.5fl3 votes in the race for piesident of the United tats against 3. 4M, & SO votes for the regular republican ticket. When we recall that the aggregate popular vote cast for Abraham Uncoln In his two races for president 1S80 and 1 8 4 amounted tj but 4. 0S0, 017, and when we further reJlect that Theodore Roosevelt in 191 got more votes by 1,095,703 than Gen. Grant
received in 1868, and more by 522,465 than were east for Grant in 1872 when we remember these statistics we must admit that it was a cure-enough party. Indeed, Roosevelt, the head of a brand new party, got more votes for president in 191? than were cast for H. R. Hayes in 1S76. o it was a party all right. You are bound to concede that. Then why should it die? It was a bigger party than the republican party, and titter to survive both in numerical strength and in political character. What was the foundation stone and the cope-stone of the bull moose party? Why, that its masses should command and its leaders take orders. It declared for the initiative and the referendum, and it carried its demands for ' social Justice" so far as to order an appeal from judicial decisions to popular election. It was a revolt from the rule of the bosses, who, for a score of years, had subjected the party of Lincoln to their will and to their whim. It was an indictment of invisible government such as had controlled every republican national convention for a double decade. From whose quiver came the felon shafts that did to death this party of reform, so younjf, so vigorous, so enthusiastic, so patriotic, and' of such glorious promise? From the leaders who assurm 1 to be its bosses. The party did i .1 commit suicide. It was assassinated. It was not licked in battle; its leaders abjectly surrendered it ere the fire of a shot. These leaders condemned it to death
and refused a referendum of the sentence to the great body who composed its electorate. They felled it. bound it, gagged it. and carried it captive and laid it at the feet of the party whose iniquities it had repudiated and revolted from only so short a while before. Shall the treason triumph? It is for the honest and the sincere bull moosers to say. The responsibility is theirs. If they are serfs they will submit to be driven by their bosses. If they are free men they will throwoff their shackles and throttle their would-be masters. It is a matter of personal pride and patriotic duty. Were they in earnest? Did they believe anything? Were they only infatuated with novelty? Were they just out on -a frolic? The returns from the communities that cast such heavy votes for Roosevelt in 1912 will disclose. What has the republican party done since 1912 to clease it of its sins so crimson and so shameless? In what respect are Penrose, Crane.
tSmoot and Oallinger reformed? They have as lirm grip, on the party in 191 as they had in 1912. Klihu Root, who presided over the republican convention that "robbed" Roosevelt four years ago. is still the artificer and the custodian of the principles of the g. o. p. and it is incessantly proclaimed that he is to be premier of the cabinet if Hughes shall be elected. If they win, James R. Mann, standpatter, will he speaker; Joseph W. Fordney will be chairman of ways and means; Boies Tenrose will be chairman of the senate finance committee the place so long held by Nelson W. Aldrich. and Cabot Lodge, standpatter, will head foreign relations, now become so important, decreeing as it may be whether we shall have peace or war. That is the fea?t of crow which George W. Perkins, the plutocrat, has purveyed for the reform party of which he was chief of staff. The New York World is a very sagacious newspaper, its editorials perhaps the most powerful and convincing in the immediate field of American journalism. The World opines that the bull moose party ceased to exist when Mr. Perkins closed his check book. There may be something in that; but I think it a better opinion that the bull moot-e party died when Mr. Perkins concluded that its death was preferable to another defeat of the republican rarl. Perhaps he did not love the bull moose party less; certainly he loved the republican party more. There never was a day, an hour, a moment, when George W. Perkins's ideal of statecraft was anything in the world but Aldrichism. When this new party of reform was created it was to the vital interest of Wall street to have a representative in it. You see the thing might have won and it behooved Wall street to be on the ground. That is how it came that George W. Perkins became a magnate of the bull moose party. It is written: "Now there was a day when the sons of God came to present themselves before the Lord, and satan came also with them." Roosevelt's was the dagger of the beloved Rrutus; Perkins stuck as did the envious Ca sea when the bull moose party fell at the feet of Pompey's pillar. Shall the treason triumph? Not unless Justice be asleep, or is gone
j on a journey, or is fled to brutish beasts. I Washington, July 27.
THE MELTING POT
FILLED BY THE EDITORIAL STAFF
TIIII .SOFT WORD. A very short and simple monosyllable is "please." A word which can be uttered with celerity and ease. It lends the touch of gentleness to order and request: It smooths the rapping corners of the tyrannous behest; And we should all be greatly stimulated, helped and joyed To see this simple syllable more frequently employed. The laws should read: "Please do not set your neighbor's house on fire. Please do not walk upon the gras if that is your desire. Please do not burglarize our banks, but ask to have the keys. Please do not fak your country's coin; and please, oh. pretty please. Do not employ your honest hands in steering fast and far Your fellow mortal's best beloved and only motor car." It's easy to believe our thoughtless disregard of lawArises from the fact that it is worded rather raw. "Thou shalt not" is a harsh command and somewhat impolite; It seems to hint that we an not disposed to doing right. The world might operate with fewer lawyers, courts and fees If all the statutes were refined and introduced with "please." A. R. R.
car or a woman: ther? will be another along after a bit." o
One of the extreme horrors of war must be to be flatly repulsed.
Useless things A bag pipe at a German picnic. Some men are real nice to their wives. They buy small sized hose so the ladies won't have so much trouble sprinkling the lawn. SUM3LKU FICTION. Over in the west, the sun was on its last hour in the heavens. The heroine stood on the shore of the lake, looking out over the waters. A canoe glided along, propelled by the muscular strokes of the hero. The canoe rammed it's nose on the sands and the girl stepped into the boat. Then our hero paddled .and floated along. Their's was contentment. They talked of this and that and all too soon realized that darkness was approaching. Then he paddled to shore and the girl stepped from the canoe. "Fate." he said, "brought you to me." as he held her sun-tanned hand in his. "Y'cs." she murmured with a faraway look, "it was fate." "We do not know each other's name." he said, but we will leave it to fate once more. She will bring ou and me together again and then we will know." "Then we will know." she said and turning went up the bank, while the hero paddled away in the coming darkness. Chapter II. She was driving her electric in on of the suburbs of her home city. Suddenly ahead she noticed a man coming in her direction. She looked again, and then she realized who he was. He was the hero of her summer romance. Joy permeated her heart until, until she noticed. He was pushing his baby buggy. IT WAS R11YT. The inspired reporter wrote this on a hot day: The plash of the waters on the pebbly or shingly or sandy beaches mingled with the noise of the bathers, the shouts of those on the rafts, the laughter of the girls and the cooing- of the babies. Perhaps it didn't write it this way, but this is the way it appeared in print. 0 Cold wave is promised by the weatherman for today. Go ahead. We art prepared for the crool blow. They 'aiigh at this sometimes in vaudeville. "Never chase a street
TTMFS CHANGK. When Ma was a girl, things were quite different, For she got a dollar' worth for every dime she spent. She'd carry a basket to bring home the grub. That she could purchaso for a dime. But if she spent more than one at a time. She'd bring home the stuff she bought in a tub. The purse that she carried was only a handkerchief. Rut if she happened to lose It, there was woe and grief, For with the dime that she had, She'd keep the family fat and sleek. And get enough grub to last 'em a week, Without further assessment from dad. Now, when my wife Koes down to the grocery store, he asks me for five and oftentimes more. She needs no basket to bring home the stuff. For with prices up to where tht-y are, (And all of this due to the raging war), She knows her purse will be big enough. o Tin; ti:iton loss wan. Paris-Large-Berlin-Small. Add to horrors of war. Heat wave in northern France.
PHOSPIIUITY SICiNS. Wanted Laborers. Would trade flivver in for automobile. Silk bathing suits. One man with thre Palm Reach suits. I love his voice in the morning hour, As it is wafted to my heated bower. This man who yells in voice not nice. Rut yells them words, "Here's your ice." The secret of the success of the Allied drive in France is explained. The men are determined to go north. Our advice to the allies would be to turn loose an army of hay feverites against the Germans. Nothing could hold them south. o Brody, what a welcome relief?
WITH OTHER EDITORS THAN OURS
A vear aeo the Germans, in a frenzy of hero-w orship.
i I were driving nails into a wooden statue of Von Hindenj burg. Now Jie Russians seem to be driving nails
into Von Hmdenburg himself.
.-'peaking of -lang phra.-es the doctors call in fantile paralysis "poliomj eht:V
A little less reading in the Inde-
J pendent this w eek than usual may i be attributed to the fact that our typesetting machine ? is not in working order on account of an over 'supply of that product that . ade ' Milwaukee famous. If there was
j any way of getting the type et we
would write about 17 columns in favor r.f prohibition. Conrad (Mont.)
'Independent,
MAKE TIIK HOTEL HOMEY. Hotel Life (Cleveland). Some hotels seem to be constructed with a view to encouraging guests to spend all their time with the exception of their actual sleeping hours elsewhere than in their rooms. We see handsomely fitted bars, rotundas, and smoking rooirui, and in some instances billiard rooms for the male guests, and handsomely furnished parlors for lady patront, but he who gathers from the tine appointments of these that the whole hotel is beyond reproach would be vastly astonished by a glimpse of some of the bedrooms of these very hotels. Too often the bedroom is looked upon as a mere sleeping apartment, whereas it should b; regarded as a sitting room, too. A large majority of tho traveling public are so surfeited with hotel life that what they are looking for is a hotel that is as little as possible like a hotel. They want to spend a good deal of their spare time in their own rooms Just as they would do at home, but how can they if that room contains furniture that gives one the creeps and is decorated with wall paper that one would not paper a dog kennel with if he loved his log! Careful provision should also be made for good light in every beiroom, that is to say, good artificial light. It is presumed that the hotel Is so laid out as to afford as mu h light as is available, but when darkdess sets in and the blinds are drawn, the guest wants a light within easy reach, and which will enable him to read without straining his
eyes.
Queen of Springbrook Park to be chosen at Girls' Annual White Dress Parade at 2:30 o'clock Wednesday Thousands of little girls in this community are preparing to take part in the splendid event Who will be queen this year? Who will get the diamond rings? Three mafds of honor and twenty marching girls to receive handsome souvenirs.
Philadelphia courts last year forced 3,So2 men to support their wives.
Germany s normal meat supply is 60 percent pork.
Many a little maid has already planned' her dres-s and w ill be ready to take part in the Fifth Annual White Dress Parade to be held at Springbrook Park n-xt Wednesday. The selection of a Queen is always a looked-for event. Resides the honor and the crown, she will receive as her very own a handsome diamond ring. The three maids of honor will also receive diamond rings; the two marching maids grid chains and lockets.
Gifts now on exhibition m the i
window of Mayr's Jewelry Store, u; S. Michigan st. In choosing a queen th3 judges will base their decision on her ex
pression and sweetness of character, j counting the majority of points. The ."implest of white dres.-es will be ' worn by the girls and the only deviation from pure white will be foand j in the flags and sashes of ribbon. If you wish t enter droj a postal! to F. p. Dailey, Mgr. Springbrook j park. j
Tingling-All- Over-Cleanliness That's the description of the JAP ROSE Bath. The reason is that JAP ROSE represents the greatest skill in soap-making; the farthest advance in the art of preparing toilet soap. JAP ROSE The wönderful "Sunday Morning Bath" SOAP makes one "peculiarly clean"; a cleanliness known and experienced by millions of people who prefer it above all others. Try it tonight; know for yourself. 10c at leading Grocers and Druggists. Use but little It's all lather Send your name on a postal for a liberal sample Free James S. Kirk 5L Company, Dcrt.332 , Chicago, U. S. A.
ÜÄE3T
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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
Name i City or Town t Street Number ! Left St. Joseph county about years ago. , Last address in St. Joseph, county was 1 . i . . . .. . . i
I " i I
Sent in by Of
j
Every-Head-of-the-House
in South Bend doubtless knows that Electric Lights have been for years steadily dropping in price. Every Head-of-the-House doubtless knows that Electric Lights are the best lights. We wonder sometimes, though, if every Head-of-the-House knows that Electric Lights are the cheapest lights, everything considered. Investigate.
I. & M.
We Ksnmlnr nyea niF.I IenM"! dupll-
rntrti sar.10 day
DR. J. BURKE & CO. Speialut8 in Fitting EVeglassrji. 230 S. Mich. ist. Homo Phone 2091
OUR MAKE TO IL CT CREAM for chJtpxd ha.n-4, face avd lipo. Ji per Bottle. OTTO CL rvvsnAX IVVgiiit. ArxHtorlum Tbater
Suits for Men and Women $15, $18 and $20. Easy Payments. GATELY'S 321 South Michigan St.
Art Materla'.s. Picture Framing THE 1. W. LOWER DECORATING COMPA-VY South ItanJ, Indiana Wall Paper DrapHe Paint jppllet
