South Bend News-Times, Volume 33, Number 281, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 7 October 1916 — Page 6

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THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-T1ME3

SOUTH ftEKD JsJEWS Morning Evening Sunday. JOHN' Hi:NKY ZUVKH. Editor. GAnp.IIII, IL SUMMERS. Publisher.

OM.V AO(ITMI PR .. MOKMNfi r,i"v? iwitu in noktiiikn j mhana am only ; NOITH iii:m-v, . t-r r,.w.;Pr In the Mte PJ? ery oy of iL w,r ari.l twke or, all d 1 expt SnndajjnJ IloluJijy hun.i at tUe toutti üenü ptoflir an neoooa

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Pall .-it tl.e f fTi.. .r i.'N ph'TP above numlrs and ask for department ant--.:- Kdiii.nal. Advertising. ( 3 rru ! ft U on. or Av coSntir.g. P.r "vnnt v.' if your name H In t be t Hpbni Hrw-torj. hill win be miled ufter Insertion, import Inattfntioa to l,uir.. bad etfutln. poor d-livery of pa r n. bad tiephore -n i f . t- head "f department with whlrt you re J.-aiin? T),- .evs-Turi ba. thirteeen trnn' lioe, all or biet rts i-jU'I t Home l'hone llöl and Hell '-1W-

rrn-rniiTlo icATFS: Morning and F.vfnlDg WltMt F'nzie "opy. -J.-; Sunday. .V ; Morninc or Kventng 1rllUoo, daily, in. haling Sunday, by mail. r-U l-r yrsir lu advance. iM-Uftrvd by ceirnr in S.ath Ind and Mishawaka. uu per tax lu advuo'-f. ov by täe k.

ArVKIlTl!I'fl ILATKs: AJt rbe advertising department. Prt-!gn AdTe'tisinr IlfpnwntatlvM : CONK. IAKKN7.kn & WOODMAN. ISil Fifth At. New York City and Adr. Hldg.. hu-i Tfce N ws-Tlnte endeavors to keep Its adTertlstnjr roiamim fn from fraudulent mKrepresm titlon. Any rrma rtrfraud-l tbrujh p:itronape ..f any advf rtirnent In this paper will rr. nfT a Tavor on the man.iceaie.it by reporting Uil la'.t romrUt'lj.

FIRE PREVENTION DAY. Oct. 0 is Fire Prevention 1 ij. It will remind many Americana of our old-fashioned Fourth of July berauc iff ho different. There will be celebrations in nearby every city in the United states, under the auspices of the fire department, with the co-operation of the Safety First federation, and with the official function of the president and the governors of all the states. Citizens will he shown how to put fires out. And still more important, they will he told how to prevent tires.

I Mere are a few simple rules to that end. prepared by the Safety First federation: ! Don't leave new matches where children can pet at I them, and dont throw burned matches in anything but i .

a meiai receiver. See that your ra.s or lamp brackets are well away from nil wood work and open window?, and that it is impossible for shades or curtains to blow against a flame. Never have a stove near wood work which is unprotected by rnefal or asbestos. Do not use candles on Christmas trees or for night decoration, except under constant observation and with extreme care. See that oily rags are never left on the premises. Never clean or permit others' to clean garments with volatile fluids at night or in the daytime if there is an open flame in the room. Examine at frequent intervals all gas connections, and never use r.ih stoves with rubber connections. When observance of these rules become general, the nation will burn up considerably less than JCOO.000,000 worth of property a year some authorities say it'a $."00, 000. GOO and will save many millions in the cost of fire departments.

OCTOBER 7, 1916.

NICE FOR THE FOREIGNERS. Federal officials who are inquiring whether there is an illegal agreement among bakers to raise prices call attention to the fact that bread made from American Hour is selling cheaper in London, Trieste, Lyons. Havre and other Kuropean cities than in the United States, which certainly refutes the claim that the increase in prices here is justified by war exports. At any rate, it proves unquestionably that there is something rotten in Denmark and that a real federal investigation is due. An embargo on wheat exports is apparently not warranted by such facts as have thus far been deduced. More likely the trouble lies here at home and a little digging would unearth a healthy young trust. The increase in bread prices pinches most those who can least afford to be pinched. Bread from American Hour selling for less in London than in Chicago is a condition which will surely not be tolerated long.

THAT FOOL'S PARADISE. After all, we may well take the charitable view and ;iliow Mr. Hughes and his little echoes to rave on in their "fool's paradise." We must remember that the i-iudden transportation from republican "soup houses' and republican -t read lints" due to the money system the republw-ans xwe us', to democratic prosperity with more Men ctiilloed at better pay than ever before in the l ittery of the nation, is lialde to turn the head of any "1C0 percent republican candidate." We must bear in mind that when four gamblers in the Wall street gambling pit can no longer be secretly place'1 in physical pcssion of the United .Suites treasury while they declare a money panic and use this treasury with which t ruin the business of the country and ma Ae millions for thrmsehes: when this condition haö suddenly changed and the people control their own treasury and m ike p.nucs impossible, shall we marvel tbat Mr. Hughes should iew with alarm the discomfort cf the men who are pouring millions into his campaign funds and de ide that the ptoplc have all gone mad in a b sire to goern themsehes? Sen. latj of M:ourt, who was chairman of the tciumitue in i g.t t ing ibe notorious and infamous Mulbail bl.b, which was employed to debauch national legislators and ceure the enactment of laws for the suppression of the hum'red millions of our people, described trie situation most graphically in a recent speech in w liit h Ix. .-a;l : ' 11. 7. er ha; s we do dwell in 'a fool's par-ad.-v la;t in the laboring man who. jobless and h;s family in want. rop-d in the desert of repul.'.i-an hard times during the 'Roosevelt panic', and the "Tafi stringency' is now juite lonteut to i-nter that 'fool's paradise". 'The man w hos. w ages have been increased cwry jcar unIer the Wilson administration, who is better able to educate his children, to luv shots for feet that were once bare, and to substitute good ebdhes for the rags of poerty js at least enjoying a bit of terrestial paradise even though Candidate Hughes may tall it the paradi.-e f 'a fool.' 'Th' farmer who is receiving a better price for bis erop than ever before paid in all the history of the world may be farming in 'a fool's paradise' but he is ettinr the monoy and lifting" the taorU.u'e on his hometcal. "Tlo. president t.f .1 bankrupt railroad who f.rais arn:ng3 ib creased twenty-seven percent ar.d transportation business running beyond his capacity may be operating his road in 'a fool's paradise', but he is gcttihg his company out of debt. The small merchant who for years has been ftrugc'.ing beneath a burden of debt to wholetale hou.-cs may he doing business in 'a fool's paradise". I ut he is moving from the debtor to to the creditor class. 'The banker who has lain awake o'rights Kst pumc should com ills the world and bring liini rum, cow t tl .in.ic that the democratie party has made t so he can at the till of a government -o n? ro;;t d bank transform his food lommerc-.ai paper into ready cash and meet all m rgencies, may sleep and dream the dre.ims of paradise and wake content, even though Candidate Hughts tells him that h:s dr am was the dream of a fool. If this be 'a fool's paradise." may we dwell in r. fc rev t r." The answer is ;u;te complete. Net a panic in histcry but has b en a Wall st. panic, and this includes the depression 'f 1 '. 1 !. wboh beari under Taft and never abated until the deirveratir amendments to the Aldrich-Vr land law clipped its w iius, and subside J Dnly when the f d ra! reserve bank law went into effect and tore th-e winfs off ompletelv. Now they are s r.e. It : ; amfui. of . ..arse, t,, Wall st., and its j,iwtiUuJ iuiw bat "what ,i, vve. core"

GALLINGER S BUNK. Some of the republican campaigners, to whom are delegated the task of rattling the bones of the free tariff skeleton, are finding it hard to do so without handling facts rather roughly. For instance, there's U. S. .Sen. Gallinger, of New Hampshire, who says: "Free trade in hides has not only discouraged the production of cattle but has closed our tanneries, so that we have been dependent upon foreign countries for the finished product." The fact is, our exports of raw hides, over two years ago, have actually increased thirty-seven per cent, while imports of raw hides have increased less than twentyfive per cent. Now as to the "finished product," if you please, imports are less than under .a protective tariff, and exports have increased one hundred and forty per cent at least. In re the "discouragement of the production of cattle" we wish to remark that from 1910 to 1914 the four years preceding the free tariff the production of cattle decreased each successive year. Mr. Gallinger might turn to his Chicago beef trust friends for the explanation of that. Upon the whole, the New HampsNr senator's statement is such a distortion of facts as to be ridiculous, as most of the protectionist charges are. Only, the protectionists depnd upon the public not being sufficiently informed to sec the ridiculousness of it. They simply cannot conceive of the extent of modern strides in human intelligence. They seem to think humanity is still groveling in the age of cave-dwellers same as they were before democracy and the "new freedom" demonstrated to them that it is all a matter of choice.

You can remain a pampered, protected infant, if you

want to. hut you really feel better, and manlier, and stronger, after you have once learned that you are capable of looking out for yourself.

Wilson Is for the Masses of People Is "Life's" View

Miss Ida Tarbell says Mr. Wilson is our greatest progressive and has proved his fitness to lead the cause of progressive civilization. Life says. "Miss Tarbell is right". Incidentally, Life says some nice t bines about Mr. Wilson right off its own bat. Its editorial In part follows: "Miss Ida Tarbell has come out for Wilson, and Gifford Pinchot has com; out against him. "A gain for Wilson both ways. "The truth is that Mr. Wilson comes more and more under suspicion of being the greatest American progressive since Thomas Jefferson. Jefferson was an exceedingly clever man, especially in the use of language, and he was out to beat the rich. Mr. Wilson gives more v nd more the impression of being o.:t on the same errand. Whenever there comes a choice cf courses, as lately in the threatened railroad strike, he shows himself the same man who was president of Princeton, and at outs with most of the nobility and gentry on his board of trustees. He is an astute, shifty, formidable person, driven all the time by an innate and sleepless indisposition to knuckle down to the power of money or any one that stands on it.

"The rich, as representatives of the vested interests, are always and instinctively obstacles to political progress. They are beneficiaries of the existing order and don't want it all mussed up. Also they have a say about the conduct of life and the management of affairs, and they don't want to lose it. The only power that can stand up against theirs and keep their grip on the human windpipe reasonably loose is the power of the people. Accordingly, ambitious spirits are always reaching out to rrrasp and usa the power of the people. "That is the way of the world; so human life goes on. Jefferson fought the federalists, including most of the rich and respectable people in the country; Jackson fought the United States bank; Lincoln fought the slave-holding aristocracy and all its allies; Koosevelt fought here and there the trust, the railroads, the bankers, eff and on, but Roosevelt is an aristocrat and has compassionate bowels for his own kind.

HYGIENE FOR SIAM. Mahlldo, Prince of iSonkla, brother of the King of Siam. wanted to be something more than merely the king's brother. Peing a sensible young man of modern views, he thought it extremely silly that he should live in idle honor. "If I am to be honored." he says, " wish it to be because I have earned my honors." Casting about, then, for some means of attaining true honor, the royal prince observed that what his country needed most was hygiene, and decided that he would introduce in Siam the beat western methods of sanitation and healthful living. Mahildo when he made this decision was already pretty well equipped for his work, having" spent ten years of study in Germany and England. Put he decided that there was more hygiene to be learned in the United States than anywhere else in the world. He is therefore in this country, taking universii' work in his chosen line and observing the public health service of our most progressive cities and states. The prince has the right idea. There is no more important work in Siam or anywhere else than the promotion of human health. Mahildo's choice shames those obi-fa-shioned Americans who belittle the efforts of our health authorities and begrudge money spent for sanitary improvements and the spread of hygienic know ledge.

When ecy. Daniels isMicd his order asainst the use of intoxicating liquors on the kov ernment's battleships. he did what every railroad, every factory, every hank and practically every business concern in the country has already done iemand sobriety among their employes.

The republican party whose majority in congress voted for the passage of the eight hour law, might have former Speaker Cannon answer the criticism of the presidential candidate of their action. He and sixtynine ether republican;- voted for the measure.

"Put Mr. Wilson is not an aristocrat. He is a Presbyterian professor. He has fought, according to his lights, against the exploitation of the bodies and energies of the common people to defend the interests and investments of the prosperous. At the start he would not fight in Mexico to defend American investors; he would not take sides with liockerfeller in the Colorado strike; he helped reduce the tariff: he alleviated the domination of the money trust; he would not get us into the war, even after the Lusitania. though he did risk doing so, and though all 'society' wanted to get in: and he would not side witn the railroads against the brotherhoods. "So you f ee his best. "You may not care for a mongoose for a household pet, but a mongoose is a bully little animal to kill snakes. "Mr. Wilson is a kind of presidential mongoose. The question about hitn is not whether he is pretty or has affectionate and endearing ways, but a question of snakes; how many; how hip.

THE MELTING POT

Conducted by Stuart H. Carroll

Tin: m;v word. How strange the ways of custom are'. How frequently we find The thing today abhorrent to the normal human mind Pecomes tomorrow's commonplace and ordinary act. Accepted as the usual and customary' fact. The crime at which our fathers would have raced with burnin: hearts We elevate with honors and enthrone among the arts. We hold the Roman circus was a carnival of shame; We deprecate the cruelties which marked their bloody game; Rut what had their inentions of a tit and proper class To rank with modern murder by machinery or gas. With all the gallant argosies of nations great and proud Which slaughter locks of children with explosives from a c.oud For when the centuries have gone and future peoples vi:w In cold and retrospective mood what modern peoples cb. The names of all the ancient crimes which ever shamed the sun Will mingle all their horrible significance in one. And on the deeds we do a future day will see conferred The unsurpassed opprobrium of that unequalled word;

A. P.. P.

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a rum's wnrx. AngHina and Harry we-re Imiiix, SIk ngrtmni that 1 10 would protean x. Hut poor Harry went broke, And its soon as lc spoke Angle cruelly tunic! up her neaux. Roston Transcript. Oh. dear Eastern friend, don't you think that Harry then went out and invested in Pethlehem steel; after which this may have hapjcned: And then Harry's finances neaux, Iiis loe lie attain did clisclcaux, This time she accepted Ami in his arms crept od. So now he is buyius her Ikvulx. Readers of as well as contributors to this colyum of mental cuisine will welcome even as we welcomed the appearance this morning of F. L. T. whose rhyming wit has aforetime served as a gracious seasoning for the Melting Tot. In the following dialect verse, the town referred to, Commorriel, is the hottest place in Mexico. Md'can papers all time lie, One day telle Villa die. Nc.x' day much all 'lhc agen. All same kill Carraiua men. Hop Ling klaec! No can tell! Wish Pancho Villa gx to Somorriel. 1 L. T.

"When Mr. Taft stepped Into the elevator", said Chairman Wilcox, "Col. RooFCvelt was there and they went down together." Which causes V. P. A. to remark in the N. Y. Tribune: "That must have revived memories of 1912." And if Charles E. Whews (to adopt the editorial orthocrraphy ) had also been present it would have been an able forecast of 1916.

Every Saturday we shall print if space permits the best poem of the week, taken from one of our exchanges. The verse today is from the New York Sun, -and "its title is

TO SAI.LIirs HOUSE. The road to Sallie's house went up. Rut the road to mine went down. And Sallie's liair was like the sun While mine was meicly brown; And she was- older far thajn I Quite six months and a day. Rut tlicse things made no difference When Sa-Ilit came 10 play. I think the mornings all were sprinc, And the sand pile was of sold, The birds all sang like anything, Nothing was sad or old. When Sallie's feet came down the road, And far oh, far away I ltcard the siRer of Iter shout, "Hurrah! Yc come to play." The years have gone so fast, my dear, I don't know bow to play. And sand is only sand, my dear. Yet, if o showed tlie way If throiurh the jcars your votcv rang out, I'd neer more be old We'd build again our palaces lYom sands of purest gold. Scissored IYom Somewhere. "No house in the country." said .a drummer, "has more men and women pushing its line of goods than mine "What line are you selling?" asked an on-looker. "Baby carriages." said the first over his shoulder, for he was in the act of escaping. Broad a.s it is Iinc. Since the Roumanians joined the Tight, And crossed Bulgaria's border, A shorter war we'll have, all right. But then, you tee, Its broader. M. n Ed. M. p. Did ya nctiee where Mrs. Felix Salice of Tes Moines, claims three million dollars worth of the late Patrick O'Prien's estate? And could one refer to that as quite a big sa-lice for one woman? rough sTrrr. "I like to kiss a sassy miss, Quoth be, in accent flip; We questioned why and lie did sigh, "You get so much more lip.'

FINE SERVICE To Canada, New York and the East Observation cars now on practically all Grand Trunk through trains. M.(;Aia-M:V YORK IMPRESS 1-avo C'lueacn r:0." V. M. daily, arrive Souh Ilcnd 5::0 1 M., Macara Falls :."o A. M. (giintr full day at Niagara if d-sirvd). Buffalo S:l! A. M., New York 3 P. M. Through sJeeicrN cxclios and dining car service to New York; soicr to Hamilton and Toronto: otw-rvatloti ear to Mac-ini lYilN and Buffalo. Till' INTERNATIONAL IJMlTi:i Canada's train of superior service. lcacs Chicago 6:10 1. f. Lilly. South Rend 8:5 I. M., arrives Toronto K:S. A. M.. Montreal r :!." P. M.. Portland 7:30 A. Ronton S:0. A. M. Ob servation, library, drawing-room, and compartment sleeping cars (valet service), sleeping cars and dining cars to Toronto and Montreal. MICHlfiAN-NirVV YORK EXPR!S leaving Chicago 10:5. A. M. daily. South Rend 1 :a I. M-, now carri?s in

addition to its regular equipment of sleeping cars, day cars and dining cars to New York, iMillman observation parlor ears to Ikittle Creek. I-ansing. Ietroit, Mt- Clemen and Port Huron.

Mi

Apply C. A. 31cNutt. Passr. AgL, (i. T. Ry. Station, South Rend, Ind. Ilionc Bell 93; Home Ö093.

Here 's One Necessity That's Gone Down

m

Price

Electricity has gone continuously down. The downward trend of Electric Prices through the years is as interesting as the situation is exceptional. Such a sharp contrast with the upward trend of other necessities. Let us show you.

L&M. Bell 462 Home 5462

1, 1 1 j With Other Editors Than Ours

Wall street stands ready to pay a his price or chance 1 big sum. to get control of thr tremendous wealth that

i has come to this country during the past three jears.

They know that it will be safe to the people and safe from Wall street if Pres t Wilson is re-elected.

Mr. Hughes during all the preliminaries of the strike situation said not one word as to how it should he settled. After the settlement he has been vociferous in his denunciation of the method of its settlei.unt.

The address of Mr. Hushes at Portland. Oregun was delivered in the Ice palace. Only the presence of Mr. Fairbanks was needed to make an Arctic winter feel like a Cuban summer.

j Japan's national chamber of commerce declares for I high tariffs, after the war. These heathen aren t o1 ing to l-t us "dump" our goods on them. It's perfectly I outrageous!

"This man is for the mass of the people. He really is a great democrat. He is a good hand to nip the tariff cobra, the banking adder, the railroad boa-constrictor when that is necessary. It is his nature to fight these creatures. It was not Roosevelt's nature to fight them. He could slash around among them cn occasion, but he enjoyed their society. His notion of government was always government by aristocracy. "Miss Tarbejl is right. Mr. Wilson is a real progressive with the iecessary hite. the indispensable wiles, and a remarkable gift of public discourse.

"Government is a sad affair, and f

being president is a sad duty which someone must undertake. Nobody continues very long to make a pood job of it, but, other things being equal, a man with four ears' experience at it ouKht to do rather better than a green hand." "Resides thin." says Joseph II. Choate, Candidate Hughes' old corporation law partner. "Justice Hughes has never hand any experience in foreign affairs, which nowmost crtically involve our national honor and safety, and. what is more, no man knows what his views are cn this or any other of the leading questions which now apitate the people of the United states."

TOO I-WMII.FA ItShe laid her hand lovingly on her husband's shoulder. He started. "My dear, would you mind not doint: that?" he asked. "Why do you object, dearie?" asked the wife. "Well." replied the Yusband. "eer since we have owned a ear, every time you do it I think it is a traffic cop." ladies' Home Journal.

sa.mi; NOW. Preacher You ought to make ur husband think about religion. If he should die you might worry about where he had gone. Mrs. Wayupp Oh. no. I'm used to that. I don't know where he is half the time now. Judge.

A WOHLD COINAC.F. (Chicago Journal.) An p:nglishman has Invented a mechanical calculator which shows the money values of one country in terms of the coinage of several others. It is fitting that such a device should come from Kngland. which has the most consistently atrocious money system in the world. Rut a much better device would be a standardized coinage for the whole or at least the main commercial world; and the practical difficulties in the way of such an improvement are singularly small., There are only three widespread systems of coinage; those whose units are the pound sterling, the franc, and the dollar. Add to these the German mark, and you have a croup covering tive-sixths of the commercial transactions of the planet. Now observe how closely these four systems approach each other. Four Rritbh shillings equal &T.u cents, American money. Four German marks gold equal 95.3 cents. Five francs equal 96.5 cents. And the good old dollar equals 100 cents. A shift, a compromise of less than live percent. would give a common unit for the systems of coinage which transact more than S'. percent of the world's business. The I-Uin monetary union led, of course, by France ha.s accomplished a. far more difficult feat of unification. It has siven a common value and standard to the coinage of France, Spain. Italy, Switzerland, Belgium, dreoe. Serbia. Bulgaria.. Roumania. Finland, and Venezuela, while the Argentine peso is merel. a five-franc piece with a different stamp. With such a start, and with the immense practical advantage waiting to be gained even the passions aroused b this war ought not to delay long the accomplishment cf a world monetary union.

deprived of nine-tenths of the joy of living. Every wife fondly imagines that her husband is loved by at least one other woman. To find proof in his pocket eonlirms the suspicion, and so gives her not surprise and pain but triumph. If careful and persistent searching fail to reveal proof against him, then she is happy, anyway, in his fidelity. - Whether she finds incriminating evidence or does not, she has the satisfaction in going through his pockets of exercising a generally disputed right, and this to a woman is in itself the next thing to perfect bliss. And then the keen joy of secretly extracting change, or even bills, from his pockets, and appearing before him with a new ribbon, or even a new dress, and causing him vainly to inquire where she got it. and possibly to suspect that some other man is in love v. ith her and is giving her presents this is just a very, very little short of heaven on earth. In spite of its manifest justice. however, such a decision is not apt to come from any other police mag

istrate except where the office

appointive and votes of men.

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farmers

Trust Company

South Bend, Indiana

ays 4 per cent interest

from October 1st, 1916 On all savings deposits made prior to October 10th, 1916 And left upon deposit for a period of six months

IS

not subject to the

MI'TCAR MlSTAKIX He I love the smell of powder. She Oh. so do I. Don't you think the iolet scented la the best?

A m:v woman's nniiiT. Ianil!e. 111.. Tress.) "A wife who does not go through the pockets of her husband dos not love him." This is part of a decision of a police magistrate in Washington. I . C. Whether this is a good law or not, it is inter sting philosophy. Perhaps a wife who is not to be permitted to pry into her husband's vecret letters and hLs 'pocketbuok in

PARATYPHOID. (Macon, Ga., News.) The appearance of a series of cases of paratyphoid fever among the American troops on the Texas border neei occasion no worry among friends and relatives of soldiers there. Paratyphoid, according to the New York Herald, is neither typhoid nor very dangerous. Typhoid fever itself, always heretofore a scourge in our wavs ha-s not vet

developed either in Mexico or on the!

border and the army officers are counting confidently on the successful immunization of the troops to the disease. Paratyphoid is an intestinal discv.se. Formerly it was included in the typhoid group and thus got its name. Scientists, hov-e-ver. have determined that it is i müder affection of brief duration and rarely epidemic, occurring usually in small groups of ccses. Most American cities have cases from time to time ;md it is sometimes confu.-ed with typhoid. Rut while it is not a disease to be ne

glected, with prop.-r care it i easilj

controllable and not verj ous.

Small Hats Large Hats

We have them from 6y2 to 7. All the Popular Styles, and Fit Your Head. All Prices. HOWARD SCHROP, Hatter. THE JOHN HALE HAT STORE

127 W. Washington Ave. and m r w Iff

J. IY1. o. Lobby.

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danger-

The C. W. Copp Music Shop ftpom livery livening. 22 South MJchiran St.

Vp Iii amine Pye milE.

VVA -s- O At-cl same daj . DR. J. BURKE & CO. Sp?cillrts In Flttir.jr EyeglisswA. 230 S. flch. St. Horn Phouo 20? 1

Art Materials. Plctnr Framing j TOE L W. LOWER DIXO RATING COMPANY South IinJ. Incliajxa Wall Paper DmrHM Paint SuppU

Producers Union Milk comes to you only after It's P&lleunzed and Clarified