South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 38, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 7 February 1917 — Page 6

6

w:iM!. i.i;.i.r;. immrAHV 7. HM7. THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH ßND NEWS-TIMES

Morning Evening Sunday. JOHN IIKNIiY ZUVi:n, dltor. r,AHiiii:i. 11. M'MMi:iu. PuMisher.

with its peculiar system, aid ach with its own hoss who doesn't want any interference, fven from I'ncle

am.

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I l.Wli.li I III. I I 1.1 ' ---- ------ . 1

ut Til hi:m - No -.tr.-r n-pnpr ir. tn hti i . tato- hauierl irom ("ape i.narles. a

r i i i r. ... . . i hy tw nir--n'ciit ar,d !u nev srTl- also onij ! f-!rht-cr,:irr.i, p;i;-r in ktnt ouH'.ilf- InJtamprdls ruMIDH j t Mrv flay f th- y-ir m l twlre on nil day eeet Suul-y an-i ,

HillliT I.ntr-rcl at t'-e

titts mail.

THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY

Offl e: 210 'V. Coifs x At.

llom FhoAf 1131.

BI1 rnn 2

100.

THE COST OF TRANSPORTATION. (icorte Iallas Dixon, traJfic rnr m Kr of the Pennsylvania railroad, undertakes to prove that railroad freight

charges have little to do with the hih cot of pro- j

vision, and mikes out a j?ood case. Taking as a hasls of dicussioi the situation in li eastern cities, ho shows that New York citv uets po-

a distance of

three hundred and ten tulles, for a tritle over eleven

Souu Head istjff ice ecoad ' nits a r,wnej. ana rnuaaeipnia gets them ror Jess (than nin cents a bushel. A twenty-pound erat of

tomato- i transported from Central Mississippi to Philadelphia for 14.G cents. California oransres: are hauled all the way to the eastern seaboard. H.OOO miles, for $1.15 per one hundred pounds, less than one cent per orange. Florida grapefruit are set down at Philadelphia, one thousand miles away, for seventy-five cents per one hundred pounds. Colorado cantaloupes are hauled two-thirds of the way across the continent for about one cent apiece. Milk Is brought from distant farms to the biff cities at an average of half a cent a rjuart. It is much the same with all perishable foodstuffs, and the charges are lower for the nonperishable ones. As .Mr. Dixon remarks, "you would be charged moro by a teamster to deliver one of these packages a fewMocks from the station to your house than the railroads churKe for the entire haul from farm to city. often hundreds and sometimes thousands of miles". So far as the transportation element is concerned, it's the local delivery that costs money and makes city life so expensive. Cities must learn how to distribute food quickly and cheaply. There are few municipal problems so important as this, and few that have been U'iven so little thought.

Wireless Music is Silenced, Give War Use of the Waves

THE MEL TING POT COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

Cull it the f.ff.,. m Motion bor numbers anfl nk tnt rf";irtrr5t " r.f M - I: l!f ..rial. A'lrrrtWnr. flrrnlatn. r -;" r'..int!nf. IVr "wnr-t hIt" if TO'ir nnrr.e is In the- t"pn n !lr-t'.rv. I'll ubl !,r ml!d nfW InrMm Import imttnI n to M:irv bd eiTMflm. rv.or delivery 1 P' ""J flp...n wttI-.. ff-. f lirnd of dpirtmcnt with '1,r!l.j ' ir d--i'1n. Tl. N-'v-T1n: tin thlrtn trunk line. a '' w'dh r -;.on t Horn. I'bor.e ll.'l r.n 1 rell 2100. M"BritirTION HATT: dornlntr nnd Frentnjr 'V,?" f!n?!c r pr. -J.-, Si;n lay. .; Mornine or F.rrjn FrtltK.n. !nl!r. lürpidir. Smd.iy. by ir.all. U'fl p'r ,n JV,I?n''e" I.-;iv r-l !.y r.ir-l"T In Soith Hn I and Mi-hawaki. Trnr in adviuiv. or 12 - the eek.

Ak the advertMnir dr psrtrrnt. h..iUm: CONK. IOIIKNZKN

nvr.HTisir,; imtkv

VoohMAN. I'. riftli Av. w Vrk CUT, and A1. I"(JKf I'M- nr.. TI Nrwu-Tirr." . ndvom to kMn lta a!tertllny 'i.!'m.n Trt-f from f rsi u.iulf nt mlreprrfiontatlon. Any prsnn fi' fr.iu id thror.sjh p itr1 npe of nny Hdvcrtl?pnier.t In this p i ;'r will '-"nf.-r a faror on the maoajtement by report'.i-S tbj t t t om pitl J.

FEHKUARY 7, 19 17.

TECHNICAL SCHOOLS FOR WOMEN. From Paris comes word that a technical school for women is to be opened soon. Its purpose is to prepare women for work as trade engineers, employers in technical ol!';i es and secretaries to engineers. In spite of ability and opportunities in the past, women have found it hard to pet into technical work because all means of raining were I. aired io them. The plan of the Paris school includes classes in drawinv as applied to trade and in the application of natural science to industry. There will be visits to factories and studies in schools of design. It is jut a beinniiu. but it is expected to produce results within a car. Women have broken into the technical world in this country and abroad, but it has- been a hard struggle usually. The indiidual woman has had to make her U-ht alone. Te- hni al schools have been even slower to op n their floors to her than othr Institutions. This step in France is a good move in the right direction, if women are to do technical work they ought to be able to get adequate training for it. . If there is no room (or them in the technical schools for men, let th"iii have technical schools of their own.

THE PRUSSIAN CONSCIENCE. Whether in resentment of Pres't Wilson's ultimatum and his suggestion to neutrals that they follow his course in the breaking of diplomatic relations with German, or that the kaiser has concluded that war with us must be rendered ineitable, his ruthless submarine wat fat - M cms more and more certain of execution. The Housantonic and Favestone cases seem merely by way of introduction, differing in the degree of 1 1 1 1 i i les.si i ess considerably, and perhaps on account of the t!ags carried, but presaging a certain determination t. maintain the l.bnkade undertaken, regardless of ha a i ds. The mo.-t puhng thing about the new German camto an American, is the strange vein of righteously s in which the Prussian go eminent clothes its rrthlet-'sre-s. The German note announcing the indistiiiuinute sinking1 of en-uny and neutral shipping at -a explained that "the imperial government, before I - own conscience and before history, would be unable : assume the responsibility if it left untried any one .Man- to hasten the end of the war". I 'loin tins utterance, as from others een more explicit, we i;. i titer that the German warrior-statesmen

PRONUNCIATION. An acrid controversy has arisen as to whether any person who happens to be of a sulticiently skeptical mind to demand that every proposition be demonstrated for his individual benerit is from "Missou-ra" or "Missou-ry". The Boston Transcript remarks that 'those who love it', being the common people of the state, call it "Missou-ry", while "Missou-ra" is a pronunciation affected by natives of highbrow tendencies. The .St. Iouis Republic administers a stern rebuke to the Uoston paper, remarking that "any man living in this state and calling it 'Missoura' is a linguistic sloven from somewhere down east". The St. Louis paper seems to have the better of the argument. Hut another cause of perplexity is left undecided. Granting that the state's name, when properly pronounced, ends in a "y" sound, what about the middle of the word? Is it "Mlss-oury" or "Mizz-oury" ? The rest of the country would like to know. It seems to depend on what dictionary you consult. The state's name may be hissed or hizzed, so far as book authority goes. Inquiring folk are in the same dilemma as regards other fctates. Is it "Arkansas" or "Arkansaw". Is it "Illlnoiso" or "Illi-noy" ? When it comes to cities, there is still more confusion. Shall we say ".Saint Lou-is" or "S'nt Loo-ey"? "Tucson or "Tu-sone" ? "Wal-tham" or " Walth-ham" ? Ami how in the world are we going to pronounce "Los Angeles"? There ought to be an American Geographical academy to settle these questions. And yet. if there was, who but highbrows would pay any attention to it?

Hy Garrett I. Sem Us. ne of the interesting developments of wireless telegraphy whb h

the great war has interrupted is the I production of music by electric j waves. Before the war several mechanisms for this purpose were j in f :leriment.a 1 use :uc were urorn- '

i.-ing excellent results, but Mars laid hismailed hand upon these new aeolian harps of Apollo ami silenced them while he was trying his own new machines. The musical spark in wireless telegraphy is in itself no novelty. In fact, its employment for the transmission of ordinary' wireless communications was one of the earliest steps In advance made after the preliminary triumphs of Mr. .Marconi. It depends, essentially, upon the fact that by means of a rotating vheel, furnished with projecting studs which serve as spark-ups, any desired number of sparks per secend may be produced, instead of the 15 or -0 produced by the ordinary oscillator. The latter only make a series of clicks in the telephone receiver, while sparks succeeding ono another at the rate of several bundled to a thousand or more per second give musical sounds, or notes.

They say that thes.? Fnited states are fiooied deep with gold: That many men have put away a million hard and cold; That wealth and ostentation are extremely commonplace; That diamonds almost constitute occasion for disgrace; That soon the day is coming when our honor and applause Will be for him who sUns ro checks with his patrician paws. The new arriving millionaire is deeply pained and hurt To lind that h:s possessions are as cheap a grass or dirt; He learns, that thrifty pugilists and dainty movie stars Can circulate in private yachts and special Pullman cars; That any farmer lad to whom a line of luck occurs Can decorate his loving wife in Russian sable furs. Hut does the saddened millionaire thereat repine and kick. And throw his million dollars down with phrases curt and quick? Nay. nay, my kind and gentle child. He bucks into the game. He seeks the- ;iebl from which that small initial million came. He sheds his perspiration, his morality an1 gore. Endeavoring tu gather in a hundred millions more. Arthur Brooks Baker.

k T- nini.tT I i7n IT7-I ii.i i i art n-ir in n t 1 -

Till' I'X PLANATI OX. i going to bed without supper which "Where did Van Scad. Is get al! his i vide is Satan on?" Buck.

money? He was poor as a church mouse when he came to this town

UNNECESSARY OPERATIONS. South Dakota is getting after surgeons who hae an undue fondness for "operating". A bill introduced in the state legislature provides that all vermiform appendixes removed must be sent to the state laboratory for examination. It is further provided that the patient need not pay the bill in case his appendix is found not to have been diseased. A good many appendixless citizens win sympathize with the honest intentions of the South Dakota law-

ons.d i it their bounden duty to sink every ship and i makers. Anybody who has his appendix removed, at

i eery I'.nni i.nili.il.int w ho eiitures at sea without '. h :i i ! minion, just as they held it their bounden duty !.. In:i! t untold rnift .nl li traction on Belgium, if '.' mi doing thA Uno vtmmthen Germany in a military w ;i v .

It an o d vl i o 1 1 c t t ; o i v i i U World remaiks;

of uu.iahtN. As the New

'Why not bt'tcher th-" prisoiiets. too.' That would lelievc the tlvi nun government of the necessity of feed-ii.-: al out ." t ''."(.Mi men, and it has quite as much riuht to Kill thetn ;i to murder neutrals on the high seas," It th- Prussians ate consistent in their imperial ssteoi t morals, they'll do that et. it would be just a permissible as the Faestone shelling.

THE SERVANT IN THE HOUSE. The federal department of labor is going to inestis.tte the servant problem. There is to be a general inquiry throughout the country, with every employer of domestic help testifjip.- as an expert witness. Mr. 'aminetti. the immigration commissioner. is rePponsiMe. lie wants the co-operation of women's ilubs and hou-e-w ivt s, leagues and anybody else to speak on the subject. And there ought to be no dit'iculty in u-ettir, information. Was there ever a woman who didn't enjoy talking about the servant problem in her house.

"Are ou able to keep a servant'.' What wages do j

other inducements do you otter for faithful service? How long has our present cook or maid been with you? What are the chief dirhVuities you have?"

..ii u i . ei. oi:s .is io- se iiif iu ce oieu .11 me nauon .-hou.-en l es. Fit th sake of getting the whole thing straight, let's lope the department will not overlook the serai ts' testimony. They surely know as much about the pro! b-: i a their mistress. Indeed, what they

s.i may r.ae hae more weight. j Far le it from any male to venture an opinion on i th'.s hazardous question. But it docs look as if CommissnniT Camir.etti is on the right track, when, in j adame of his inquiry , he remarks: "Our belief is

that one w ay of o'. ing the question may lie in stan

the earnest solicitation of a car' ing specialist, is likely to have a natural curiosity as to whether it was really necessary. It would at least help to console the patient if ho learned that the organ he'd lost wasn't worth keeping. And th same reasoning may hold true of numerous other forms of operation that have come

! into vogue in recent years.

Still, this principle may cause trouble if pushed too far. The doctor-; who'd rather operate than eat. either for the fee or from plain love of the game, are. after all in the minority. And too close legal scrutiny might drive the profession to undue hesitation. No branch of medicine has made more wonderful progress than surgery. The great majority of operations are unquestionably wise and desirable. It's rather perilous for legislatures to interfere along this line. The proper remedy lies with the medical profession itself. It knows what the evils are, and who practices them, and the honest and able majority could easily eliminate the few ignorant and crooked members if they went about it seriously.

GOING 'WAY BACK. In devising plans to "further emancipate" women. California legislators have harked back to some Babylonian laws under which children, even females, could not be deprived of their shares in estates upon the death of either parent. Archeologists show us that there was a whole lot of sense in civilization even 1500 years before Moses time. They may yet dig out of ancient ruins evidence that men did not labor and worry all their lives to

i leave their children, rich, lazy and useless.

The primary intention, however, was not to produce music, but to obtain a better means of syntonizing, or putting in vibratory accord, the transmitting and receiving stations. When communications were interrupted by trains of wavs issuing from several different stations it was foutul that the musical sparks enabled the operator to lind a note which would separate his series from the others, thus freeing his operations from interference. But it was also found that the musical sparks increased greatly the distance at which messages could be heard. The immense advantage obtained by this method, entirely aside from any attempt to arrange the sounds on a musical scale, is indicated by the experience of the French government in its African possessions. M. Monier has given a graphic account of these experiences. In the superheated deserts of Africa thunder storms are frequent, causing electrical undulations to traverse the. air in all directions. In addition to this there are in those regions electrical disturbances of unknown, if not of mysterious, origin, so that wandering, or vagabond, waves undulate all around, producing "parasite sounds" in the telephone receivers, and these extraneous noises often completely mask the communications from transmitting stations. On account of these interruptions it seemed', at one time, impossible to make effective use of wireless telegraphy in tropic Africa. Hut the

invention of the musical pranks at j

once solved the difficulty, since they were able to pass unbroken through all the fracas of the discordant at

mospheric noises and to make themselves distinctly heard in the telephone. The effect, says Mr. Monier, was very much like that of the little; flute lifting its clear voice above the roar of an orchestra. Then, as a matter of curiosity and amusement, the range of the musical sparks was extended through one or two octaves, enabling the operators at the Eiffel tower in Paris to make a music air, like that of the "Marseilaise." or the song. "I Have Some Good Tobacco," heard in Timbuctoo, in the heart of Africa.

10 years ago." o NO TKILING. A rather patronizing individual from town was observing with considerable interest the operations of a farmer with whom he had put up for a while. As he watched the old man sow the seed in his field the man from the city called out facetiously: "Well done, old chap. You sow; I leap the fruits." Whereupon the farmer grinned and replied: "Maybe you will. I am sowing hemp." Ladies Home Journal. o which? Visiting Curate: "Willie, everything you do is either for elod or for .Satan. Think of that, my boy, every time you choose." Willie: "When dad says I can take my choice between a spanking and

CAN'T AVOID TIIi:M. "Don't you find it hard these times to meet expenses?" "Hard? Man alive. I meet expenses at every turn." ALMOST FATAL. "She was in an automobile accident nothing serious. Only had the enamel scraped off." "Her face or the machine?" Judge. o ix tiii: klysiax iii:lds. WIfey iDoked out of the window. "It is time for my spouse to be cming home." she murmured. "Ah. there he comes and somebody has removed the pie." Judge. m;rvi:i:x ruinxDs. Kdith (conceited) I suppose a lot of men will be made miserable when I marry. Marie Why, how many men arc you going to marry?

Five-Minute Talks by National Leaders

Muu lu Politics;"

? , v .v

Out of the earlier experiments grew such instruments us the Iesilets "Wireless Organ." a Canadian invention, which had begun to loused on the river and ocean steamers before the war broke out. but

1 1 :

which, it is said, has now been of- business men to enter the field of

THE GERMAN ISSUE. Volumes might be written about our latest and most perilous controversy with Germany. Put it isn't neces-

! sary. Here's the issue neatly summed up in four lines I of v erse, printed in the New Ytrk World. The poem i is entitled "Columbia's Plea," and runs as follows:

"Kaiser, may I go out to sea?" "Yes. my darling daughter. Paint your f'.ag on the stern of your ship. But don't go near the water."

d.irdtzatien of household work That would make it ! Charles Evans Hughes does himself credit, as a!

more attractive T i.s a h;;v. ili 'tin-: t ' o . t b 1 t LT " " ! t .- . .1 p the go- 1 : '. W t s ,.f V, r ..... ' 1 :t it . I v. ork. mLu. the;

oun.' vv;j.n who now regaro It ' patriot ami semie. aau, aim exj'iesses me uiiiium irui-v. j.. i--- 'iui.. im-n - -

ticially silenced because of military and naval authorities need as full command of the air as they can get. One might imagine that valuable secrets could be conveyed by the notes of an apparently innocent popular song tlung out in electric vibrations over the sea. As far as this invention has been pushed at present it seems to be still in the mere wonder stage. Hearers are Impressed not by the beauty eif the music that steals so mystically into their ears but by the fact that music of any kind can be conveyed without hands or wires, or any apparent material connection or agency, over vast distances, dropping down, as it were, out of the sky. It is quite a different sensation from that of hearing music conveyed by telephone wires. But is is rot impossible that an advance may ultimately be made in this art of wireless music as great as those which the phonograph and the motion picture have achieved since their first Imperfect beginnings. The descriptions which I have seen of the "wireless or?:in" indicate that the player, using an ordinary wireless sending apparatus, employs a large number of sending keys instead of only one. each key producing a musical note of its own. Bows of rotating spark gaps arranged on circles of differing diameters give notes varying in pitch with the number (f sparks produced per second. The keys played upon may be likened to those of a piano. The receiving instrument is. of course, similarly provided with spark gaps arranged in series to respond to certain notes only. In the days of our Civil war there was a song called "When This Cruel

War is Over. which pictured the

;v. Frederick P. Gardner of Missouri contenting themselves with critiuu ;tsked lr the International News ci whenever the stalwart citService t write a short article on some topic he considered of especial nation- izenship makes itself felt politically, wide iniport.-tnee at the i.reetit moment, j we will have more economically He responded .with the fallowing, whi. !l . sonnd iaws nnri ,nrp ptfieient m.v-

he entitles ".Necessity for the Kusiness V

tri iiuicai. That there should be a state of mutual understanding and confidence between business and government is of superlative importance to both. The common sense of mankind dtvmands that there should be no unreasonable handicaps imposed by governmental regulations on the one hand, and no unfair advantage assumed by business enterprises, which, by the sheer

magnitude of their influence, are able to dominate their several fields of industry. Present conditions present an extraordinary epportunity for this country to take an advanced position in international commerce and finance. This can only be accomplished by the government, the manufacturer, the farmer, the banker, the merchant and all other business men pulling together. This is the way to realize national solidarity. To attain this, business men must participate in the tield of politics and deal with social forces. They must learr. to subordinate the individual to the good of society, and thus to the greater good of the individual. They must attain that attitude of mind which wiM lead them to vield to their best impulses and enable them to appreciate that the only way to bring about a practical application of business methods to

the management of the machinery j of government is for business men 1 to take an interest in the affairs of! the government. ;

The trouble with business men has been that they have not recognized any duty or responsibility in the field of politics. There should be a national awakening to the ne

cessity for sound business judg- j ment applied by practical business; men in the operation of the government. Governmental regulation is I

being extended into almost every

: ; x. ', y' :'y;y : i " ,:M ;y: t-. I::.;-- .-v-

.f.ji.Z..M...

Ily Iclorirk D. Gnrxlncr doirrnor of Ml-fourl. Tliere is a growing necessity for

politics. This necessity exists both in business and in politics, and arises from the fact that there is a lack of mutuality between the two. To a large decree the machinery ot the government is necessarily manned through the agency of politics. Since the functions of government are being extended in the reg

ulation and supervision of business enterprises, the relation between business and government is so close that cooperation and confidence are

essential to both.

Moder business methods are! field of business enterprise. If ib

often criticized by the government on one hand, .and the government is the more often criticized by business men on the other hand, in spite tf an urgent necessity :'or business men to have the proper sympathy .and cooperation with government and the government the support of the business men. The best way for business men to exert influence in public affairs is for them to participate in politics and render sincere and active service in the public interest, but business men have failed to make their knowledge and experience felt in this direction. This is not because they are unpatriotic but because they are indifferent. They have not demanded that participation in the coancils of the government that they are entitled to have, except when they have appealed to the government for aid for complained of governmental restrictions. I. sofar as government relate-? to business, its purpose should be to encourage and stimulate industry and not to retard it with unwholesome restrictions. In other words, there should be wholesome cooperation b'.-tween government and business s. Such cooperation will depend u:"n the force with which business

'iM'i :' euip'oyn.ent. We believe. i: s ,ut:t follow if 1 1 :;. l v rs would :vl! -M poli. v i.f .. ca Mil u. 1 1 ! y raising " .!?: ho g, t long and reliable

e u : e

t. To s t a n!a ! 1 1 hoäch'id io..iiu:; of households, cuvh

unanimous sentiment of Americans, whatever their politics or ra ial origin, w hen he urges his fcllow-citi-zer.s to ''stand lovallv 1 ehind the president without a partisan thought in upholding the rights and honor of th" nation." We An ucans may debate and quarrel amor.--; ourstlves in ooimal times, hut when a crisis comes thtqe are no parties.

agencies are properly administered, they should stimulate and stabilize business; but in order that thoy may be properly administered they must be under the supervision of competent, experienced business men. Th? machinery of government is becoming more complicated with the extension of these governmental agencies and requires greater skill and eJliciency for its proper management. Furthermore, there is neces-ity to protect industry from the burden of taxation, and so distribute this balden upon business men that it will rot reduce- its effective competition with foreign commerce. These conditions call for the ablest men of our time to devote their energy and bestow their judgment and experience in working out the probb'in.s of the government, upon whose solution depend the welfare of the people. There U an imperative reason that the leaders in politics should come frorr. the avenues of business. It is up to the business men to meet this situation with a spirit of courage, confdence. and. if need be. self-sacrifice.

Use Electric Power

io

.0

a

a

n This Wnrtf

It's much cheaper than Man-power. A small y motor occupies but little space and is always ready f; for service twenty-tour hours a day if necessary, k

M

i

Bell 462.

Home 5462 J V

A Frieni

tiie ra

of

All

mily

I

GOOD light is absolutely necessary for young eyes and for old eyes. Grandmother needs good light so that she can be happy with her sewing in the evening. Father and Mother need it to read by, and the children must have good light to study by. So when our Good Service Man comes along to inspect your lighting fixtures and put everything in good order, just consider him "a friend of the family." Incandescent Gas Light is the best light you can use for close work, but sometimes the lixtures or mantles in different rooms need a little adjustment and the Good Service Man will lix them without any cost to you except for necessary new parts at retail prices.

I)

i

Gas

Company

The price

of gas

goes down May 1st

n

i

0

J

USA

Get the home care of

shoes habit It pays

Well dressed people always have well shined shoes. ShikolA, with the key for opening the box, its quick shining qualities and the handy

ShikoiA Home Set for polishing, makes the home care of shoes a pleasure. DLACK TAN WHITE SHINE WITH SrnxA AMD SAVE

At all dealers Accept no substitute

V' TTrtMT rs 1

Brt Clothing aJid Btioe tor Msn. Worr,a .n3 Children at Lowt Price. CHAPLY HOME DUTT. STOltEA. 41f. and A17 B. Chapla B.

occur when jieople could return to ! j.ese make themselves and their ex-

the pleasnres and occupations of teaoeful life: 1'it how much more splenlUl is likt-ly t le tle outburst of the marvellous inventions for human enjoyment that have leen arrested almost at their start by the present far greater and more cruel

war;

I erienre. felt in shaping our politl

cal c''irse. Business men should lve greater heed to seein-r that the men to whom they dele-ate the :,reat responsibilities of government are the nwht type of men. They should te

I, ready to lender serv ice iru-tea! oi

DIAMONDS Reset and Mounted while you wait. CLÄÜEKS jEVLRy 5T0RE

The C. W. Copp Music Shop rpon Kvery Lnilru;. 22H Kmtti f.C'-n St.

MOFFTTS SHOP Cor. Mlchln ancl JefTetxnri. Women's and MLs OUTI3; CAlIKVTS. Croats, Bult, J Oonrts illlllnerj, Wabrta

Streibel & Steinel, Preps. PUBLIC DRUG STORE 124 N. Michigan St.