South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 65, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 6 March 1917 — Page 6
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THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
30UTH bend Ntws-TiMES Morning Cvc-nin Sunday. John HKNitv zuvnn. rrJitor. gai:i:u:i, n. .ummkpj. publisher.
AoriTri) PFFSi MOKNINO FTtNCn,'n 'N MIKTIIKKN IMIIINA AM ONLY PtFKIt EMj
OM.r r ITH
ILOYINC THK I.NTr.KNArinNAL.
'OL' Til iii:m Vo other newtnarr In
isht-T.Jumn piper 1 n tit outiUJ Inllanipoii. 1 u,U4',,u:; fTfrj day cf the jeir unl tire on U tlays ecpt Suui,;?i Ho.'S.iij- I.ntereJ tt the Soutä Ued poitolflce a sfcoau chi mail.
coiil! not have "obstructed" at all. He-sides it make." some difference what it Is that is bing obstructed. Gov. (Joodrich, In his attempted to-called "economy and efficiency" measure?, has in the face of his fall campaign, merely proved himself a most colossal humbug, and there.' is nothing impolitic in nailin such a humbug to the wall. Democracy has taucht tu tu re candidates for governor of Indiana that the peopl depending upon
them for the truth, will not allow them to blanket i their prevarications with other false pretenses, ami it J 1
has been to prevent this that the democrats in the
Our Hills Were Once Only Grains on Oceans Floor
the itate pfiecipj , awMnl.lv have made their bin- lieht
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THE NEWS-TIMES POINTING COMPANY
orice: 21) W. Colfax At. Horn Thon 1131.
H!l rtn 21C9.
CM At the offir or ph-on Mt nnmr-ri nl k fr rtepartmeat winfe,; -Kdlt '.rial. Alvertlrfnp. ""' ?fhl counting. For "want nlv" If tout name Is In the tei?pD
dlre-tory. h'll n-fll he miüH after inrti.n. Vi h.! to bm!rM. b! execution. t delivery of PVjV.k " ,
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1 to bm!rM. bu1 execution. ;". delivery of PPf. r' pt-ne erTl-. et'-.. l' h'1 of l"pi rtnint w , . 11 if 1M!inx. The N-llni r,i thirteen trnnk Unci. au
srnsCXIl'TION KATF.S: Mnrnln and Ft-enlnc PUtl' 5!nir!e (V,pT, 2c; St:n-l.-.y. ; Mornlrj or Eveline I'nr Cany. ln-::ilRff Sunday, by mull, MO rr yetr ra "'i IIlrrre! by cir-lT In South P.en-1 and Mlstaka. low Jrnr in adT.ine. or 12.- by tie week.
AHVERTISIX; HATKSs Ask the alvprt!injr nrpjrtmpn.. F'rr'zn A 'i vertiert Itf prn-nt itiv- : CONK. LOR F.N A Woodman. L-j Fifth At.. New York City, and Ad, f1')' Lhrig. Ti e Nw-Tlrne4 . ndpiTor to keep it a Tertmin ilurnni free from frau.inJonr riilirfpresntiition. Any l'tT cfra!i!-(! tLrot)t;h pitrr.uge of any ailvertlnenient in u-i" pun will confer a favor on tLe inanagorr.eut by reporiuc i I 1' t" ron.pletely.
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MARCH (, 1917. THE WISE PATRIOT.
Mr. Jschwai. d the lU-thlehem Steel Cc uimounceil that, in ca.; jf war, Iiis kic.H plant wuJld be at the fr.-Ik:' of tlie ieni!iiT.t. lluriah! Theie's patrioti.-m for u! There's the t: spirit of Am : i ani-m'. llun the stars and stripes ., to the top of I'.ethl'-li ni's tall-.-st smoke-stack: Three f il 'M S !' .N'llttilM Later: i : t hlehein .t-el t ". has just submitted bid J..r . a-iiu-s lor the navy for $ 4-0UV0U. Navy experts i ty that tli" - 1 nnu iit ci.ill make these cas'.ns for ? 1 ,0'!i')iMi, .-viiwah thus -rabbin;,' for only l.Ouo.OOO u iit 011 this jot). Ilur well, putt ioti.-ia's one thin,' and profit's ani.th r. Three c"lieers fr well. omo to think about it, tue pa't en.tk'id in runiiiiiq; up Hags might use the
kull and Cros.-i.nin-.s" on
H foresaid. It's a vjt- pi'tiiot who knows his own Hag.
THE CASE OF GRANT MANNING. Disclosures made in the columns of The News-Times in the editions of last night and this morning, forced upon us in defence of our fairness, sincerity, and in excuse f our previous lack of knowledge, would aggrieve us, indeed, should they serve to effect the defeat, which the challenge to u.s was no doubt aimel at; that of (Irant Manning as the republican nominee for the mayoralty. Mr. Manning, in this connection, is a victim of circumstances; the circumstance of being Mayor Keller's controller, and thereby attached to the Keller administration. He has had about as much to do with the law enforcement, or lack of it, of which the disclosure complains, as perhaps, the superintendent of the water works has had. (Irant Manning Is honest, sincere, reasonable, and with a mind set with high ideals. Passing from him down the line of republican possibilities, we see nothing in him anywhere, even though he were associate! with Kellerism at its worst, that would disqualify him for representing the republican party at its best. We hae said it before, and we repeat it here, that we are not of the type of candiate promoters for the opposition party, who wants that party to nominate Its worst, thus making it the more easy t" defeat him. We want both political parties to nominate their best men so no difference which one wins in November, the peojd? need iiOt lose.
Hy Barrett I ScrvK. Lectures having called me into New Kngland several times lately and the unwonted self-restraint of the wintry powers having left the bare rocks of that knobhv land in n
. ... 1 s'.ate of unseasonable exposure, I
nave had unusual opportunities to see. from the windows of trains, what a peerless common school of popular geoglogy those who are called away on sliojt journeys from this metropolis have before them, with its doors wide open and its instruction offered free to all takers
Bethlehem's smoke-stack
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THE PRESIDENT'S ADDRESS, t U il-on's- sei .md inaugural address is exactly
liat vs. is t be expected in these particular times of Htesv. an express. I demand for popular allegiance to the American government and unstinted public service on the part of the people's servants. On the heels tf hia statement, given out Sunday night, following the expiration by limitation of the 4 1 li congress, without performing its duty to "America iirst," it will be recorded as amot.g the great state documents of the age. J or een temperament, in the face of most aggravating dilluulties, not only encountered from without, but 11 well from within. Pre.s t Wilson stands, if second to anyone, then only to Lincoln. Indeed, the president is an artist when it comes to elcaiir.g with fumlamental principles and expanding them t cocr governmental activities, with all their complexities and ramifications. All of loyal America would that the iciouj doz-:n of United States senators who have been blocking the much needed progress of the day. had at broad a conception of their proper responsibilities, and were as capable of expanding them t embrace our international relations as well. The j. 1 e- blent's inaugural address was a splendid appeal to t-tatcsmanship ns superior to politics, and the welfare -f the nation, even as against the world, as against the political fortunes of individuals, or the clannishness. vr wh.ms of particular nationalities not distinctly of
the Anieiican order. Talk about America having been discredited in tho eves of the vrld! Never has there been such an example of it as. appears on the blackboard of the prest nt. with an alministration em'oavoiing to pursue a f-Ttign policy," Lighly essential to the prtseration of American ncht.s and honor, and the congress of the Tinted ,t;;ts. or the upper house of It, withholding authority. s plainly in support of internal allegiance to the foe. Nothing short of a very even-tempered indivi.lu.il. in the president's position, could have fat 1 the country yttterday without unloosing the vials tf a ery riahteotis wrath. Tho ad Ires : an invitation to America to stand together as a nation. rearlless of the multiplicity of jac-s. ami o far as concerns our foreign relations, without lii-iiui by parties. The president's second term ptoir.w.s to IV fully as stormy. If not more so, than was the first. He faces it. one might say, almost "with stucism. It is plain enough that r-.e realizes that itmong our greatest need.-, with respect to preparedness t deal with an aggressive foreign foe. is a centralized American mind and American purpose. We must be securely w ldei together at home, and we are in need of certain vital reforms of lesislatix e methods, enabling the popular will to t:nd congressional expression, hefore we can expect the outside world to have much respect for our demand, our rights, or our llplomatical1 announced purposes.
HE WOULD 13 E A BOSS. If we were the boss of this big, overgrown town, and the high cost of living problem was worrying us, we would oilicially announce that every idle lot that was in weeds was public property for the use of any family that needed It to raise food on. Moreover, the city would provide tools and seed, and city teams would break the ground, and the lot farmers would repay in crops the loan. Editor Los Angeles Record. Yes you would, and in about two buzzes of a bluebottle Ily you'd find yourself face-downwards across the knees of the supreme court. What! Confiscate the lot of old Mr. Compound Interest that he's been holding for years, almost untaxed, until the town's growth raised its value? Put unimproved, useless private land" into potatoes merely because folks are hungry? Why, doggone it, Mr. Record Kditor, you're assaulting the sicredness of private property lights and you're disputing the fundamental principle that man is a land animal only when he can own and hold land against all other men! To be sure, the high cost of food would be busted if more people tilled more land and to be sure, a form of government and society that can't help folks when they're starving is open to improvement by both God and man, but what you propose is illegal, sacrilegious confiscatory, arbitrary, socialistic. It's a drastic departure from regularly established charity methods. It's helping people to help themselves, rather than skinning 'em while the skinning's good, and it doesn't sound good in Indiana, anyhow.
You cannot ride 50 miles in any direction without having fluttered before your face the pages of a world history more marvellous and fascinating than the wildest inventions of the beautiful Scheherazade when she stayed the uplifted scimitar of her jealous husband for a thousand-and-ttne consecutive nights by telling him stories that would have made a hungry bear arrest his jaws to listen. You do not need to be a geologist to understand and enjoy the wonder tales of the rocks. The simplest A II C of science will suffice. You need learn no technical terms or concern yourself about any details of geologic knowledge. You can ignore all the ages, eras, periods and fossils of the technical geologist. You can he Ignorant of "Archaean," "Ordovician," "Silurian." "Devonian," "Carboniferous," "Cretaceous." "Permian," "Eocene," "Miocene" and "Pilocene", though these are charming chapters for those who read them. All you really have to do is just to remember that seas have flowed where hills now stand, and that the rocks you see were once sandy beaches and sea floors, which were pressed and hardened into stone and afterward lifted up by the tremendous pressures resulting from the shrinking of the crust of the earth upon Its cooling nucleus.
NO TEA FOR BREAKFAST. It was bad enough to limit the Hritish beer supply the English people before the war drank more beer than the Germans hut what shall be said about the new anti-luxury order prohibiting the importation of tea? How can any Englishman or Englishwoman get
along without tea for breakfast?
Deprivation of coffee may be endured. The Uriton cares little for coffee. But to tart the day without a dish of tea it is unheard of! Nothing in all LloydGeorge's anarchistic career has been so radical and subversive of British institutions. Bamboo ware and canned lobsters may be dispensed with. John Bull an no doubt worry along without such commodities as diatomine and unfusional earth, ornamental feathers, mops, live quails, quebracho, stereoscopes, perfumery and straw matting for bottles. Hut life can never be endured and wars can never be fought without that morning dish of tea. It is the ultimate in f rightfulness. The T.'-boat campaign i succeeding. It is the beginning of the end. A little more pressure, and the marmalade supply will be shut off then what will be left to surrender?
FOOD PROBLEMS. According to a dispatch from Los Angeles, a group
of boys In the San Mateo high school have asked that
a cooking course for boys be made part of the school's
domestic science department. The high cost of living
has driven the youths to make this demand. They
have come to the conclusion that men as well as worn en should understand the scienc of their own home.
We have always understood tSat men had a natural genius for cooking as well as for everything else
and that even without training, they could step into the kitchen at a moment's notice and do the work
more scientifically and economically than women do it now. However, there's no reason why these lads should not improve their natural gifts by a little training. In the meantime, there are problems of food production and food distribution that need solving. If the boys haven't time for this kind of thing, we hope the girls will do a little studying along this line. The country should never again face a food crisis like the present one.
There, in the landscape, as you
fly by, is the very substance of those
old sea bottoms and beaches now
swelled up in hills and rocky knolls.
You will perceive that the rocks are
In layers or strata, one above an
other, strangely twisted In places.
These layers come out very plain
to view when lare of shrubs and
mosses and yet unblanketed with
snow, sometimes bright, crinkling
lines of ice or little ledges of snow lodged out of the reach of the sunshine, make plainer the divisions of the strata, like the streaks of white
paper "between the lines of type. Except for their picturesqueness, which even a jaded eye may notice.
these rocks ami ledges are commonplace enough to those who see them without understanding their
sign-language. Hundreds of thousands of passers-by In the whirling
trains have glanced indifferently at them and taken no second look unless they happened to catch sight of a goat or a dog perched on a giant rock. Yet all the books that were ever printed contain less history than is there plainly displayed. It is the Book of Chronicles of the Earth, the world's Bible, that stands opens. It Is absurd, it is humiliating, in this age of supposed universal learning and sharpened intelligence. thit whole tralnfuls of "educated' people should see these things and not notice them, never say a word about them, but only talk of stocks or bonds or dresses or the latest dancing step or bury nose and brains In a novel while Historic Time, the oldest and greatest of klnetographers. is running reel after reel of the picture drama of creation In an endless panorama before them. Perhaps you have stood looking at those astonishing sections of the great sequoia trees of California, 20 or 30 feet in diameter, fistened up on the walls of the American Museum of Natural Hlstory.and have counted with a thrill, almost of awe, the circles of annual growth lines, which show that those trees were a thousami or two thousand years expanding their mighty trunks In the sunshine of past centuries before tempests and lightnings overthrew them.
THE MEL TING POT COMB TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.
nri: rajxn rorvr of vrnw. The cat is a mysterious, unfathomed quadruped. Who keeps h:s private counsel in his strictly private beau. He does not empty out his soul in antics and in yelps. Nor use his tail to supplement his other language-helps. To every one who questions him regarding what he thinks. He keeps the stately attitude of Egypt's speechless sphinx. We duly love the honest dog with loud and tuneful barks. With soulful eyes and woolly tail and other bench-show marks. We let him share our confidence, our fortunes and our food. So long as he rewards us with a wag of gratitude; And when his soul departs to chase the rabbits in the skies. We buiid for him, a monument of sentiment and sie. But still we pay the crafty cat, unsociably inclined. In coin which meets the moderate requirements 01 his mind. He does not seek by obvious and emulating art To share the dog's impression on 'he mushy human heart. The thing which suits the purpose of the feline Intellect Is that he can compel us to regard him with respect. Arthur Brooks t3aker.
HER BRONCHITIS IS RELIEVED IN A SINGLE NIGHT Altoona Mother Tells of Her Experience With Vicks VapoRub.
H .1
( Every mother owes it to hfr family to investicate the Southern remedy Vick's VapoUuh Salve. In the South it is uni ersally i..ed in place jof injurious internal meduines for treating all forms of cold troubles--from head or chest colds. h n to t-ore throat, bronchitis or im ipient pneumonia. In adlition. it has a hundred uses in th- home as a soothing, cooling sähe. t'sually croup is relieved in fifteen minutes and most colds over night. Iast January Mrs. A. S. Kennrdw 502 2nd Street. Altoona, Pa., was
asKea by her druggist. Welh
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iiUMi- t. oi;i hi.NM Hi il.IOON . J I NN . te;. Mr K n :.-. i writ, "I iiu'v e u-t d uu!' t: ..1! . 1 k's Y.l pu I I .1 .t!l'l I: A W .M !; be without i? in The hii-- I f :;-, it (UT'Nl n;v li'lb- -:rl of a -p.'.; bror-.chit:.- -. - r r.Uht u ::I; .: tl anl intern 1 n.-d:c :?:-. I h i ns'-d it imse'f fr p!ein' . ard it,
tew minutes '!' ia:n . av .n
NOTHING TO WOUHY ABOUT. (Out of 47 staples it has been found that three petroleum, prunes and timothy hay haven't advanced in price in the last year. Supposing potatoes do soar out of sight And onions are costly and few; While meat is so high that you hardly. can buy Enough once a week for a stew. Though carrots and cabbages, parsnips and peas Are sailing aloft like balloons. You can stand the wolf off with triumphant scoff By filling yourself full of prunes. And even if prunes, taken three times a day. In time on your palate may pall (As they're likely to do in a fortnight or two. You don't need eat them at all. Pick up the papers and turn to the pase Of market quotations today. And you'll see at a glance there has been no advance In the price of nice timothy hay. Of courst you may weary of hay before long (Some people don't like it a bit), IJut don't tear your hair in a burst of despair. For you still can keep healthy and lit. Cut out all the meat and the vegetable chow. And when you get ready to sup Just fill up your mug from the kerosene jug Petroleum hasn't gone up!
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Brothers, to give this preparation a Thre- s:z -. :'.'.. :,o. . .,r si.w
l7Tfflf,&sbM!ysi?MW& s? Firm
Tlie Limit. By the first of next year Washington will be as dry as the congressional record. o Jiiht iv Suggestion. One way to bring down tho price of cabbages is to forbid the Connecticut farmers making them into campaign cigars. Let's Get Immunity. What we need more than anything else Just now Is a preventive serum for war fever. No Applicants. Where are we going- to get the privates to take orders from all the officers that have been trained for the army reserve corps?
The High Co of Illness All drugs have gone up, and bread
pills aren't either.
so thundering cheap.
Just tlie Right Time. The Baltimore man who wants to sell one of his arms In order to get an education has wisely chosen a time when arms are at a premium. o Waste of Good Advice. What's the use of counseling the poor not to eat potatoes when potatoes cost live cents apiece? o Like All the Rest of Is Now. The vegetarian's argument that his diet solves the cost of living problem was good last year, but it is worthless now. The Upstart! The potato Is now sneering at the alligator pear.
Inklings and Thinkings
By Wex Jones
PROMOTING TRUTHFUL CANDIDATES. As the Indiana seentieth general assembly passed iruo history, last r.tght, there chased one of the most retuarkable sessions in the history of the state. It has been a harmonious session, too, in the main, save where polities has been injected into it. and much good work has been done. The constitutional convention, the prohibition, and woman jffrage bills, none of them promised by either of the parlies in their state platforms.
stand to the erelit of both parties, brewery and utility lobl Us iri a ! e'.eaguered opposition, for mutual help, j.otu jtJ-.stan.lü.g. Too there has been much other legislation .f a non-pohtical nature, upon which republian and democrats worked together in harmony. Only whei. (low UMidrich came alone with administration
measures, has av.vthing like partisan lines appeared.. . Tilt--" wrutulfs. n lubt. all of them, will be heard) "Severance of diplomatic relations doesn't mean from in lh- futuie. j war," says Cousin Bill Taft. Maybe not, Bili. but it In the liLii i. l.oweer. a We see it. democracy, de- j knocks the chocolate fudge out of "My Dear Will" and ...Ielly in tl.e minority in the house, but eiual to its "My l'ar Theodore" correspondence, pretty sudden; 1
The ' r
Teddy's holding back, he's holding back: lie offers himself and four sons in case of war but doesn't peep about son-in-law, Nick Longworth. And Nick would so become a trench!
But how much vaster the Inter est that is offered by the lines of growth of our continent and of the earth itself, which you can see In the unheaved bottoms of vanished seas, that were turned into rocky layers and then puffed and rolled up into hills and mountains millions of years ago! They need no halls to display them: the landscape la their museum. Compressed Into a rocky layer, a few feet In thickness, there may be the product of uncounted aeons of deposition, slowly formed at the bottom of a primeval sea. into which rivers, that the changed earth has forgotten, flowed down from paleocosmic mountains' which were crumbled into sand so long ago that the sun himself may then have been a star of different color. lid you ever know that half the Hudson river was drowned by the ocean ages ago and that, when you sail out of the harbor that it has formed for the greatness of NewYork, its submerged and sand-silenced valley still runs beneath you. a trench in the sea-Moor, which, off the Navesink highlands. lies 800 feet below the level of the tide that heaves your ship. It is a great mistake that the earth was not an interesting place before Adam and Kve came to live on it.
Proposed to bring down prices by boycotting food. And then, after all hands had died of starvation, food would be cheap again. You never know that spring is here till some urchin's baseball swats your ear.
Restaurants may charge extra for salt and pepper. Fool 'em with ! following bill of fare: j SOUP MULLIGATAWNY OR PEPPKRPOT. j FINNAN HADDIE OK SALT CODFISH. ! CHILE COfr CAR NE. j SALTED ALMONDS. !
Commuter, who this time last year talked about the roses he was going to have is now doping out the price of seed potato;s.
Will the proposed bone-dry bill place a penalty on carrying a clove ? St. Louis Globe-Democrat. For the sake of the public, we hope so.
Takes a gamer man to wear a "trench coat" on Broadway than In the trenches.
Speaking of the spring drive, Bock signs show that the great spring draw has begun.
Famous synonyms: Vegetarian nd millionaire. ,
Our idea of a food gambler is a man who eats cranberry pie. Cuba needs a good big spoonful of sulphur and molasses. Embezzler has two wives her. Headline. Bigamy seems to be a habit with embezzlers. Or is it that embezzb ment is a habit with bigamists?
ONCE-OVERS
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th vtuiute. ha- nothing to fear.
term ,'ob.-tru-tionits" hardly applies for the ieaon Mr.-. Wilson will go with Woodrow when he takes tiit 1:1 Marc- an iiut.uuv hl the democrats "obstruct" j the oath, March 4. What's she up to, Woodrow, picketuv.ctbf uii without republican help, and otherwise ing you ?
Reminded by his wife. Squire Porr recessed court in Ashtabula. O., Tanked his flivver and raced home, v here he hoisted th rear end of his car, attached a belt and started the butter churn gone from court seven mir"''
AHE YOU GUEETKD WITH A SM ILK? Ushers in our churches are responsible for a lot of people becoming non-church goers. Why? Because of the chill they give strangers who. enter the edifice where they officiate. It is all right to say that the person who pays attention to the manner of the man who seats him is not in church for the right purpose. But if people were barrel from church because they went from ulterior motives, how many would he In their plees Sabbath mornirtg? It may be curiosity, or want of a better (to hirn) place to go. but there is some sort of religious prompting or he would not enter. It Is the duty of the one who greets him to inspire from the first a feeling that it is good to be there. It cannot be done by a folemn-faced cold blooded piece of alahavter who stiffly bows and without turning a hair unfeelingly says: "'This way please." The true Christian should be joyful and happy in the beautiful thought of salvaiion, and his countenance should pass the thought on. The kindly light in the eye, the warm grap of a hand, the gracious smile of welcome tell the tory What kind of an usher is there in your church ?
YVAN
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Husky men b.r fu tr wmk i:. Ibi'-ix-r in !, n f .1. t u v. , .-' heavy jiihI rnjuires imn wh :i re uel b bald w ..rk. ;i? I -.ji .r 1'h.v .'() pr day uid. learning M-u :n in. ike T r-- : 1 s s " o- -:
week-. Steady Work 8-Hour Day No labor trouble-. I ' 1 1 i ; 1 1 examination 11 1 Kinpl !i'-m I i . : :. eigner or American. Apply in permit- . writ.- t . i!t; !!.. . :. e The Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. .krn. Hiii.
WANTED Young; ladies :o learn telephone oper.itin.;. Mum be over sixteen and of ood character. All applications will be investigated before empl mem. Apply Chief Operator's onice, third ilonr. Telephone Building, between the hours or S:no a. m. and s : p. in. Good salary while learning. Central Union Telephone Company. E. T. Bonds, analer.
At Ysur Service"
Whether You Need Light Heat Power Any time of Day or V Night, a touch of the Magic Button on the wall gives instant " Electric Service. " It's for you as well as your neighbor.
iio
Bell 462; Home 5462
Emergencies The m;m who is :i the lookout for emerevncie- ic not taken by Mirprbe when they come. He knows the ;ne cunin.iT. a:ul lias an advance u.ird out to meet them. The money he has place! in this bank makes the mee:in LT of most emergencies ai easy matter. Our plan has helped m m people meet emergencies, and will help you.
Amorinsn Truer
I
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Company
on oavings.
The Star Restaurant Reduced Prices. 109 West Colfax Ave. 15c LUNCH HOUSE. We serve lunch from 10 a. m. to 9 p. m. For lunch we serve all kinds of m eats, steaks, chops, eggs, roast beef, roast pork and stews. Italian Spaghetti, home made. Beans every day l 5c. We will save to every customer loc and 1 5c each meal. If you try Ui once we are sure you will become a regular customer. This new system will commence Monday morning, March 5th. ALL INVITED.
HARRYLYERRiCK
Funeral Director
Honm 543 r IM1 7S X '
v tir-
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--T.IVI.' H. DILL. A.hifcUnt
Crear!st. lLirpaln in Town Economy Cloak Dr.pt. Economy Dept. 5rond Floor. 21 .211 B. MirtaCan. In Oonjurctiim wlik lhf Independent Store.
i :n
"When you mink, of Ilomefurn-
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Jo Ellore Oasira for Tobacco Arthur Kr"U-- i :i I- ;ii..t i f, r-i.i ' who hnd 1imi uii UiT t"!'a'-" ! was a o. Alut tu, rn " t: -- tr;.n t hiiv !;.. f i!lti-8 Hi- n-.u-ry ?-tt::i very n.-p! aui hU !.tliTvl him :.'-'! l'.il H ii'i.J tri-! In vain t ronqu.-r th- h;i! it in.!" 1 ! :i t-rtaln Injok Jiii'l nw i fr -vi fr- r:i tL tliral'Jrrs f t"!--. .m-l 1 1 ! U wrunlrfiilly iui;.r'i-.I A:iy:. uii !eslres r r-;J the !..!. üi '..tnlü it i'I.-mjIiiMv fr- t.y writing t IMuur-1 Woods. l.V.l K. " St itl- n I.' N-u V-rk (Tty. It t2N h.n th 1. a? it '? : ii k i i. -h-'iiifc' or M.ufT tkii:: n. ! '! in rt-I in th: - -ho A'lv. Trv NEWS-TIMES Wan Ada
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STAHR SHOPPE Union Trut I'.M.. Thirl riHt. Ik-1! GIT. 1'ii'mi- !lrm- I I . ShanlxKinj M :iii'"iiriri CllrrwKly 1 l- t r ! t
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V; Y- f- rV ei Kam Vl J DR. J. BURKE & CO. ßial'.ji in Fltt!". tZO 6. .flrl St. Homo Phone i'CSl
WATCH US GROW'
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