South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 66, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 7 March 1917 — Page 6

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THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morning Evening Sunday. JOHN' HHNRY 7-UVKR. t: lltor. caihhhl it. summhil?. publisher.

only AMrrTM rnr- mornino ?Rrriinr PA IT Ft N NOIlTHKItN INDI.A AM) ONLY Prr.R r.Mj ri.(MINfi THK INT K UN AT ION A L. NEWS fEKVICE IN hOl'TII IXF.NI No f.fh-r ntipipr in tfc tt prottf'J br tw. iram-l lrf alü:t and d.iy-nwi ittV; ilo onij !r.t-or,tjrnn paper In Ute outbl IndlanapolU. Publice! ery day of thr jrar ml twlre on all dajr eirrpt Suu4.ij ana Ilolilt j Jiaterei at tie Soutli Uesd poftofflc kco U.b mall.

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Cpartrnnt winT Kflhorial. Advertising, nr-ulat'on. r founttnc. For "want alts' If ro'jr rime li In the 1V " dlrtftrr. Mil -vl'l nnld after Inp-rtb-n ltrport '"f"'": tton t b'ndnn. b-ii eieutl'.n. poor delivery of P"P'r' J" , tel-ph-rn. srvk-. et. to h'ad "f department with 7 are dealing. Tbe News-Times r.na thlrtn trr.nk llnet. all wttkb ri-epond to Hon.? l'Ijone 1151 ani Hell 2100. tnrr.fPT?ON RATES; Mnrn'ne nnd Fren!nc EJJt1n'J. 5!n!e (V.pr. 2r ; Sun-lay. Morn'.iisc or E Ten In a; E''1"0"' '"ally. Inriuiina; Sunday, by mall, $3 00 pfr year m " J I, Hfllvpred by rar'lrr In Kuth In1 and Mlshawaki. y Jear iu aJvance. or 12c by tbe week. AIVFKTIINr. HATEs: Ask the n.lTertlatng department F'r!n AflvertNJne ItprnHiUM: 1 'N I'UKN-vU Woo 1 1. MAN. 2. Klftli AT. N'v York City, and c1t. CMcifT). Tt.e Ne Times .ndarort to keen Its ac'TertlalnK olunm fre from fraudulent iiil.rpresrntation. Any f1".5?! lef..ui.j tbromjii patr'-iiufe'e of any advertisement n D1 piper mill couftr s fivor ou tbe rnanajexent bj reportug w fCt completely. MAKCH 7. 1917.

HELPING FRANCE. I,ord Northeim-, the Hritlsh publisher, iit an address to an American club in London, remarked that Oreat Hritain was o.uite able tf boar the tremendous flnanci.il burden of the war, tut that if the United States entered the war he hoped we would help Trance to endure "the rushing financial strain imposed on her". The öUEehtion, regardless of the source from which it comes, is worth serious consideration. We may not give direct assbtar.ee to any belüserent; but if Ave do, we should give it to France. It was Franc that helped us In the dark days when we were fighting for our independence. Without French support military, moral and financial, it is extremely doubtful whether we could ever have, won the lie volutionary war. If wV become an active participant in the present war, there would be no Impropriety in ivin France a Mk loan without interest. It miuht even be proper to fcivc her a downright present of. say $ 1,000, UUO.OOO to use in defenditu' herself against the invader, just as the gave us the means to defend ourselves against the Itritih Invader more than a century uro. It may really be regarded as a debt we owe her. The money that France expended in our behalf during our Kevolution, money which she save without thought of return and fur which i-he has never asked payment of either interest or principal, would probably amount U at least $1.000,000,000 now if the interest were reckoned.

THE CASE OF JAMES P. GOODRICH. On the day of his inauguration as governor, somebody remarked of James Putnam Goodrich that he looked like the Duke of Wellington, for psychological ctfeit. perhaps, hoping that it would gain sutticient currency to give him a sort of Irresistible power, but evidently it didn't take. The "Duke" hasn't defeated anyone at Waterloo as yet, but on the other h md the Waterloo has been more nearly his from the standpoint of the "little corpcral". Untried in a place of large responsibility, prior to the day of his inauguration, Gov. Goodrich was rated a political general of no mean ability. That his own rating of hid ability In this line was not less than the public intimate there never was any doubt. At the tnd of the legislative session if his self-confidence has tumbled as rapidly as the public has lost faith in his ability to accomplish things or manage public affairs, then that self-contidenc surely has taken an awful drop. As governor he started to orrter what he wanted, trying to copy the llanly methods. He made no headway, lie slid backwards. He sought the cooperation of his party leaders to force through an unprecedented program. It was charged that he violated all promises made to numerous interests during the campaign. In any event he got small consolation in his appeal for party aid. He denounced his political associates for deserting him. Then he called the democratic members in one at a time holding out threats to veto their personal measures unless they supported him. With all this when the final day of the session arlivod the senate was turned into a slaughter house for all the Goodrich measures as they made their tardy appearance for action. Fach bill died just as did the ecie tax. The republican platform and all the Goodrich campaign thunder were founded upon the charge that democrats had been criminally extravagant and that the republicans under Goodrich were g;oinK to save i million or two each year. The democrats had removed the necessity fur the sinking fund levy of about $:i00.00 a year when tiny paid off the republican-made state debt of oer $ ;.:,e00,o vo. The democrats had accumu1 ted a balance of $ ."..o ::.:. :2 in cash which was turned oe- to Gov. Goodrich on the day of his Inauguration md the democrats believed he could materially reduce the ley just as he said he would. Instead of economy he advocated etraagance on a s ale that nothing short of an excise tax would provide. The democrats and main republican senators refused to proide him his extra fund of more than $4.000,000 a year as an indirect tax on all the people. For in his own argument for the t ill the governor told the senate .'larr.ittt e that so far as the public utilities were concerned the public service commission would recognize tins tax .n the making of rates charged to the public. In the matter of other corporations than public utilities the same rule of charging the people would prevail. S. all the Goodrich measur-s failed and the public is tar better off than if they had passed. Whatever of good they may have contained will le far better when considered on their merits at some future session, when the chief object of parsing them will not be the providing 5iwer or money for the construction of pome personal political machine. The record of the seventieth general assembly is the rec ord of the snumng out of the ambition of James I. Goodrich to build a personal machine at the expense of the people of Indiana. While the credit for the defeat of this ambition must be gien to the splendid senate organization, it is true that republl ai s in the same body gave large support to tiie opposition. Many of these republicans refused to be b d to the doing of things they knew were not right, walkh.g with their heads in the party halter. I'oiitical opponents will criticise the democrats for

purely party reason?, but it will he hard to convince the people that uhi democratic minority did not make a plendid fiuht to prevent the rise in taxes direct or indir(t. for both in the end amount to the same thing. Never in the history of legislation in the ttate has a minority party Ktood so solidly for what was considered right than did the democrats In th house and .enate. F.en where there was a tremendous republican house majority the democrat-? made ?ome splendid winnings. In the sennte. where the republicans had the disadvantage in the organization at the start, they were very weak in trying to sustain such an unpopular program as that put up to them by the governor. On the other hand, the democrat of the senate were so effecv ively organized that they could not be overriden when they started in any direction. Gov. Goodrich's attempt to bribe republicans and democrats by proffers of political appointment to their friends in return for legislative support, apparently failed to take times having changed since days of yore when Goodrich himself wan a legislator and trading patronage for support was considered the proper thing to do. The threat, too, of the governor to go out In the state and defeat all democrats and republicans who opposed him, places upon his shoulders almost as big a job as the one he undertook In his legislative doings. If he were to carry out that threat he will have time for nothing else for the next two years. He could not be at his o;tice at all, and at the end of two years he would still have much unfinished business. After all, that might be more beneficial to the people than having him at his otlice, If he in to keep up the same methods he has been trying. There is one opinion that is general with republicans and democrats over the state, ind this is that James 1. Goodrich as governor has in the tlrst month of his reign made democratic success In both IMS and 19 JO an assured fact in the state of Indiana.

Strange Zodiacal

Light due to Swarm of Small Particles

THE MEL TING POT COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

"ULTIMO LOCO." The Argentinians are using a picturesque phrase to describe the German plot meant to embroil LatinAmerica and the United States. "Ultimo loco" they call it. The word "loco" means crazy. The combination means the "loco limit" or the "ultimate in craziness". And this characterization seems merited. It was practicable, of course, for the Kerlin .statesmen to make trouble for the United States in Mexico and Cuba, and possibly in two or three other SpanishAmerican republics. German emissaries have actually succeeded in fomenting anti-American feeling there and encouraging revolts which it might devolve upon us to suppress. It was not beyond the range of possibilities ically to turn Mexico against us, by playing on the ambition or cupidity of the revolutionary leaders. Hut if the Herlin statesmen really imagined that they could array Latin-America in general against the United States, that they could in a moment undo the constructive work of a hundred years and overthrow the Monroe Doctrine; If they imagined that they could turn Japan away from her present allies and use her as a catspaw to pull their chestnuts out of the lire in a losing war; if they Imagined that Mexico, with or without Japan's aid. could really conquer the great tier of states promised as a bribe for the German alliance; then, as the Argentinians say, the Herlin government must be "ultimo loco". All the important Latin-American countries have hastened to repudiate the imputation cast on them, and show their good will toward the United States as against Germany. They are plainly against Mexico if that country yields to the German plot. Japan has denounced the plan as ridiculous and given convincing assurances of her good intent as regards the United States. Carranza and his revolutionary associate?, whatever their secret inclinations may be, are hastening to set themselves right with Uncle am. It's the same blunder that the rulers of Germany have made time and time again In this war. They believed that Ilelgiuin wouldn't fight. They believed that England would keep out of war. They believed that Italy would stay with them. They believed that the American people would side with them against the allies. At every step they have misunderstood the

psychology of foreign nations, guessed wrong and incurred fatal penalties. Now they have been wron

again in sizing up the Latin-Americans and the Japanese. .And the German people, as usual, will pay tor the blunders of their militarist-statesmen.

THE PEACE ORDERS. The prospect of war needn't interfere with our looking ahead to the time when the clouds shall have claered away and American industry will face new conditions. What shall we sell Furope instead of munitions? According to Foster Hogg'on, reporting in 'System." the results of the American industrial commission's inquiries in the European field, we shall send Furope vast quantities of such goods as theso: Kolled teel for prick construction, sanitary and plumbing" fixtures, concrete-mixing and concrete-block machinery, stock factory sashes and doors, wire, glass, factory lighting fixtures, cranes and conveyors, elevators and lifts, pneumatic riveters, metal furniture and lockers, standard factory hardware, automatic sprinklers', farm equipment, hotel equipment, modern factory structures, and labor-saving machinery c eery kind. Speaking of France in particular. Mi ;. . ;son says: "The war has made France conscious or her industrial needs and has created an infinitely greater demand for labor-saving machinery than would have prevailed under normal conditions of peace. And this demand is accentuated by the scarcity of male labor and the necessity of converting it to remunerative work. France cannot allow her men returning from the trenches to work at lowly tasks such as the production of raw material. She will need every man and woman available to work at the latest labor-saving machines to manufacture tlnished product? and thus justify their higher wages. "New machine, new parts, quantities of machine tools, together with raw materials and partly manufactured goods, will be in great demand for a considerable period, and until France has found her balance in her industrial manufacture as she had in her manufacture of ammunition." Along with this industrial need, he speaks of the Ü, 000,000 farms in France, a large part of which should be in the market for Improved American machinery when the war ic over. And France Is only one country. The requirements in nearly all the belligerent countries will be much the same, differing chierly in their relative demand for in-

(dustrial and agricultural equipment. All will need tre

mendous quantities of merchandise. It will be our function to restock Kurope with laborsaving machinery and building material. And until Europe's land Is properly tilled, we shall have an eager market for all the food stuffs we can spare.

liy Garrett I. Sortie. A correspondent asks: "What is the cause of the Zodiacal light, and when can it best be seen?" It is believed that the cause of the Zodiacal light is the reflection of sunlight from vast numbers of

small particles, circulating around J U ! . . . . . . '

me sun in practically circular orbits, the swarm bein condensed in the neighborhood of the 5un, and thinning out with increase of distance. Its farthest limits are not known because the light gradually fades to invisibility, without a sharp border, but it is evident that the reflecting particles, though greatly reduced in number, extend .somewhat beyond tiie earth's orbit, sinco the light is in favorable circumstances faintly visible clear across the sky. A puzzling fact Is that there seems to be a condensation at a point in th sky exactly opposite to the tun, where a curious oval illumination is visible to practiced eyes. This has been named the Gegenschein, or counterglow. A very interesting suggestion concerning the cause of the Gegenschein is thus stated by Prof. F. It. Moulton: "At a point 'j;l0,000 miles from the earth, which is beyond the apex of its shadow, there is a region where, iri consequence of the combined forces of the earth and sun, wandering particles tend to circidate in a sort of dynamic whirlpool. It has

been suggested that the circulating J

particles which produce the Zodiacal light are taught in this whirl and are irtually condensed enough to produce the, observed phenomenon of the Gegenschein." Hut while anybody can see the Zodiacal light, when the circumstances are favorable, no ordinary eye is likely to catch sight of the tiegenschein. I was once on Mt. Wilson in company with l'rof. H. L'. Harnard, on one of those nights when "from all quarters the hea'ens speak to men," and he endeavored to make me see the Gegenschein, pointing out the stars which staked its limits, nut my eyes were not trained to that work and 1 could only feel the presence of the mystery, knowing that it must be there, since Harnard saw it. The spring months, from Febru

ary to April, are the best time for!

seeing the Zodiacal light in the evening sky, while the autumn months are the most favorable to its visibility in the morning sky. It appears after the end of twilight In the evening, and before the beginning of twilight in the morning. The reason why the months named are the best for its observation is that then the ecliptic, or apparent annual track of I he sun through the sky, meets the horizon at a -very high angle, and consequently tne axis of the light rises nearly perpendicular, thus carrying it out of the obscuring effects of the dense, misty air nearer the horizon. On an autumn morning in 1S9, from the summit of Mt. Etna, which, being two miles high and far from any other mountains, offers one of the most unobstructed sky-iews in the world, I saw the Zodiacal light glowing with a splendor that astonished and fascinated me. I could hardly believe that it was the .same

phenomenon I had sometimes)

glimpsed through the dimming atmosphere of New York. Yet often the Zodiacal light is exceedingly beautiful in our latitudes and longitudes, even when viewed from near sea-level. Its light is usually described f.s pearly, and it has, perhaps, at times, a slight tinge of color. It is of a lenticular shape, or, perhaps better, saw edge-shape, narrowing to a vanishing point which may reach nearly, or quite, to the zenith. It is orightest in the line of the axis, fading out at the sides. Its width at the bottom varies, at different times, from 00 to 4 0 degrees. Whether the substance whose reflection produces the Zodiacal light is in a dusty or a gaseous state remains an unsettled question. although observations of the spectrum of the light favor the view that tho rellecting particles are solid. It has even been supposed that the concentration of these particles near the sun is sullicient t account (by the resistance which they offer to any body moving through them) for certain irregularities in tbe motion of the planet Mercury, and in the motions of comets. The Swedish sa.ant. Svante A. Arrhenius. has suggested that the Gegenschein is not a part of the Zodiacal light, but is a kind of cometary tail of the earth, composed, like the tails of comets, of corpuscles emitted from the electrified earth and driven out into space in a long streamer by the pressure of the waves of sunlight.

THK IIOXKST YILMAX. I met a seedy citizen who stopped me on the street And begged me to advance the price of something small to eat. aid I: "My coin and sympathy are not for any tramp. I do not wish to waste my aid upon a worthless .camp. Fray show me, sir, your union card or anything you can To prove that you're an honest and deserving working man." Said he: "I am a villain of the very deepen dye. Aud thus I cannot get a job. though often j apply. I murder men and burgle banks; young ladies I mislead: Oh. I aan always ready for some dark and dreadful deed, And if you could but put me next to some tremendous crime. I'll prove it is an henest man who asks you for a dime." "Hut dare you prate of honesty," I questioned in dismay. "While you procure your living in this wicked, ugly way?" "I am an honest villain, sir, as honest villains go. And used to have employment in a moving picture show: Hut ince tho censors swarm about in such obtrusive flocks, A h st of honest villains, sir, have gone upon the rocks." Arthur Brooks Baker.

Tin: MAMci iti: lady. liy William I Kirk.

"I walked three miles down the river this morning," said the Manicure 1-ady. 'and believe me," George, that's one habit I'm going to form." "I never had no time to walk," said the Head Darber. "and I'm on my feet enough anyhow." "That ain't the Idea, how much you are on your feet," declared the Manicure Lady. "There is as much difference between standing on your feet and walking as there is between trying on a pair of mittens and having a prize tight. You'll be sorry some day, George, if you don't ,;et this here walking habit." "It's only one of them there fads with you' said George, "and I'd like to bet it don't last a week. About next Tuesday you'll be getting off that street ear across the way. That's the trouble with walking in a city too many street cars all the time going past to tempt you. I used to like to walk when I was a kid. Used to walk 10 or 12 miles every day." "It's one of the secrets of long life, according to the doctors," said the Manicure Lady. "Nearly all the doctors say that plenty of walking and an occasional trip to the doctor will keep a lady or gent on this earth as long as they caro to stay." "I've been trying them setting-up exercises that a soldier told me about." said the Head Harber. "I was setting up the drinks the other night and he said that reminded him. and told me how a person could" go through them setting-up exercises every morning and night and live to be a hundred, barring accidents.

"Hut hero we are talking about how to live long, and the way I feel this morning I would care mighty little if I kicked off before lunch. The older I get the less I can figure there is in this here life. Work, work, work and not even a moving picture theater open when Sunday comes. What's the big idea about life, anyhow?" "Oh, well." said the Manicure Lady, "of course there is a lot of good things in the world, if we only look arour.d enough to take our chances when they come. Let us then be up and watching with a eye for every' f?ate, as Mister Longfellow once said. Hut as I always tell you. George, I would hate to think I had to lie along- and always' be a manicure girl. The profession is all right, and the girls are all right, but it is bad business if the girls don't look forward to no future beyond that. "Looking forward to married life ain't enough a girl ought to look forward to a life that makes her noticed in the community and gets her name before the world. That's my dope, George, and some day I'm going to make good." "I dunno," said the skeptical George. "I heard a lot of girls talk that way, but they mostly get married. And then, if they ever Ret their names; before the world, it's something about divorces." "Gee, George," declared the Manicure Lady, "you may not be much of a barber, but you're a grand cure for ambition. Nobody can keep folks from getting ahead like the folks that can't keep themselves from going backward."

Grand Opening Saturday, March 10 th of a Tailoring store that will positively Iv the K'-t i:i town. Yc will have on display over 5oo nitty, new .ii:. up-to-date patterns just fresh trom the 1-mhi t America's best mills. In this larce an J varied selection you will lind silk shadow stripes Green llanneiScotch mixtures, in tact anything and everything that is in voue for the coinine; season. The quality of these fabrics compare only with those you must pay S25.00 and SoO.OO for elsewhere. We cannot describe on paper the wonderful values of our but SEEING. IS BELIEVING. So all we ask is that you -ive us a call. All our woolens are displayed that you mav see each ana every pattern. UP-TO-DATE CLOTHES TALK FOR THEMSELVES Suits JSdade to Measure

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Inklings and Thinkings

By XVex Jones

A few things we wish to impress upon you. UP-TO-DATE CLOTHES are Hand tailored throughout by expert mechanics. UP-TO-DATE CLOTHES are guaranteed to lit you and please you in every respect. Should you order one and not like it after it is finished we will cheerfully refund vour money. UP-TO-DATE CLOTHES are made "any style without additional charges for fancy culls, pockets, etc. UP-TO-DATE CLOTHES are kept in repair and pressed free of charge for one year. Wait for Our Opening. It Will Pay You. Up-to-Date Mercliasit Tailors

114 S. Michigan St., South Bend, Ind. B. SIEBLER, Prop.

Holland preserves a state of alarmed neutrality.

That first robin must have gone home for a pair of skis.

Office boy would like to send his boss to Halifax Halifax, X. S., we j 4

mean so that the Itritish authorities could remove his runoer heels.

To Colonel Roosevelt, every addititlonal boost for rice as a food is an- I other attempt to Chinafy the United States. '

Very annoying to Mayor Mitchel to have "liars" and "guttersnipes" ( ask him about Throwing-the-Rocks-Away park.

Market note: No advance in the cost of vild oats.

lrofessor says that men who play the cabaret stuff every exening will make the best soldiers. Trenches ought to be a joke to any gink who can last through a nightly siege in the cabaret dug-outs.

Cuba's breaking out with a spring rash.

March comes in like a polar bear.

Ancients used few adjectives. Headline. Didn't need '?m; thev had no janitors.

Proposed to substitute a vegetable called the dasheen for the Irish potato.

M fi i r

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It i3 composed of vax and oils so combined as to give a brilliant, lasting shine and to soften and preserve the leather. The ShisoiA Home Set The handiest, most efficient shoe shining set you i .

can buy at any price. Sold at a nominal cost to ShikoiA users. FOR HOME, GRIP OR AUTOMOBILE CLACK TAN WHITE

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7 ' ' ) THE HOKE SET

When Charles the Great became monarch of central Hurope, amongst other great ideals he set himself to unite the learning of Christendom by purifying and unifying the many and varied forms of writing. To do this he went back to the original Roman model. The invention of printing came as a great advance, and at first the type took the form of a written hand.

For more than a generation St. Louis, Mo., and East Ft. Louis, 111., put up with inadequate bridge accommodations. Lately the Kads toll bridge has been supplemented by a free municipal bridge across the Mississippi, and in the Frst week alone the- public savd J 6,7 17.

Oregon as a lea'der in the production of steel is the ambition of Gov, Withycombe. The state has almost unlimited power facilities in the streams of the Cascades. Ore or crude iron materials, it is said, may be obtained at cheap rates from China.

Little Bobbie's Pa

lty William J Kirk.

Pa had a fon-graft sent up to the houre last nite & he played on it till the nabors nocked on the walls of our hat. Let them nock, sed Pa. thay will taim down after while, sed Pa. Music hath power to soothe the savage brest, Pa sed. Thay will all be around after thay have herd a few of these swell tunes. I brot hum sum dandy records, sed Pa. One of them made me almost cry rite in the stoar wen thay played it. It was called Here Is the Ring Thou Gavest Me. What was the matter with the ring he gavest her? sed Ma. I guess it didn't coast enuff, sed Pa. Gurls is gitting moar partiklar than thay used to be. I shall nevver ferget, sed Pa, what a pleesed littel darling you were wen I handed you our engagement ring. Anybody wud have thot it cost live hundred, sed Pa. You made sum remark at the time, if I remember, sed Ma, to the effeck that five hundred wuddent buy it. I thot you were kind of bulling the market at the time, sed Ma, but I know you were sterling, deerest, watever I mite have thot about the ring, so I thanked you kindly. You certainly did appreshiate me in them days, sed Pa. I guess you reelized what a dee-sirabul party you w-aj4 charming. This Is a grand song, sed Pa. It Is about a yuns lady called Jenny Veeve. Listen to them words, sed Pa: O Jenny Veeve, fair Jenny Veeve, The ycers may cum. the yeers may go. But fetill the hands of Memry weeve Them blissful dreems of U-ns ago.

That is sweet, isn't it, sd Ma. I wonder who rote it. Sum song riter, I dare say, sed Pa. You are very chipper tonite. sed Ma. It Is a wonder you dident tell me you rote it yurself. It must be wnuderful wen a yung man is abel to rite songs to a gurl that he luvs. sed Ma. Then she has sumthing that she can cherish thru the yeers & maybe shew to her childeern. & maybe show to a attorney, sed Pa. A yung man must be careful what he rites to a gurl. Heven a song may be used aggenst him. sed Pa. Here is a splendid record. Pa sed. It is the latest ballad, entiteld. I Did Not Wed You for Yure Welth, I Took All That For Granted. That is a vary silly sounding title, sed Ma. Maybe, sed Pa. but under the silly sounding titels in this wurld thare is man' a Aching Truth, Pa sed. After Pa played 3 tunes Ma found a tune Aich she played & she sed it is the tune she is always going to like best, it is about a married woman telling her husband to put on his slippers & lite up his pipe beekaus he ain't going Hye Bye. That is a grand song, sed Ma, the sentiment is luvly. Maybe, sed Pa, but it will drive many a kind harted married man to a rebelyun. The day is curnming. sed Pa. Mark my words. Wen the day eums, sed Ma, you know wich side is going to win. doant you? & then Pa beegan to play the fonevKraft aggen.

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Whether You Need Light Heat Power Any time of Davor Night, a touch of the Mareje Button on the wall gives instant " Electric Service. " It's for you as well as vour neighbor.

Bell 462; Home 5462

Mn Iy Dr. I'.indjorz (No. 2)

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I K-i o:j . r .'. '!"'..' t .i i ' I i , i r i 1 1 v.' 1 1 ' '.:;!.... t'O'.'l in -.t, with V" :r a;," ." :! !.,, .t nd t !: ". ' !: ' r on t owk .' o;; c; Ii i '. :. t : 1 sr t-'.oth and f -It . - if . had b-cjj hit on t.'.- !. ,! -.. !. :i ti a e '.' ' II. t K.it'- :. -.. n i i,'- d a d-!iti-t. W i .. tint sav tooth ;.!.! !. i .: at in.: ' ; t .f . r !.,:.! : . a bo ;t tv- m;:; it---. '..'!. .t DR. EITELJORG, Dentist union ii:n tm. . I I:: s. Mi Jnari -. O.rr M.t! .Jewelry Moro.

Streibel & Stemel, Props. PUBLIC DRUG STORE 124 N. Michigan St.

Don't Pay CaH for Your Clothing Your CrMit ts (;1 ni GATELVS S21 J. Michigan St.

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