South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 94, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 4 April 1917 — Page 6

i, r.. i.t. .Ai'lllli I, UM7.

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH B'D N-1WS -TIMES M ( i r : i i n z I : v e n i n S u n J a y. John irr.NitY zrvi:u. nditor. GAP.IiIi:i, II. PL'MMRRS, Publisher.

to soon recognize, and to make provision for a defensive !

prosecution of. It is not necessary for the United States to declare war. "We need only an expressed realization that we are already at war, not by our choice, but because of an enemy's trespasses. Our disposition accordingly, and quite naturally Is. to do what we can toward kicking that trespasser directly and completely off the premises. The Prussian ambition for world

y ! dominance must be crushed. The kaiser of Berlin is j

OM.V .OfiTM I'ltKss mokmnc I'KANTlllsK scheduled to ko the same way as did the Caesar of rxi-Kit in oictiii:i;n iniina m only papkk , riouM, tiii: international xkh m:rU( K in ! Home; another case of history repeating itseir. and oi v1-?' ':V',r , '""7;',i,,"'r ,n t,:" ruo'oni- empire exploding by the force of its own over-exertion. i'.v two ,V-. !, wir- - iitirt;t and 1 v nw mtvi e , ' om..

-s-rhr-1 ;-iti.n ;i;i;, r In ft.it outsi t indi..r...p-.i. I'uMUhM j The Teuton bent upon absorption of the Anelo-baxon.

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What to Grow and How Much Seed to Plant in Your Plot

i::.t r ii ut i.t- South I :-nl ' i.-mtoff i e aa ecorid

THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING COMPANY

Off! : 2h) V. Vifux Av.

the Celt, the Latin and the i-erb. has. we fear, ventured upon the "meltins: pot" a trifle close, and is in grave danger of being burned.

lfom 1'iKinr 111

Urll IMioae 2100

ill ct the - fT': r lf! j.li n1 af..v tin inl-rs arid ask for SVf.-irtmt-iit w:int..l IMit'.riiii. A-l t rt it! up. lrulatln. or Aui.tlns. K,,r -v.-i ut ;i.lv" If v ur n.iiii'- i i tb telephone -ilr. . t -rj. wiü .,. !, ii;-d afa-r insertion. Kep-.rt Inattention to bulij..M. t-..iitl..ii. p.,..r 1.-IIvt.v of p.Tpf- I''' f -.(ion. Hen i, c, t-t'., .. Ik jkI if lp;irtm-iit with whl-b yon re U-;iu,z Tli- N- -Tl::n-s b . h tMrte--!. trunk line, all of wt! L r. M.r..l to lb -iii.- I'll-. ii- ll.'.l and Hell -Kx

ICII'TION KT: Morning and i:v uinjr Mdit ion. i

.:!'. I o;.y. J.-; Siinl.tv. .V; Mn.iii.; or i:vnltiK hdllinn. I lily, in i i.!in Sun-i.iy. t.y mull. l-r ye-ir In ml v.tnoe. I'.liv.r.d t.y trri-r In South It.-n-l and Miti.i" uka. :() per ; .ir tu :i'Iv.ui''. ,r !. Iiv the week.

AIVt:KTIINi i: Tl ; Ask the adverti-di..? d ji rt meat I -rtl-ii .Id wrtisin;: i; i.ieB'i.tatlws : (M:, a I;i;.NI:N V Wool'MAN. rj: 1 ifMi Ar. .Ww Vrk City ami Adv. UbU' L'hlaKo. 'Mil- Sw-'l In. f ndva V"t to ke-p it vi-rtisiug "luinr.H free from fraii'iuU-nt inisrtr;r iv nt itioti. Any prso.i ' -fr.iii'lrd through atron.ik;f ntiy adv-rtl-i'.n-iit in thi.i ,ip-r wi'A -i.nf.-r a lavor on tfi man a-inont ly r-iorting th : H ! .rnpl-t l) .

A PK IL 4, 1917.

SOME MOKE UNKEST. Mar rtports. through Miurits more or less r-U-.it-le. stroimly indu.itc that wh it is called "the spirit f unrest" is hotly boiling anions the people of Spain. In thtc times of oUaiiie action by peoples, it would not be surprising should th Spanish go in for revoI ition. They arc near neighbors of republican France mil of Portugal, whoso king is a refugee, and they h.iw tin" recent splendid example of the Kussians. Aii. tin. they're awfully hungry by reason of (Itrniany'd unrestricted submarine warfare and they know that thir own autocrats side with (Jermany. Spain may not yet I m fully ripe for -revolution bit she's another country whose masses are being reduced to Marvation by the German autocracy. Germany is .i tu. illy Marving peoples into revolution, and if we ere a .Spanish autocrat, we surely would get down otf the neutral fence. It certainly is better to get down while Mie getting's good than to have your head pulled off in being brought down.

THAT -STATE OF WAR" WE'RE FACING. While to the average layman, the distinction is one luiie without a difference, yet there is a. distinction, and one of which Americans should bo proud. Entrance into the world of war under the recommendations of the president as taken up by congress, declaring a st.ate of war as existing and accepting the status of belligerency even to the point of aggressive defensiveness, is quite different than a declaration of war would be

that put the enemy on the defensive and' made our-

.-elves the .aggressors. America has not sought this condition of affairs. It has done much as could be done, it would seem, to

present it. We have desired peace. The president, as the representative of the American people, has ever p'ead for peace, not only with all the Kuropean bellig

erents, and between them, but especially with the power !

that has made its peace with i'.s no longer honorable or tolerable. From the moment of the sinking of the Lusitania to the destruction of the Aztec, Germany

has almost constantly made war upon us. Of course, .

like a nation of whipped, or cowardly curs, we might have complied with her demands, become her ally in her world-wide conquest, and for the moment escaped her assaults made up.m us, but the Fnitcd States has never been a nation of whipped or cowardly curs. After two years and more of German abuse, broken promises, seditious meddlesomeness, etc, we have finally deter

mined to tight, not in a spirit of revenge, or of retail- j atin. but still for the advancement of those principles for w hi'h we have stood from the start; American life, i r the rights of neutrals, and now, finally, the survival of

democracy as a governmental mode and power.

The right of one nation to remain at peace with the I vorld while other nations quarrel and tight, is at th ' bottom of it all. That rUht with neutrality maintained ;

.is between the warring powers has always had international recognition. iklligcrents may establish their Mo, ka.ies. and announce their war zones, Jut until now the-c blockades and zones have always stood only as airain:-t contraband, or at the most against conditional contraband, so far as concerned the commerce of neutrals. Fven at that the offending vessel has always heretofore been accorded the protection of seizure and search, plus recompense where non-contraband is con-f.scate-1. with safety for passengers and crews where A

TRUE PACIFISM AND FALSE. j It is hardly to be expected that the United State, ; in a crisis like the present one, will -be able to bridgeit without intervention on the part of the reincarnated j tdriev if 'TK Ii rt th coupfrhfads of the '()'. The I

dilatory tactics of Sen. UFollette. yesterday, no doubt sanctioned by such other anti-Americans as Sens. "BiH" Stone and "Al" Cummins, need be no surprise, therefore. It is they who blocked the president's program at the close of the last congress. Their encouragement and cheer for the kaiser appears still on "tap." They especially Sen. LaFolIette, seem nowmost concerned in 1'eeping America from recognizing the state of war which their "patron saint" over in Berlin has intlicted upon us. and hence iheir continued insistence that something different be done evidently, preferably nothing, and that it always be done at some other time, meaning, apparently, never. fc And to think that such men should be parading the country under the false pretense, even of "pacifists." There used to be dignity and honor to that term, but that was before it became the wail of demagogues, or, th3 false pretense of traitors. We are a nation of "pacifists." hut, thank heaven, not all of .the I-t Follette-Stone-Curnniins-Ktc, school. It is present day "pacifists" such as these that are making that tine wurd a term of reproach and disgust. They continue shouting, as they have shouted from the beginning. "Wf do not want war:" Hut neither the facts nor the nation's attitude are what they were in the beginning. Nobody wants war. But the majority of our citizens have sense enough to see that conditions have changed, that circumstances which we could not control have swept us from our peaceful moorings, that the time has come when our safety and honor, and all the things for the sake of which we ordinarily want peace, demand war. While these blatant pacifists repeat, parrot-like, "We do not want war!" they have war. Germany is making war on us. Germany has been making war on us intermittently for two years and continuously for two months. Germany .leliberately murders our citizens going about their lawful errands, destroys our ships, which the law of nations and the specitie treaties we have with Germany should protect, closes the sea to our commerce, and insolently announces that she intends to keep right on doing so. To insist that we do not want war now is as rational as it would be to say, "We do not want cold weather!"

when the temperature is down to zero, or "We do not

want a hot spell.'" when men are falling all around of sunstroke. We must accept the war as a fact, just as we accept winter and summer, and act accordingly. The way to have peace today is to light for it. Those who do not want war must help to force Germany to keep the peace. Today the patriot ready to

j tiht is the true pacifist. L.et Sen. IviFollette, and

his like, if so anxious for peace, address their suppli-

! 1 cations, and make their appeals for delays, to that

throne in Berlin. The sovereignty of America is vested in the people, and the people, save a few exceptions, have at least sense enough to be loyal to themselves, Messrs. Lal'cllette, Stone and Cummins, etc., notwithstanding.

For the benefit of South Benders enlisting in the backyard and vacant !ot garden movement The News-Times is Conducting this department with the co-operation of the National Emergency Food Garden commission, which is affiliated with the conservation department of the American Forestry association with headquarters in Washington, D. C. The advice Is supervised by experts of the department of agriculture. Charles Lathrop Pack of Lakewood, N. J., president of the commission, and other members are Dr. Charles W. Eliot, John Grier Hibben of Princeton, James Wilson, former secretary of agriculture; Luther Burbank. John Hays Hammond, Carl Vrooman. assistant .secretary of agricuituie, A. W. Shaw, Capt. J. B. White, L S. shipping board; Emerson MacMillan, Fairfax Harrison, president Southern r.nivay. Watch this column and follow it closely in planning your garden. Questions that may not be covered in the advice will be answered if written on one side of the paper and addressed to the Garden Editor The News-Times.

PLINY MISSED FIRE. Pliny the Elder is accredited with summing up all needed garden instruction in six words and we even have one of our farm and garden contributors proclaiming that if you live up to Pliny, you'll have nice tresh vegetables to aid you to tight the high cost of living, Pliny's six words being: "Dig deeply; manure well; work often." -V": ... - ...... . 1 . . - . . V. 1 . I I i

i .vmti) per ceiu ui muse uu uo Kaiueiinit; aim uhc

hundred per cent of those who really understand it will swear that Pliny left out the most important part

i of the needed instructions, j Dig a mile deep, fertilize a mile deeper and work well j twenty-four hours per day. and you'll get little or nothing without irrigation. Without judicious watering of your garden, you might as well have laid it out on the sidewulk, or the top of your piano. Pliny tried to be smart and brief, and missed It both ways. He might 'have put it all in three word cultivate, fertilize, irrigate. And. verily, it is in many instances unfortunate that

the beginner in gardening is given any further in-

..vil ?v c'itik.-.h IVii.l'.i.rmitw 1 - tfll .n tli-i Pnc. 1

Istructive details than just those three words; such is

i.imi nas mteriere.i with our commerce as well as nas ;

Germany, and maybe she has even oftener, but the dif-lei-ence still remains that Britain has kept within the

rules above outlined while Germany has scarcely re- j

.-pected them :U all. No one is to blame save Germany herself that her r.avy is s limited to submarines, aside from that which has been kept bottled up by the British. No one is to

the variety of soil and climate in our country. Deep

cultivation of soil in some p.arts is not necessary. Some

! soils are naturally so loaded with phosphate and nitrate

that further fertilization will kill tender plants. Some

i garden seeds will only fully germinate when soaked and

to others much water is fatal. Generally, the novice can rely on this rule cultivate, fertilize, Irrigate, but experience alone can make him capable of producing

Having selected your garden space, measured it and drawn its diagram on paper, it is time for you to decide what plants to grow in those which you have marked on your map. Before you can make this decision you must know something about the soil with which you have to work. In i general way, no matter what the soil may be. if it will grow anything at all. it will probably grow every vegetable you select. If your garden, or part of it. happens to be moist and low ground, such crops as celery, onions, and late cucumbers will do best there. If it is high, warm; and dry soil it is particularly adapted to early peas, beans, and other crops which you mean to force. If you have plenty of room, you may grow sweet corn, melons, squashes, and other spreading plants in addition to the ones which may be planted closely together. Around the edges of your garden you have probably discovered places for permanent beds of asparagus and rhubarb, for a fewstrawberry plants, and possibly for some other small fruits, like currents, the bushes of which bear annually. As for the bulk of your produce. please your own taste and that of your family, always remembering that it is better in a small garden to specialize on a few vegetables, preferably those like string beans, peas, and radishes, which taste better tho fresher they are, than to grow little driblets of everything.

but not enough of any one thing to be worth the trouble. Suggestions for early planting in an everage small garden peas, beets, carrots, radishes, parsnips, lettuce, salsify, kohl rabi, onions, spring spinach, and (if enough room) potatoes. Later crops can be planted w'ien some of these have been gathered.

Now as to quantities of seed. The following quantities are sufficient to plant 100 feet of row for each vegetable given. You can buy in proportion for your needs, measuring your rows on your paper plan: Snap beans one pint; pole lima beans oz. ; carrots, one oz.; bush lirnas, half pint; early cabbage, half oz. ; cauliflower, one packet; celery, one packet; cucumber, half oz.; eg plant, one packet; kale or Swiss chard, half oz.; parsley, one packet; parsnips, half oz.; salsify, one oz.; summer or huhbard s.piash. half oz.; beet, four oz.; sweet corn, one pint; lettuce, one oz. ; onion sots, two quarts; peas, two to four quarts; radish, one to two oz.; spinach, quarter pound; Watermelon, one oz. Determine your requirements and order your seeds now. Do not let the planting weather catch you unprepared.

ONCE-OVERS

Mame save Germany herself that her submarine typ tne j,ej:t reSults. , f r.avy cannot re successfully operated in compliance j .Know thyself!" said a wise old solon. Know thy with the rules of international law. She should have a , carden! if you want potatoes and beans and carrots and r.v that she can operate V ith:n such rules. Let her : thlnps lo l(Ml t)id high cost of living. for e the unbottling of her :U-t t of cruisers. Dattleship Talk it üVer with U8; not iiiny. a: d dreidnaughts, breaking through the British lines. ai d use them in st-izures and starches, and protection AMUSING 'EM. . t American lues, as contemplated by international' That German chancellor is some humorist. "We law. if she wishes to maintain a war zone, and she ' hall." he says, "follow the principle that we never w-uld l ave no more trouble with the United States .meddle with the Internal problems of other countries."

th.ir. England and France have had.

You can almost hear old Carranza and the mikado make ! ha-ha. but German humor always is pretty heavy, any-

It is different, how-ever, when Germanv would

i.- -u::r the consequences of her weakness as to rec

t -m.e l legitimate t pes of naval warfare. We are Hollweg wasted breath in declaring that Germany's

u: w-r !.o ligations t pull her irons out of th

t-. onvemenco her ! v a submission that would make Nobody cares what Germany's autocrats say. It is

how as. for instance, to take a whiff of von Bethmann-

doesn't desire anv more war.

le- warfaie more e::'e. tive than a legitimate warfare 'what they do that counts. Unrestricted murder of mikht be It v .-.;ld l e unneutral to the other btlhger- Americans is still the German policy and while such is e:;ts f.;- us to attempt such a thing. Our rights are as (the policy, talk is about the cheapest thing going.

of th

UCh to i res;. - teil as tllo.i-

kaiser, and Ger

many ha ving so admittedly -t it to subdue the earth. ..lid master the -..". bv lit r rut!ilesnes. the president right vh n he .!. .! irvs that there is no other alternative than to reestablish our said rights by force. It is in the destruction of thoe rights that Germany ha. tiiaüe war ipo:: u; a ar which conres bids fair

, If we were in "ousi.-i Wilhelm" place, we'd put our

! l-e.-t cetior on incoming reports of that Russian revo-

ution.

Carranza has not vet declared how he welcomed Wilhelm'.proportion to take Texas. New Mexico and Arizona.

How about it, are you afraid to take a stand for what you know is right, or are you waiting to see what some one else does, or do you fear the loss of a friend? Well, if your friends are the right sort they will be lad to know that you have the courage of your convictions. No one cares for the nambynamby. wishy-washy wobbler. Better be blunt to the point of rudeness and let people know where you stand on questions involving a moral standpoint, than to be forever on the fence, not knowing which way to jump. And beuare of the so-called fiiend who tries to use his influence with

you to make you do a certain thing when you are in doubt as to the i moralitv of it. i The earlier in life you learn to ! use your own brain and exercise

your own will-power, the higher vour standing in the communltv will be. Be slow to decide, if you must, but once you have mapped out the right course. b independent enough to do rieht whether So-ar.d-So does or not. The world needs men and women who have the courage to stand up in the face of every opposition and try to do what they believe to be right. (Copyright. 1 V 1 7, International News Service. I

THE MEL TING POT COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

PLi:ST.G POSTKItlTY. "We owe it to posterity!" the earnest statesman cries. Impressively removing drops of moisture from his eyes. "Posterity is helpless and it can't collect the oill. And we may disregard it, fellow-members, if we will. But future generations will abominate our name. And diligently hammer on our cheap and brittle fame." "We owe it to posterity!" is measurably true. Posterity will be engaged and have a lot to do. But much of all its heavy work will be to mend our breaks, To cover our incompetence ami pay for our mistakes: And as it cleans up aft?r us and carts away the muss. What things would dear posterity desire to do to us? Posterity is coming at a gratifying rate. With plans to change a lot of things in school and church and state; And when its battles all have been victorio jsly fought. And numerous improvements been laboriously wrought. Posterity will pass the world along to future men. Who'll hump themselves tremenduously to change it once again. Arthur Brooks Baker.

Tin-: ti:st. By James J. Montague. Whenever i statesman arises. With a virtuous gleam in his eva. And says he alone of all men he has known Would scorn to put over a lie: Whenever he grieves that his colleagues All stoop to pretense and deceit. And it's rarely, forsooth, that you ever hear truth On the lips of the people you meet. You view him askance, for you know in advance That he"d prejure his soul if he had half a chance. Whenever a gentleman utters His firm and unswerving belief That, counting- him out, there is never a doubt That every man born is a thief; Whenever he mourns at beholding The larceny loose among men, And says every one that he knows should have done You don't leave your pelf lying aro jnd on the shelf. For you feel rather sure he's a burglar himself. Whenever a person assures you, With eyes that are misty and dim. That no one has nerve to step forward and serve His war-beset country but him Whenever he weeps for the nation Whom none but himself would uphold. And says all who incline to believe he's a shine Have been bought by the enemy's gold. You make up your mind that both he and his kind In case of a racket will be hard fo find.

Some IVat for a Cow. The world's champion milk cowwas killed by eating a needle, in spite of the fact that Unding a needle in a haystack has long been regarded as practically impossible.

Something to Think .lxtit It. A useful little lesson in what war means can be found in the words of M. Plainleve, who spenks of the sacrifice of the hoys who "sacrifice themselves before even having lived." 0 Splendid Sanitary Condition. The doctor who insists that wearimg too many clothes is detrimental to health will have to admit that most society women are in no Immediate danger. He lias a Lot to "Learn. The psychologist who said that artists want human sympathy rather than material rewards ould get a few valuable pointers by talking with Mr. Gatti-Casazza, who extends hu

man sympathy and checks to the artists at the Metropolitan opera house. o The Blessings of Coniietition, As soon as the sun goes Into the heating business down comes the price of coal. Merely a Difference in Orthography. Nicholas's speech of abdication was so to speak, another speech from the thrown. o Harping on the Same Subject. Merely adding an "s" changed a reigning monarch to resigning mon

arch. The Iut Clianco. Let us hope that while congress is at it, it will give this country- a thorough war proofing. 0 Caesar at Ixvist Was Warneil . There was no friendly soothsayer to tell thi czar to beware the ides of March.

With Other Editors Than Ours

tin: scpimu'-ssiox or m:vs. (Kditor and Publisher.) Pew people would have the hardihood to ask a judge to have a grand jury indictment pigeon-holed, or secretly dismissed, as a personal favor, with the object of saving the accused person front public humiliation. Yet there are still people to ask editors to suppress news or to color it to the advantage of those figuring in it. If the people generally could understand that the newspapers are quite as important f.actors in our lives as the courts that the responsibility of an editor to tho publicis fully as sacred as that of the judge there would be little effort made to have legitimate news suppressed. To ask a judge to exercise bias is

to commit "contempt of court." To i

ask an editor to suppress the truth about actual events is to commit contempt of public opinion. The newspaper which would suppress real news in the interest of the individual would betray its trust, violate the obligation to society which it solemnly assumed on

the day of its birth, and would thereby forfeit its place as the guardian of public interests, and would become a menace, rather than a factor of useful service, to its community. To suppress the news of a court proceeding, with the mistaken purpose of protecting the good name of an individual, would be to imply that our court proceedings are invasions of the rights of those who are under accusation that for the protection of those rights the newspaper must draw the veil of silence over the event. The surest safeguard against judicial tyranny is full publicity of court proceedings, whenever these have a public interest. The best safeguard against injustice to the individual is the publication of the truth about any event in which he figures. When, because of personal considerations, an e.litor fails to do this, he breaks faith with his public. The -.litor is the historian of his day. He must record history as it is made, in both larce and small things. It always happens that some of this history w:ll b1 humili

ating, shameful that in the printing of the news of the day some people will be pilloried. It is to be regretted that the events happened but the historian must put them into the record.

tjii-2 ti:achi:u. (Cleveland Leader.) It's great to be a school teacher. In .addition to the privilege of being bossed by a principal, a corps of supervisors. a superintendent, several assistant superintendents, half a dozen school board members who know more about separating dollars from those reluctant to part with them than they do about education, and some militant mothers of precious darlings who can do no wrong, it is necessary to possess a liberal share of such attributes as these. listed by a teachers' agency for the consideration of those applying for assistance in obtaining employment: 1 Initiative, energy, aggressiveness, force, ambition, persistence, decision. 2 Tact, discretion, tolerance, cooperation, courtesy, power to suggest, persuade, control. 3 Independence, originality, responsibility, self-possession, poise, control of nevres. 4 Honesty, fairness, loyalty. o Cheerfulness, sympathy, hope, vivacity, enthusiasm, humor. 6 Faith, courage. T Imagination, alertness, resourcefulness, memory, judgment. 8 Power to tell a good story. Conversation, interview. 9 Voice: Pleasant. clear, smooth, musical, decisive, modulated., cultivated. Not loud, but with sufficient power to make yourself easily understood in conversation or over the telephone. 10 Manners: Conventional, graceful, natural, quiet, free from peculiarity or eccentricity. 11 ?rr.ile: Pleasant, cheery, attractive, natural, genuine. 12 Handshake: a warm, cordi.il: not clammy, listless or uncertain. 13 Postures: Krect, refined, graceful, never lounging, dignified. The ail vantage of possessing nil these qualities, virtues and accomplishmer.'s must be plain to everybody. Thus endowed and equipped, the fortunate holder of a teacher's certificate should be able, by faithful application in the schoolroom and her boarding house bedroom to reach the point where she will be eligible to a place in a movie production company, with a salary of s'teen hundred dollars a week ad- , tached to iL.

! f) fvxxi ; Mjjjjlrf Wf4 lift

iV i il ill V i . tL MAi

H 1

No "Goblins" to Fear

in a Wired Home When bed-time ccrnrs ami mother touches thr

1 little button at the foot of the ttsirs the good fairy cf

electric light drives away all the "bug-a -boos" from the aim border cf SlumbeHand. Llcctric light for the path ahead and fcr dark corners, quick heat vithoix re for chilly mornings or evenings, and wülir.g tlectric motors that take the grind c:t cf daily tasks for busy housewives are cn.'y a f.j cf the aJzaits'ts cf a xsirJ kjiu. Let us tell you some of tbe others

& M.

Bell 462

Home 1 197

fSii

Get an Early Luncheon (Or Dine on the Train)

and by so doing leave South Bend 12:32 noon daily on the Grand Trunk Reaching Chicago Early 3:35 p. m. Carries Observation Car This is the train to take when oint: from South Bend to KANSAS CITY, OMAHA, ST. PAUL, MINNEAPOLIS, ETC., as it makes sure connections with evening trains from Chicago. other trains for Chicnco leave South I5 nd :."1 a. m. and I. m. daily. C A. McNl'TT. IM'ii-cr A sent, (irand Trunk 1 1. v. Station. South Ilrnd, Ind. Phones, Hell K; IIoüic ,,0!:t.

Malffi Thrift a HniisRhnltl Word LL LA

IIIU'W IUI 111

Teach the children to be thrifty. Habits formed in childhood are not apt to change in after years. The key opening box of SiiiKOiA with more than fifty shines and a SiiinoiA HOME SET

for polishing is an outfit unequalled for economy and convenience. BLACK TAN WHITE At fill dealers Take no .substitute. SHINE WITH S.IIMlA AND SAVE

HOME SET

jli 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 r 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 f 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 - I Start Your Savings Account at Once 1 I And get the benefit of our APRIL DATING. f All funds deposited prior to APRIL 1 1th will begin to draw interest from APRIL 1st at 4Tc I DO NOT DELAY. NOW IS THE TIME, AND HERE IS 1 THE PLACE. I 1 Citizens Loan Trust & Savings Company 1 1 112-114 W. Jefferson Blvd. E Next Door East of the Pcstofficc. iiiiniiiiiiiMiMiiiiiiiiiMiiiMniiiiiiniiiiiiMiiiiiiijiiiiiiiMiMniiMiMiiMiMMiiiiniir;

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Keplacint; lost natural one?, eraje deep facial llns and hollows, and restore roundnt-s of contour, ban

ishing premature aed looks. We make them from servicf-nhle. inexpensive sets up to the finest that money can buy ,but always AT HCASONABLn CHARGES. No charge for extracting when ordering new teeth. All work guaranteed. Other work at our oli rea

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f Porcelain Fillings SI.Oo J)iJ GoI1 Finings 2.00 Tv Silver FlIlir.K 50c

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NEW SPRING SHOES MAX ADLER COMPANY VVorlcTt Bt Clothes Guarantee Shoe Co. cornrr iiciu and vai. st