South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 104, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 14 April 1917 — Page 6

satthday aiteunoov. aptul ii, 1017

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

QHTTTH RFMn NPUC TT M C C ! r this year than ever before. Whether we like it or

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Mnniinir livening Sunday. NEEUVTIMES PRINTING CO., Publishers. J. i: M'.IMi:i:s. I'rul.l-.nt. J. M STKPIIIINSON. Manager. jhn hi:m:v zuvki:. i:!itor.

n'T Tr Mnrntnt I'aprr In Northern Indian sn-t Only rH;,r t mptoj in the International service In uiU llrn.l Two I.ee.l Ulre: !a ami Mjht.

Ilon.e Phone 1151.

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Co-..irtci-rit w i MM - I".. lit. rial. ilvertiii! jr. t 'lrrulatln. or A -. .!;nt ir.jr. Ir "w mt .-i.!.' if nur name i In tke telephone dilatory. Mil will ! rallied iiftr lnTtl-n. Import Inattention t' l-.jIn-. e- ijtl ti. jcior lilrery .f parra. bl te!f -!,. ,n prvirc. t. l.f.-id f b p irtmnt with which you are b-nüng T.Ve V -Tim In thirteen trunk lii.M. all of wLka r i;. n l to II .me phone 11.11 and IM1 t"RrRii'TION itATI.s: .Morning nnd Evening IMitinm, Firjri- V,py. !; S ni.lay, .",; Mor'.lnff or Kvei.tug Edition. 'in'.iy. in-1 1.! i n ir S'iM'l.iy, .v m.ill. "O t year In :ilvau-e. I'elivt fo. f,j ,.irr;,r in S'-iith IU nd a nl MidMw;ikn. ä 0O per Tir in .nlvar,. . r Ev l.r the (k. Entered at the .South Ben'. p-ir..fri'-e a f.t.'l'c m ill.

AIivi:itTIM.r; HTI: Ask the nl verti-inz department. For.-'cn .VIv.-rtMcg I:e;.res ri!.itlve-, : NE. I.OUENZEN Äi Vi iiMA V ir.T. J iftfi .v. Nerv York lty. and A'lv. lihlg . i'hV ;.".. Tfie N a-Tlme eiob-avor to keep It advertlahisr ro'.nu-.nn free fr.;n fraudulent mircpresentatl"n. Any ieron !r f r.-i u !'! t h r . u i; Ii j. itr!i ig f any nl vertl V'ent in tl.ia P-ifter ,".. r a fivr n the man. lament by reporting' the fat r r;. j. I. t i y.

APRIL 14. 1017.

DOWN WITH THE STABLE FLY. When son svs.it the houe II y don't forget his mure It-r.M n.us fellow, the -table tly. The stable 11 y Is no worse in ti 1 1 1 - than the common house 11 y. lut le-t-au-i; of its ability to pierce the skin when it bites, it I a graver menace to human beinK.s. There are many h-e;ivts it is dffinittly known t carry. It i. thought al- that tin- stable My spreads the drea.J infantile pa ra l ms. It tarries anthrax and blood poisjninK. The tia rue " stable My" is ina( curate. The tly is freineiitl; li,und in stabler beeauso its favorite breeding .!a is rttinni straw. lint dftayel vegetation of any ;in-i mtm-.h equally weM a- a h'Mne for hordes of these laniriiuiu Mies. There is m.thir.r; to do but al.solutek to exterminate the pet. or at least to keep its numbers down tu the minimum. Ion't let pile.- of decaying matter accumulate, patti ulai l around human habitation1. Kill veiy tly you see. There is little beer t be derived from the fact that i he viable tly. as a rule, does not trnvel more than a few fi from its breeding place. And its life is only .. iut two weeks Ion;-;. It should be simply a matter of energv, determination and perseverance to rid ourselves of it Not to do so is a disgrace to our intelligence and a. menace to our h'-alth.

MILITARY PROHIBITION. Kcpott fiom Washington that congress is conteiniilating the abolition of the manufacture and sale of ti juoi-. this as a military measure, looks good on its fare, but it looks better when you get under the kin. The moral i.-sue is eliminated from this consideration. It is purely an economic question, the favoring statesmen contend. It woii'.l means the conservation of wheat. re. corn, etc., more necessary purposes, the contention runs; the resne of those grains from the sewers of waste and their dedication to mankind's better advantage. CoimI' We a.-e agreed. We have been agreed right along. I5ut why wait for military necessity? If 11'j.uor is waste, and we do not question but that it Is. why isn't it a good thing to eliminate in time of peace as well as war? Prohibition as a war measure is only that much more proof that K would be a god thing a) a peace measure. Waste is alwas an economic menace an! hpior is waste. New proof omes along every day too that the prohibition of t'ne li'i""r trattic fails to bring that disaster cen t the men in the business that thy seek to have us articipate, in adance of the passing of that busi-los.-. I'.rewers and distillers especially are Unding; othei and less wasteful uses for their plants, and gradually take to thanking their stars that they have found them. They really enjoy the more respectable occupations o:ue they get into them. l-'rom the northwest come reports of the aried activities being carried on in former breweries. At Vaniouer, Wash., a company manufacturing soft drinks and inegar has taken over what was formerly a lare brcM-r. It is putting up sauer kraut and pickles, too. Another brewery at Aberdeen, Wash., has become a clam cannerj. .vrups. denatured alcohol, condensed milk and

not. much of our fooJ will be drained off by Kurope.

It Is estimated that forty million men today are withdrawn from agricultural work by military exigencies, engaged only in consuming and destroying lnead of producing. Our own tillers of the soil must assume as much as possible of the duty necessarily neglected by those forty million. We need soldiers and sailors today. Hut we need farmers Ju.t a much. Says Ii. F. Yoakum, one of the nation's foremost railroad men: "For every mar; who must shoulder a rifle for military duty we had better furnish inducement for another to take up a hoe for farm work. For every farm laborer who leaves the farm for the ammunition factory to earn $3 a day we had better offer inducements to the farmers to npeei up their efforts to feed the people, and show them how they will be Justified in gong to the labor market and paying good wages for the same class of labor for farm work a the Kun and battleship factories pay labor to serve the government." This fact cannot be too strongly emphasized. Desirable as it is to fill up the army and navy. It Is no less desirable that the farms should have their full complement of men. It is not desirable In this emergency for our farmers to "beat their plowshares into swords". In the planting time of 1917, it is just as patriotic to drive a plow as to carry a rille or point a battleship gun. And here is a service that doesn't call for the ages, health or physique of the men acceptable in army or navy. A lot of us weaklings might make ourselves fit for the battlelield or armed cruisers by absorbing a little of the health of the farm. A lot of us, too, having once enjoyed a real taste of the ozone of the country, and the physical exercise that farming carries with it, might prove willing to forego a return to our veneered civilization as it culminates in the cities, and by sticking to the farm, render ourselves of some, actual service to humanity for the remainder of our days.

THE POOR MAN'S HEALTH. The idea of public health supervision's Unding much favor rowadays. A new York institution interested in the problems of poverty recently published a report indicating- that illness Is the chief handicap of the poor, and declaring that in most cases the illness is preventable or easily curable. It seems a natural step to proceed to the public inspection of health, especially among the working classes. Health is a more important consideration to the workingman than to the business or professional man. The latter can usually eret along somehow or other even in case of prolonged sickness. His income is not entirely cut off. His business continues. His subordinates or associates take his place until he recovers. The workingman is likely, under present conditions, to lose his income altogether until he is able to return to work. Insurance against sickness is a remedy that has so far made little headway in the United States, though it is now almost universal in European industrial countries. A physician Ilnds fault with the report mentioned, because he thinks it falls to take Into account the economic factors of wages and the cost of food, clothing, rent, etc. "No matter how wages soar," he says, "the balance is forever adjusted to extract a compensatory outlay that forever keeps the poor at the border of destitution." There is unquestionably much injustice in the matter of wages and much grinding in the face of t'.ie poor through monopolistic prices. Those matters must be attended to. Hut that Is no reason for neglecting- so simple and obvious a thing as using public means to keep the workmen In good health. Medical aid to workingmen is not a panacea for poverty, but it is an admirable remedy so far as it goes. And it is inexpensive. "The cheapest commodity In the world today Is, as it always has been, medical service to the poor." Private expenditures for medical attendance and advice have always paid big dividends. Public expendltureH would pay still bigger dividends.

GOOD THING ANYWAY. Upon his attention being especially directed to the fact that many men are offering their services provided that they be sent at once to European battle fields, Sec'y of War Paker said that the plans of his department were designed to train an army no element of whih would be considered ready for actual conflict within a year. It does not seem possible that the Kuropean war can continue for another year. If it does not, and if Sec'y Paker is not misquoted, we will be making a big army and navy for ptace times. And this is all right, too. Uncle ?am m ist never again be caught in so helpless a condition as August, 1914, found him. Uncle Sam on

few more of the articles now being made I a peace footing must always mean Uncle Pam able to

take care of himself. Our thorough preparation for war will be a mighty good thing, though we never fire off a gun on European soil. It is going to show us and others Just w hat we are, and it means training that will strengthen American manhood in peace or war.

candv are a

profitably where intoxicants were made before. Two former breweries in Oregon are being transformed into . reameries. The manufacture of denatured alcohol is among the most useful purposes to which these former breweries may be put. lUit there is room for all these varied productions. It will be .n interesting side Issue to the spn.ul of prohibition t. see how many different activities find profitable development within the walls of old breweries. So iet congress dismantle them as a military measure if it likes. Any reason for it is better than not doing it. 'tue dismantled and put to work in other lines, they may r.ot tare to return to the old and hazardous emp!o merit, even If they should have the opportunity, which is doubtful. And they ought to know by this time that it is a hazardous employment; a hazardous investment, ever, in times of peace. At the pace with which they are being wiped out of existence, other busimsr would oluntarily take to the timbers but then, this i (baling with John Uarleycom. and blessed with the te-.aiity of satan, John, like the kaiser, is rather .-low to admit himself licked.

TAX IDLENESS. War is a matter of resources. Every vacant city lot that's being held for 'Increment" is a legitimate war resource. If it isn't producing food, put war taxes on it. We suggest it to give the speculating "ground-hogs" something to ponder over. One fine war plan is to get service or resources out of folks who would like to git back at ease and see others do all the fighting and paying.

Says the big black German autocrat to the little brown Iissian revolution, "We're ready to deal with you. since you've kicked out your autocrats." And what the little Russian revolution says to autocracy is going to be listened to, you bet.

NEEDED SOLDIERS OP AGRICULTURE. Incident to the discovery that has been made locally with rfcr-f!:c. to farm help, comes the further information that we are no exception to the rule, but only cr.o of a mil!;., n localities similarly affected. Neither is it a temporary t omlitiun, but is made serious by prospective permar.f-nce. following in the footsteps of a growth. The Amerban movement toward the citie. ',,r the larger s. lal ilitv . greater conveniences, stemir.gU easier nio:e and more apparent snaps, is provin

to. lay to : e a menace. We need soldiers of agriculture, j Orlv .t-.. f i..ii!v ,,it ..f tin-, e m the I'nitl'il StüteS 'S I

engaged m agricultural production. Thus ery farmer rou-i produce foeii fur two families in addition to his wn, if the war.t.-i of our people are to be satis:led. To ILm i.tcJ m-iit be addej h foreign demand, far sreat-

Military training will lend dignity to the player, says a baseball magnate. Good! We're just sick of seeing players grasp their bats with both hands full of tobacco Juice, for one thing.

The pacifists are now rging that we go after "the mad dog" of Europe with a syringe loaded with antitoxin.

The single man who can't or won't get Into the war service and who has $l,oOü income should pay an income tax.

Hard times! Hard times! Amos Pinchot is after us plutocrats with a proposition to war tax us until we can't have an income of over $100,000.

"The htars In-line, but do not com pel"

HOROSCOPE

m

Saturday, April j 1, 1917. Thi Is most unfortunate day, ac cording to the readings of the stars

Mars. Saturn and Venus arc all

evil place. It Is an unfavorable time for love affairs as there is a sign making for treachery and deceit. Women should be cautious in all public matters, while this configuration prevails, as they are likely to arouse opposition. There is a sign indicating some great movement that will cause widespread protest within the next two weeks. Hotels and all places of amusement may have a disappointing time today, owing to some unusual state of affairs. Forebodings and fears may be more potent to disturb mentality today than usual. Quarrels and misunderstandings should be guarded against under this rule. Domestic happiness has a most forbidding sway which makes for divorce and a general disregard for marriage ties. Scandals and libel suits may multiply during the next few weeks. More than one cause celebre is presaged by the stars. Discredit for a man who wields great influence among persons of

the lower classes is prognosticated.

Again peril to a great city on the sea is prognosticated. It will sut'fei damage from an explosion or tire which will destroy lives and property. The president of the United States comes under a sway that means a period of supreme anxiety, which will bring him into a place of highest fame, but he should guard his health. The rise of military a man of exceptional ability is foretold. He may be of foreign ryitivity. Persons whose birthdate it is may have trying times in business during the coming year. They should safeguard their health. Children born on this day may have many ups and downs. These subjects of Aries are often very unlucky, but exceedingly talented. (Copyright, 1917.)

THE MELTING POT COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

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Tin; hewaiu) o r p.vnnxci:. The methods which we use to get financial resources Are subject to a great d ssimilarity of courses. Some grind the stubborn dollars out with hard and heaw laoors. While others trade and traffic with their fellow men and neighbors

s-ome

An

ne profit by results of their employe's perspiration, d some derive their mode-t wealth from deed- of desf

peration.

Hut all the ways of getting goods are harsh and grim and grating Pesido that softest snap of all. the game or wa'.chful waiting. To have a wealthy cousin of remote and small relation. Who will not deign to d:e without extreme deliberation. Is one of life's exalted arid most interesting features. Which makes a quite profound appeal to wise and patient creature.--. For while the calm testator still procrastinates deceasing The total of his wealth is quite presumably increasing. And those who wait the moment his existence snail be ended Have lots of pleasure planning how the coin shall be expended. Put when he dies and leaves it to a hospital for sailors They join the ranks of ehronic and inconsolable wallers -Arthur Ptooks tiaker.

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PULLMAN HEGEWISCH HAMMOND CAST- CHICAGO MICHIGAN-CITY HUDSON -LAKE NEW -CARLISLE SOUTH-BEND

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One Strong Plant Much Better Than Several Wea Ones

The News-Times Is conducting column with the cooperation of the Nattoi.a! Emergency Ihm1 Garden Commission t inspire the planting of more food gardens throughout the country. Members of the eomiulsnion are: Cbarles Iaitlirup I'Aok. president of American Forestry association: laitlier Hurl. unk. Ir. Charles W. Kllot. Prof. Irving richer, John Hays Hammond. Fairfax Harrison. Myron T. Herrick. Dr. John (Jrler Ilihhen. F.mcrson MMillin. A. W. Shaw; Carl Vrooinnn. assistant secretary of agriculture; Capt. J. It. White. V. S. shipping board; James Vlln. former secretary of agriculture. You should watch this column every day. Any questions should be wrltt'-n on one sile of the paper and cent t the (Jarden EHtor of the News-Times.

iii:.in:its: Ily Jur:rs J. Montague'. "'Alas!'" cries the cynic, "alas for the nation! Who is there to lead its battalions to war? What use in this fury of fierce preparation With none of the captains who battled of yore? We've money and men, we can make our munitions; We're richer than Russia and England and France; I hit where are our strategists? Where our tacticians. Where are our Sheridans, Shermans and Grants?" Where are our leaders ? Don't worry! We'll find them! They're quietly waiting the hour of trial. When, leaving; the grooves they have trodden behind them. They'll fight for the flag in the old Yankee style. We found old George Dewey the day he was needed. We found Farmer Putnam -at work with his r lough: We found John Faul Jones, and remember what he did. And more of that sort are responding right rww! i-'ome now wear the khaki that swarms will be wearing On many a field as the days shall advance, .oiiie, still all untrained, are alert and preparing For the time when War's fortunes shall bring them a chance. W never have leaders till leaders are wanted, Hut when the air rings with the mustering drum From all the broad land, wise and brave and undaunted. When heroes were summoned, the heroes have come!

The Fighting Hantani. Isn't Panama the peppery thing?

little

I.ofa Go Slowly. Before we beat all our plowshares into swords, it will be well to remember that we'll need a lot of potatoes this year to make up for the winter wheat shortage.

Bread Coming; Baek (her the Waters. It is evident that Cuba is not an ingrate among nations.

IiOts of Good Children Vrt. Were you up early enough Easter Sunday morning to see the sun dance ?

How They'll Smoke 'Km There will be no lack of

Over. men

to

hurl those 0.000.000 hand grenades the government had ordered. There are nearly that many men on the pitching staff of the Yankees.

It's the Part of Dix-retion. Tcm. We may not all know the words of "The Star-Spangled Banner." but we can learn them, and in the meantime we can always get up when the band is playing it.

Jersey

Which Abate-s Most of the The people in the New

summer resorts are no longer making any complaints about big gun practice at Sardy Hook.

It Ought to He Easy. Mr. Bryan, having volunteered as private, could doubtless raise a regiment of major generals to volunteer with him.

It is better to have one strong plant than several weak, spindling ones, nays today's bulletin from the national emergency food garden commission. That means thorough thinning in the young rows, continues the bulletin. Seeds cf most plants are sown more thickly than the plants should grow. This is because not all seeds have the germ of life within them, and it is desirable to plant a surplus so as to insure a sufficient number of plants. But when these plants, often coming up thickly together, are big enough to take hold of, they should be thinned out severely. It may seem heartless to destroy many good plants, but those remaining will give a greater crop of a better quality than all the plants would produce if left to grow. Thin enough so that the roots of every plant have plenty of room to spread out and seek the plant food in the soil. By having the monopoly of all the food within its little area, the plant will grow vigorously. This

explains why it is important to keep,

out all weeds which attempt to share this plant food with the valuable vegetable. When the plants come up. if the seed has been sown thickly ther will be numerous thick bunches of plants together. In thinning it is usually better to pull out the plants In the centers of these bunches. firdinarily leave the best plants and pull the weaker ones, but this plan may have to be modified occasionally to insure sufficient spacing between plants. Each plant to thrive must have enough room to growin. Thin the plants to these distances. Carrots, two inches; celery, sixinches; onions, three inches; kohlrabi, six inches: lettuce, eight inches; parsley, four inches; parsnip, three Inches: peas, two inches: radish, two inches; salsify. two inches; spinach, three inches: turnip, three inches.

The Public Pulse

Commnnltltloni for this cnmn may b? Ifrnd annnynvootly bat must be acrocifAnled bT ttie name cf the writer to Insure irood faith. No reronBlt)tllty for farts or f-nt1 turrit eipnwd will b aasu-ml. Hootwt discussion cf puMlc question la In Tlte-d. bat with the rieht reserved to eliminate vlclotm an-d objertloimbl matter. The column la free. Bat, b reasonable.

BITS OF INFORMATION.

Uneasy lie all heads that wear a crown.

When fish of the deep sea chase their prey or rise for some reason high above the ocean bed. the gases of their swimming bladder expand and they become light. A machine has been invented by a German that sews the open end or side of a filled bag and knots the thread Mitomatically. A rubber bulb enables air heated by electricity in the handle of a newcomb to be forced through its uerfcrated teeth to dry hair.

APPEALS TO Tili: JEWS. I wish to make an appeal to the Jews of .South Bend in behalf of their .",000,000 unfortunate brothers that are dying of cold and starvation in eastern war zone. The appalling situation of our brothers is unspeakable and unbearable, and funds must be raised immediately if they are to live. It is also true that there are larger aspects of these funds than more humanity. The Russian revolution has opened the door of freedom to our people. Are they to die on the threshold? Are they to crawl through as heggers in search of a crust of bread? Or shall w feed them and clothe them so that they may stand erect playing full part in the drama of reconstruction. Not only '-he lives but the liberties of Russian Jewery are hanging in the balance. The-e half clothed and half starved brothers are looking upon the American Jew for support. We must give it to them and we can. W? have all prospered during this war. and we are at present enjoying all the luxuries of life, while our brothers do not oven know what a gc.od piece of bread looks like, and for thi.purpose the American Jewish Relief has been organized in all th principal cities of this republic, with such respective committeemen as: Oscar Straus. Jacob Schiff, Imis Marshall. Henry Morgenthau. Cyrus Sulzberger. Herbert Lehman, Jacob Billikoff and many others to pilot this organization. To start thb campaign Julius Rosenwald of Chicago, h promised to contribute

for every million ro'.locted March. 1'JlT. and Novem-!

struggle to maintain the democracy of freedom and truth in the world the following "Litany" may prove timely. If you will find space for it in your paper. Holding to this thought, not to worry, may help in the demonstration of that courage which we know the American boy does not lack, and may possibly hlp, too. the devoted mothers of those same boys. This Is the French soldier's philosophy of war. It is one of the litanies which the men at the front recite over and over to themselves and in chorus. It is characteristic of the many expressions of soldier philosophy which have been written by the men in service and taken up by the whole army. The following copy was sent to a friend in Cambridge by Henri Raveau, a Paris business man now at the front. M. Raveau says the litany is very popular in the trenches: "Nothing to worry about. "You have two alternatives: Either you are in camp or at the front. If you are in camp you have nothing to worry about. "If you are at the front you have two alternatives: Either you are in reserve or you are on the fighting hne. If you are in reserve you have nothing to worry about. "If you are on the fighting line you have two alternatives: Either you scrap or yo j don't. If you don't you have nothirg to worry about. "If you do you have two alternatives: Either you get hurt or you don't. If you don't you have nothing to worry about. "If you do you have two alternatives: Either you get slightly hurt or you get badly hurt. If slightly you have nothing to worry about. "If badly, you have two alternatives: Either you recover or you don't. If you recover you have noth

ing to worry about. If you don't, and 1

have fallowed my advice clear through, you have done with worry forever." Submitted by MRS. W. W. SCHNEID ER. SIC Park av.

$100,00.1 r etween

ber. is IT. If you have not done your share we want you to pet In touch with the Fr.itcd Hebrew organizations of this city, which is a branch of The American Jewish Relief. MORRIS SHAPIRO. April l. 1917.

FRENCH LITANY OF THE TliENCHI. füitor News-Times: As our own brave boys are being recruited finally for tht f.gantic

Join the U. S. Army or Navy Now Your Country Neb You! Your postmaster is a qualified recruiting officer.

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South Shore trains from the Fast are pickel up at Kensington by Illinois Central locomotives and hauled to Randolph Street Station, making stops at 63rd, 53rd, 43rd, 12th and Van Buren Streets in Chicago, without change. These trains are clean, comfortable. : unctual '

and up-to-date in every way. There are mere trains on the South Shore Eines than on any other road between South Rend. Chicago and Intermediate points. Block signal control for safety ; regulation railroad equipment; 1 aggage checked; Wells Fargo & Co. Express. H. G. FAITHORN, Traffic Mgr.

Michigan City, Ind.

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past in wired homes

A wired home need never be cleaned in the old-fashioned, hack-breaking, sour-wearying way but it is always clean. Tin- electric vacuum cleaner has banished the dust- and perm-scattering broom and the unsanitary

dust-cloth. If Your House is Wired' you have a w iJlinp, irsonpiUMve si rvsnt ia electrn itv. It w-r!l not rjy jK e yt many comforts vwj nrve-i drexneJ cf, but if uscJ to the full, t.i11 more than double vour leisure time. lo live iu an unwircd h-me is t deprive yourself of all benefits of tic greatest advance In modern civilization. A telephone call or pust card will bring full information oa our lowcost wiring plans.

Bell 462 Home 1197

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Are You Climbing? Those who are not at the top have this advantage. It is easier to work jour way up, than hold your place at tbtop. I)o not be discouraged if vc: are not at the top. but start in with whatever you haw-, and make a stealy climb toward th-top.

Eyes Examined Ö7 YßV rl, DR. J. BURKE & CO. Optometrist and Manufae Hiring Optician. 230 South Michigan St. LENSES Dl PLICATED.

This bank the helj you

an niv need.

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American Trust Company on Savingt.

HARRY L.Y ERRICK

Funeral Director

Item 5144

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H. LEMONTREE

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bt Clothtn vnd 8ho tor Uta, Womm cd Chlldrta at Lot PrfOM. CT LA FE nOHE DEPT. Tore. lit. aad tl7 8. CbApta D.

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