South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 118, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 28 April 1917 — Page 4
.-ii n i:i;oo. pr.ll. iri7
lUE SOUTH BEND NEWSTIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES M o r Ii i n Ii v e n i n g S u n d a y. NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO., Publishers. J. I. M'MMi:i:s. President .I M. STKI'IIIINSON. Manier. Jons iikni.y y.vxi.n. i::uor.
OiiIt Associated pres Morninr Vper In Northern Indian ) Only rp,r I mplnilnr t.ie International !rU-e In tb UrndTo I.rn.nt Wirr: lmr iml Mjht.
Ifom l'bono 1151.
OSTice: 210 W. Co'.fix Af.
II I"hne !(-
Tall at the njlfc or trpi nMTe numlrs and ak for !p-irtraont ir.iritd IM;frl;il. Advertising, Circulation, or A-oo.itlr.jr. Kor "want a l." if our nam 1- In the telephone Ilmtorj. t I ; 1 will , mailed after insertion. Kp.Tt Inattent.on to b'lnfm. rnl execution, j . . r delivery of paperi. had tephnn nrv i p .. t lif.nl of I p:'rtin-nt wltb td h you are dealing. Th News-TIns hn thirteen trunk line, all of which respond to Jfome Phone ll'l nnd It-ll -l. rnntlPTION K.Ti:s: Morning :nl r.veiong IMitlona. .Single "opy. 2'-; Sunday, Morning r r.ve..lng Kdition. d.iliy. In-ludici' Sunday, t. v rami. $.".') pT year in advan e. llleri n-y rurrler In South I Send and Mlshaw.eLa. $.( per J-r in advance, or 11": by the w-k. llnteTcd at tbc outl: tienl postofrice as nnt.d i!m n i a II .
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APRIL 28. If)l7.
MORE ALLEGED" ENEMIES. And still they come; more enemies, more war. more rumors of war. We're -orry to be force. 1 into war. even if it's merely nominal war. .vith Germany's allies and especially since Gtrmany pretends nut to recognize ;hat wc are at war -.vith her. We h ive no quarrel with IiuU-aria. We have no serious Grievance of our own arainn Turkey, our chief criticism of that country being based on the Turkish government's crimes against a group of its own people the Armenians. Austri a-Hungary has annoyed us hy meddling with our internal affairs; but we settled that j-core by sending her ambassador home. She has given us no such reason for hostility as Germany has. Neither have any of these countries any legitimate grounds for declaring war against us. They are break- ... . . !.-. r. i.f i 'i at flar
ing o:r relations anu urnmiK n" a "- "v many's behest. Left to their own devices, not one of them would have either the desire or the hardihood to take such a tep. And yet it's just as well that these nations are en rollinc; thcmsc'.ves as declared enemies. They will add little to our actual task of helping the allies to subdue Germany, awl they will make our own role as a belligerent simpler ami clearer. They free us of their own olition from many complication. We no lenser have to consider the feelings and prejudices of Austria, Bulgaria and Turkey as wc should be morally obliged to do if they remained friends or neutrals. We shall be able to carry out our own policies and aims unhindered. And the advantage this Kivea us will appear at its full value when the time comes to make peace and settle the future status of Europe. We shall be in a position to wield great power at the council table of powers. We have nothing to ask for ourselves, but much to a.-k for the future freedom tf people?, the safety of democracy and the peace of th.e world. We can support any proposal calculated to promote those ideals. If it involves the partition of Turkey or Austria-Hungary or the relegation of Uulgaria to a "state of innocuous desuetude" we can sanction it nevertheless with a legal right and a clear conscience.
ii lost. And besides the saing in actual pounds, there j Im a saving in nourishment per pound in v aiting until! the animal is more mature before killins, it for eating, j There is more waste and less nourishment n the meat of immature than in that of mature animal) i i These restaurant men expect to effect a genuine con- i
seration in food supply by their act. Americans hae;
always been known as wasters, and it's a'most as wicked tu waste food in peace time as it is in the midst of war. If we learn now to stop fome of these food leaks we will not only meat the preent emergency more successfully, but we will form some good habits that will be beneficial when the war is ended.
The Kurs incline, bat do aot compr
HOROSCOPE
THE PERENNIAL CAMPAIGN, l-et no complacent reader believe that, just because we're engaged in a foreign war and the newspapers are full of military editorials, he's going to escape the usual exhortation to domestic warfare the regular spring drive against cur native enemy, musca domestica, otherwise known as the house fly. We have her the female of the species being more deadly than the male always with us. Eternal swatting is the price of fly less houses and freedom from the diseases Hies bring. It isn't necessary any more to go Into details. We needn't bother estimating how many million deadly germs one My may have on the baby's milk bottle or trail over the sponge cake, or how man' billion Hies will populate your house next August for every one that you fail to kill in April. Every intelligent man, woman and child knows the basic facts about Hies, and knows what to do. There is no excuse of ignorance. It merely inertia that keeps us from following the recommendations of the anti-My. anti-dirt, anti-disease crusaders. And inertia is plain laziness. Swatters are cheap. Swatting is one of our finest indoor sports, fascinating alike for old and young, once they enter into the spirit of it. Screens may seem a bit expensive, but they will pay for themselves many times over in a season or two. in health, cleanliness and comfort. The sort of Tilth that Hies breed in ought to be removed anyhow, even without reference to this pest. There's no excuse for Hies in any civilized household or any civilized community. Now this newspaper has done its duty. Let's not make it necessary to repeat. The world is fo full of a number of other things to write about.
HELPING ALONG THE LOAN. Nothing could show the pull-together spirit of the country better than the plans adopted for marketing the $ j. 000,000,000 war bond issue tht is soon to be offered the country. Ordinarily a government loan, especially in a critical time, means huge rake-offs for financial middlemen, and big profits for everybody all the way down the line. This time there are to be no rake-offs, no extravagant commissions, no disastrous discounts, no lavish expenditures of any sort. The biggest government loan in history is to be disposed of with unprecedented economy. Everybody concerned, instead of trying to get something out of Uncle Sam, is trying to save him money. The secretary of the treasury has $5,000,000 available to pay all expenses connected with the loan. That looks like a lot of money, but it is only one-tenth of one per cent of the loan itself, and it covers all the clerical and mechanical expense of issuing the bonds, including the high-priced paper on which they are engraved. The loan will be launched with an advertising campaign of paid publicity. Advertising agencies have volunteered to write the ads for nothing. Many newspapers have offered to print them free, and many billhoard companies, street car companies, etc., have offered their space free.
Sa tu relay. April S, 1917. Astrologers read this as an uncertain day. In the morning Saturn
and Mars rule strongly for evil. I Later Mercury is in a strongly bene- j fie aspect. ; There appears to be a sinister , warning concerning the financial affairs of the nation. The seers declare that immense drains on the j public treasury will suddenly be- j come of serious import, owing to J
some checkmating move on the chessboard f world affairs. Saturn is in a place held to presage perils in dark places, surprises by night and accidents where victims are shut in.
Increase of depression and melan- j
choly. with consequent growth of insanity is foreshadowed by the malign planet and as an antidote for mental distresses extreme activity in congenial lins of work is recommended. The afternoon of this day should be a most auspicious time for all who depend on publicity of any sort. Advertising is well directed. There is a sway held to threaten through the printing press or through the use of ink and the discovery of some system of spying or propaganda inimical to the United States is foretold for next month. Again warning is given that foreign loans may present serious problems at an early date. Changes in the alliances of the central powers are prognosticated. The moon is in a sign today which is not favorable for any important decisions. According to ancient' lore this should be a good planetary rule under which to hire woman employes. It is prognosticated that children born this year in Canada will be more brilliant, more beautiful and more successful in life than those of any other country. Persons whose birthdate it is have rather a sinister omen. They may lose money and engage in unsuccessful lawsuits. Children born on this day are likely to be exceedingly rash am' headstrong. These subjects of Taurus are usually highly gifted. Venus is their principal ruling planet. (Copyright. 1917.)
THE MELTING POT COME! TAKE PÖTLUCK WITH US.
Fine Soil Helps Parsnips; Require The Whole Season
TIIU THIRD llKOTlIi:U. We've heard the touching story of the produal, the sou Who spent his patrimony in a lare. protracted bun: Who stumbled horne. a shattered and dilapidated wreck. To fall in filial response on lVs paternal neck; To pay but Muall attention to his brother's ruueous squeal While lilling his anatomy with icnderloin of veal. Hut what about the brother who brought home a two-foot smile. Corroborative eviden. o that he had made his pile: Whos chauffeur wor a soldier cap and military boots And .-tiricned uj in frequent and obsequious salutes; Whose consort had a sealskin coat financially so warm That it cremated coin enough, to buy the homestead farm? It frequently is greatly in the juvenile behoof To stick around the s Kdter of the dear ancestral roof; I bit we must not by any means deductively ir.fer That hideous calamities infallibly occur ' - To those by whom the native dust is reverently shook, Arthur Brooks ftaker.
THE FARMERS' RESPONSIBILITY. Our farmers," savs Frcs't Thompson of the Ohio tate university, "are afraid to sow wheat or plant corn Tor fear they won't tt enough for it. They are really praying that the Lord will limit the crop lest they hav e? a surplus." This is a severe indictment. Pres't Thompson seems to have had in mind particularly the farmers of Ohio, and might have had, of some in Indiana and Michigan. Jf they are so sordid as lie represents them, in this time -f world crisK let us hope that their attitude does not prevail in any of the other states of the Union. There are many kinds of patriotism. Or rather, there aro many vas of showing patriotism. Love of one's country means nothing unles It is made practical, livery class of citizens has its own duty to perform. It i" the American farmer's duly this year to raise the biegest crops he can, just as it is the Amerian soldier's dutv to tisht for all he's worth, and the
American mechanic's duty to increase the output of war j supplies, and the American transportation man's duty to j :ret soldiers and farm products and factory products i
kliere they ought to be as quickly and cheaply as possible. No farmer who deliberately curtails his crops, or through carelessness or indolen negle ts to plant n large an area a possible, and cultivate and harvest it as well as possible, can lay claim to true patriot-
The
PAPER MILK BOTTLES. War to extermination against the plass milk bottle is on. Housewives know how dithcult it is to clean milk bottles. And they are rapidly learning how essential to health it is that the milk bottles should be clean. Glass bottles are expensive, too. and they add something to the price of milk. They a e clumsy to handle, dangerous when broken, and. in fact, have so many things against them that it's only strange we have not found something better long since. At present it looks as if paper milk bottles were going to take the place of the glass containers. The most common type of the new paper bottles is one of light cardboard coated with parattin. It is air-tight and opaque. It is said that milk can be kept fresh in these cardboard bottles hours longer than it can in the glass bottles. Incidentally the paper bottle is cheap, so that destroying it is not wasteful. The newest machine used in making these bottles manufactures them from wood puli. instead of from finished paper. It turns out two
.''.WI l'u I'V ...U.V.-. .1. -... ........
fifty seconds, making sixty thousand bottles from a ton of wood pulp. Everything in the process is completely i sanitary. The whole process is continuous. Only three
men are required to run the machine. The doom of the old glass bottle seems to have been definitely sealed.
The News-Times Is conducting colnmp wltb the cooperation of tta Natioi.al Kmergeiicy Food Garileu Commission to inspire the planting of more food gardens throughout the country. Members of the commission are: Cbarle Lathrop Pick, president of American Forestry association; Luther Ilurbunk. Ir. Charles W. Pilot. Prof. Irving Fisher. John Hays IIa minoi.d. Fairfax Harrison. .Myron T. Herrlck. Ir. John drier Hibben. Fmerson McMlllin. A. V. Shaw; Carl Vrooman. assistant secretary of agriculture; Capt. J. It. White. P. S. shipping lard; James Wilson, former secretary of agriculture. You should watch this column every day. Any questions should be written on one side of the paper and sent to the (Jarden Editor of the News-Times.
With Other Editors Than Ours
The n.t ion li'-t.is all the food it can lU't.
nations with whom we are making common cause need j all the food they can get. To limit the food supply is as j treasonable as to deter nu n from enlisting in the army j
vv to start strikes in munition plants. City people everv w here, with only small garden plots at their disposal, are rising nobly to the nation's call for fo..d. Put with all their willingness they can do comparatively little. The main burden tests with the farmers. Theirs is the big opportunity an, I rcsponsibilt Thev Fax the land and the equipment. 1 tailing foo.l
........ j Is their business. The tuition naturally looks to them -O !
do tht ir part. And if they once realize the importance of their ioie in the great drama, they will not fail us.
STOPPING POOD LEAKS. . . i .. i
eating in a restaurant, or ncuei. anu
Few people
i booking their meal from a Ion
SECTIONAL PATRIOTISM. The east, particularly New York, has long been finding fault with the rest of the country for its lack of militant patriotism. It was naturally supposed that when war came, the east would register its sentiment in a practical way by outdoing all the rest of the country in volunteering for military service. As a matter of fct. the supposedly unpatriotic, un-
warlike middle west and south have made a better showing. Illinois, not New York, is the banner state. For the fust three weeks of April it produced more vol
unteers than the Empire state, not merely in proportion .... .....-.. 1 . l.tit i 1 .t-nl II t cl I
I III IIS lllii.lllllU, l'UW illirviun 1 , I New York's quota of recruits for the regular army j wa lS.-.S men. iHiring the first twenty days of April 'it raised 2.1--. At that rate it would take more than J :"ue months for New York state to provide its share of
Illinois' quota was 11. 21. In the same twenty
days Illinois raised 2 . 4 7 1 men, proportionately nearly
tro ids
g list of possible dishes. ;
realize what waste mat u-i unm - twice as many as New York.
and hotel men in New uhk iiinus uic
l ine words '.utter no parsnips, but line soil makes parsnips growwell, says today's garden lesson from the national emergency food garden commission, which is aiding The News-Times in the campaign for more gardens. Parsnips require the whole season. Planted early in the spring, even as late as September they seem to have made a disappointing growth. However, the autumn rains mature them rapidly, and they arcready for use along in November. From then until spring the parsnips can be taken from the garden. The hard freezing- of winter only improves their Ha vor.
lie sure to plant only fresh seed, for parsnip seed that is two years old is apt to have lost its life. Have the soil deeply prepared, for if it is hard or lumpy the roots will become branchy. Sow a half ounce of seed to 100 feet of row, making rows IS inches apart. The two best varieties to plant aie Hollow Crown and Student. Parsnip seed is slow- to sprout, and therefore it is well to mix quickgrowing radish seed or cabbage seed in with the parsnip seed to break the crust of the ground. Often the success of the crop will depend upon breaking the soil with a rake after the planting, especially if rains form a dirt crust. It is important that the thinning
(to one plant every two or three
iui:ess to coLrirus. P .Fames .T. Montague. Oho: ye merry gentlemen, who hurried forth each week To devastate the greensward as you swung the shining cleek. Who blew about your brtssio shot and bragged about your drive. And purred with satisfaction when you bettered S."; Get out and -veed and sow thc behind the furrowing plough. I'orget the score; we're i-i the war'. Your country needs you now! Hard work? You bet! but what's the harm? Smooth out that startled frown. The hoe is better than the club to keep bay-windows down. You'll puff and blow the lirst few days, hut do not get up?et No one was ever foundered by a little honest sweat. Of course you're fa, but what of that? Though you can't point a gun. You'll bo remade by hoe and spade before the summer's done. Turn out. you portly busings men, and plant the pea and bean.. And make the gay potat y thrive on every level green! Dismiss the toiling caddy boy, for he can learn to drill; Get out upon the links a, one and hustle with a will. You may have thought oud not be caught and tangled in this row. Put nix on that: Although you're fat. you're country needs you now.
righting Units. The howitzer thunders and blusters: "I'm death and destruction." roars he. "My voice may be gruff, but I make good my bluff: They cannot win wars without me." Meek is the modest potato. His eyes are all dewy and dim. Put well he's aware in his deep hidden lair That they cannot win wars withou t him. Naming no Nanus. Hobart college is to start a course in city management, and we knowtwo city otlicials. holding" the lirst and second positions in the largest city in this country, who ought to
take it. Mahe HiM He IVofnl Now. Charles S. Mellen, when accused of being a railroad president described himself as a farmer. Maybe as a farmer Mr. Mellen could be useful to his country.
There atv so Many uiscs Nv. The story of the heavy firing heard by the Cape Oodders reminds one of the Scotch boy who told his mother he had a call for the meenistry. "Jamie", said the old lady, "are ye sure it wasna some ither noise ye heard?"
These
sou Is and '('111.
I 'air Trials Too ere times that try men's
convict a pood many of
-o-
Pocn lie He mind Yon of Anybody? Pemember the boy who wouldn't play unless he could be captain of the baseball team ? o He was Overworked. Poor IVHow. The one o'clock closing ordinance will enable John P.arleycorn to rest up against the light for his life he will soon have to make. Up lo Dato. "And to through the dawn flew Paul Kever?."
GKOW MOKE 1XX)1)STUI US. .(Fort Wayne, Ind., Sentinel.) The federal department of agriculture appeals to everybody in thc country who has or can obtain soil to cultivate this year to make the most of it. This is a sensible and practical appeal that will greatly profit such as may heed it and is calculated to do great good the whole world around. There is a world-wide- shortage of foodstuffs. To Europe mo one can look for any effort t help make up this shortage. Ir" peace were to come at once its coming would be too late to avail anything this jear in relieving civilized mankind's stress for the things mankind must have to eat. Moreover, the end of the worin war would create conditions that Americans in general would scarcely fancy. With blockades raised and embargoes lifted, with the free seas restored once more to th" unmolested commerce of the world, such a demand for American foodstuffs would ensue from ra- half-starved nations n.w at war as would all but strip us clean. Impoverished asall of them are by the stupemdoun drains made by the groat conflict, they would find the means to supply their long underfed peoples with enough food to restore health, contentful i;. and bodily efficiencies. AmeiiiM will not be able to deny the woi id's demand for food. It would b- a dangerous th.ng to place embargo.s upon a commerce that always has been the backboV.e of American foreign trade, for besides costing us invaluable other markets it might incite a bitter feeling agalnsf
inches) be done while the plants are , iis. Then. too. America does not yet small, because it is hard to pull j want to re f ase food to The starving
: e tau rant
j. latter strikingly before us. Manj menus are cut in half.
Pare and costly dish
es
ate omitted and real food left in their place. ne hotel is s.ud to have reduced its daily list of vegetables from forty to seventeen varieties. There's no reason why everyone .ouldn't find one s.ttisfactory Vegetable in a i hoice of sev c nteen. Another e client move has been to cross off the meat of voting animals. Hothouse lamb, suckling pig.
Indiana, also, did far better, proportionately, than New York. So did Texas. Georgia and several other
; states in the south and west.
Judging from the outbreak of marriages on the part of young men eligible to military service, Mr. Prjan was quite right about all those men "springing to arms at their country's call". Only, as the Chicago Tribune remarks. "He didn't say whose arms".
Germany
veal etc. are to be oj.utted. A voang lamb weighs about
twer.twbw. i.nund. In oniv a fvv months more the given her by'J. Picrpont Morgan to raise war funds.
same lamb would weigh forty-live pounds. So, for every hothouse Iamb killed, tw antv pounds of nourishing meat
empress has sold the diamond necklace
It
is things 'ike this that make us hang onto our diamond necklaces 'c our own use.
them out when they are large. While they may be left in the ground all winter, in northern climates it is better to harvest them late in the fall and store them in garden pits eovered with earth. Pulling or spading them out is almost impossible. The best gathering method is to dig trenches on both sides of the rows and then pull out the plants. Hoots not vised by spring should be pulled anyhow, because in the second season the old plants become weedlike.
GOOD JU1GU. Tourist Who is the best doctor in the village? Native Wal. I alius recommend Dr. Killumquick. Tourist Are you a good judge?
Native Jedge: No dertaker. Judce.
fall
NO WAY OUT Of IT. "How did Jones happen to
downstairs?" "Why, his wife said. 'Now. Henry.
nations th.lt have been exhausting
themselves in c vast and useless as well as ne-edlcss strife. F.eeauso it is in the fust place com:n'rcially is no reason why it should nor also be a good privilege t relieve the elistress of millions of human beings who for two years or more have been suffering for food. There lias been a shortage of food in America daring the year just now passing less of a shortage than would be fair warrant for the prices of many thin-'s but nevertheless a shortage. To overcome this subnormal condition of oar markets for foodstuffs we must have larger crops than wire taken from the tiehls last year and to have a supply for the foreign demand that surplus must be very berge. That assurance may be taken for having an ahun-
Pm the un-j dance there ought to be tms year
the greatest crop acreage ever seeded. While it is unusual to encounter two ban years consecutively, it is by no means an impossibility. A huge acreage is the hostage for a poor yield. If the viel 1 should be average or even abnormal there will
will
heart has increased
per cent : i
be careful,' and as be is not th
mar. to be dictated to T'V any worn- be a demand for it and prices
an. down he went," be stiff enough to suit producers
from liright's disease and nephritis . 15 per cent. Life insiiianee talistics .--urport ; these statements, also those e,f the army. An amazing prope.u tion of j candidates for military service show the physical shortcomings of even l young men. The percentage of rejeotions of applicants for militia ser- ; vice last year is said to ha.e ranged; from 10 to ."0. A government re- j
port shows, that but out of 11, 0U" applicants in New York c ity for the marine v-orps were acceptable. This is an appalling proportion and does not promue well for the rapid building up C'f army and navy strength. This defeneration of the American type. Mr. Pittenhouse thinks, no doubt correctly, comes largely from
the inactivity of many classes ,f j
men. Americans, whether native or foreign, are descended from physically acti.e and vigorous men. a large proportion ef whom were accustomed to out-of-door life. Inherited vigor gives, the descendants a good start, but the disposition to crowd two lives into one. the habit of ne er walking when they can ride, errors and excesses in eat.rg and drinking soon offset the birthright of health. A warning to give better heed to tbeir bodies is time
ly. Indianapolis Star.
RKCrVlMC
i J... i
V I U 1 '11J Vi -N V ' I ,A
AHE AMEHlC.Ws LOMNG VIGOR? There is no better authority on general health conditions than life insurance companies, and what E. H. Itittenhouse. a prominent life insurance man in New York, has to say on thc subject is therefore of interest. He w rites in the interest of national preparedness and, since we must have a citizen army, to warn the averag-? American to get himself in better physical shape. For.
takinu this average American as an I illustration, he tinds him a man of! mental alertness and nervous force . I but with n tendency to self-indul- j genre and luxury that is in itself J deteriorating, and an absence orj phvsieal c ovoise that has greatly i
lessened bodily stamina. He looks well ami often regards himself as healthy, but examination for life insurance or admission to army or navy brings U lif his defects.
That the re is a general decline in the death rate. Mr. Rittenhons admits, but this is due, he savs. to thej fact that sanitary science has con-J qi.ered c ertain diseases, and the de. vt lopment ot bacteriology has led j to the control of others. (in the
ethe-r hand, an abnormal increase in the death rate has oecurreil from eiise-ases due directly te life strain
t on the nervous, digestive, urinary and cardie vascular systems. Tiie-se ; deaths, he say.s. are not caused by infections, but are the direct result i of the heavy burden of service put upon the vital organs. Since 1100 j' the death rate from eiiseaes of the!
Like Pm&timig Moiniey in the Bank It's just (his way. Of course you don't want to sell your home. But if you did, it would be worth more wired for electric service. Just as modern plumbing and modern heatini: arrangements add to the value of property, so does wiring for electric service. Hlectricitv means not onlv the verv best kind of lighting facility lamps that give the most light for the least money but also the best facilities for cleaning, ironing, washing, sewing and even cooking. We are conducting a special campaign to wire homes and on an easy payment plan, too. Betier look into that wiring matter today and tlnd out why electricity will be a real investment to put into your property.
I. & M.
Bell 462
Home 1197
PALICA'S
TU ÖL
For Rheumatism, Neuralgia, Sore, Stiff Muscles, Stiff Neck, Cuts, Bruises, Sprains, Burns. Palica's MYSTIC Olli is an internal and external liniineuil. made of puiv ogctable. healing oil-, rxtrarl. gums and spirits: it i clean, antiseptic and refreshing te iw. will not Mitr or Main tin skin. It quickly iH'iietrat to eleep scateil pain-, where it sentliing and healing proivrtics. gi prompt and graleful relief, assisting Nature to cfl'ect a sM-etly cure. A- a healing and anti-epiie-dr-ess-ins: for wound, of all kinds, such as cuts, hriiise. sprain,, bums obi running miiin, etc.. it I. cjM4-inll.v adaptil. Taken Internally, it N prompt in breaking up co!, hills, rip. etc. The many common ailments ndieveel by this internal and external liniment make's, it a real family rcinedv to Ic tlpeiideI iiti at all times, (.el a heittle Iroin vour druggist and try it: ou will not Im without it af lerwai el. HTm anil ."iiic at elniggUts. (i. r. KIM'IIU Mfg r.. Racine. WN.
The New Way To Remove Corns. Japanese Method Don't Hurt a Bit Just a Touch Stops Soreness, Then Corn or Callous Shrivels and Lifts Ot). trv It. Your Feet Will Heel Cool an j Fine.
Thanks to tl:e new discovery made frmn h Japanese Product your fc-t troubles an be' qui. k!y endet he-Mint thii new preparation is called Is said t shrivel lr 1 corn. s"ft (cms or corns befwe-:i the toes so that t h can be lifted out ejisilv with the tinsels. If Wonderful. Think of ir: just little tou h f that delightful, cooling, soothing. Ice-Mint and real foot joy is yur. No inalter Low eM e r tough your pet corn is he , ill shriv light up and you i-,ni ph-k him out :iftr n few nichts' lino of b-e-Mint No pain, not a hit ef froren-ss . t b r when applying r nfterward. an I it dofsn t even irritate the skin
If your feet :iT? in'Mr.ed to r. r puff, or if veil hat 'r.vked r M.'brig tos. it wi'.l lraw Hi inflami iati ai out and n;h klv laul the sore ;nid tcrol-: jo;e es It is t real Japanese s.-.-r-t for f.r.e hej.ltl,v little fe.t and i great!' a TT-if T-1 M 'otncn e h cur Inch ! !! sh'es ;inl ni-n w jjn liau- to stun'! on thei- fe.-t 11 (in No more tir.-ij. ;i. hinz or huriiir ? feet -No nitre fiHit trou Me cMint niak--" your fe.-t s .d and fine that yo-i v. ill ji;t -nth relief It is i,ow s.-iiii, "Wild l"ir"' hre .lust a in anv dr' tore for a litt! b-Mint find plv your pen.- Unering, tirerl feet th treat of their lives There rj.-.th-Jng f''T. .or nothing Just z g n
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MAX ADLER COMPANY World's Best Clothes Comer Stich, and Wmi Ft.
LINCOLN COFFEE Good as its Namesake.
jpt.
ki m n m . -m . - m9- m . , . m
If tiOMEOF GOOD CLOTHE
ADLER BROS. On MichtrTan lU Wvshincton Since 184. nrc stoiu: ron men axt BOYS.
"When joa Lkl&k of Homrfur.
J
