South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 188, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 7 July 1917 — Page 4

sATi i:nY Aiirnvoox. ,in,y 7. idit.

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morning Evening Sunday. NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO., Publishers. . Ii- SL'ilMEBS. VmiiUnl. J. M. STEPHENSON. Manager. JOHN' HENHr ZUVKR. Editor.

Only Axiatel IT. Mornlnr Taper In North ai Oaly rpr Employing- th Infrnatlnnal Nwt h K4luth 1 1 . .1 -v- w I t i , . i X.I.V.

iiu 4nu ivatvu m irrt: A f m J ami - ' .

Indiana

bervir la

Uom Thon IUI.

Office: 210 W. Colin Ar.

IVcil Thon S10O.

til! at tbe e5V or tphc stm numbT" avl Ior tfepartmnt wa ntl FMltorlal. flrertSain. Circulation, of Accounttcif. For "want a'!.."' If our nam 1 In the tekpaon directory, bill win Le maWM rfter innertl'-n. Import Inattention t- bu!nt, fcal icjtl .o. po.-.r lIivirj "f papyri. la tlphon t-rrirp. rtr to head ",r J-p irtrr.nt Ith wblch you re dealing. Tfca Newn-Tlm? $ ba tMrfen trunk lira. all wldcfc reaped to Home I'fcoce ll'l an. I Bell 2100. .msCTUPTION KATfcS: MircJng- anl RrpnJr.s Edition, Find Copy. 2c; Sundaj, 5c; Mornlcff er Kvet.lr.K r-dltln. rtally. Including Sunday, by maiL 3 00 p" ar In adrnnre. iWlTerxt carrier la S-uth NtxJ and MUSawnka. 'V )ir la adanc. er 12-? 1J tbe ek. Entered at tlie Souto Jen 4 (iOstoCic as aetror.d cla mall. ADVFRTISINO RATES: Ask the adTrtn!ntr eVpsrtrrint. ror!rn Ad.-ertUlns lpre?ntatlTes : CNK, I.OKKNZEN A WOODMAN. 2'.'." Kifto At. New York City, and Adv. Bid. Ch!cafff. The Nwa-Tlm ftd'STori o kep ltf alTertlln folumnn frf from fraudulent rr lsrepr'.-Nntation. Any person defrauded throujra patronage ol any adtertl vtr.ent In ttjia ppr will confer a lator cn tha mauajrruent tj reporting U facta completely.

JULY 7, 1917.

NEW RUSSIA AND THE REST. "Russia Is aain floln her part; poo,1 news from the eastern front. Witness the wonderful return of our new sister republic to orderly Kovnmcnt and lihtin-; form, as evidenced in the preat Galieinn offensive. War Minister Kerensky, the Russian I.loyd-Geore, has accomplished the impossible, turning the revolution into a military a5,et for the allies when nearly all the world believed it a nihility. The quick suecc-s of the first drive, has filled Russia, anew with the war spirit, and revived the hope of an early victory. The task of the United States is made slightly ea.-ier. Then there is Greece, now definitely a member of th? allied powers, a reunited nation with a strategic position and military resources by no means to be scorned. Greece, too. has turned from a liability to an asset The Balkms are now safe; the central powers may be attacked from the southeast; Turkey may Ve sereated and Serbia won Lack, Bulgaria punished and Koumania restored. Brazil has jo'ned the allies, too, not formally but none the less effectually. Her tlet is added to ours to mak the South Atlantic safe. Her army will be added to rt;rs if need aris-- , and her influence is a fulcrum ewineins Latin America powerfully to our side. And we have won our first battle with Germany. 'We mi&ht almost say, with Perry, "'we have met the enemy, and they are ours." All the German naval resources were invoked to hinder the passage of our lirst expeditionary force to France. The sea swarmed with l.'-boat eaer to teach us a les-on. Berlin heilf has learned the !esvrn. Not a ship was hit. not an American soldier or sailor hurt. AH arrived safely. We may not expect su h luck to continue uniformly W shall lose ships and men. There will be great transport tragedies. I'.ut this is demonstrated: We can meet the Thoats on more than e-jual terms. We can do them more harm than they do us. If we can send one army corps safely to Franco, with all its equipment of food and lighting stutf. we can send a hundred.

Hpe-ch on June 4 Is bein? satisfactorily answered. He referred to the peculation of economist?, as to whether this J H-'.fiOO.oO'itOO to be borrowed and spent by the Ko'.ernrnent would have to be added to the expenditures of the nation, or would tie made up by private economics, thu3 keeping the total national expenditures, put lie and private, at practically the same figure as before. He expreod the hope that ''this happy bal ance" w ould be fleeted. And apparently it is. We are loins almost precisely what he declared to be probable. "The great body of purchasers of the smaller amounts of Liberty bonds are going to curtail their living expenses, 'largely in the w ay of cutting cut luxuries, pretty much by the amount they invest in government bonds. The man with an annual income of $1,000 who buys a fl"' government bond will cut down his yearly expenses by $100; the $10,000 a year man who has bought a $1.000 or a $2,000 bond will cut down superfluities and luxuries to that amount." Thus most of the bond-buyers will be, at the end of the year, richer by the amount of their bond purchases

t Patriotic investment will have, saved them just so much

through this new form of thrift. And there is little hardship imposed on any consid erable number i people by eliminating luxuries to attain this end. There is just as much money being spent as before more, in fact. The difference is that many billions of it are being spent by the government instead of by individuals. It all linds its way promptly and steadily into th channels of manufacture and trade, stimulating business, maintaining "good times" and enabling the people to continue their earning and saving uninterruptedly; that is. It will, unless there is a tightening in the money market a thing which business has a right to insist shall not be tolerated. Sec'y McAdoo has well pointed out that any attempt along that line, on the part of the bankers of th country, will simply serve to prove the efficiency of the federal reserve banks, :nd that they will be called Into service wherever nece.-siry.

UNCLE SAM AND JOHN SMITH. Referring the coal pri'e dispute, a dispatch from Washington says: "On the highest authority it is stated that the government will not tolerate a situation whereby swollen profits sought of the government and denied by it are made up. even in part, by an increased tax on the private consumers. " It is well that this principle should be thoroughly recognized by all the business interests that the government and the public are seeking to curb. The president will not find it difficult, under powers conferred on him by congress, to enforce reasonably low prices for war supplies. Manufacturers and dealers readily acquiesce when oriven into a corner and then calmly plan to ir,.iki tlv general public make good the excess profits they have renounced. If this is permitted, the nation as a whol gains nothing. All prices must 1 e held down to a reasonable profit. and John Dmitri, spending a dollar for a m cos ary commodity, should sot almost as favorable terms as Uncle .Sam spending i billion.

THE LIBERTY LOAN AND BANK DEPOSITS. Panks that :.i e tightening up on buns. deired to stimulate buJinc-. on the excuse that recent purchases of Liberty bonds have been a draft on the deposits. arbeing accused ia the large citi-s of see kin c to create a fiat scarcity of money; ;n ,.M method of hanking to which Amernaü b;;s:ne- is m i taking kindly in these latter days. The Cleveland Plain Iw-aler. f.r instance, is pointing out that "business as usual" must be mad? to nian "business by the banks as uual ". or it cannot be accomplished an w he: c. Attention is called to the recent publication ,.f bank reports from w hit h deposits the entire recent, purchase of Liberty bonds $2.0e0.0uc.Ccc might le deducted, as though the. money had dropped out of sight. :.r.d the total deposits would still exceed an: thing n e;- i,-fore in history. The secretary rf the treasury tstimates that if th war continues for .m-thrr twelve months the amount f financing th-- government will have to do to cover its own expenditures and extend the necessary credit o our allies will aggregate $ 1 ('oocoioi u. f th.it sum we have already raised J '2,v i o " 0. p o 0 . That leaves us $ .O'.'O.OOC'.vOO more to be raised within the year. This might appear, on first ttv ight. to threaten an enormous an J dangerous drain on the nation's resources, tut there is no evidence to that t fleet. Cleveland, vhich ma le the largest per capita subscription to the Lit erty Iv an all oar big cities, reports that payments on the bonis have n-t at all drained the people's sav ings a. counts; w hile the fa st pa ments w er being made, th- depo-i; jn Cleveland i .inks actually increased. It was evident that the mon-y for the government loan . s .oming not from savings. h-vlt almo-t w holly from . urier.t incune. and rep: Sent . 1 a ne form of thrift. The people were simply spending for i.:h. rty bond money that the would ordin.tnlv have spent for other things things they r.ow find they . aa disj er.se with without hardship. M-v.t communities including .South Uer.ci. are said to have: had the sam? experience. Thus & question raised ly .-ec y McAdoo in a Public

EASIER LIVING MOSTLY ELSEWHERE. Things are getting cheaper in spots. Our city market master hasn't discovered it so very seriously as yet. but that doesn't matter. It was never understood when the grocers, coil dealers, etc., got behind the present city administration in the campaign of four years ago. that anything, would be undertaken to seriously interfere with them through municipal or popular competition, such as the city market might be brought to furnishing. Were cur city market master to visit Indianapolis, Chicago, or" any other city market "reachable" from here, or even study the market reports; were he to visit even the grocery stores in nearby cities, and then come bae!; and look over his market prices, it would scare him to death. We are still being tleeced, notwithstanding that summer crops haw. to a degree, come to our relief with an increased supply. Potatoes, say, have dropped several dollars a I arrel in the last two weeks. Onions, almost a prohibitive luxury some months ago, are described in some market reports as a "drug on the market". Vegetables generally are elsewhere becoming plentiful and within the reach of the average purse. Poultry and eggs are. some cheaper. Meat and dairy products haven't dropped much yet. but they will probably do so as summer advances. Fruit is beginning to appear on thrifty tables again. Living hasn't become cheap yet, by any means, especially in South Rend, but it's comforting to realize thf change lads fair to come about in this most important department of household economy. It's a promise of easier times so far as food is concerned. Our great efforts '.o increase 'he supply are rewarding us. Home gardens, larger planted farm areas, better cultivation, all are having their effect. The middleman is still with us, but his reign is threatened. The attention of public authorities has been directed to market abuse?. Wc may expect that "profiteering" will soon be reduced to a minimum. The government is certain to inaugurate soon a great system of price-fixing for food, fuel and many other necessaries of life. We are going to have enough to eat, enough to wear enough to keep us vvtrm, and we are not goir.g to be obliged to spen 1 fortunes to get it. All we have to do is to keep up the work of production, check the waste improve our marketing methods and cut out the extor tion. And we can do all these things if we hang together, instead of separately, and congress shows th spirit to hang with us.

POETIC JUSTICE. It is reported officially that some of the ships used to transport den. Pershing's army to France were German merchantmen, seized in American ports when we declared war. Fourteen such vessels are in the service of the nay department. Kighty-seven more have been turned over by Pres't Wilson to the federal shippinghoard for operation within the last few days. It is safe to pay that the navy may have as many of them as it needs. The ret will be used to swell the tonnage of our merchant fleet and help make good the losses Inflicted by German submarines on the world's shipping. The total tonnage thus gained amounts to more than five hundred thousand tons. Nearly all the damages inflicted on the ships by their German crews, acting under secret orders from Rerlin, before our declaration of war, have been repaired. Every ship, it is said, will soon be in commission. Here is u rare example of poetic justice. The value of all these vessels to o United States at this time i incalculable. The margin of carrying power they give us. when the need is so great, helps to solve a big problem, and will prove a vital factor in the war. It may iieelop in the end that Germany owes her defeat largely to her own merchant shipping, seized in such great quantity i.y th? United states and the other allied powers, and thrcwn into the scale against her. And the greater part of those ships, be it noted, would never have been turned against her but for her ruthless destruction of the ships of neutral nations. Germany is paying the appropriate, penalty for U-boat ruthlf ssr.ess.

One of the next things congress will be asked to do is to authorize the government to provide life und casualty insurance for all our soldiers and sailors, instead of leaving compensation for death and injuries to our usual pension system. This is a new policy, deserving public .-upport.

Atlanta. Ga., has a new ordinance requiring that all roofs hereafter shall be of fireproof material. Some day we'll wonder why any city should ever have built roof? of any ether sort of material.

'Toe 6Urs Incise, but do not corn jP

HOROSCOPE

5 J

SATURDAY, JULY 7. 1917. Mars and Uranus contend for power today, which is a time of conflicting influences. It should be a lucky rule for military affairs and the planets seem to presage great honors for new men. Again the law of this period appears to be inexorable in its demand that the old step aide for the young. In both army and navy dancrer of dissatisfaction and enmity is prognosticated, owing to changes in methods of handling the affairs of war, but great heroes will rie to victorious command, the seer's declare. Concerning the war even astrologers who disagree find that there is a probability of a long conflict, if peace is not attained in the next six or eight weeks. Uranus has an aspect that is read as exceedingly sinister, so far as Mars is concerned. Scandals, criticism and insubordination in the army are supposed to be encouraged by this rule of the planet. There is an encouraging sign that affects military affairs today and it is interpreted as promising great success to the medical staffs, Red Cross members and all who seek to allay suffering. Uranus is believed to breed inconsistencies and to make it possible for persons ro be patriotic and unpatriotic at the same time and this policy will mark many well meaning men and women. Chicago comes under a sway making for large attainment in all lines of public service. For Canada the outlook appears even more encouraging than for some time. Crops should be good and business prosperous. The south should benefit greatly from public enterprises, especially after August. Tersons whose blrthdate it is have the augury of an active, busy year in Ahich there will be travel and change, but they should bo. careful of letters and writings. Children born on this day should be quick of mind, conscientious and successful. (Copyright. 1317.)

THE MEL TING POT COMEi TAKE POTLUCK WITH US.

Hi: THAT HI LITII HIMMCLF. The man who goes at all his tasks in coolness and disrassion. Who faces every problem in serene, unruffled fashion. Who manages to keep his thinking faculties in sejsion. Who holds a firm and careful grip upon his self-possession. ; Retains a tall advantage over him who gets excited y And imitates the animals, impulsive and benighted. The ancient Hebrews had a king, much-wedded, wise and witty. Who said that any gentleman who merely takes a city Must yield the palm for sovereign and royal reputation To him who placidly controls hia inner inclination, Who doesn't lose his self-command in rash and helpless stewing. Rut knows with cool exactitude precisely what he's doing. When two of equal size and strength are equally emhattled. The one who wins is he who gets the other fellow rattled. While keeping with sedate and highly valuable talents His own extremely laudable and serviceable balance. Of course you are at liberty to exercise your option, But here is weighty counsel, amply worthy of adoption. By Arthur Brooks Baker.

C

lhtli; nonniirs pa. Ry William F. Kirk.

Smaller Carrots Best for Canning, Don't Discard Them

When thinning carrot beds, be careful not to throw away vegetables as large as a dime for this sue is the best for canning, says today's bulletin from the national emergency food garden commission, which is cooperating with this newspaper in its campaign for food conservation. Wash carrots thoroughly with a stiff vegetable brush, blanch for four to six mintues. then plunge into cold water for an instant and remove outer skin with the stiff brush. The carrots may be cut into strips or cross-sections, cr used whole. After packing the jars, add level teaspoonful of salt rer quart of vegetables and till jars with hot water. Adjust tops and partially tighten them, and sterilize for an hour and a half. (If using tin cans, seal complete!' before sterilization.) Remove jars from boiling water, tighten tops and invert out of a draught to cool. For storing, wrap jars in darkpaper to prevent bleaching. In her list of canned vegetables, the careful housewife will include Swiss chard and French endive. These greens should be used only when fresh and crisp. Pick them over carefully and wash thoroughly, and then blanch in a steam for 15 minuses. After blanching, plunge into cold water for an instant, cut into desired containers and pack tigh.ly into jars. Add sufficient hot water to till containers and season to taste. Partially tighten jars, sterilize for two hours in boiling water and finish sealing immediately. Invert cut of a draught to cool: wrap in nark paper and store In cool, dry place. The commission will send its canning or drying manual free to any one who will send a two cent stamp for either to pay postage. Simply enclose th" stamps and write to the National Fmercency Food Garden commission. 210 Maryland Rldg.. Washington. T). (

Little Robbie is now a boy scout, sod ma to pa lart nite. He joined the colors toway. That is good, sod pa. I am glad to see our little son lives up to the tradishuns of his father's fambly, sed Pa. We have ever been a race of titers, sed pa, our fambly. Robbie dident join the boy scouts to go around with a chip on his sholder, sed ma. He Joined to do good and help peepul. I know, sed pa, but the time will cum wen he will have to rite for them principuls on wich this grate republick is founded on, sed pa. This wurld is a place ware fiteing is sure to be necessary soon or lait, sed pa. I wa.it Robbie to be sure to slam the foe with both fists wen the time cum pa sed, like me. Oh. to be sure, sed ma. like you. I almost forgot, sed ma, how deerly you luv danger. You lux danger so intense, sed ma. that wen danger is netr you trembel all caver. Xow, ma sed, Robbie is not suppoased to taik instrucshuns from you. He is supposed to lern his boy scout lessons from his supeeryur ossifers, sed ma. & if you go inter-feering. ma sed. his littel hed will git all confused. Let him alone, ma sed. Thare were no boy scouts wen I was a boy. sed pa. so that is about the only thing about wich I doant know anything about, but I guess it is a good bunch of kids .- I am glad Robbie is one of the gang. Here. Robbie, sed pa. is sum change. Go X- git a uniform & a sord & revolver, etc. The first thing we are going to do is dig trenches, I toald pa. That is our orders. We are going to dig trenches to drain the garden wich we are going to plant. Good! sed na. That is sumthing worth while. I am proud to know my son is following in the useful steps of his father, sed pa. What else do you lern? We have to do rite at all timess, I sed. ivV we have to be nice to the old, etc. Fine, sed pa. Thare is nothing finer than to fee a littel boy helping a old man acrost the street. Or a old lady, od pa. I was always that way wen I was yung. sed pa. I used to help a old man that was a nabor of cur, sed pa. I always helped him pick his appels in the fall & his plums & cherries, sed pa. Sumtimes. sed pa, I wud git to thinking about the poor old man in the middd of the nite, & then I wud go caver in his orchard pick sum more appels plums. ed pa. & I was vary thotful about dis-turb-ing him. too. -ed pa. I t;sed to work very quiet. I guess you were a quaint child, ma sed. You have never outgrown that nite prowling, ma sed. U must have been nearly time for the little boy scouts to get up. sed ma, wen

calm hoatn this morninr. dident pay much attention to time, sed pa. but specking of scouts, I am vary glad Rohbie

is one of them now. The braiv little feller is certainly taking after his

you I the boy

dad. That is why I have grate heaps for him. sed pa. If he keeps on gitting like me, the boy pcouts will make him thare commanding ossifer, . then pa began to play the fonygraft. WHKX SHK WAS KNEADED. Ten-year-old Lenna had been taking osteopathic treatment, and her little friend Mabel was curious to know what the treatment was like. "Well, I'll tell you, Mabel." Lenna said seriously. "they just make bread of you." Ladies' Home Journal. o SURMAKIXIXG PA. "Willie, didr.'t you go to the trunk-maker's yesterday and tell him to send lound the trunk I ordered ?'" "Yes. pa." "Well, here is the trunk, but no strap." "Yes, pa, but I told him I thought you hadn't better have any strap." Sacred Heart Review. o SOMETHING WRONG. "Grandma," asked six-year-old Paul, "what makes Helen such a pretty little girl" "She is pretty," grandma replied, "because she is uch a good little girl." "But. grandma," Paul protested, "you are awful good." Ladies' Home Journal. NEVER USED. "He is certainly a fine looking fellow." said Smith to Jones, looking at Brown. "A fine head." "Yes." answered Jones, "he ought to have a fin head. It's brand new; he has never used it any." Ladies' Home Journal. THE ELEPHANT. Rohby, a boy of four, went to Rlngling circus and in the menagerie tent received a sack of peanuts with which to feed the elephant. His parents stood a short distance away talking to a group of friends. Soon Hobby came back with his sack still full. "Didn't you feed the elephant any peanuts?" he was asked. "No'm," replied the lad. soberly, "I couldn't teil which end to feed 'em to." A FINE ONE. An officious shopman was showing a lady some parasols. As he picked up a parasol from the counter and opened it he held it up before the customer and, surveying it with admiring glances, said: "Xow, there you are. Isn't it lovely? And observe the quality and the finish of the silk. I,ook at the general effect. Pass your hand over the silk and notice how smooth and nice." and he gave it to the lady. "Really, now," he continued, "don't you think it's a beauty?" "Yes." said the lady; "that's my old one; I laid it on the counter here." Tit-Bits.

ONCE -OVERS

IE THE CARDS DON'T RUN RIGHT. Mr. Married Man. how about it? Are you planning to meet tonight that crowd with whom you played poker last Saturday? You think you will be able to win back what you lost. You have been worried all the week over what you gambled away that night You have bills to meet which should have been paid with that money. What better chance have you to win tonight than ou had last Saturday night and what ar-? jou going to do if you lose again? Follow it up with another attempt next week to regain your losses ? When you go into gambling as a pastime, or a means of procuring money, you should look at the undertaking from the losing s well as the winning standpoint. Consider the consequences if you lose. You know men who have lost their homes, their reputations, their friends, and brought privation and disgrace upon Their families because they have followed the course you are pursuing that of going after it where you dropped it. Have you not seen examples enough to convince you that you are a fool to go on camtlliu:?

Who's IV ho Behind , the Scenes in the War Army BY GEORGE GARVIN.

MAJ.-GEN. LEONARD WOOD. Commander of tin southeastern Department. Rorn in New Hampshire Oct. 9, 10. Graduated in medicine from Harvard and appointed to the army as an assbtant surgeon from Massachusetts in l S j . At the outbreak of the Spanish-American war he was made a colonel of volunteers pnd rose to the rank of major-general. In IC'OJ he was made a major-general in the regular establishment. Washington, July 6. The elevation of Gen. Wood to the position of ranking general of the regular army has been spectacular. At the outbreak of the .-panish-American war he was personal physician to Pres't McKinley with the rank of captain in the regular establishment. He was commissioned colonel of volunteers and recruited the famous Rough Riders' regiment, of which ex-Pres't Theodore Roosevelt was the lieutenant-colonel. On July 1 S C S . he was made hri-adier-general of volunteers for services at l-as Guasimas a:id San Juan hill, and on Dec. 7 of the same year was nroraotßd to maJor-ierieral,

I thereby rising from captain to mai jor.general in five months. In April

of the next year he wa.-i discharged from the, volunteers and made briga-dier-general In the regular establishment. Eight months later he was made major-general in the regular army. In he was awarded a congresional medal of honor for distinguished services with the medical corps in the 1SS6 campaign against the Apache Indians. On Dec. 12, he was appointed military governor of Cuba and served in that position until the island was turned over to the Republic of Cuba in 1902. He also served as military governor of one of th-: Philippine provinces and was appointed a special ambassador to the Argentine republic. In 1510 he was appointed chief of the general staff corps and in 1914 he was transferred to the command of the department of the east, where he served until a few months ago. While chief of staff he was responsible for the removal of AdjutantGen. Ainsworth, causing quite a stir in military circles. He now enjoys

the distinction of being the "father J

of preparedness." Jn command of the southeastern

Clearance

Sale

of

St

and

raw Mats

irts

Discount on all straw hat s and all shirts, 8x cepting Manhattan.

AdeerBrothe

A Store for Men and Boys. On Michigan and Washington since 1884.

r I tm , m mmm l t

department the responsibility training the major portion of national army for service on the ropean battlefronts will fall to lot of Gen. Wood. (Copyright, 1917.)

of

the j Eu- !

the

Blackbirds o.- grackles are smaller than a pigeon. Redwinged black- i

birds fit their names, and the females are marked like a sparrow, but darker.

Have You Wired Your Home for

Electric Servi

I. 8z M. Bell 462 Home 1197

mm-

iTMIE Wtei i! mini

imi he am imi mm toöe I if mmmii No trouble to get what you want when you want it. News-Times want ads cot little, an J reach a vast army of responsive readers. There's no need of bringing in your ads our splendid phone service is at your command. Phone us your ad we will send you bill after ad runs if your name is in the phone book.

Home 1151

Bell 2100

Cg3 . . Jia

9

? IN

feiiM

Special Ladies' Shoes in Broken Lots 98c Great Values. KINNEfS, 1 1 6-1 12 E. Wayne Sr.

114 W. WASHINGTON AVU

FW Ntr Shoes and Shoe Ncvcs Watch Our Wind ott. WALE-OVLTR BOOT SHOP.

WARNER BROS. Seed and Farm Machinery 114 E. Waynt St.

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

(

'.. - J-

Art JklAieriaJs. Picture FmrrJmi. THE I. W. LOWER DECORATING COMPANY, South üend, IruILanaWail Paper Dra. partes PtJnt 8uppl

Don't say you saw it in the newspaper.' 'Say News-Times.

Wlien you Uaink of llomrfuraUhln; think o fcilor.

3

f-Tf

i i , i. F 1 tin "1