South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 199, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 18 July 1917 — Page 4

Mi:i)Mi).v i: i;.ir;. ji i,y is, rn;

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

i abridg -d, in the vt 'rt windows. The reference is tu the

SOUTH RFTJn NPUK.T1MP5!1 ril

Morning Evening Sunday.

O. II. SUMM HKS.. Prraalont. J. M .STKPHFN.ON. Mama?:. John hi:m:y zt;vi:n. iMitor.

Onlr AiM-!atr ris Mornlnr Taper In Nortbfrn In.llan Bt Duly rtr Kmploylnr tiie Int'rnjl on Nm S-eryl la "lib ILrnü Tua Ltj U lr-a: iay n.t Mit.

'I. .ii v.. i 'it t be cracged and lassoed before von c.t:i be made to do your duty ? Call at Co. I h' ad pi rhrs where you will ! told ho.v to be a f ull-fledsed American citizen."

IItm. l'Laa 1131.

Office: 210 W. Cjlfux At.

II rhone S10-X

Call at tb efT!-e or fler-hof nfiot nunb-.. ii " for Crtiiiint Tr-inte.l Il.torUl. adverti-Unir Irvilatlon. or Acroi.nt..;.'. Ko" "want ai'.." if jcnr narr.- It m tiie te.epbokedirectory. LIU mill luaileil after .ut-rtl ,n I'eji'.rt Inattention to Lu.inet. bad eie-Mition, po r dolivery .f papers. bad telephone lerrl f. tc. t l...l of i,'-:-rin:e-t wltli wbl-h joa re del;:jg. 1 he New a-Tln.e-i bi tMrt-eu trunk llbe. all of

Thi- under the head. "Fon't he a :u i i 1 -1 1 1 ' j t e 1 '. 'N the card challenge;

d.i'. k'-r

Th btara Incln, bat do aot comp!''

HOROSCOPE

vi:ii:M a .ifly is. 1917. ' a

THE MEL TING POT COME! TAKE POT LUCK WITH US.

a now

Good is believed t predominate

in the sway of the stars today. Mer-

' cury, the .un and Mara are in ben I efic iij)-ct. while Jupiter changes

from adverse power to Kindly rule. The new moon of this date falls in the third decan of Can1 t and is said to cauv' much mortality anion?

t ;ir'veil contempt for the forthcoming conscript army j women.

'that ought not b tolerated. The conscript army under; Children should bo especially i the American svstem. is no more a "slacker- armv than j atc h-.i during the next few weeks. I , , .. ....... ..... ....... I ;ts lh' 'f ""usually suseep.

lis i r 1 e oitioieei iiii!i, iiim e -1 ri i,i . j y if Ii i i: t; o I u n

'"Will ou he a volunteer or a slacker" I'-aw-s room for doubt ns to the intent, and is an

liUU rcap.ai tw Home 1'I.uüe 11." 1 ant 'JIOO. j as thev "will be

tihle. til illneS th ..-." i crl ii

fiVmcnimos k.ti; m .iroing and Erndne rdit'y.n. t, j u r jr,(i,j, ..., and undertaken in anticipation of j According to the Mir this la' Ffn?!e Copy. 2c: Sundnj, .V; Mmlrr r Kver.lr.j r.d.flon ' ...... ; ., , , ' ' , .: '

ir(tlnir Wund L niMil S.l tf) tr Near In S'lTarife i some sp-cai iaor. s ich as me nauunai Kuaros puu- .-uuii i jinuuuur i si'tifi, e.i

aliy. lrjrfndlDi Sunday. t rund. .3' per ear

I i.) . . j . .... t i if ..v ff I id t i . a r

. . ,. , I).. V,.,ik O'I.

cra l jrostoZice it iecot.d lai

.ii'iit now offer-

Note it;

ADVrRTISINC. 1CATKS: AV the adTertts!n (department. Fore'jrn Adtrtllr: IprentatiTa : CONK. l.OlÜ.NZKN X VoolMAN. Fifth At . .New York ity. an ! Adv. UUlg . t hloiij n. The Nwi-Ttmi ei.dearor tt k; Ita alTertl'.ng olfiinna fre from fraudulent iiiSr?i'reontatio!). Anj ptvo

f:rao.ld throjgij pttroi.,ig cf any ailtei tij uient 'in tale,

piper rill corner a xaTor ca tiic rnaiiaffnuent L'j ft zoning f4(.ta conapleteij.

a"

JULY 18, 1M7.

"COPPEKHEAIjISMS" .AST DESPERATE: THRUST. Thinps are looking hopeful 'from Wav!iin-ton way; more hopeful th in th'' have ,t -fore in werks. Senators opposed to food conti ol legislation hae reached th" J.oint o! mud slint;in-. That is u.-tially the lust resort in legislative cliambors; tiu- tiling tiiat ftlAays comes when plutocra . smelling uefe.it. indulges In its itnal piling". Sen. Heed's attack on Food Director Jloover is illustrative. To detract attention from the supply manipulator;, price grafters, and speculative crooks who would cfrnv fat on the very life blood of our o!diers, sailors, their dependent?, and those who would honestly labor for their success at arms, Sen. Kced and his clique now rttack IIooer, and would make it ap pear that ha is the worst of them all. Of course, to hein with, Director ito; rv has been appointed to his position by the Kraee. oi' tlie president. Voodrow Wilson, n.t .i republican, and that is excuse enough for Sen. Heed for attacking him any time, onlv shy the false pretense. The charge is as silly as .Sen. Jteed is idiotic. Like Sen. Stone, democrat, he is from Missouri, ami he is not Koin to let Stone outdo him with he CJermans of that state in blockading legislation that would help alone: in the war with (lermany. Mis .vouri has two of a kind. ery eidently, in the Fnited States senate. A'l either of them woiibl need to do would be to join the ranks of labor and they would be classified at once anions the Cermanized F. ". W's. one thins is certain they won't work' for Vncle Satn. Pres't Wilson asked loni? ao to hae the foml bill become a law not later than July first. It is such men i?s Sen. Keeii that have been dawdling with it, and a)proachini? the t nd of their wits, they naturally tend toward desperation. Ashamed of themselves they want to besmirch everybody elc. lie is a fair specimen of the "copperhead" statesmen of these latter days.

"Io ou 1 now that drafted men will be sent wherever the o!li' ials ay they vhall Ko'.' Do vo.i know they will have no hoi1 e of the branch of sei vice they would prefer'.'" Wei', suppose ou do know it, and volunteer and et your choice of .-ervice in consequence. Who is the "slacker"'.' Th" koo.I soldier lines where he is told; does what is outlined i him to do; has no choice and asks none to th exel don of his comrades. He isn't asking for special favors, and furthermore, we wouldn't be surprised if, when thrown into the maelstrom of aimy oi ca nizatKn, national guaidsmen would lind that their expressions of choice had been made under misapprehension. Take this from I'res't Wilson's proclamation of the cn:cript a-t: "This is not a draft of the u nwillin--'. It is selection of men according to their titness from a nation that 1 ias volunteered in mass" and it is cheap patriotism, and worse soldiery, to attempt to make anything else out of it. The conscript army will be, in the end, the real American army iu this war. it will carry with it the heart of the American p' ople as will no other branch of the service. America has virtually discarded the volunteer system, not that volunteering will no longer be permitted, but that it will not be depended upon. The idea has been to enforce a mote universal military tiaininu. and so arrange thi ljrs that the rich as well as the poor, could I t required, not alone permitted, to face tiie cannon's ih.j. It is democratic because it com pels equality. of course, everybody wants to see the national guard ranks iilled. but it isn't necessary to scandalize, or attempt to scandalize the.-conscripts to any such end.

MYSTERIES OH THE ICE INDUSTRY. Announcement locally, with a bit of criticism, of an increase of ten tents on a hundred for ice, has brought a defense from Mr. Herbert I. De Prez, president of the Indiana Ice Dealers' association, which by reference .o the "Public Pulse" column may prove as interesting to our readers as it has been to us. There is nothing unusual about it. We have yet to learn of any special interest, with an axe to grind by ;.dng the public for a whetstone, that hasn't an association back of it somewhere to give it encouragement and cheer. It is the, same as with the Indiana FJeetric Light association just now begging for more money for its members before the Indiana public service commission. Only the people,

We hear much .about the importance of arousing the ' individually, seem left to paddle their own little canoes;

country to the fart thai it is at war. The country is awako. The calm and orderly way in which it registered for selective service, generously subscribed for Liberty bonds, and promptly furnished money and service through the Ilr.l Cro.-s, demonstrate that the great mass of our people are all ri-ht. .Senators and representatives have so long been playing to the galleries, making speeches to send out to constituents, imacining that their continuance in ollice depended upon furnishing "pork" to their constituents, loading bills up with administrative details that took the real executive and administrative functions out of the hand of the president and his subordinates, that when war came, congress continued to, and still is, play ing t ho same obi game. It is doing more to disgust the average nn.i with democracy and to reconcile hini to autocratic methods than all other things put together. The food bill affects every home in the land. l'aci day's delay is ( (tabling the fed h'ous to wring millions out of the pockfts of the poor. Passage of it ensures our ability to furnl-h necessary food to our al!ies. Failure to pas the ball deprive the producer of his jus, reward and increases the burden of the consumer. The only men who Wtufit by delay are the middle men. The feeling arair.st the senate is particularly bitter. If the w tll-groomed men in our upper house had worked with half the zeal and devotion that our women are doing in the lied Cros.. this bill long ag() would have been In the president's hands. Instead of that, we have

appear void of organization hacking. Pres't De Pre, presents us with a handsome figures on the increased cost of maintaining an ice plant; labor, wagons, horses, mules, harness, feed, horseshoes, everything has jumped from twenty-five to one hundred and fifty per cent. He thinks, therefore, that anincrease of twenty live per cent in the price of ice, shows that the i( e men are taking something out of their pockets and putting it into the pocket of th consumers; bearing much of the burden inflicted by the increased cost of operating their businesses. It may be true and it may not, and besides, there is the possl bility that the it e men were making enormous profit s before, the enormity of which the increase of expenses has merely served to reduce. Suppose, for instance. South Fend consumes thirty million pounds of ice in a season, and we guess maybt that isn't so very far off. An increase of twenty five per cent oer last year's price ten cents on the hundred means an increase of income of $::iMint to the Ice men. and who anticipates that they incur anything like it in the transaction of their whole year's business. The increased asked ahme will go a long way toward defray'ng- the crtiro expense of the business having perhaps, more than ever of the old rate for profit. To be sure, we are only speculating. Pres't De Prez anticipates that of us. We "of necessity cannot go very deep into business conditions affecting any industry serving the public", lie says, which we suppose, is ex-

a lot of senate-" w ho seem to he thinking only of how P' tpd to shove us off to one side, meek and subdued, this bill i going to affect their individual political j UIuior his. assurance of our "lost and undone condition", fortune. We notice, however, that what more often worries these 5en. Hfcd" is only one of th.m; Sen. Stone simply arv '"industries serviA?: the- public", is the manner in which

other; this or an other legislation that affords no aid

newspapers do sometimes go deep into their husinesse?.

or comfort to the enemy. If the tiling coes on. we an- I ' pet s have all too fieqiiently, for monopolist!;.' ticipate for some of theta. in other states than Missouri , ""f,,t- -one into prive uraftimr. and observed how a and. perhaps. MisoU,i aN...--that they r,n-l ! Iil!ht ilu',(:t vp 's granted a few, has been use-I

pecially to those seeking commit sions or promotions. The death of a noted officer is prognosticated. This vvill not be

due to a casualty in action. I Persistently the planets seem to I presage a grow th of peace sentiment tli .t-ill 1... r- 1 i. a..-.i. - I

iuu t 111 I r f.ll t s s v X lit J il ,1 I 1 . . I s that may not be acceptable to patriot-'. The sers declare that between thl late and o t. 1 the fate of the war w ill be decidf d and if there is no distinct promise of peace then three years of conflict may follow. It is a good day for publishers, even though they may have many serious problems to meet. Changes long predicted will be beneficial in the end and make for good literature, it is prophesied. Jupiter gives promise of gain for financiers and bankers. This should b a lucky time for raising large sums f money. hove affairs will continue to mul tiply antl the grow th of romance and sentiment, so long predicted, will be strongly apparent. One of the cabinet officers comes u ider a rule of a sinister star in August, Persons whose birthdate it is should be very cautious in the handling of money in the coming year. Speculation will be unfortunate. Children born on this day are likely to be thoughtful and of good mentality. These subjects of Cancer partake of Leo characteristics. (Copyright. FHT.)

1 1 1 1 c i : l : pi:u ci:nt orr. When vo i present the banker with a promise thot you'll pay A certain sum of money en a very ertain day. He fgures off the descot nt with a free and easy hand And never lets ou have as much mazuma as you'd planned. He's learned by sad experience that healthy human hope Must have its movements limited by shortening the rope. When you insert your nck in matrimony's velvet yoke. With flowers ami rice and footwear thrown by kindly village folk. You may not look for doubt, for disillusionment and tears. You tlo expect that happiness will crown your future years; Put those who are experienced with Cupid and his schemes Will gladly grant a discount on fulfillment of their dreams. Perhaps It's true that hfavn if exactly as we're told. With walls composed of jasper and with pavements of gold; Hut when xou've reached that residence of sinners saved from sin, lie not surprised to find a little nickel, brass and tin. It's best to take a discount on each optimistic plan originating1 in the mind of optimistic man. Arthur ihooks Faker.

The Public Pulse

CVmraunfftUoni for thl Hotati maj be. atjned anoByrnoosIy bot muat be i(TWDDie1 by tbe vame of tb writer to insure ir fattb. No repocgVcdlity for farta cr aentlnfnt expriww J wlil be iwr?rpeV llooewt diivcacion of ptrtilic queatlor la IdTttrrl. but wUfc the rlprfct referred to elituJnatr T"i-iomi und thle fJnaabW matter. lae coltrao ! free. Bot, b reasonable.

of

the ami'.ir.t of t

l'MV

left. I think it is vifr ,:. th. i 1 will t o v r the ) r 1 . j ; t ; o t ; 1 1 o -1 : the average fami!'. for th- !;. o the seaen. Yours v er' truly. H f. d. v::y.. President Indiana I ! ;. A- n

Simple Method of Making Jell From Currants

MAHCIIING 1X)IITII TO WAK. Ily .lames .1. Montague. For military reasons our soldiers must sail secretly for their destination over the sea. It was grand to be a soldier and go swinging down the street With a crowd of cheering children throwing flowers at your feet. While the girls along the sidewalk waved to you fond good-by. And the prettiest of them, maybe, had a tear drop in her eye. hands were playing, flags were waiving, when the army marched away It was glorious and thrilling, but it's pretty grim today. Down the streets you file at midnight, not a soul to see or hear. Not a strain of martial music, not a flutter, not a cheer. No one there to breathe a blessing on the cause you go to fight, Or to wish you all the glory of a battle for the riht. (tloom and silence .ill around you, gloom and silence on before. Ah! It sure does take a hero thus to march away to war. It was tine to be a soldier, when the ship sailed down the bay. And the shores were lined with people come to watch you sail away. I low the w histles shrieked and shouted on the boas that passed you by, How the echoing farewell .ilvos rose until they reached the sky. How you thought of deeds of valor as you watched the vessel's bow Cut the waves that tumbled seaward. Ah! it's grimmer business now. In the darkness of the morning, just the break of dawn, On the silent decks you huddle as the vessel hurries on. One by one you see the fading of the light along the shore, Anl von hear the swash and rustle of the water, nothing more, hike an exile you must stand there and look out across the foam. Ah! it takes a heart of iron thus to sail away from home.

fiv--riS-N

" : .it- v1

j; , r -LA.;'.. i

Mgilance coinniitte in-teu.l .f admiritt. v. elcon-.e them on their n-tam home.

A very simj)le methotl tf making jelly is given in today's bulletin from the national emergency food garden commission, which is cooperating with The News Times in its cam paign to induce the housewives of the country to conserve the food which would otherwise be wasted. Pick over currants and remove all stems and leaves, and then place them in an enamel lined preserving kettle with a few of the bottom berries crushed to pi event burning. When hot, crush berries ami strain through a double layer of cheesecloth. Do not press the juice from the crushed but take hold of the op posite corners and roll the mas.- back and forth in the cloth. A more transparent jelly will be obtained if the juice is strained through a, flannel bag. After measuring the juice, put ii into the clean preserving- kettle, bring it to a gentle boil and skim, Then add a little less than a pint of sugar for each pint of juice and bring to lt il again. (Sugar should be heated before placing in fruit juice). The time required for hoit ing after the addition of the sugar should be about four minutes. Skim and pour into sterilized jars taken directly from hot water. The glasses of hot jelly should be placed on a board and the board set in a cool, sunny window, where there

is no dust. After the jelly has "set" j it may be covered in one of several j ways. j Fut out pieces of stiff paper to lit over jelly, put a few drops of :" percent grain alcohol on jelly, dip ; paper in alcohol and place on glasses. Pour melted paraffin on top of! the paper to the depth of a quar- j ter of an inch. Put on tin covers if! available. (The purpose of the al-j cohol is to destroy what molds and j bacteria there may be present. Jelly ! sealed in this way will keep for sev-j eral years without the formation of j

acids or molds). Another method for sealing jelly is to substitute a cap of writing pa per for the paraffin and tin cover. The paper should be at least half an inch larger than the glass. It

A CILAXCK AT LAST. The decision to accept bantams in the navy, will, of course, immediately attract all of our leading light and featherweight ring generals to '.he colors. ;i:rn(; finicky. Carranza Asks Authority to Forrow 100,0(0 Pesos. Headline. What's the matter with the old gentleman? Fsually when a Mexican gentlemai wants to borrow anything, be it money or hi.s neighbor's cattle, he just goes and borrows it. AN FNFAILINd SIC.N. Now we are sure that potatoes are going to drop. They have

stopped calling them pommes de terre on the bill of fare. Tili: LAST I. LOW. The demon rum has received its death blow. They have destroyed its only ally, the free lunch. o HFSINFSS OPmilFNITY. Any person having a large, comfortable house in a perfectly neutral country will be wise to communicate immediately with the king of Spain. . o A COHHIXTIOV. Probably what Pethmann-Iloll-weg really meant to say was that the Junkers would fight not to the last gasp but to the last grasp.

COMFS TO KFSC1F OF IFF. MUX. Shelby v ille. Ind.. July 1-'. Fditor News-Time; My attention has been a!bd to .1 statement in our paper of Jim'2f.. in whu h appeals the inference that "in spite of i big ice crop re

ported last winter. South Fend ice i

companies yesterday announced aal J advance in prices of ice." '

As president of the Indiana be. Dealers' association, 1 have seen th ice man in Indiana subjected to a i great deal of unmerited abuse, j What you have inferred is very mild; compared to most of it, but th- fact j that there is an inference at all is,

evidence that yon do not understand the situation in the ice industry. I am not awate of any local difficulties our companies in South Fend may he facing, but I am well aware of general conditions being faced by everybody in the ice in dustry, and that is why I write. 1 feel perfectly at home writing to newspaper men. I have met many in my time. They touch life in many places and of necessity a mot go very deep inte business condition affecting any industiy serving the public. Tiie wonder to me is that newspaper men can be as thoiouuh as they often are. The plain facts about the ice industry are that wattes for labor today run LT to .".." percent more, and we all know that there is reason why men should be paid more; wagons cost "at to .".ft percent more, harness 40 percent more, horses and mules 20 to "0 percent more, corn, oats and hay p'ui percent more, horseshoes :b percent more, chemicals, pipe, fittings, hardware are T," to 10o percent higher, and coal, tho biggest necessity of all around an ice plant, is l.'o to :;o' percent higher to steam users. As I understand it, the ice men of South Fend have increased to ."a cents. If the price was formerly J'" cents, this is an increase of '2 7, per cent. Certainly this is not enough to take care of all the burden of added cost of production. It seems to me that the evidence is verv clear that the ice tuen arc

bearing their share of the burden,, and onlv nassing on enough of it to I

1

J I i

1 I

Dorit lose sleep because of an itching skin

esinol

will make it

How can you expect to sleep tnih! uulcss n: d 5. -irirthir.!; b tcuieve the trouble ? Fc-rm.i and other itchi:: troubles tfo't often heal themselves. Hut it is surprising how quiCK'y K esinol ti--rs heal them. Almost daily we hear fr 'in a slvin -sufferer who says "Rrsind Ointment stepped my itching- at once and I "t the first t,M,d night's sleep I had hat! in v.-ce'kS. Now my sUn is wei!."

Eyes Examined

ni.iit.cn

t.;. IroierlT

I itLed

DR. J. BURKE & CO. Optometrist antl Manufacturing Optician. 250 South Mtchignn St. LKNSKS DUPLICATFI).

la

114 V. WASHINGTON AVÜ

Don't sav von rr it in the

enable them to stay in business. In newspaper. S.Y News-Time'

MAX ADLER COMPANY World's Bt Clothea Corner Mich, and Wah. fits.

fZZ STYLl SM WOKE

NEW SPRING SHOES . at Guarantee Shoe Co.

r- !M5ii 13

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(DARJAEDA the Beliglit of the Refined Tourist Muskoka Lakes, Lake of Bays. Timagami, Algonquin Park, Kavvartha Lakes, French River, Nipissinp, Georgian Bay, the St. Lawrence River, Montreal, Quebec each has ST its special attraction. 2 All are cool: 63 decrees summer average. Hih altitude: 1,800 feet above sea level. Delicious, clarified, pine laden , air. Long days; lingering twilight. Lakes, sparkling; m streams, boundless woods. n Th ultra refinements cf hotel luxury to camping in th? m open, or, a happy medium rustic camps an 1 family cottapes. Motor boating", fishing", canoeing', bathing, dances, cards, tennis, golf. Travel over the m

M33 Ca, i

s-

GRAND TRUNK through Toronto, possibly completing the journey by

steamer, launch or canoe. Read about tta country which 1 i br-autiful that it i toatureil in moving picture!.. Comprehenp vf Ml"- - - '---'- .. .f. tr-. C. A. Mc MTT, I. A., C. T. Ily. Sjation. So. IJciid. Hell fl.: Homo 7,WX

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toT mam , C-

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T11L: FUEL CRISIS, l-TC The Federal Trade ommison. a b"d- appoint-d -'onur.ander in Chief Wood row Wi'.-orv report1 "The coal industry i j-aralvln- tb industries or the country, and th coal industry itself is p. .rah zed lv th failure of transportation." N".r transpo.-tMtio i has l-eea in ti.- han.N of Iis tir.uish.td railreaJer.- of tlo- i.ati-ial !? fcr..-c council for month, with little appaicnt i h f. t'oiurts hai '. !.! r consideration abou.t a ebu'e-n f ul rt dilation mea

uras upon w ho h it will prol-abjy p.ew for weeks t. tc-n.e. i Why doe- not th' go rnmer.t ta ki over tlie railtoad . j 1 mines'. It ha take:; over the mm h-:wreu. t h '? e.f twenty -one and tluttv on.-.

dc lc -.,tio;ls ,;;,s aM excuse f o adding something to the price of th uhuul(1 u, dipped in alcohol and then j 'products of their ha suis, apparently small, but due o J scab-d around the eches with a mit; the volurno of lntsines. sutt'u'ient to repay that increase j tmc of white of an egg and a tea- j I ii t'i 1 1 .if unter

ii U'i'i! iiv nrMi- -nil ininv tihinii i '

l .1111. ,111.4 III. .11. lililT..-'. I I This is tlie condition that accounts for th- cost of

I i' ti.:iTiitf iitn )iiiTiv irntut itii fi.tTYi fft- t fi .ti r lijniTruoil i

j V "O iIM'UOII Ol tu -" 1 I I I Olli Ulk K I it'UI , per cent, on pretty much everything, while wage hav 1 increased onlv irom twenty rive thirty the percent.

lit is the reason for the popula r demand being mad j

I upon (o;iu!(ss for power to regulate prices, the power I to deviate minimum and maximum prices, at least during the war. We ale oing to establish that power 'too. and when we once get it we are going to keep it

even after the wr is over. The era of the price grafter is cuing going going!

At San. Franci.-.o. .lohn lanipas -ave the Red Crosi Iii- touring tar. his wa.ch and his $..M bank deposits, and then :i!i-te 1 in the F. S. army, sayintr. 'That's all

M CONSCRIPTS! YOtHUi NO I' si. CKIIHS! 1 1 X'T t,w' " " , u "ul'M " - -''- - . gents he Mr. Rockefeller. Schwab, Morgan and Astor

Ab. ut

ha

happened in th

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d -ee t his Itt m.

it

p.-pul.il" I ! . i : i n i

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tb.an

linn all n-tic a t hii a

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s.u e the w a r bt "kc o .t. ;f w e lil.cv .1 ud; th- st-liibild- s.-t tin pie-i-b'nT. a'ld )

I , t 1 . :i. e i; f an-.- ! ' ' V UK' Mail i .1 1 . ...... ,

i

il L'.jr.l. 1... a'h ..pl. F of tn.ethii't i -in. n . Just s-'ive u- v.tur talent as a .inger for on. i.irters r I'.in' , spoke -,,.. ,n to induce enh-t j j.t.a?i)M, a,uj ,,.-.. can i. the cooking all the rest of the

A spec in.f!-. ".' it apl"..io. ihmu ;-. time.

t Thu! sdav

IF l ; i k m; s she's prouder of he r tab nt ;'

f i r tab-nt as a singer. All riht. Lrn- j

s lo

in our Main -:

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hi.; nmh:

t,

a. . t . . .

i a 1 u.j. iaiiii-.it.; ii- ii

"..et .1 .i .ur.stht . ;

Chapi:i .y (one. the big whisky makers, are to u lit

v the cap ;

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e.l vi -i -- 'i-.i s,.et .1 - .Ul.stIVt . ami now ? n.e ou-ine

vuc u U:;ilaing the sanu- scntmit nt. somewhat motv the whisky business we ever knew

It is .nie of the most favorable times to jult

of.

DOLLARS AM) INTF-HLnT.' Vti have a little money in the

bank: 'ou feel that you should buy a j Liberty bond, but you are thinking j that you .would prefer to have the money when' ou could uet at it; more easily, nnd where you might j cet a higher rate of interest. j

And you call yourself a loyal American citizen. You are far tsom It. From another angle; you are, say. between 3." and 4u years of age. and possibly may not be called upon to tlo army service. Why should you not bo willing, n.sy. eat;er to Invest your money with the government, since you cannot help in a physical way? What s:if In estmnts do you know ttf where you tan get U1. per cent after taes are deducted. Some of your investments are pav ing ou well at the present time, but th Inch rate of interest i offset by the fact that you are. liable most any time to lo the original Investment; In other words, not so safe as government Pond.. Money becomes more valuable in proportion t its security. There's no gambling in a sure thing. Fuy government bonds and helo worbi liberty.

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WBSYBmL UNION

NCWCOMB CARLTON. PtSiDCNT CCOhGE W C ATKINS vice tSiOCNT BELVIDCRC BROOKS vier eucsiOfNT

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HECEIYED AT

Chicago, III., July 17-17. J. Hope Tinsley, Sales Manager, A. H. Heller Furniture Co., South Bend, Indiana. Have confined the buying of Upholstered furniture entirely to the Karpen line. Without a doubt the line surpassed anything it has been my pleasure to see. I refer largely to price, quality and styles. Have bought heavy and instructed - shipments to bm. made at once. Make your arrangements accordingly. A. H. HELLER.

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