South Bend News-Times, Volume 34, Number 297, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 24 October 1917 — Page 8
Mlt i l,t.M.ti, X UMlKIl II, 117
THE SUU1H UEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES M n r n : n Fi vc r. i n Sur j ay. NEWS-TIMIiS PRINTING CO., Publishers. ; II. stJMMKirs. rl!et. .1. M. STnrjIKNSON. Mm a er. John ih:m:v zr:vi:i:. K-nnr.
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ADVntTlslNT. ItATf.S: A k tb .idvcrf ;!rj !"Pt rt nint. For!pn A1 prt1!nc J:pr-erT:it!T r "NK. I.OKKNZKN A WMiI'MAN. Ii'.'. I- if tr4 At. Nv York City, in! Adv. MM. (h''H2-o. TLp .Nw-TirTj- mVivorj to k lta ndrert!lnf fre from f ra ui u .nt i.rire',ntHti"n. Any ,rnn Ofrau d thrujea patrca ig f sny advertisement lu tL. ! r.irr will enter a favyr j u tie rauLa;.i..t.-t by reporting t-bl tcta completely.
OCTOBIiR 24, 1917.
A GERMAN-AMERICAN NOTE. A brilliant iuws'tion, t.rilliantly tet forth, apptura in a 1 ttt r written to the New Yrrk Times by F. Waernclorfrr. ;i dorman citizen or Savannah. Ca. The war is drat?i;in on. he says, because the German nation has fail- .1 to grat) the true import of Prcs't Wilson's note to the pope. Tliuh published in Germany, tiiat docunitnt settin- forth the war aims of America was so cluttered up anl pererted by "the commentaries which a hypovritic k( eminent thought wise to uli to the preM'lent's sorü(" that the words missed their e.'fcct. It Is natural enough, h? J-ays, that the German people should be slfw to see through the webs of deception -ovcn by their rulers through so many years. "When .1 nation in its sound and healthy days has been kept in wront? idea about its nun affairs and in a wreng idea about other nations acts and feelings how much sound judgment can one expect of this nation after a deadly sickness of three years? All the prejudices against America which had existed before the war were nourished and increased durin.: the war, and the Germans cannot today believe at once the truth, the unbelievable, that it was American idealism which made the American nation enter the war." But Mr. Waerndorfer believes the German nation is capable of sr. und judgment of its own. and sees a way to appeal to it.- judgment effectively. The Germars distrust America, he says. "Uut there are Americans in whom the Germans will always LeIiev; the German-Americans." If these could talk with their brothers f the fatherland, they could make th' in see and understand things as they really are here. The Germans cannot he reached by letter. Hut there ire was of getting communications to them by the uip!.n:e method, for example, .o he would have German-Americans unite ;n a national m.essape to the people of Germany and Austria. "In this message I would say that, first of all, eery word of the president's answer to the popf is truth and nothing but truth. That the words must he taken as they are written, and tbat nothing whate.r must be suspected behind them. That the president has pledged his word and will keep it with the whole nation as witne-s. That the German-Americans believe in the president, and that the most hyphenated German-Americans are today the most enthusiastic tiirhters in the president's army thoe German-Americans who are 'hyphenated' t their country and their folk by their love and admiration for their brothers, but not for the uo eminent which drove them away from the land wh re they or their fathers were born." He wo:i!d add. he says, that just as American broth
ers once foncht against American brothers, with bleed
ing hearts but with all the strength and persistence of hiu'htst duty, so the German-Americans will now fitrht
jik'ain-t German brothers, '"because they know that Ger
man defeat will brim; throuch the help of the presi dent the Kre it t ictory to the Genc in nation Lib erty."
This i a noble proposal. It micht accomplish the
purp. se sought, saxincr untold lie and treasure to Germany and America I oth. It miuht enable the German--to win thf i;: it t ictory of freedom without further s. if rif.ee; f'-r the war would stop if they nro.-e
and d -iniM ratid their own po ernment and acquiesce 1 I
In the pc ir- i !t ;i! of the o::ter worul. Mere is a w 0:1. i r: v. p por t u n : t for our German Amcrica!
Get Both Sides of It
I
F tor any reason you ne.srlectei to read our comparative analysis of the Ackermann an J Carson platforms, discussed on this page yesterday, re
member it b not too late. Recover that back issue of the paper and read it now. You want to know what the candidates in thi- municipal campaign stand for particularly the mayoralty candidates. We haven't the nerve to ur.ire you to make that acquaintance without a presentation of both cases. We have presented Dr. Carson's platform, quite in its entirety, though in what to us seems the critical vein that it deserves. Our attitude is that Dr. Carson, forced out into the open, as he was after (en days of "watchful waiting," and then only to assume the role of copyjack framing no issue, save in the use of a superior number of words, but indorsing Mr. Ackermann's platform quite in toto, has left himself without a leg to stand on provided he means what he says. We have not criticised Dr. Carson's platform without restating what we we were criticising. In the discussion above referred to, we have covered all the essentials of both platforms, quoting in comparison the principal planks as presented by each. You have their language as well as ours. It is because they stand there in such close comparison that we especially urge the reading. If you have already done that, you will be all the better informed, to read the editorial in its intirety again. It is light. Mr. Voter, that you are after. You can't find light by keeping yourself in the dark. With which said, the campaign reverts back to its former status. Mr. Ackermann, democratic nominee, has made a statement. Dr. Carson, republican nominee, has indorsed it, reiterated it, has appropriated it. On the basis of "first come, first served," Dr. Carson should get out of the race, end the campaign where it is all save as to the formality of counting the votes which must take place on election day. lie has said nothing new has pretended to expand, but has only contracted, his enlargements on the Ackermann pronouncement running largely to the creation of loop-holes through which to crawl out. The contest settles down again then to a question of sincerity, fitness, ability of the men; which can best be depended upon to carry out what Mr. Ackermann had the ingenuity to initiate as campaign pronouncements, and which Dr. Carson, lacking the genius to improve upon, simply endorses, though with evasions. We anticipate that our republican friends will have to find something more recent than "Doc" Carson's administration of Laporte, some time back in the dark ages, and, likewise, something better than that administration, to make their nominee particularly attractive to South Bend thinkers. We sincerely wish our republican friends would not force us to go into the details of their candidate's Laporte experiences, or rather Laporte's experience with their candidate. On the other hand, Mr. Ackermann's career is before you an open book, here before Dr. Carson thought of coming, the product of own own schools, our own environment, developing an executive ability along more useful lines than organization and management of major and miniature baseball leagues. It is because of this development along useful lines that he is pre-eminently fit for mayor at this time; a time when South Bend is in need of a man, devoted to the city's interests, and at the same time experienced as he has been. Strange, indeed, that while republican spellbinders and sobriquetted letterwriters, are vigorously attacking Mr. Ackermann for being a man in a railroad's employ. Dr. Carson himself should come out with a statement in which public service corporations alone stand out like a bull's eye the only phase of the Ackermann platform that the republican nominee fails to endorse, or even mention. Then compare again the track elevation planks in the two platforms expressive of where the two men stand on that issue, and decide for yourself, which is more open, frank, and unevasive. Where is the connection between Dr. Carson and the public service corporations that binds him to leave them out of his considerations? There is one. There is, in fact, two; first, the republican party, and second the republican organ, the party that has always been a public service corporation party, and the organ that has always fought their battles locally, and which owes much of its grouch against Mayor Keller to the fact that he would not heed its appeals to not push the electric light and gas cases. Dr. Carson makes no references to the public utilities, like the electric light, gas, street car, telephone companies, of a more strictly local nature, at all. Which then, in your judgment, Mr. Voter, stands in the most likelihood of being your servant in such matters; the railroad man who knows how, and says without equivocation that he will do it, or the baseball magnate who dodges the Issue, equivocates even on track elevation, and is bound by both party and by party organ to serve as a utility corporation dummy? That all the old vice profiteers, of the more vicious sort, have flocked to the rep'iblican nominee, creating an would-be invisible bi-partisan machine, presages an "invisible government" behind any administration that Dr. Carson can put up, and freedom from these especially commends Mr. Ackermann again. So again, we say, read cr reread that analysis yesterday, of the two men's platforms. You will want to understand them and then since the republicans are o anxious that you should study the men, follow us. We are here to fairly rnd consistently help.
CHINA'S PART IN Till; WAR. Thr belli reney cf 'hin a has been treated by Ger iP,..pv as if it were '.i-ible. I'..t if the German mv
rmmer.t i sincere in that estimate, it
trench-dicirintr could be done by mere laborers instead of trained soldiers. Thus t'.ie immense importance of China, as a source of military labor, becomes evident. China, without tiKhtinir, can add millions of fighters to the allied armies. Itut that is not all. The Chinese make "superb soldiers," Mr. Harding says, when properly trained. Thus, if it is conceivable that the man-power of the European allies, with America added, should not sutMce to down the Gfnuar.s. there is an untarped and bottomless
is making i i reer dr in Asia to draw on.
I China could furnish a substitute for every man on
curious mistake. Chir.a 1- not only potentially on
the most important of the alb-1 powtis. but i- actually ! the western front, and leave no noticeable tap in her
lavinc a I..."4 ami e T-ir . re -. s Gardner H.trdü.c. a st.ob
part in the war. .t of oriental lUaiis.
w rite s in "Tr. 'Ut I y C In'fiT' s;e a - ed :r"'
A
population, varv.
And China will do it if it becomes neces-
Primeval History in the Smithsonian Museums
by gakri;tt I. SKRVISS
THE MELTING POT
''Come Take Pot Luck With Us
WORK AND PREY. onie people make their living from the earth or from the Ynelr livrs ar pure and pe.iCeaMe. as human live rhould be. With laudable persistency they cultivate the seil. Or conscientiously 2nduli,'; in other forms of teil; And when they po to bed at ni?ht they have pacific dreoms, Kniploying1 no nocturnal houig in hatching fo.y selvmes. ?nnif other people fatten on their foolish fellow met. As truly as the sprightly hawk devours the slu.-zish hen. They bend their busy energies to dicker and to deal. To uet the hapless victim's wealth le'arduss of his .'squeal. Thtv ser e no social purpose and fulfill no social need, Producing nothing mere than plans to gratify their screed. And yet the tallest honors inconsistently may zo To thoe- who -rrimly pat ho r up the other fellow's douh; While those who toil wiih Mother Farih and Great Grandmother Are treated to the deepest sort of dark ob.-rurity. The world has always had a somewhat inconsistent way With its rewards of those who work and these who merely pre... Arthur Brooks Baker.
Tin: czar or AL.ii Tin: russias. IJy James J . Montaffiu. The former czar has been transferred from his apartment in Tobolsk to a small house in the grounds of the Abolak monastery.
When in the streets of Petrograd There's only desultory fighting. When German plots are breaking bad And times are dull and unexciting. Some hard,' official gentleman Send out a lot of husky porters. ' Together with a moror van. And moves the czar to cheaper quarters. When erxperts overhaul the hooks And find the deficltis growing By leaps and bounds until It looks As if the blooming works are roing, They cry: "We must save money quick. There isn't any sense in giving So much loose change to Mr. Nick; He'll have to cut his cost of living." So every month Nick packs his clothes With meek and placid resignation, And with his wife and children goes To take a cheaper habitation. And some dark day, when times are slack. And landlords nag, and debtors pre.-s him, Somewhere in some mean third floor bc-ck They'll come along and dispossess him.
Ml
mm &
A TcrTihlc Temptation. Dairyman In pool Headline. Let us hope that they left their cans behind them.
Gic Ulm a Chance. Henry Van Dyke Fays that Nero was worse than the kaiser, but then the kaiser has been so busy building his schrecklichheit plant that he never had time to take lesson on the fiddle.
Safety 1 irst.
pet
over
"Before the Germans
the pond You'd better subscribe for a Liberty bond.
the war rill-
Tlip Days of Conservation. Nothing is wasted. Most of potatoes raised by the amateur gardeners will make splendid
ing for shrapnel shells. Some Consolation, Anyway. Thank heaven there is no nation big enouch to risht a post-season series with the winner of the war. We Can Afford to lyose. When it comes to trading projectiles with the enemy across the trenches we hope to give more than we get. Watch the Committee Rooms.
A lot of whisky is iroin to be j spurios versenkt In Washington !
after the first of November.
Betty Opens
Her First Charge Account
MOTHER "That's a beautiful Suit, dear such I becoming style P BETTY: "I am so glad you like it, mother. Yoa know tnis is the nrst time I selected a suit without vour assistance." MOTHER: "Since you went to Gately's I was perfectly satisfied to have you make your own selection." BETTY: "Well, I shopped around and found that you jvere right about Gatclv's. I am clad vou told me to co there. MOTHER: "I like Gately's because they never urge you to buy, but rather help you select what you want." BETTY: "Yes! and they have such a wonderful gelection to choose from such variety of styles and colors and their prices are really low when you make comparisons." MOTHER: "Did you open a charge account?" BETTY: "Yes. Th eir charge account service is o convenient I v .11 never miss the money. Besides, the price is the same, cash or credit." MOTHER: "Who do vou think was here this afterv noon : Other Reasons for Betty 9 s Delight Betty saw beautiful Wool Velour and Burella Coats at S19.50, $22.50 and $25 all colors. She saw Dresses in Series and Silks at $13.50, $17.50, $19.50 and upwa rds. She saw a beauti ful assortment of i urs in all pelts at moderate prices and Waists, Millinery, Skirts, etc. Betty was enthused over Gately's values and charge account service.
Open Saturday Evening Until 10 o'Clock
321 S. Michi
san
0 01.
Dignified Cnxlit in a niiiibed Manner
feel that we were near the true beginnings of history, while we saw the preparations that were made for our coming upon the stage a million centuries later.
em e
be.'
1. id th.: i n :
e v e
an e; di:
f - i - wtth 1 Ml'-
I
an
ii.: a
c
1 'ram -' i ml i.tr:al
V. o ; t i "r : . w . s !
a i o
,r r.t :u e. 1:0 no. i.eRuiar socialist peacf-j'ioiunj: in me uer-
C ri.:ar.y. China ! man navy! Maybe Hill Ifohenzollern will yet learn A hurd-ed ! bow it f els to be knifed in the back. .: that ri.it. hod I
... lt ! ..-, Reichstag is coing to diseu.-s "a conquest peace
:p .i ll r.o.c in i
n...r thousand ! ou Vx"v-
This
.diows tb.at in a reichsta; you can discuss any old thin.;
:':.. a s "IlCP-.e.
Chi:. r;.pl.il
'a:,.l.
f this ::d it is
Sa e on!!'
I ): i ! . c t b.i 1
don d. t
i a slogan down east. Some of 'em
taor addiivc heatless to meatless and wheatless
It i (
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r.e i r l ' j work-;
i. : '. r Kmthe w
.a:..'. 1 nil!."
tr-
ard-
bi 1 t. a.!
. of f .r
T
Ko'ks of I.i Follttte's honi- city are armandin -;t ation. Hut r.ohV kind never resicn.
If o ir i-.e'chbor is an officeholder, exempt from in
I i b! .res, t tc.
i ' r ; a '
1 1 n N t!'-
o k f f b - . a r t ; e 7
. r.ii'i' bl
,-.( t b m. are t h ,es who if rep!a ed would,,
1 .- .4 .. . . . ; r ?::.?:! f A :. . o: the -a tt le line it self - the ,..m;i..r of ic: u;.: ,.,!, ;.t;!ied f..r righting at' A clean garbage can means fewer j uiiv iia Uuie iai-hf L- enormously increased If the j autocrats.
come taxation, urje him to buy IJbertr bon
Hat-
ea r
eat J 1 i0. 00.0 00 Swat the rat!
worth of U. S. food every
tlics and German
It would be impossible, in a fewshort articles, to analyze in detail the educational a.hantaKCs and re-
sources that Washington possesses in the preat Smithsonian Institute alone. We have already seen in a brief Klanoe at so apparently uninter-st- ; in- a feature as the aisle of the inertebrate fossils in the new national museum what a wonderful school r. is. equally good for popular and technical instruction. Ther.s where most visitors unfurtunatel hurry by, unconscious of the enormous alue and significance of what is spread under their eyes, we found monuments of history a
I niMlUfUl IMliliUil I I UHJ, ktli,UiiI irfrfs that so Ion atro as that :he ? 'IS j raindrops dented th sands, and the I wavelets carved them into rippling j line;, w hile ar.unation to the sloping
beaches of amshe.l seas, in whose j.lace mountain-crowned continents now stand. There we saw the mists of past time roll away. reealinc the foundations of North. America, covered
j with the wealth of early life, as life I was before the back-boned tribes rose to supremacy. There we could
There is one little scene in that theater of petrified wonders that any intelligent person might be glad to travel a thousand miles to look upon. It is a slab of stone formed from the pressed sands of a Silurian ocean bea h. dotted with the fo.sils tnat delicate little shell-housed creature ailed "lingula," and. lookin t; upon it, one sees how. as the rills of water trickled down the slope at the fall of the ancient tide, they eddied round the tiny bodies of the lingulao. scooned out little hol-?s in the sand on the lower side, and sometimes tumbled the animals over and over before leaving them at rest, ami all thes- things, the tumbled lingulae, the p ded rill marks, the eddy-formed b- b s. are there today ju-d at thrv r" left (except that ho water has anished and the sands and t.h mimals have been changed into nuk). ten thousand times ten thousand years ago! It is the awful vista of. almost limitless ?mti'"iuity thronen which we view it that raises that glimpse of life on a Silurian seashore to the dignity of the highest history. Now. I su-gest that we reg-ard the Smithsonian museums' as historical libraries libraries of earth history and see something mere of tlo- interminable tale that they tell to all who will tTke the trouble which should prove a delight and a wonder to understand it.
ogy to the words, "And God said, let the waters swarm with swarms of living creature.?," than that which in your youth taught you that these things happened about 6.0"0 years ago. You will multiply the 6.000 by at least 10.000 and then wonder whether the multiplier ought not to be ten times greater yet.
tonishinrr. lifelike reproduction of J it'u unusual r are, for many ct i?r,e the animal in an adjoining case, for azair.st them ha e been long pro.; the mod-.'rn paleontologist can more t nosti' a ted. than match the scientific miracle of A w or Id -ta mo : b-cal case will atCuyier, who was abl,. to reconstruct ! tract attertjon about th" time of an extinct fish from a single bone, j the ,- v y .,i The sight of that unparalleled bast ; An A n-'-rica n in hi-h la'-e will will la.-t long in your dreams. I b.- .! -bt -d a nd fpo.uie- ?:.. I.tit hr-re w- mu.-t stop for a tim, : .-e j.ir-!i b's- to the publp b- fore taking up again our walk! , r.- :.s b-e bii tlidate it i-.a.y through the corridors of world-hi-,' .p . t , h. ker ed ",tr. The . n.a' tory tbat fill the yreat national mu-! ,.x j,. t ;. ., . .-it eti e:n-s of -.od seums, r.nl are as typical of the j;1,-K Yli" vounc will .o:rt s; ir i t of Washington :is anything ;i T. i tl
Vou have but to step into another adjoining corridor or aisle of the great hall of the fossils in order t.. bnd yourself broupht millions of ars forward in the general story of the creation of terrestrial life, for r.ow you are surrounded by representatives of th? mighty family of th vertebrates, the animals with oi.e-. The fishes were th first notable ert brates. the first great upward step toward man, and there, in their rocky tombs, you will see tbshes of the old Devonian age. some of which look, as far as their bones and general shape are concerned, as if they might have been gathered fron the trash dump' of a 'seafood" restaurant. As ou caze upon them you will, v.erhaps, apply a different chronol-
The backbone was a capital invention, and when once it had been marie the multiplication of the forms of life became rapid and marvelous. I cannot enter into any detail of the evidences, which you will find as you go .n from exhibit to exhibit, of the advance of the vertebrates after they emerged from th? sea and began tc populate the land. The sea was the great mother of life, but her noblest children early deserted her for the sunny shores, the luxuriant swamps. thö preen meadows and the tree-shaded valleys and hillsides. 1'nccncious of drstiny, they were marching toward the height where the upright form of man was to enioref from among them, crowned with "the dome of thought." Rut the early chapters of every history, like these of a novel, are often a little wearisome let us. then, make a sudden ureat stride by passing through the corridor where the huge dinosaurs, the Jurassic and Cretaceous monster-; reign, and soon to th big mastodons, who came so late in geob tic time that the f rst men, the veritable Adams, may have seen them. and perhaps learned to kill them by matching intelligence against brute force.
that the capital city contains.
"The burs Incline, bat do sot compel'
HOROSCOPE
"h:blren .rn roi this duv nvt:.e.-: ma,. -!o:r. s; tro-p-le- n life. I.ut they wl'.l not ne-d money. ( 'opyrignt. 1 '' 7.
ONCE OVERS
. 1 1 vti t v - x t vi'ti i r -i - 'iitt
rn.MMlW. OCT. 'JI. 1017. '
ood and evil contend in the rule' , ... . . I Mr. Married Man, ou bla.-r.e -our of tne stars this dav, according to ! , , 'wife jor some of her extravagant astrology, with the sini.-ter fortes ., i habits but do '.on ever tell her the stronger. Neptun, 1 ran us. j , . i i i anvthing a'. out jour finan bil conMars and Saturn are adva-rse, while ... , . .' .iitmn ? Jur.iler and enus are m bcr.ep.c . . I To 1 e f ur-... she has heard o j -iy a-pe( t. j for eat s tbat ou CO'lbl l:ot a!f'! 1 When the planetary influences ar;; this nr.d th it. rta::i thin-s wh;ch divide! so strongly, the rule is un-i"-'e dev-r.-d. but u n. -m.'ed to ! i n'- f o theo-, aftr all eertam ar.d it is well not to trust ' I rider h crc;;nM!io, ;.- hi eve,, the kindly stars too much. not t.ltu..;i, for her to think but While 'e:r..s is friendly aftf-r sun-, f,--ir orr.p'air.t.- ere n.a!e .-"b-iy do-.v::. it is wise not to ri.sk anv love J lor the purpose of k"ej ir.g down her enterprise. ' xpene aocour.t. or 1- a;.e you
a re so pen u r.o ;s
Take her ir.to our
It is an uiiniChV time for s a
You will surely pause long and; call upon your iria-rinMir n to awake the historic sense, when you stand before the gieantic, orieinal skele- ; ton. the "type pecjnen." cf th-'-amazing American monster called the "stegesaurus." The real or.es.: the grat black ribs, like those of i ( stranded vessel. th- immense veFt1 ral column, the small, wicked-look-in? head, the wonderful armor plates, the hucre bone tayor.ets that :-erried the mitrhty tail all tbes. are before you, but partially rut out of the light gray J irasic sandor.e in' which, for millions upon millions of jears. they lay embedded and concealed at the foot of the Colorado; mountains. j Then you will turn to the as- J
'::;-!"ni
oy.ues. I,o.-ses in mid-ocean are
indicated and there is a sign read as j yo.ir r,r,o n ,h(. Jir presa-'ing a naval ) attle. I rro' e M her that vo-j ,,re tMv4 It peace .Joes bd p: -Mii! sudden-j thr r, r... irr. lv. the seers declare th..' many un- ";,0,v' h,!r our bank - - ;:.t. te'i usual pro: h ms will distract arn:y .rf .N hn ,,nN u , v, lW. t,, , . . n:A and navy. Grave mi-takes on th ,A j, v ,y t y y t. n e. Tart of officers are indicate, p j f (.':r 1 öf the ;:T,- i'ar An ephlejci . iri a er,trat:on fr ; v, ho.v ; .xr... t !0 mobilization an.p has beer. 'r.; 1 .(i ,,,,,, , ;n s :m of n ot.e-. foretold. ! , c,.,'. . . V-,
Shortage of sorr.e r. r e-a r y of life is f r r-shadow . d a r.d this may be du to sorr.e w.'b--; :r. 1 tr eadi-
e ry. Kin- George orr.es under .an e-
couragir.g sway of the .-:,;is t. at
ar.d she 'r.av surpm
.'-: by tret-
ins- vou T."re than b a'.f-w.av-. if -b
1 is th- t'i.'h s'"Tt. 1 ' v.; v right. 1 "J 1 T.
sem To t n d T
-t ; e " it f-:. i r. -'
Tho,. a'-tur-Ily pedi" s'rC'tr can Vi . 1 r. i i r.r rc 1. Th-'shv -
of th governing: tfi-I : for ; , v , ; ., .h:; ld,!nv-PIm'
I'riti.-h a tri.
her, wilt.
Low ever
': e a her" av err: t in his fa -nil v. ,
A violent storm that 'v;'.l !an're , shipping and be u--i .-i- ;tri opp-".r-tur.itv for the r.e:nv foreto'...! The stars -ntin-;- t" ; .-t-e f. '. a n v s r i aid t b -? . ; r ' tb.eni bv- the Jjur.dred instead of ;. i. nits or tens. Women should be safeguarded'
j do r - a ;jly ur'.e-- r.:i ao i.illv
': No chiclrer: v. ü! e s-:p
Ad", t .
Save money Vy ratrrr.ir.in merchant that adv'vtis?.
