South Bend News-Times, Volume 35, Number 326, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 22 November 1918 — Page 6
FRIDAY EVENING, NOVEMBER 22, 1918.
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS - TIMES Morning—Evening—Sunday. THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO. GABRIEL R. SUMMERS, President.
. . J. M. BTEriJi:.MN. Publisher, i JOHN HL.MIV zuviel!, Editor.
Only AHtl ITft Morning I'ipfr In Northern Indiana rJ Only l'prr Km jlo? i.ng; the International Nrm rke to fuiU llend Two Led Hires: Day and Mght.
llem I'bone IUI.
CFFICi:: 2lu W. Colfax At.
JU11 I'hen 1100.
Call st th cflw or telephone toe numtH-it ari l nil for department want,-l--i:11t risl. Advertising. Ovulation' or Accounting tor "wmiI toll," if your r-iau? Id in tLe ttU-phon cllrettiry. btil will mulJ after Insertion. Heport inittrutlou to hutinp. hcj execution, poor delivery .,1 paper bad tfifphone tertire. etc.. t, LeaJ of department with which joit are deillnz. Tb Nfwi-Tlrr La thirt-n trunk line, all of biet rtnyoad to lloiae lboLe llwl anl Uell Ü10U. KL'IISt'IlirTION HATES : Morning an l Evening IMlHons. klügle i op j. 2c; SUDUa), Gc. Dellvrred by rarrler la South Üend M MlsnawakJ. IvoO per je.u ia advance, or l-'o by th :. M-irnlDrf and Etenl:;g KdltWi. daily iuclfifiinK Sunday, ty mail, ' v j-r roiitb; 7u two muathn; arc per uiuth t.r?rter. oi 4i; per cr In idrtnce. Lutertd at the fcovlii Deud SxjtoZic tyoud Un mill. ADVERTISI.M." RATES: Ask the acltrrtlilns drpirtmonL ?.?!P.A,ivrtl!r- IprfM-ntatiTf-s: C.'UNE. LOH EN ZEN V()(HMA., Tw I t!th Av, Ne York City. hd1 Adr. Uli?.. I b leu ft u. It ,ew Ilea eodHvor to krep Its adrertinlnjf columns free ;.-o:u fraudulent misrepn-oer.tntion. Any pen -a crfrauded tL rough patronage of anr advertiaerneut iu this paper lll -oiifer a favor oa the iBuijagcuitul by reporting Ihm X&ua coujpietelj.
NOVEMBER 22, 1918.
ROOT AND PARKER AND THE SO-CALLED "NATIONAL" SECURITY LEAGUE. Anxious ai.ti-.tdnui.i.-.trutionistn in Washington ar' j.r s.-'.nis' with much vuor for the appointment of Klihu lioot ks a VM.-rPI war p-ac commissioner. If Woolrow W'ilh'iu want- him, well in! koo.1, hut in advance of th iiiii'ointint iit vr would .suTK-st, this too without smy anticipation of the suiriT'-tion ever h'inp considered that th- presiiW-nt investi'Ht' th miieniI iullie report that Mr. Koot, of military aK' at th tirnf. liircl a Mji'M ltut' ti fh Iiis tiKhtln for hini during the latter das of the civil war when he was draftol. It l- not on ar'ount of the anti-administration ;r.h-ty, lwv-ver, to have th form r secretary of tal; sot tu l'rarif. that w mention it. but b'crnie hi.-nam-appears, and is much referred to as presiilent of the M railed National Sectirity 1 i lti ! ; referred to, by oi-u'aiiier, et-., to Kle "p itrloti-- haracter." Mr. Ji'-eph t. f';ihm;m, organizer, now sojourning in Hoinh lrid. for example, has pointed to Mr. Koot's presidency of the . auuo in his addresses at the Kotary and Kiwar.is lub dinners re--ntlyt as sett.lnt one; for all. its snper-p.ttrlof ism miht ie measured by the price that Mr. Root paid for his Substitut-. And then to establish its super-parti.smship, he assures us that .Mr. Alton Urouke I'arker, democratic, candidate for president in l'.'Ol, is the vi-e president of the league; Mr. I'arker, if you please, now s'juawkinp like a wild roo.-c about so-railed "preparedness"quite all of it of a pre-war variety, who was defeated hy I'.r.OO.OOij voters because of his Wall st. connections, whib running " h platform dmandinr "a reduction of the army" which then numbered only 23, GOO nien. Who is Alton I'.rooke I'arker? Why. he is one cf those bourbon, reactionary democrats like Col. George Harvey, whom Woodrow Wilson told before the end of his lirst campaign in 101:', in his diplomatic way. to "ku take a jump in the lake," and we wouldn't be surprised if he meant the "lake that burnetii with lire and brimstone." Ilecause they have neej been able to control the president in the interest of their Wall st. clients, they have never done- anything since he has been in oilice, hut rant and rail at him. Their place is in the republican party, and Mr. I'arker. especially, in league with Mr. Hoot at the Ipad of th" National Security league id about as much evidence of sup-r-partis,inship as T. Koosevelt and W. Taft would be there. Th' league is super-partisan at that; super-partisan in the bi-partisan sense designed for "inislble government" activities, praspin for a capitalistic hold and employing every false pretense on the political calendar to gain it. That is the National Security league, parading in iMMith Ibnd today, and asking for support to aid it in its ministry: no less contemptible for emanating from the autocrats of Wall st., than if it emanated from th autocrats of Üreman. Id-partisan, yes. but who ever heard of a bi-partisan arrangement, that wasn't based upon ulterior motives that cared nauuht for partisanships, but only
to gain its ends.
J ertainlv th" so-caheti National Security league we-iiii rather have democrats m congress who would serve its Wall st. interests. than republicans who
.ouldn't. and jt would rather have republicans therj
to seive them than democrats who wouldn't. Am! with prt paredm. s-s measures in the past their uite ('u'j.-no program; preparedness measures that i oubl t:,l i.h-- pockets of the arms and munitions maker; litnts of Attvs. Hoot anil I'arker, these to b? up;d -mented now by a rec onVauot ion program that l an ,ui:e a exclusively to universal military training . ml n..ic prt-hts for the munitions and arms manufacture!-di.-plays th"ir gold-plated patrittis-ni quite dii.!!Ct' We wouhl l.ke to a- Mr. t'aslmian. organiser fo;' the league, why it is that in their list of patriotic tests
of coin-! es.-meii and senators, th.ev forgot to mention
i is "wn r measures.' any of the ship-building act I ither of the fsj.ior.ag. bills to curb Herman propaganda and sL'vtlom. or .u;v f the war revenu. m.-.is-
r J r e s 7
Why do thy y.i- nothing about the vote on the ship
building measares. tcep: as to the Cooper amend
ment? Is it teeiu-e that amendment would have presented government .vr.ed and operated ships carrying arms am! munitions to bt 11; uerents? Witness that the baue is always interested in legislation that h is tv du with, market for arms and munitions, and they don't calculate to s-tand for anything that interferes with it, or that doesn't promote uch a, marke. fnderstaiid too. th..t or.trary to th? league's misstatement of the p':rpo. t,f cooper araernlment. '.. hud only to do with c,.; , i -ur.eiu owned and operated shipt'I nothing wl.atestr to do with privately cwn and operated sh.J vn tl:t :-b :! ing the America: It was a pr--w.tr i;,ei-;;rc, an.! the theory of it was that the .l'nited Statt i ! tr.i: r.catral, ou-;t not co-oi-crate with any b: l.u-v r. :.t ;.y carry irg arras and ma-
A
Wilson Will Umpire Europe's Destiny
ND nou it develops that WooJro-A- Wilson is going to France by urgent
solicitation ot interested people ot hurope tngiana, mnce ana itaiy. His presence is JemanJeJ as arbiter of the jealousies and competitive
selfishness of these rival countries; friends in war, in peace, enemies. The land-grabbers of Britain, always in quest of the earth, and the Brith money-bags continuing jealous tor Brittania as the "mistress of the seas," are becoming quite as" dangerous a force, with America's plutocracy at their back, in the equation of the new internationalism, as Germany was in her quest of a "place in th; sun." Naturally, Pres t Wiison's insistence, as set forth in his 14 peace principles, demanding' the "freed jm of the seas for ail nations," great and small, was as a slap in the chops cd' the British "sea lords." .To compel England, at the conclusion cf this war, to give up her pet slogan, "Brittania rules the waves," would bj like depriving her of her wisdom teeth. Naturally too, when Pres't Wilson enunciated the principle, that a peace must be established, that "will satisfy the whole world for disinterested justice, embodied in settlements that are bae upon something better and more lasting than the selfish and competitive interests of powerful states; with ":: the avowed and concerted purpose to satisfy and protect the weak as well as to accord their just rights to the strong," he landed the British land-grabbers and sea-lords a nice diplomatic blow square on the jaw that makes them rattle. Understand! It is the English land-grabbers and sea-lords who are objecting, not the progressives and their premier Lloyd George, who, accepting Lres't Wilson's peace principles for Britain, united that country, and by such "after the war" assurances brought the British proletariat into cooperation in the world movement temporarily being advanced in the field. These objectors ,who threaten to make trouble at the peace tables, even if they have to transport T. Roosevelt to make it for them, are the aggregation in Britain that is seeking to overthrow Lloyd George and his ministry, as a peace and reconstruction forces, same as their American cousins are seeking to tie the hands ot Rres't Wilson over here. In the disposition of Germany's colonies, and the internationalization of Turkey, and the Dardanelles, naturally the British lords of commerce and finance are looking for advantages, and naturally France and Italy are interested in seeing that Britain does not ret these advantages; neither these, nor the continued dominance of the seas that has been her ambition and her pride. This is the why of France and Italy's request for the presence of Pres't Wilson at the peace tables. It is the reason that the thinking and more altruistic men of England demand his presence there. It is also the reason that lie is going; going though the buzzard of Oyster Bay follows or precedes him, and buzz about the palace of the late Marie Antoinette like the discordant bray of the ancient ram's horn that caused Jericho to fall. The president of the United States will occupy a position unique at the peace tables; holding as he does the balance of power in the arrangements for future peace, same as lie, representing the American people, held that balance ot power in forcing a conclusion of the war. Much of interest will come out at those peace parleys that the world in general has never known, and due to the secrecy of the parleys, may never be generally known till history writes it; much of interest of how England's autocratic dominance of commerce on land and sea contributed more than liberally to the beginning of the conflict. With Germanv subdued, we are getting back now to where we can talk sense; "tell the truth and shame the devil," and there is likely to be a lot of it told about the peace tables if England persists in her land-grabbing, "carpetbagging," sea-dominating demands. Germany's big faults in the world war have been, first, that she ever started it; second, that starting it. she based it upon so poor an excuse as the assassination of a grand duke, which assassination there is some evidence of her having helped contrive for an excuse; third, that coward-like, instead of going to the root of her peeve, and striking directly at the powerful nation, England, whose competitive force on land and sea was too great for her, she undertook to match that competitor bv the overthrow of weaker states, and thus set up a pan-German empire that would be England's rival. Fourth, in Germany's faults, once in tjje war, and seeing the "hornet's nest" she had stirred up, she cast aside all international treaties as so many "scraps of paper," began to ravish, rape, and indiscriminately ruin all that came in her way, even to insulting and invading the rights of neutrals until she had turned the whole world against her becoming a vagabond and an outcast on the face of the earth. Germanv has been taught her lesson on the battlefield. .England, old England, land and money-grabbing, sea dominating, suave, deceptive, reactionary England, will get hers at the peac. tables and new, progressive, honest, peace and justive-loving England will applaud. And should Lloyd George be overthrown, Woodrow Wilson is just the man to tell thnt old England, land and money-grabbing, sea-dominating, snave, deceptive, reactionary England, where to get off. He will tell it to her, of course, in polite, diplomatic form, and that, too, rtgardless of her ranting emissaries in America, or from America, the result of her pro-British propaganda here, and her capitalized politicalization, and enlistment of ex-presidents. That will be the nert propaganda we will have to fight in this country; pro-British propaganda. Thanks awfully, however, we won't have to eliminate it from our school books, notwithstanding the pro-British propagandic sophistry that all the anti-British history there, is of pro-German insertion. France and Itnlv, and the progressives of the new England, are readv for a peace that "will satisfy the 'whole world.-for disinterested justice; better and more lasting than the selfish and competitive interests of powerful states; to satisfy and protect the weak as well as to accord' their just rights to the strong." It is to be a jusi peace, not a vindicative pence, and there will be a league of nations to enforce it a necessity against t';e "earth and sea" wanting Britons as well as against the "place in the sun" wanting Teutons.
merchant marine, with a for them at government
prefers a privately built, government subsidy bui' t;
expense 7 It is possible that the league doesn't regard the war revenue treasures as war measures, merely because Wall st. and particularly its; arm and munition makers, don't like the excess profits tax? Attys-. Root and Parker while giving "patriotic character" to the ieacUe, .-.ppear to be serving their arm? and munition clients very nicely, and now what they want i for you to blindly put up your money, to hela put their propaganda over. Remington Arms. Savage Arms, and Aetna, and Dupont Powder Isn't the National Security league program, indeed, more suggestive of being their humbhsew ant. than of being yours or America's?
dren because they are the hope of)
It? future.
Of course, we have long recog- ' nlzed in a formal, hair-hearted way ; that the community was responsible i
I for the health of all it people by,
our poor-laws, our county psysi- ; cians, our free dispensaries and ) charity hospital". But wnat we now want and must have Is not merely j medical attention and nursing care j of a sort for every citizen of the '. state Init the very best, and most skilled and effective that can pos- I sibly be provided at any price. j And every cartful Invrstigation of j the actual facts of medical atten-
danc and ho.cpital care, whether in city slums or in open country districts has demonstrated the shameful fact that In this day cf grace and enlightenment not more than from one-fourth to one-third cf the whole community get auch adequate and ideal attention or niythlng even approaching" tt. About one-half pettinginferior or insufficient medical attention and nursing and about one-fourth of the community getting none at all when they are ill. Nor is this deplorable state of affairs polelj- a matter of expense, as is shown by the curious fact that the one-fourth of the community which pets really adequate care consists cf almost equal pirts of the 10 percent of rich and well-to-do at end of the Foclal scale and the 15 percent of destitute or desperately poor at the other. The very rich can commnnd all the medical skill and hospital car. rnd relays of nurses, which their case require, while the very ror go directly without sense of humiliation or shame into the great public hospitals where they are attended free gratis for nothing- by the ablest and most distinguished members of the medical profession and cared for by splendidly organized staffs of hiphly trained nurses
The man who with his family falls between these stools of perfect and adequate medical attention and nursing care is the great backbone of the community, the entire intelligent working class, from the day laborer up to the office worker and lesser mercantile and professional classes, whose prld forbids them to apply for admission to what they regard as a pauper hospital and whose means do not permit them to meet the ruinously high cost of first class medical' and nursing attendance. What we need is a careful study rind intelligent redistribution of the medical and nursing and financial resources of the community, in place of our present brainless and haphazard method of medical service and practice. What can be done when the community really puta it back and its brains Into the task N triumphantly shown hy what has been done for the health of our troops in France and those of our allies: Disease on th Enclih and American fronts has almost been wdped out, as a cause of death, as shown in a. death-rate from disease in the English army in the trenches of less than 4.0CO and of our own American of les than thre pr thousand ppr annum as contrasted with from 12 to 15 per thousand in the civil populations at home. Why shouldn't our home populations be priven the "benefit of the same protecting and upbuilding care?
The Melting Pot COME! TAKE POTLUCK WITH US
New McCall Patterns and publications 1st Floor, right
GEORG
E WYMAN & CO.
anno and Six l
3 Selling Events of Importance To Interest the Saturday Buyers
A Corset Sal
including the choice of the entire stock at these reduce:! prices:
S19.75, $22.50. $25, $29.75, $35, $3(75, $45 and $5o. .of our woolen and silk, smart tailored Skirts. Placed in three groups at these reduced prices: $7.75, $10.75 and $15.
Skirt Selling reducing the number of C. B. Corset stvles. lo models closing out. 55, $6,S7, $9 Corsets $3.75; $10 and $12 Corsets $6.75.
Our Suit Sali
cry lT'T-1 J. J w V
Very Smart Coats at $25 Here Saturday The styles are the most desirable of the season, being along loose lines, some belted, some belted effects. All have huge collars and attractive pockets. In Wool Velours, Burrelas, Pom Poms, Salt's Plushes and noveltv weaves.
You can assure yourself a saving of from $5 to $10 in a selection from these $25 Coats.
The Coats at $19.75 are exceptional The woman or Miss intending to pay from $2.50 to $5 more than this price for a Coat will find here in this group exceptional qualities. There are Coats of warmth and style in wool velours, Melton, Burrelas and Salt's Plushes. In the shades in demand now. All sizes. See These Coats on 2nd Floor.
1 1 iff IS
3c
Toys "Made in America" This year, of all years, "Young' America" wants American-made Toys and Wyman's Toyland shows hundreds and hundreds of "Made in America" Toys. The famous "Ives" mechanical and electrical Trains; the "Woolvenlne" gravity toys such as pile drivers, pump, derricks, etc. operated by and, and the American Model Guilders- all are here in complet; assortments. Toyland occupies a space of nearly .1,000 su're feet and as your children will y you, i a real, live pluc-. Conre with them tomorrow see the thing which interest them.
Selection made later If desired.
novs. held till
Tojlaml ;ird I'loor.
Handkerchiefs Selected Now Are wisely chosen indeed. Now you may choose fro mhundreds and hundreds in unbroken assortments. See those by the box featured Saturday.
Black Woolen Materials Now at Special Prices
36-inch All Wool Albatross, Pres. Val. S1.5Q at 89c 36-inch All Wrool French Serge, Pres. Val $2 at 1.25 4 2-inch All Wool French Serge, Val. $2.5o at 1.G9 45-inch All Wool French Serge, Pres. Val. S3 at 1.S5 50-inch All Wool ChitTon Broadcloth. Val. S.S at 3.50 4(-inch All Wool Imp. Henrietta, Val. 52.50 at 1.25 -
-CARPETS, RUGS, LINOLEUMS and DRAPERIES, 3rd Floor
The Economy of Health Insurance
Hy James J. Montague. OX THE JO'l ACAIN. The tumult and shouting, made famous by Kipling. Have died as they did in his widely known pome, A headache i all that is left of the tippling, The whistles are still ar.d the hands have zone home. We still are brimful of delight and elation, Our hearts are serene, though our temples may throb. Hut life isn't ever one long celebration, So let us go back on the job.
Before The Advent Of Woman's Gladness
dornen Who Know Take Precaution Aff&inst Suffering.
3T
K 77
u . in in j l imt i
Hy .Garrett I. JScrvlss.
nitions
s to them c:i
dp
operated by itself;
that It would b uii r.rjtr-d t do o. I it pOibi that t;,v. iUat dyvaii't ttgulJ tiiÖ kliip yjidinff measure a -.n..i im-usr''" Lecaue Wall L
brought out by this world war
the truth of the word of scripture. "No man liveth uno himself and no man dieth unto himself. Jt has been written in letters of blood and rlr that it is emphatically the business of a nation, a matter of keenest interest to the state, whether this man dies or lives, whether that mother is sick or whole, whether
i - the youncest child or feeblest inTHE PHILANTHROPIST NATION. "ZTZl JT imsibie ever Of course we love all humanity, and everything like ;1ain to claim in future that the ....... . , ., ... , health and physical welfare of a that. And it rather flatters our philanthropic van ty to . . ' man. a woman, or a family, are that b.avv the world depend on us so much for help in war individuals or family's purely prlvand peace. Hut we don't mind confessing that once in j ;te and personal affair with which a while we do get kind of tired of having the whole the community has no right or call . ,, to interfere, b.amed world holding out It. hands all the time. t. v j .1 it has proved in the most ovrr-
Mireiy .1 Lnrisuon nation ue.;eres aoout one da;-s nh
There still is excitement in most of the headlines, We still have a lot to be chesty about.
I But non of us hanker to pose in I the breadlines,
One of the most striking things i And nothin- but work ever
I Koeps a man out.
four years of worry. No longer we dream night and day of the Hun We settled his hash in the deuce of a hurry. Hut there still ia a lot to be done.
rest from philanthroping out of every seven.
I'riy, in the Lorraine iron fields, is not like the old man who had a great many troubles most of which nfver hrtppMid. It wa.s besieged in lo:), again in !."7 destreved in 1421 and captured in 1 475. Of cour.-e. thes. lone suffering old towns dort complain much, but all
elminc an onvincin manner
that it is one of lite most vital and important duties '.ot the state to protect and preserve in health every one of its citizens, from the tiniest (hibl to the fiercest righting man. ar.d to Insure them the best and inost skilled attention and quickest recovery possible if they fan t no m Itter whnt it may cost. V . 1 - .1 ... . . , I ... . . -
the same there are limits to their patience, and sooner 11 m'1,1 " ,!S r'allz? wun vivui- ....... ... ! ress ne-ver dreamed cf before that or later the invaders have to get out. If you don t be- .h? h,.alth .in l physical vUor of its. lieve it. go to llriey and count the Germans. J citizens are the v ery hfe-bloo l and ih'-p of salvation of a r.:itpn. of its ) oldiers because they are the hulA good n-.f-r-y people are. in favor of the food admin- w.irk of its verv -xistence. of its istruticn guir.g out of bu;nes .t the earliest possible working men and working vomn n.um..nt. Whoi w,u invwiirat- von tin,! that (h,v :,r because they must supply the sol-
dier and
generally people interested in sUinff food
i
support him on the fiehtinir
'ine, of iU mothers and young chil-
The Germans won't desolate my house or your house, Hut unless we get back to our muttons this fall. By spring we may be journeying out to the poorhoue And that is a fate that's not pleasant at alb And so, though we view with profound satisfaction The fact that we've ' walloped the Teut and the Turk, We'll never get forward unless we get action. So let us go back to our work! One imperial crown One throne badly broken down. Oi.e German sword in five pieces. One mailed f..?: considerably dented. One set of iron hee'.s in poor condition. One ring of steel fatally twisted and otherwise damaged. Two million Verboten -itrns. Apply Junker Somewhere In Berlin.
Before the arrival of the Stork, women for orer Laif a century hare learned ta trlsdom cf ciTin? nature a helnlnr hand. Nausea, lit rvousness, bearinr-down and itretchinr pains la the abdomen and muscles are entirely voided br the utc oi Mother's Friend, according to the teitlmony it thounandi cf mother is have used thii lime-honored remedy. Mother'a Friend lubricates the fine retrcrlc of nerve beneath the 6kln. and by rtmilar ue cturlnjr the per'or the muclea ire made and kept soft aoi itle. They ran thee eipand grntly ana sily when batr? is born and pain and dsngrr at the crisis is naturally avoided. Mother's 1 ricr.d Is a preparation of penetrating oils and other medldnal arents rrepared especially for expectant mothers, t is for ext mal use. is ffjsolutely safe andj shcttld be U!d rejularly duriny the entire period before hairy comes. Writ to th Brad field Rernlator Company, Dept. A, Lamar Bulldinr, Atlanta. Georgia, for an Interesting- Motherhood Jlock, and obtain a bottle of Mothrs Friend from the drusirHt. You wIU Cad it tLe sreatert kind cf Lcis.
Don't Pay Cash for Your Clothing. Yoct Credit Is Good at GATELY'S, 331 R. MJchljran St.
CITIZENS BANK & TRUST CO. Safety Deootit Boxes $1.50 per year.
SilCEP
3T
22
fV'-IHWH -III 1111-. I IV.III It. U, T ill, . I Clt A . A J $ 42-inch All Wool Imp. Henrietta, Pres. Val S3 at 1.50 j
42-inch All Wool ChitTon Popin, Pres. Val. S3 &t 1.35 j
Clauens Jewelry Store Radiates With Gifts
Jewelry is the ever-acceptable gilt, livery woman loves handsome jewelry, and nothing pleases her more than some beautiful trinket. Come in and look over our Christmas Jewelry the goods are new and clean and many are entirely original in ideas. Inspect the stock now when it is at its best you'll lind an endless variety of gifts. Clavier's Popular Jewelry .Store Michigan Near Washington
T"l .M-k flil ti f I ..ft 1 it' X"-. I
The allies at last have taken the germ out of Germany.
FOR COUGHS AND COLDS X fcSJidy Cilciurn ompouni that sxfe ruards agalut chronic lun? anl thrcse troubles. .V tontc-r-s ora.Uv5 prepared itto-t harmful cr LiUt-rcnr.lCf drucs. Try them today. 50 cents & box, including war taz For alo by all IrorriU
PA S'X ?
CLOSING OUT Entirr J.ine of Fall Millinery at Vi PRICE Thee are no restrictions. Thi uiier .applies to every hat in stock arul vviil continue until Fall stock i fully JiiposeJ of. McCOLLOUGH'S Exclusive Millinery Shop 130 S. Main St., Opp. Farmer Trust.
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