South Bend News-Times, Volume 35, Number 331, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 27 November 1918 — Page 4

i:ii.may i:e.mng. novembeu 27,

THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH BEND HEWS -TIMES Morning Evening Sunday. THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO. CASH ILL iL c I M MF. IIS. presl-lent. J. iL 8TL1'UE.n.m). Publisher. JOHN IIL.MiY ZITVER. Editor.

Only A elated rrr Mnmlnr Paper In Northern Indiana nJ Onljr l'irr Lnilo) inc th. i ni'mutlonai New terU la

CFFICL: ao W. Colfax Ar.

Thon tlOO.

Cs.l at th rffie or tea-a!ove numbers and ml for parttwTit nnte-1 K-lit ri!;. AdTcrtU'.nc Circulation or ;ount:n? Iror "want a-'i." If your rai;i? Ji In tLe telephone ölrernry. bill Hl ,, aulWl iftrr l;b. rtion. IUport lnitteu tloa to biiffiaa. l.-ml eieeullou, p'-or ieliry f pa-r bud telephone ervlce. et.. tj Lal ct cpartmrnt with alcb ju-l re ue.il.os. iLe .New s-ri:.'. hm tU;rtt-:i trunk linea, all of walcä rvso&d to librae 1'boi.e 111 aiid litll ZluO.

ErBsrmiTluN irA TLS:-M ..-nit an 4 F.Tfnlns K-HUon. rSngl t'-vpy. L'c: in..4y, 5 lellvered by carrier la ftouta JWn.l aii'J ill!, aw ki. vU) ;,-r year In advaute. or U'e by t-t-fk. M;rMotf sad Lttiulug LJlti'Mi. daily luclafllng Sunday. Ly etil, 4h' it UsOQtL; : two nntha; ic ptr in ,uth therea.ter. or -l.oj f.r jer In drun'. filtered at the fcoutii Head fcoatoHlce as wouil clis UJili

AIVKRTIKIN; KAILS: Ask the dTert!'n department. Foreign AdertilL,c Uopret- utaUves : CONL LOKLNZKN Jt VOOiJMAN. 215 1-itth At , New Iirk City, aud Adr. Mdff.. Cilag. Tba .- 1lu eaUeavor to keep Its advertisiujf olumaa free Iroai frauduK-at iiilareprc?entatlon. Any person Crauded ti.rt.UKb rutrocae of gnv ad vertihomeiit lu tula paper will confer a favor ou the inanag'.-aitnt by reporting tta tacta cotapieuly.

NOVEMBER 2 7, 1918.

ALL OTHER SINS HE FORGIVEN HIM. Our t-k'Ctric-juico utility-fe-i contemporary, th: South lUn.J Echo cf the Chicago Tribune, has at last, thank you, after tuch manner, found an xcusf now for henceforth MipporUn S'ec'y McAdoo of the treasury tipartment, in his re.-sigr.athm. A few days aeo he was a "chtap-skate'' for rfalniri on account of ?n.-mthcien; piy; he wasn't much of a secretary of the treasury anyhow, and a.s a director perioral of railroads even worse, hut now it has !" n ;-t forth and copied, that t real reason for his rination is his opposition, or alleged opposition, to povrrninent ownership of puMlc militi-s anl for that, of course, all other miis he forgiven hiru. I i-.n't m ce.s.sary for the country's v lfaro, -itlu-r a. MCctary of the treasury, or railroad director general, th tt a man have any sense. If he is opposed to government ownership or control of utilities the railroads, t-dKraph, telephone, cahles, etc., that is all that is iu-res.ary. Vith that ono o.ualification, no difference what el.-e he lots, it is all riijht. A man may he all wrons: today; e ry tliirnr that he ever did show up olack as a spad-. Put l-t him tonight evidence a friendhlp .somehow for puhlic utility msipnatts, and what was hlack before fades into divinity white with tomorrow's sunrise. It illustrates the amount of coniidence anyone car. lecently have in the disinterested honesty of our contemporary with reference to anything. If it isn't partisanship, it h some direc t or indirect linancial intluenco that controls it, even if it has to be inUuenced by so cheap a process as free juice for a limousine. I5ut anyhow, Hec'y McAdoo is redeemed. He can now k on his way. Nice things can henceforth bo sail of the things he has done for other reasons than that he did them. He is opposed to Kovernment ownership of public utilities, or has been said to be by the Chicago Tribune and its South l'.end Echo, and truly true, like the kir.K--i of old, a man so minded "can do no wrong."

NO CHANGE OE HEART. The attitude of the c.erman people tow ml their former and present governments is peculiar and hard for Americans to understand. Most of us have taken it for granted that the Mer-jiu-rfi.s turned against kais.-rism from conviction. Wo have pi tuied them as entering jofuliy uion a new er-i v( freedom, as in earnest about democracy and eager to repudiate the mm-, follies and tyrannies of their pat. There is little real evidence of th it. Dr. Harold Williams, i.rmr correspondent of the London Daily Chronicle, writes from Switzerland: "The Herman revolution as seen from nere certainly demands suspension of judgment. There is no exultation in liberty, no particular indignation against the authors of national misfortune, no recognition of the wrong dona by tier man v to the world, not the faintest sUn of national repentai-.ee. The overthrow of the Herman monarchs is regarded with indifference or su oly con -cab d regret, and there i v no hint of any di.- Insure rag.irding r spousü'üit y tor the w ar ami no publication of .vedWt documents.

"T'ne ho-tilc attitude toward the allies is unchansi'd. or ralh-T intenü:ied ly the sense i;' humiliation -aus,-d by tip- tonditions of the armit ic - f.if v'-.ich we are apparently con-ideied to b!.me in-t'-ad of the Herman ii.Ieis who tind to wreck civilisation. The persi.t':p e of C.-.e arrogant and exclusive spirit under tb.e :--w co-editions is most :c-luarkabb-. As .t t'-.e involution has ett'.-cted r, chaiu'.' of he.', vt -.n (, rinan.v .' We h.tll have to wait a lit 1 1 longer before making up our minds about the Hermans. Certainly we Mr.not receive them into fill democratic fellowship mtil they rcpiuii it.- .c.-toci ; -, and all its work.-, from the heart as w as !:.- lip-, and give .(p;e induation of understanding wh.it d-:ii r.ii-v means.

GERMAN HANDS. Tl:e mor.il s' mdi-.ir of He rmar.y with the rest of the world is ep'.toTi. i ! in an incident of the H. rman lie' t surren. ier. The I'o'.m r of the Herman navy- that navy with which the emp.re-b.-. uders of lrn-s.a li ad dream

ed of orvi-.o : g lb.

w r i

h.ui -te.iliu d

Hi sibmc

between tvo guirdi..!! lap.es of ltritish. Irei:ch and American warshi-. Then. In silence unbroken, the German oüicers ca me al -ari! the allied vis.-e'.s to m.ik -the formal plotters i f surrender. There was v.o ceremony such as is ordinarily shown an honor-de opponent. T!a re w.is r.id one word of iouri-v to ;om-:i the i. : ;t- rm s of h'.in..;hati,n. There was nothing - it on? ml tuous. elo m :.t s.b'nce. "Tvvi of th. Herrn, in oihvers wept. Ar.ctht r raised

THE DEMAND FOR OPEN DIPLOMACY IOpcn covenants of peace, openly arrived at, after w hich there shall be no private international understandings of any kind; but diplomacy shall proceed always franklv and in the public view. Pres't Wilson's Peace Principle No. 1. WHEN Pres't Wilson uttered the above, the first of his fourteen peace principles; to which our European allies have agreed as the basis of negotiations, he delivered a direct blow in the face, not only of the central empires, but of our allies as well. We are over in France today with 2,100,000 men, because of the secret treaties, peace covenants, private international understandings, and offensive and defensive alliances, indulged in not only, by Germany, Austria-Hungary and Italy, but by England, France and Russia. Everybody was doing it over there, even as it's been done over here, hands thus stealthily clasped sometimes, even reaching across the brine. In Europe from Tangiers to Armageddon, it has been just one secret treaty, peace covenant, international understanding, etc., right after another. The war is the result, indirectly, and evolutionally, of course, but the result, the festering beginning even back before the treaty of Frankfort, to the Crimean war. Nothing breeds misunderstanding and suspicion more readily than the things that are shrouded in mystery. When England and France,temporarily of one mind to selfish ends, went to the rescue of Turkey and Sardina as against Russia, in the Crimean war, there began a series of secret treaties, frequently broken, and variously suspended and shifting, creating new sores, here, there and yonder, until the multiplicity of sores, with Germany sorer than all the rest, made the world war inevitable. Pres't Wilson had this beginning in mind, and the series of secret operations that followed, down through the wars of Louis Napoleon, the FrancoPrussian war, to the Morrocan ari'air, the Boer war, the Russo-Japanese war, the Balkan wars, and even our own Spanish-American war. In promulgating his principles of peace, therefore, he naturally picked upon these secret covenants, etc., first, as among the things to be eliminated. Spheres of influence and balances of power cannot be established behind closed doors and maintained in the dark without jeopardizing the peace of mankind. Prussia took no part in the Crimean war, perhaps, because she was suffering from a revolution of her own at that time, but behold how soon she began to fortify herself against the advantages which France and England gained. First it was the war with Austria, bringing that country under her thumb, and next the Franco-Prussian war, and the transfer of France's ''lost provinces,'' while meanwhile England, more jealous of Russia and France than Germany, played pro-German pretty well up to the founding of the AngloFrench alliance in 1904. England was pro-German most of the time while Bismarck held his iron sway, perhaps not always because she wanted to be; but because she thought it wisest to be, but that was her open diplomacy. Nobody knows the number of secret alliances she may have had with other powers, in many cases no doubt, with the very nations against which she openly appeared to be aligned with her German all)'. Such has been the diplomacy of Europe for a half century; a seething caldron of deception, and nobody knows it better than the president of the United States, who as historian, economist, and student of political and internatioral affairs, all his life, has analyzed the causes and effects too frequently, t) be fooled by any wild promises that the parties thereto can make him. It is the lirst of all things, arousing distrust, jealousies, and misunderstanding, that brought the world into the holocaust of war. Are we interested? Why not? Hasn't it dragged us into the most expensive war in our histov; indeed, of the world? Aren't we interested in this aggravating source oi warfare? Naturally there are forces, even among our allies, that do not relish American interference with the continuation of this European brand of diplomacy; but they were glad enough to have us come to their rescue, to save them from extinction on account of it, and we don't propose to be called back if we can help it. The trouble with or virtue in the Wilson diplomacy is that he is a fundamentalist; strikes at the roots, rather than the branches of things, and is therefore effective rather than superficial. Revenge for the assassination of a grand duke was only a pretext for war; not the reason just an example of the deceptions that Europe has been habitually practicing, ostensibly going after one thing while in fact, seeking to accomplish something entirely different quite as England and France went to the aid of Turkey in Crimea on the public presumption that they were to save Palestine for the Latin as against the Greek monks. They saved it but they crippled Russia's sphere of influence in the Balkans, their real object, and especially thwarted her ambitions for Constantinople.

sed Pa. It helps one prately if one knows a lot of langwidges. sed Da. Deer old France, sed Ma. How grateful we shud be to France for all It did for us in the Kchelyur., Ma. You mten in the Kevclushun, sed Pa. I meen in the llel-elyun, sed Ma, wen MMer Lafayette helped Genr.il Grant lick Genral Burgoyne, Ma sed. Doant tell me anything about histry. Ma sed. I will bet you a new hat for ra: apger.st a new hat for you, sed Ma. & I newer bet anything beef oar. sed Ma. & then Pa bet with Ma & Ma pot Dewdad's Hutry of Nashuns, wich she pot with vjm oap in a deepitrtment store, &. Pa won the bet - gaiv me a quarter 23 cents.

ONCEOVERS dont hi: too kasygoing. If anyone should tell you, little Mother, that you have not the b'ooi of your child at heart, your eyes would strike lire at once. Why, then, are you sympathizing with your son or your daughter because "that horrid old teacher has kept that exercise going for the past live months?" You regret that your own education was not more thorough. You were not very keen on "digging In" when you were a child, and you see the folly of it. Then have stamina enough to stand out against the laments of your offspring, who are sure to blame you in later life for a sympathy which was merely Indulgence. It takes downright heroism to be the right kind of a parent It takes high ideals and standards, end the backbone to uphold and enforce them at any cost to yourself for the good of the child, if you would be a truly good parent. Don't fall down in this particular for the sake of j'our "nerves" and because Debbie has the headache every time she is scolded. Ie a real honest-to-God father or mother, regardles of every thing. (Copyright. 1918.)

When will Herman hands be taken again in friendship?

Other Editors Than Ours A

hi:

id to sImm- w:th a l;r:t:h ortaer. The latt r re-

futd Th-

i it-

ill's hand

hmply t

lb

turned away g:;:..ly mutt-ting something in his native tol.ue." Thei e was n. i.e. i:: ib -.d .-: th..; hand. It 1-. what ; rm..i; f.. - i- iv. wher vor si-.e turns. TL's i- the t i eption th.-.t aw.it milLoe.s of (n rmans, in their 'i.li.r" i w ;th th- humane civilizations

v. . ,

de-trov

who th.nk of Hermanv

Oow thiiik. hist cf ail. of t-L.--a; and l'-bot morality.

Till-: UIIV IN' THIS I ATE. ( Louis lllc CourieT-Joumn,.. The republicans are beginning early to taste some of the bitter as well as the sweets of their recent success in the congressional elections. During the campaign there was nothing to indicatethat the republican party was not a homogeneous, harmonious party. Indeed, it was homogeneous and harmonious, for it confined itself to its purpose to dislodge the party which occupied the seats and enjoyed the emoluments which the republicans for about half a century have considered their own special property. In their crusade for the recovery of that property all differences among themselves were put aside. They acted on the time-proven theory that in order to divide up the rabbit pie they must first catch the rabbit. They caught the rabbit. The pie has not yet beevi served. It is not yet en the table. Hut the aroma of it is in their nostrils, and in their hands their wenwhetted table cutlery, which, while they await the pastry, there are ominous indications they may use upon one another. Thus ten of the republican senators and senatorselect have served notice that ien. Penrose and kindred spirits among the standpatters shall no', be placed at the heads of the principal committees, if cutlery can prevent; and cutlery that may serve admirably the stat-mian who in the zest of a long-denied appetite may be an expert at ating pie with a knife may serve him just as effectively as a sr.ickersnee on the persons of disapproved competitors for the choice cuts of the pie. It i the reappearance of the old rift in the republican lute; the schism between the progressives and the old guard which lost them the presidency In 1912 and which, notwithstanding the surrender of the progressive leader, they were unable t ) bridge for Mr. Hughes in iyl'5. The geography of these ten insurgents Is suggestive. All e.ctpt Lenroot and Ii Foliette of Wisconsin and McCormick of Illinois are trans Mississinpians. It is

! the old clash between the west and the east, which ! spht the party eight years ago and which was only

superficially concealed four years ago. Hut it means much more than geographical jealousies. It means the irreconcilable contltct of liberalism and radicalism with the Toryism and fossHism which cling to high tariffs and clasH privi'.ece as the mo.it that the is worth while. It means that whenever the republican party, putting aside the expediency by wh'ch it seeks power, takes

!an honest inventory and seeks to use for honett end-:

the power thus attained, there is no such thing as a republican party as it may appear in name on the rolls cf congress. It means a cleft in the organization whic can nevar be welded, because it goes to fundamentals; a cleft which is bound to widen because the age in which we live does not stand still and the tendencies which ha', e caused this division are becoming stronger all the time. It i- alto-ther the reshaping of a situation which promises anv thing but state moi.otony in the existence of the republican party the comlnff two years.

The Melting Pot CO ME I TAKC POTLTJCU WITH US

IjIttli; itoiiniirs pa. Uy William F. Kirk. Thare is" going to be lots of work for us workers, sed Pa to Ma last nite wen he cairn hoam. Thare Is

going to be many things wich we must put rite, after we have put the kaiser on bred & water, Pa said. Pretzels &; water wud be better for him. sed Pa. I hoap thare wil be a good deel of ackshun & Uttel talk, sed Ma. I have herd so much talk laitly about what thay are going to do with the kiser that 1 am gittlng tired of the whole thing. Let us turn our eyes to lite lafter Ni work, sed Ma. & fergit the kiser. Rite, sed Pa. rtut about the work that we have got to do. I was thinking I wud talk a littel run oaver to France beefoar long & help them bild up thare butiful cities aggenn. I worked for a arkytek wen I was yung. sed Pa, & picked up a good many things such as hods of brick, etc., ted Pa. This wud cum in handy Oaver Thare now. I a:n keen to io Oaver Thare now, sed Pa. It is slng-u-lar how many is keen to go Oaver Thare now, sed Ma. Wen the going was good, sed Ma. many of my friends & sum deerer than friends, such as you. sed Ma, dident say a word about taiking the big jump acrost the Hrine, Ma sed. Now all the old boys want to CO. I wud have went long ago, sed Pa, If I dident know that the country needed me moar at hoam. sed Pa. That is what Unkel Henry sed. sed Ma. I doant know in just what line the country needed him here, sed Ma. but he seemed to think

they needed hin & that setteled it

beekaus he stayed on & on. 6beef car the war beegan, sed Mr, Unkel Henry was all the time telling what a grato f.ter he vas. I am differen-t, sed Pa, I newer brag. But altho I newer brag. I know what I know & know that I cud help a lot In reebilding France. The Job is going to be did, sed Pa, Sr did rite. Bobbie, sed Pa. how wud you like to taik a trip over to France with me? Parly Voo fed Pa. Parly W?ho? sed Ma. Parly Voo, sed Pa. that is a grate French saying, sed Pa. wich meen the saim as O You Kid or Ah Thare,

time to indulge in these reveriea 3h-jw time you have frlt-

DON'T THINK ABOUT IT IK) IT. Wake up, Mr. Day Dreamer, you are a simpleton. Yes, you are. You are wasting time and brains on "castles in Spain." Not the air castles of childhood, but fancies Just the same. Why allow yourself this senseless luxury when It is unfitting you for actual facts.

If you have reveries, make you how much

tered away In the past. Idle fancies of the great things you would like to do In the future won't get you an inch away from where you now stand. You would be insulted to be told you have never matured. Hut are you not a child In this silly waste of time and can you not see what a difference It might make If you used your spare time In really doing something tangible to gain the goal you .iow dream of? Well, Instead of snapping your eyes at this, "insinuation" which is far from an Insinuation, however; it is a regular statement w-hy don't you put your mind at some practical problem, follow it to a definite conclusion and make your earning capacity greater? Get the idea? (Copyright, 1918.)

"WOMEN'S PART AT Tin; I N'TKK NATION ALZ

Cooperating with the United States Food administration the directors of the International Live

Stock exposition will stage a dem onstration of "Home Emonomics

at this year's event in Chicago the

first week of December.

All meats are expensive and never

before has such necessity for

economy by skillful preparation

been necessary to conserve the di

minishing supply, especially when Europe is calling for part of our relative abundance. American housewives can best alleviate the needs of our fellow beings across the Atlantic by improved methods of cooking and this demonstration will aim at conservation by teaching how to make the cheaper cuts of beef pork and mutton as palatable and nutritious as high-priced roasts and steaks. By such conservation the cost of living may be materially reduced without imposing inconvenience or hardship. "Hetter meals at less cost" is a problem squarely up to those who prepare the food of America. It is

merely a matter of knowing and at these demonstrations

who runs may read." While your husbands are solving the problem of economical production you may acquire the art of economical preparation and use, which is of equal importance.

The Home Economics school feature of the "International" promises to enlarge its scope

vlded the women profit by the op portunity.

how, ".She

Is a that pro-

The best service for amateur Scocak finishing, aL Schilling's. Advt. 9323-27

GEORGE WYMAN 8 CO. Store Will Be Closed All Day Tomorrow, Thanksgiving Day.

"This is Mv Official

f gH.p fvu 'Hivte Z--- tvttfe 'rxxi v. ir

Toy List

said Santa

AND so saying: old Santa handed to us this long list of toys and dolls which he has on display in his wonderful Toyland on Third floor. And you might tell all the children for me that later on I will arrive at Wyman's to meet all my little friends. iln the meantime" tell them "I will be glad to receive their letters and will answer them, but they should by all means write their name and address clearly." Here is the list he gave us:

Toys for Boys

Motor Truck l.on Platform Truck 1.2. Dump Cart l.&O TrtJn Wlrclo Wobble .75 Fi.h Wlgfflo Wohlde .75 Ali ftntOT Wiggle Wobtlo 7r MUlget Phone 25 Drums 25, .50, H5, 1.25, 1.50, 4.00, 7.00 Tool Clut 1.25, 1.50, 3.5( N'et of Farm tBaro.. 1.00 Cinm Car 50 Arks SO Hand Car 25 Fin) Engine 25, .50 Hook & ladder. . .25, .50 Hoy Hanger Machine Ciuii 2 JA) Desks 1.75, 2.75, 5.50 Mei haiiiml Trains . . . 1.50, 2.00, 2.50, 3.50 Electric Trains ..5.50, ...ß.OO, 7.50, 8.50, 10.OO Transformer 3.00 Mec-lianlcol Engine . . OOf 3 0 1 ) Sliorol 15 Metal Carts G5 Ford Wheelbarrow... .15

1.00. . .75, 4.00,

Wheelbarrow . . . .65, Ten Pins 1.00. Horse Shoe Hume. . . The FnJiious Yankeo Tank, it's a wonder. lights anything .... OomlcaJ Animal Ten llns

Swords .25, .50, Metallophone . Printlnif Iress

Kiddle Hone Clown 75, Cliiimvs 25, Heimes Hrtns . . . .25, Haulers Panama, pile Driver. . Elevator Hliiy Andy Trip Hammer Pojr ILlso Ball Crazy Traveler Pin Iong 1uzz1cm 25, Cut Up War Puzzle. . Dorothy Dainty Puz.le Y'oung Amcrk-a Puzile J The World Inizzle. . . U. S. Map Puzzle OO, Lotto 25,

1 .35 1.50 l.OO

3.50 .75 1.25 1.00 5.50 1.25 1.50 .35 .50 .15 1.25 1.75

Cannon Soldiers .... Pitol N'eted Blocks .65. .S5. Bombardment AdvaiKV Guard SU Hers TahU iolf füant Soldiers Big Battie Oarmv... Trmniets . ...5i, i.oo.

.25 .25 1.25

1 '

.50 l.OO .50 1.25 .50

1.00

Horns 31, ..V, Wonder Block Mother (iixw Ulm ks Saddle Horpes ..1.00. Milk Cart Trucks A B C dllorks fr, Leather 1 aney Ball. .

.50 2.0 1.5o 1 .50 1.5o 1.25 l.OO 1.5 1.75 i.5 1.75 l.oo

5

l.OO .50

Military Encampments Battleship At Crulr Ihvmlnauüht

Fort 50,

Dvsks . . .

Ilfl (inns

i - - -

-Hepeutln Pop (iiin

Bla-k Board ...1.00, .... 1.50, 2.H. 3.00, 1. 00

l.5. 2.75,

1.IKI 1.25 .541 l.OO l.OO l.OO 1.01

Toys for Girls Bed 1.25, 1.75, 2.00, Steamer Trunks 2.00 LTiildle Winks 25 2.50, 3.00, 5.00 Piano 50, l.OO, Sewing Set 75, l.OO Cradles . 75 1.25, 1.50, 2.00, 5.00 Cookin- School 1.25 Aluminum Kitchen Piano Bench 50 Jnpanoe Tea Set ... 1.25 et.s 50, 1.00 Piano Mool 35 Tables 85, 1.00, 1.25 Granite Kitchen Sets Washing Sets 50, Chairs 50, .75. l.oo 63, 1.25 75, 1.00, 1.50 liirniture Set l.oo Cid iui Tea Sets 4 .50 Wall Phones SO Laumlry Set l.oo Midget Phone 25 store and Hanges Enameled Des-k lo.oo Trunks 1.00, 2.00, 3.25 .75, 1.00, 1.75, 2-50, l.OO Chair i.oo Wardrobe Trunks 1.50, Pollyanna Game 1.00 Table 6.oo 2.75 Lotto 25, .50 Arm Chair 1.50

Games for Boys and Girls

Hook 50 Mrs. Casey Wants lo Selling Hoard IH 50 Know 25 50, .75, l.Oo, 1.50 Flinch 50 ITags of All Nations II1 Joy IoIIeys 75 Black Cat 25 Game 50 Clilnws 25, .35 How Silas Popped the Hnmmey 25 Battlers 10, .15 Question 25 Venetian 25 Sandy Andy Old Maid 23 Boy Scout 50 75, l.Oo, 1.25

Santa's Official Doll List Hundreds and hundreds of Character Dolls, little Sailor, Indian, Hed Cross Baby and boy and girl Dollsire here in Santa's headquarters on Second Floor.

BABY DOLIS BeaurlftUly dresM-d, 50c, 75o, $1, $1.25 and S2.50. BABY G HUMPY DOLUS Lovely baby iloll at $1.25 and $1.50. DOLLY DUMPLLV DOLLS Priced at $1.50. HOMPEH BABY DOLLS Gingham romixrs and wl?S "5c and $1.00.

HED CKOSS NT USE DOLIj 1)411 in nurse uniform, $1.25. LITTLE SI STEH DOLI Beautifully Irc-nsl doll, $1.50. SWEATEH BOY IMHJ, With knit sweater, 65c. SAIEOIl BOY DOLL Dashing sailor boy, SI. 25.

INDIAN DOLLS Varied t-l7, $1.25, si ..V, $2. Oil and S2.50. KANT KHACK DOLL Unbreakable, at 4 and 55. YKTOKY DOLUS . position dolls tliat are unbreakable. Full jointed dolls $5. $7.50y $10. $12.50.

Rugs, Draperies, Lamp Shades 3rd Floor

1 vs. i I a

READ

A Jewelry Store for All the People, CLAUER'S Michigan, Near Wahinton.

After each meal YOU eat one

worn

(fort your stOMACfTs Sinti

and get full food value and rc3l stom-

cu cunuon. instantly relieves neartbnrn. bloaled, gassy feeling, STOPS iciaity, food repeating and stomach aiisery. AIDS digestion; keeps the stomach sweet and pure. EA -ON IG it th best remedy sod enfy cost l cen or two a day to u it. You will t deichtet! with retult. Sarin faction guaranteed r 'noeey back. PIae call and tr i harle 11. Mm, Urusfit, suth Ueod, lod.

4VV

WANT

U 1 BS

1 li

SARAH I. NILES

sr - y t ,r i - i n i. li.,.!.,, in i i . ..... i

Teaeh r of ,Vx ial un i C lacteal

Janln: South IUiuI Cons-ratorj f:

Bell 716 Home U

Art Materials, picture 1'ramln. THE I. W. LOWER DilCO HATING COMPANY South Ii'nd. Indiana. Wall I'arr. Draperia. Pnlnt Supplies.

CATARRH

of fr. DLADDER r'.'eTi in 24 HOURS Eh Ca?- ST

1