South Bend News-Times, Volume 35, Number 343, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 9 December 1918 — Page 4
MO.Mi.w :vi:.Mi, ii.;i:.Miii:n ,
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BE HD HEWS -TIMES Morning Evening Sun Jay. THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO. GABRIEL IL SUMMHIiS. rrf!3ret
J. L fclEI'lIK.NSON. IuMlabr. .
juii.N iiknuv .lv::k, i:!.t,r.
THE PEOPLES OF AUSTRIA-HUNGARY
! ict
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Hm I'hor IUI.
office: 2V) w. cuifn at.
1511 I'honn 2 10-).
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CJ1 at tb eff;c or t.Loa Uv. run.tivr b.hI l for j department winteJl-'Jlt jm.i1. Alvc rtil;ifc Clr ulation or, A'' oxiDling- for "mat da.-- If jour .iiu- i In tu? leifpboiKt dift t .rj, ti;i ia t.e ii.ul.eJ after iiied t.n. K-it imtl'U-
lion to builnn. La J nt jU' i-, j. or il-l;-ry if i.ii-e:s bid telephone ervlc. atr to Lt-a-l of rtim-ut it!i uhi..l uj rr de.ilinrf. Tb -.-Ilm.-B 1,), t inr t-ii uu;. iian, ui jf wülcü rn;oaa tu II. me lit i.v ll.'-i a;. 1 D -11 :iiO.
SUUb'Ci: 1ITION KAILS : M ri.ln; nn l i:t-ninc fV.it -on. yit.gie Copy. 3; hna-iiiv, . Iie.urn-J uy carrier iu Sjtitli aul iliil aaLi, r j-ir hi a'U.iiiM', or 10 ly tL wek. Morning Miid l.ifuK.i I.iiiti'vi. .1;U In. im:n.;; S.ji;1.i. hy mail. 40r j.t tnonth ; To tw m. jnfii; .V i' r in mtli ti.rrt;tfur, or HJSn i,r -ar In id van-;. LnU-rcJ at tU- South lkud I0to21e ,j lid ll.ia. mill.
4DVi;ktihi.V(J KATLS: Ask tl" advert iMn' ilr.ii trnrnt. Korean AlTertliiig Uert-s. tit.itu : CoNi; LOIir.N.llN U iTo I iftlj Av., Ni- 'rk t.'ity. iiinl A-lv. l'l!tf.. CMcatfo. T1j Nf-l'iia i nnlcavnig t k--j it h.I v-M mlUK columns fne foi:i fraudul.-.,t r; M rt iit.iti n. ADJ j.vr a !f fmuilffi through ratri-iiUe o f anv ad v.-rt..- i.w-i.t in tiii per will eorjfwr a I .vor uu il.c ni t.v rf portis tnXJita CJtul'let-! J.
DECEMBER fK 19 LS.
JUSTICE TO LABOR. Tht-re wa.t sound j--n.- in th a-H u f of Scc'j of Cornnif-rce II.-illl to the 'invention of th chamber ol commerce of tlio tTnitd .tatc.-, at Atlantic City: F'fwn rf of the tfr:ijt at ion to l.iy rash h iml.H upon waii. (Jon-nti at- thought, jiu i I'u.c and tffort on output. 'FiiiI and oiz hold all th.c i -rn h is sr.ld or ran 'iy c-oncfrnini: Industry. It was lankly l-ecau Ormuny made hr i idu.,tri" the opr.itinf: ii d of hr scjnr that her ommTCe crew so fat and iiowttful in the yrirs before- tho prat war. "It was more (Jrman yew-m tli.iu Grnn.in uaKu that made htr i üini tition daiiK rous The resnon-dw- iof r of w ll jiaid 'iid t ontentrd labor to fur-Mntrd lcadi-rxhij in industry is tho grratt-st foin Jn production, and happy are thy who have it b hind thm.V ('harles M. h'chwal, hail ei at the convention as Anirica.s greatest business man." cave himilar adice. He insis.ted on employers recokjnizin that tho men in the factories and rnilU ami mines mu.Mt hawmore of th general prosperity, it) practice as well afIts theory. The Imperative need t th period of transition, lie said, ia to keep the. men of the country emrdoyed, at profitable wajres; and this must he doiulor fecial a? well as economic reasons, even though It hhould re.sult in manufacturers having to k alonp for a time on "shortened pro'H.s." It is pleasant to add that the thousands of 1-UMness men assembled cheered this utterance. And there wins more than nere genros-it y and puMic sirit in their attitude. They recoKiiizod the force of Mr. ischwab's prophecy that, with proper handling of the present situation, there lie ahead a greater prosperity than our oeople have ever ilreaned of.
1 r THE pjoplc of Austria-Hungary, xhoc place amon I U. the nations vc wish to ee safeuarJed and aureJ, sIkhiIJ he accorded the freest upportunity tor autonomus development. Wilson Peace Principle No. 10. iA ;!t :Jc f
EYOM) question the above 'utterance by Pres't Wilson a near year a.c:o.
more than anvthinjr el.e, particularly from tue outM.ie, jave spirit xo the subject peoples of Austria-Hungary anJ marked the beginning of the
end of her hacking tor Germany. Hungary hegan to tire very etlectively or the Austrian domination from which it was sullerinjr, and likewise the Czechs, Slovaks, Pfles. Ruthenians, Slovene.-. Serhs and Wallachs. In America they felt thev had found a triend; a friend not only in the ahove principle, but in that" previous one that had declared for a "free and : pen-minded readjustment ot colonial claims, based ;: upon the interest ot populations.;" likewi-e a later one foreshadowing a friendly interest in the Balkan states "aloni; lines of allegiance and natonaiity." The world knows how quick Austria-Hungary fell to pieces as a war power and sued for peace, when the president frankly recognized the Czechoslovaks and Jugo-Slav communities and the following of Germany was not far oil'. Bohemia, Bosnia and Herzegovina almost forthwith declared for their old independence, and it is probable that the peace conference will a floret them an international protectorate. Is quite the same as taking them from Germany, considering the manner in which the dual-monarchy has been dominated from Berlin, daring" hardlv to say that its soul was its own. The Hr.psburgs have, in fact been virtual slaves of the Hohenzollerns for many years. Germany has not been much of a colonizing nation, but she has kept Austria-Hungary long on expansion, and every new acquisition made by the latter has alwavs served the former's purposes quite as well. Thus it was that the assassination ot the Grand Duke Frederick was made the excuse, if not connived by Germany to bring on a war against Serbia, certain rights being wanted through Serbia more particularly at Berlin than at either Budapest or Vienna. Serbia was to he brought under the same subserviency to Austria-Hungary as Bosnia and Herzegovina had been and the opening of the Bagdad railroad was to be given new impetus, connecting the central empires with the great Mesopotamia wheat fields, hurtful to the ''spheres of influence" of England, France, Russia and Italy, in those parts. It wouldn't be surprising if the Bagdad railroad were realized, as the result of this war. under international, however, rather than German direction and control. The people of central Europe have got to eat, and the Balkan states can be served as well by such a project. The point is that the utility will be made a service to humanity rather than an exploit for territorial aggrandizement. Whatever may be the re-mapping of Europe, Germany, Austria-Hungary, Russia, and the Balkans alike, the privilege of life shall be to live, and the processes of maintaining a livelihood be thrown open, by land and sea. It is to be a peace settlement in the interests of humanity, freedom and selfgovernment 4,the freest opportunity for autonomous development."
i v t ot Ki i .1 : i.s which i in iMidi' ii
I ' another remarkahl example of!
I actual dream. Prof. B. V. Bib I r V t " f s-v i a ' . .ia-t Ari.nt'1 1
j ''V.lt lUHMMin till "liliva I scholar and explorer, had a dream, I in which the solution of an obscure i I difficulty connected with two Tlahy- :
Innian Inscriptions whs presented to hint by an ancient Mabylonlan priest win. appeared in the dream. Here the mind of the .reamer would seem to have worked its way
to , logical conciucion which in Its j waking state, it had been ur.aMe to ; attain. The picturesqueners of thi !
machinery of this stranpe dream Is
! not its least interesting feature. U :
j has ben sup'-'eMted that Prof. Hllj prerht's ?ream was due to what is j known at "double personality,"' I which in iUelf is an obscure .subject, I closely connected with spiritistic
phenomena.
The great majority of dreams are prohably due to some sdicht disturbance of the nervous system, which does not amount to a sudden shock, so that its reflection in the unconscious operation of the mind makes but little Impression, and leaves no distinct memory after the dreamer has awaked. Even the lower animal, especially dops, seeni to dream, but we can Infer hut little concerning the nature of their dreams. The indications are that they dream enly o! what they do when awake, and that the element of imagination plays a slight part in the phenomenon. On the other hand, human dreams are instinct with imagination, as is shown by the cae of the romancer, H. I... .Stevenson, who asserted that h" had so trained his dreaming mind by self-suggestion that it furnished him with the conception of some of his best stories. Anybody who can do that may make a mine of his drtams.
WAR THE PEACE-MAKEH. Thr United War Work campaign and the work ot the societies it represented have done mere than anything done previously since th dawn of the ehritian era to lower denominational bars-. The Tathollc pries', holdinc the cup of water to the lips of the dyinir .lew--, the rabbi making the sii,'n of the Cross that a 'atho-li-boy Tniicht pass In peaee from this world, tin.' Episcopal bishop tolling In happy comradeship beside the Salvation Army man. taucht a lesson in simple teliiou brotherhood the inthietice of which will never de. The experiences of the war have equally brought nations into harmony and intelligent undersfa ndinpr of one another. "So longer shall the I'rt nch be eoiirddered frivolous. th I'.ritish decadent." Who from nw on shall call the Americans mercenary. sel:ih and exclusive, or the Italians unworthy of a place anions' th" reat nations of the rarth? And with what reverence shall the r.ume of Helium be mentioned in the ears to come! As for the racn who fouKht. peer and pea-ant. millionaire and mill-hand have joined in n hrotherhoo 1 which Is above all ronsbh ration of th chain s ot" birth or race. It will be no small part of the punishment of the defeated nations to find t hejisel s outside of this friendly circle, unwanted and ashamed.
two-zone system, with charges of one cent mM one and one-half cents a pound respectively. There never was a thoroughly legitimate reason foi' rai-hv: po.-.tal rates The older rates paid t tie cost of the service; and as most authorities auree, postal matter is not a proper object of taxation. First-class mail represents for the most part neither wealth nor prtUit. Any taxation of either first or second-class mail is a tax on intelligence. We miht alm"st Us well tax school books, lectures and sermons.
The Marvels Of Dreams
i;v li.uuiinT r. si:iiviss.
! "A friend savs she had a dream, I i the incidents of which occupied a I period of three days. Hut I have) j been told that a dream lasts only a ! second. We are Kreativ interested,
Now it is the huntrry Mexicans to whom we are poini; i
j a no wouui iikc an explanation.
"I). IV
SENDING FOOD OVER THE BORDER.
to sell food. At a recent conference of American con- i
suis and Mexican ko eminent otticials, preliminary plans wire made for the distribution of great quantities of foodstuffs. The tirst call is for ."O.uOU.oou pounds of wheat and (lour, and for H , p 0 0 , 0 i o pounds of suirar These supplies will &o to I'nited States consuls and be distributed by them on a basis of population in the arious consular districts. IVrhaps the lack of proper nourishment is the chief thiu that has ailed those troublesome Mexicans all these years. If enabling them to secure the food they need will also enable them to attain self-control, selfgovernment, education and civilization, then our conservation efforts will have been well worth while.
"If a woman can earn $t a day by wearing men's clothes instead of a week as a woman, I say let her wear a pair of trousers!" says a St. Louis police judiro. in re Mary Hertha Schmidt, arrested for "masquerading as a man." That is said to over-rule the Mosaic law. but it sunds like a judgment of Solomon.
No. there isn't anything inconsistent in having a National Conservation week jutt after the food restrictions have been let down. The more food consumers an allowed, the more they can save by not consuming it.
GREAT AMERICAN DEFEAT. If peace, no Irrs than war, has her ictorie. sh.lias her defeats. One of them is th influenza epidemicthnt has swept this country and ha- not i i linished it .i ravages. The victorious "fif is alrradv credited with .;"ü,uou
.lust a little longer and we'll all be listening, openin out lied, while the boss tell how they licked thos. Hun s
There are dit'feriner views with regard to the actual time consumed by dreams. It is probable that manv are extremely rapid, while others may occupy nearly as much timo as the incidents would require If enacted in real, or waking, life. Hut your friend's experience shows- that the mind when engaged in dreaming is not hound by the usual measures of the lapse of time. Very extraordinary examples of a similar kind are on record anil they always make ood reading for thoughtful persons. For instance, French savant Maury relates that a bed pole having fallen on his neck while he was asleep, he dreamed, during the moment of time required for his awakening, that he was passing through the tragic scenes of tha French revolution, that he was arrested, condemned to death and taken to the scaffold, where the knife descended upon his neck, and at the shock he awoke, to Und the bed pole lvinir across him. the evident cause of his dream.
Other Editors Than Ours
Ill sMW L1T1K A 1 LIU:. ( lntllanadU Nes.)
The remarkable- thimr here is the, wonderful quickness and fertility exhibited by the mind in inventing, instantaneously, h story to fit the suggestion given by the peculiar impression on the sleeper's nervous system that the Mow of the falling pole had produced. If one represents to himself the
II j successive incidents of the Reign of j Terror, such as passed through
Maury's dreaming mind, and the ! preparations at the scaffold, they all
appear crowded together, and the
ONCE OVERS I.KI(; A II ITT OF YOUlt I ITS BAND. Ridiculing your husband in order to provide amusement for others is a kind of fun which Is going to create a serious disturbance in your home one of these days, and cause much unhappines?. He sure that your life pirtner feels the little darts, whether showing it or not. Each added thrust, as time goes on, makes a more painful situation and opens up the mental wound. Why should you wish to ridicule your wife or your husband? Is to make other laugh a pleasing way to show a love which should wish only to shield and protect? Yoci attitude, moreover, encour
ages ihers to pursue the same course, and they will delight In telling in the presence of others this j
great joke. Decided embarrassment and a broken friendship follow this practice. The person who feels that, his
frailties are to be the topic of amusement and the butt of the evening's fun, is pretty sure to avoid those who display this poor taste and show so little sense of propriety or courtesy. Copyright, 191 S.)
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.....ii .-w IU..U.) ii.viisiauuns Ol uuv.1111 novels ai'J ' .., ,...,. ,.,ni..,,vl,. t1,nH,n.
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to 3 Oi 0 deaths in the United States a lorn
list will probably reach half a cillior. befor.
i.--UiM lM'III III' ilit'XT Uj1. k UV Jl.llCI pidt'VU i A abo.oct .mint .vs.. 11,.
I'he datl. about the liter.. ry p forma rues of any author whose j ehminat(Mj . llU't to fhe' dreamfr thpr;.
tl- in- i name ended m 'Mtch is rapidly p. ing dissipated. A , a.,.,r,.rs . be . , hllrrv. pnrh inc.
vaslon is ended, our mortality P.-t t, ,m the war. thouuh 1 'Jisquietim; doul t as to the hitherto unchallengeable u- (i . f dt.Vf.lo:)mont nnd
. t...: . . ....
larger than most Americar.s expect. 1, w ill total p,r-
d reamer s
hips one-eighth of that num! it. ur f i" casualties, or cases of illness arying t t l decree, .ire vastly greater than all our war casualties, and. more di-a.-trous in their effects than the wounds of our soldiery. It would have been humiliating, a- w dl a- Mildenirp, to suffer so many de.vths a:. I inr:::es fnun an inv.iUnr army of enemies. I should I hardly .-ss humPiating to suffer lhc::i, .i-j vc l;.ie dot:e, fn-m an ltiV4litu' pidemic. Conti icii'ii" ii.se. i.- cm bi- kepi r".t of a country no 1 ss o-.:r'!y tb.an at rr.e l foes, if proper defensive neure- are taken; a mo: e iierouuse cf th liead. The pu'lic dees nor ct !o''. ;he m.itt r in th;.i
light. When it doc w tif feats Iv the invisible
" b . . . . i . i : . - v
ene
no more disastrous
of p.uman health.
t i ,.f t V. . . I'n.-.i . . a , .... . I.... .... i.. .1. .
pit im. vi oi iii- iMi-.-i.iu ir' i is aiis.ab. c"iu in in time its full swav pioup of erudite commentators who formerly consti- ! Then think
luted a society ior tn wormp or all things Russian. Ferhaps there is a suspicion that Russian literature is re-p..nslbie for the bo'.shcv iki. At all events, after the recei.t turn of the wheel in Russia, it Is no longer possible to have quite the same faith in anything and everything Russian. At this critical period in the history of Russo-Amer-ican literary relationship comes a Slavic author to testify that Riis-ia is p.ot to be judged by her literature.
.Maria .Moravsny, w no mhos in trie in-iejnueni. con- rPivf a upsestion that acts like i tes-es that "the typical Russian writer sees life through tritr in srkttin, ,oos, .. tr;lia 0f
dark Kog-ies. lie Meib'ves it a crime, ag;iinst good taste to .'irr.sh his story with the happiness of the hero." Tile trasi'' ending is a tradition in Itu.vinn. an un-
I'l-ndabie convention, us the nappy emur.g is in Arne. - ; time, to bring the successive ideal' ica. American writers w ho have bemoaned th" neces-i ., , ' nt. ,-k- i.f,.. '
;i i: voru ni:k;iihou a hand. What do you ever do to make life happier for those outside your family or uur little circle of friends? Can you think of half a dozen times in all your whole life when your assistance could be measured by more than a kind word? When sickness is prevalent do you try to ascertain the condition of those you knew to be ill in a way Which would help them? Is It ncd true that you are so sel-
tishly occupied with vour own af
fairs all the rtme that you knownot one thing about the family across the street, next door, or even in the same apartment house, and von are so apparently cold blooded that your neighbors would go a mile, to get help before they would even think to ask you. Nice state of indifferent selfishness, isn't it? And there is no difference in decree of selfishness between tho little 'pink pingy" and the r;ruff old porker, both belong to the ame family. Heeause you 'have no money of your very own" Is no excuse for not being thoughtful and kindly to those around ou, and who knows but your actions of public spiritedness may cause the "guy that has tho money" to loosen up with it for the benefit of humanity and his country. (Copyright. 191S.)
of the
mind, although set in motion
the sudden blow, apparently ignor- ' Ing that at tirst. and leaping back : to the beginning of a long chain of ; events and scn.s which lead ui ' gradually to the one ?htng to which the whole phantasmagoria was duo, ! viz.. the blow on the neck. '
ii a person in waKintr lire ve-
thought. or serves as the p-erm of a logically developed story, he requires time, and generally a jroo.l deal of
FIRST IN THE NEWS-TIHES
sity for optimistic endings wh n "art" demanded a
sad conclusion, will sympathize with
writers MN Mor.o.-ky tells al,out.
the Russian
wnov- unieenngi i r,vrth..li
eye, but th dreaming mind, whil? seeing everything in an Instant,
able to distinguish
NORMAL POSTAGE AGAIN. Aleut the or'.y thing m favor of the p. -: v! rates that the p-.;M;- has j..u ! for the ; ..-t ye ir has b, . :r the
i ic tr.ui tnev raised cor.-: : ra : ie mom v ior war pur- i
loses. ; may e doubfe.l, though, whether -ug' leven'je has l ern teriv l from tills so-.).v-,- t compin ...If for the tr.oible it has i-au-e 1.
Now the pq; !:- jo fully h.tiN t!Timing to th- oij i.tio j..: :, i i .im cor;. mitte which is rev it ing th
1 1
b.n-
i.aic :. n cm:
or?;n;erc:.il editor.s obü-e I them to char.ee a happy detail--, and to spread them out' tinting f-r a tragic one. . in th(.,ir r,ropf.r proportions on i' It wi'.l be a reli-f to o;r.e Arr.-rican readers to know I tiir- scale as ample as that indicated that R-.-.-ian t'-'ra s do not fairly represent Russian j ,y n..r clorks and calendars." ! people and lif. No one, perhaps, really believed that ; t
;thty did. lüfe njvvhirc is utterly dark and somber ' it u n tvirvelo-.; .vbibitt f ti,Ä .
Som-timcs men l ) i.airv th,- women they love and I jperent powers locked up In the live a fairly happy life with them. Sometimes men live mind, and it shows how verv far I to a ripe old age wi'hio.t killing somebody or heir g 1 Oo.r r.n- c-dinarv cerr b-. tiro-. fd'c
- ---- - - - - v ' .ii t i 4d g do not exi-t in Ru.-sii j nti!i7ing those powers. It sug- ;
t.iKen seriously, it i.'p,:s that, ii' freed from the trat:
themselv
iif It us- iiiii
is ki'. !e 1. Such men
n o f 1 ; .-l - a re t o I
hou
ever, a little unfortunate th it a Russian writer ! to which its association with
t.i 1 i d th tl.i e--c-r.t b tfej- r tt- t two c. nts. and the two. re tit ; ovt-.ir.i rate to one . nf. ;is tb y
were befoie. i -b'.- away ; ith tb.e , , -. m:
lUI toi I.eS
a', -o q. m away a it h 1 1 pal:.- and m.i g izi f a s.
titut
a;
should !f!:iii- us of takinc her professional brcthei s
s ru i-ly. j-.j-t at a time when the world was beginning to think, with the bolsheviki in aition, and massacres and assassination on the daily program, that perhap the Rus-ian writ r were r.ot so f..r wrong in depleting (lit- R i; ss um tin. per and life.
the brain subjects it. the mind might ; be in IrpeibKnt of what we call
time. Hut these things lead to very !
de.-p waters, which, moreover, are overhung with darkness. There is another interesting as-
Cuticura the Foot-Sore Soldier Friend After long hours of hiding or guarding, when his feet are swollen, hot. itching or blistered, the soldier will rind wonderful rehef in a Cuticxra Soap bath followed by a gentle anointing with Cuticura Ointment. E-3-Ocifert hn Skia Wifi QrkxnxZ Bthe w h Soap, tootbe with OntmeBf . d xst wuh Talcum. 25 cer.t each at ail dealers.
But 13 more shopping days before Christmas.
GEORGE WYMAN & CO.
Como ami See
6K
y.
I
More and more women are learning to "shop in the morning' they have learned they can get individual attention. Try it.
BEGINNING TOMORROW A real Economy Event A Sale of Genuine Heatherbloom Petticoats Women interested in sensible c cpnorny will welcome ths. announcement ot the return genuine Heatherbloom Petticoats. During: the past yeir, efforts to obtain these petticoats have been fruitless owir.i;" to a scarcity rt certain fabric entering into their manufacture.
A few weeks ao, however, we were successful in aain securing these sensible and fashionable Heatherbloom Petticoats, and announce their return to our petticoat ection with this special selling". 50 dozen genuine Heatherbloom
Petticoats at these four Special Prices
sM-im
fi XVWA I ' . N . Vi
$2
.15
$2
$3
.15
$3
.45
Made in the new and prevailing btyle Heatherbloom petticoats answer the call of fashion at far less cost than silk petticoats. Shown in plain shades of blue, green, navy, tan, purple, lavnder, rose, grey, black and white. Other models in fancy floral patterns and pom pom designs.
In varied flounce designs some with walloped rüttle, some plaited. Every petticoat lias the Heatherbloom label t maintain its genuineness. At the above special prices every woman will want one or more for they look like silk, only wear three times longer, costing one-third as much.
Look and Feel Like Silk Wear Three Times Longer Af One Third the Cost
Black Woolen Fabrics at Special Prices 36 in. All Wool Albatross. Pre. Val. $1.50. . .at 89c 36 in. All Wool French Serge. Pres. VaL $2. .at $1.25 42 in. All Wool French Serge. Pres. Val. $2.50, $1.69 45 in. All Wool French Serge. Pres. Val. S3, .at $1.95 50 in. AU Wool Chiffon Broadcloth. Value $5, $3.50 40 in. All Wool Imp. Henrietta. Val. $2.50, at $1.25 42 in. All Wool Imp. Henrietta. Pres. VaL $3, at $1.50 42 in. All Wool Chiffon Poplin. Pres. Val. $3, at $1.95
Our Drapery section shows numerous gift suggestions Lamps, Table Covers, Candle Slicks, etc.
yip
CANT A arrives at Wyman's on this Thursday Afternoon.
v
v
i I
n300K KEEPER
STENOGRAPHER MAID
A-Vv vV.
W w & W FACTORY HELP EXECUTIVES! MECHANICS
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If you need honest, conscientious workers executives or mechanics,
maids or stenographers, clerks or
managers, bookkeepers, office boys or factory help use an economical, result producing News-Times Want Ad. Bell Phone 2100 Home Phone 1151
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