South Bend News-Times, Volume 35, Number 367, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 2 January 1919 — Page 4
V
4 TMi.'itsii.w i:nvivfi, j.xr.itvs, ism. THE SOUTH BEND NEWSTIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS - TIMES Morning Evening Sunday. THE NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO. GAIUilEL R. -UMMERS. rrfaMmt J. IL STtl'IUINifON. I'uMIibcr. JOHN HKNUV ZU VCR. Editor
MLMBEU INTERNATIONAL NL'O'S KEi:VIClEYENING3 Morning Edition. MEMUER AS.MWJIATE PRESS. The .Boclnttx) Vmn la exrJuaiTfly entitled to the use for repuMUation of 11 new Jlsi.it ten retiite.i to It or n'it other wie crei'tej n tnU i,rpr, :uil also tijf local u w jm;ii1.-l x-enrlo. TLli does not a:fIy to uur afternoon ii-er. All ngfcta of republication of ;. Ul dUpatohea here a arc reaerte Ij lar ;-ubliLera at U both tditl ju.
JUrnc Fboiv IUI.
OFFICE:' no W. Colfai At.
Url I'hn 1W.
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ADVERTISING RATES: Aait the ad vertlnin departni-nt orlgn Adfertliing Ueprentattvea : 'JUNE. LORKNZEN A: UOUMAN. -Jj Hfth at. New York Utj and Adv. Uidg. t-ü.oago. The Newa-Tirua endeaora to k-p ita ndvcrtSluJC column fre from frauduieat uUsreprexontMtiou. Any oeraou cer-auded through patronage of aur udvertlaenul 1 ft töl paper will Confer a fuvor oa the management tv rrportiug the lacte completely.
JANUARY 2. 1919.
FLYING TO THE POLE.
T
COLISEUM OR HOSPITAL. Wliilf if nothing cle can l..- had as u memorial to Him Loys of St. Joseph county, who have died, suffered. JouKht. or jii!-t pncuiiipeii In the world wr.r, other than a coli-mm. tlu ro arc still thus-, it seems, who regard ;. hospital as th more cr i able and sentimentally fit. 3)r. I-Msar A. Mjers raic.j the iuestion at tlie t'linmbor of Commrrc luncheon .M.- inlay. If th-r" any one think' needed here so very much more than another, that would ho u littMikr tribute to our soldiers twul sailors, it is hospital facilities. Vc rabd this jues. tion a month ami more atco. We will net oppose a 4olieuin instead, should the puldic prefer it. hut tlic liospital idea is r-t i II deervinK of consiileration. After all. tlio coliseum once built, d'.-dicated. an'.". Inducted into th' public service, the sentiment that would attach to it a.i a memorial to our soldiery will Lave about spnt its force. Not so with a hospital a yanltarium. a chateau Thirry. as it h.:s been stiffjested that it be railed. and the sentiment that attaches to the thinp. is about all there is to the memorial after all. We see very little of it heinjr preserved in ;i wind-jamming conention hall. industrial exhibit or a lie-to'k show. It wotihl he infinitely better than nothing of course; better than a shaft of pranilr, l)iif there l a sentiment about the war. dedicated to y icri.'ue and sufterir.p. if which a lbpital is more blpnitleant. And South Itend and St. Joseph county need this. They r.eeU It for times of stress; t o care for their people in time of trouble. The coliseum is more significant of the nrmy on dress parade than in actual line of battle When we think of the battlefield, our thoughts revet i to the base ho.-pital, the stretcher-bearer.-, and the ambulance cor; s. Just naturally. We haven't, according to the physician-, one-half the hospitals that we need. ' need it now. A coliseum will be of much vrreate us. to u. in the f.iture than now. Thouph it could be used to a pood ad:intage ris'ht away still, why not think it otr?
WAR BENEFIT MONEY With the swelling of the casualty list t-and. of families are directly Interested
tary payment provided for by the sov many of them are In doubt as to their matter. There i-i much confusion particularly trance" and "compensation." so that of the treasury ha found It necessary e -xpltcit p it lic statement explaining and between the two. It ihculd Lc clearly understood that
tens of thou:n the mor.eernment, and jihts in the tetweeti "inthe secretary i make an Jisiinuishir.t
where a noldier with a government insurance policy is killed, th? insurance money is due hi people Just a surely as if he had taken the imUrance in any private company. The financial standing tlf the family does not matter. Whether "dependent" or not, the wife child, gTandchild, father, mother. broth, or ?iter named aß beneficiary in the policy will be paid the money in tegular installments by the United States government "Compensation" U a somewhat different matter. As explained by the treawury department, it i. intended primarily to take care of injury case- and of such death cases as may not be covered by insurance policies. It takes the place of the old-style military pension. It in paid only to a member of the family who l really dependent on the man in question for support Dependency must Le proved. The beneficiary will then receive monthly payments in proportion to the degree of disablement of the soldier or sailor. In case of death, compensation may he paid in addition to insurance. If It can be fhown that it is needed by the dependents. Kvery family interested should Ret these facts clearly in mind. In case of doubt, the war or navy or treasury department at Washington will furnish the necessary information.
With the war over, interest in exploration revive.-, -Caturally, the good old nort' pole comes in for relicwed attention. And now the problem of chasing tha elusive phantom is immensely simplified. ;o more doc, sleds. No more weary trampln? for months over rouh ice ridges. No more drifting on floes. We mik'ht even tay, no more gum drops and pemrniean. .Men will lly there in airplanes. It is Just as ea.y as th t! The Aero Club of America, made up largely not of imaginative eplorer-folk but of hard-h.-Tded gas-engine experts and aerial engineers, declares after prolonged idudy that the thins is practicable. Plans are laid for the first dash next summer. A ship will sa l t i;tah, which might be called the, Polar seaport. I: v.ll carry all necessary supplies, including a few small t-couting planes and the large seaplane cn which the Lopes of the expedition will mainly depend. Utah is only 600 miles from the top of the world. That i.s a long distance, by lan. I and s ;i, as Peary. Cook t al. tan testify; but it becomes ridiculously shor when covered in a bee-line b an airplane. The scoutJut: planes will reconnoiter, and when weather conditions are pronounced riirht the seaplane will soar tut i.oithward. with a reasonable expectation of arrivim: ui the goal in a few hours. Midsummer weather in that region surprisingly mild. There are said to be six weeks when the temperature averages about ',0 degrees a'o , ;.eio. There fchould be no engine trouble flu, to cold in that tempt future. It will be comfortable and even i leasant for the mapping and other scientific work intended. The seaplane has the advantage of beiag able to come tr est anywhere, on the snow- or en the water, except in a gale; and the north polar regions seem comparatively free from such tierce storms as prevail around the south pole. The "biz nail." of course, h is been discovered, and is tiown to be merely an imaginary point in an uncharted ea. The expedition is meant primarily for the collection of scientific data, but the ordinary citien cares
lite about soundings and maps. The venture appeal- I
to the popular mind as a great sporting feat. And or. lifT reason why everybody will await th" new undertaking with keen interest is the fact that, if it proves feasible, it will be demonstrated that anybnly at least anybody v. ho has the pere to go up in an airplane, and the money to pay his fare can duplieate the trip. Hying to the pole may yr t bt corny a pujuhr summer tpurt.
YEAK.ROUND CHRISTMAS TREES. Iar?e numbers of American cities have adopted the community Christmas tree as an annua! institution. FAerj- Christmas finds a magnificent tree set In some public place, lighted and decorated for the enjoyment of everyone and, in many cascH, made the center for distributing Christmas gifts to those otherwise unprovided for. Hut so far, it has always been a "dead tree," cut from the woods and set up temporarily, to be removed as so much rubbish when It has withered and the occasion is past. Now comes the American Forestry association with the suggestion that the tree be a living one a tine, biff evergreen, preferably a spruce, planted in a central square or park, and used for the same purpose '.-very Chri.-tma. Such a tree would be all the more attractive because of its permanence. It would take on a character in keeping with its use. Children and all grown-ups who love Christmas would love that tree. It would be a source of pleasure and enjoyment al! the year round
PURITAN METHODS. The Puritans used to save men's souls even if they killed the men in the process. Their methods may ha'-e been a bit rough at times, but largely to their sturdy insistence that the majority should accept cerLiin fundamental principles of right we owe the thing that U America. If it is necessary to shoot the fear of Gou into the hearts of the hobhoviki, in Kussla. stil! bol.-dievlsm must go. If it is necessary to maintain an arn.ed league tr enforce peace, still peace must be enforce.!. The world cannot afford to be racked again as it has been because of the jealous rivalry of nv.ions. The New York World suggests that, inasmuch as the Cnited States senate is devoting a large part of it? time to the peace negotiations, it might let the peaci; conference- take care of the American war revenue bill. We might then entertain some hope of the bill being t nacted.
Some people who insist that the formation of a workable league of nations is an impraciicable dream seem to think that it perfectly practicable to ge' $1 20.000,000,000 indemnity out of Germany.
The Germans have let their famous Watch on the Uhine run down a bit, but the allies are winding it up for them.
If the Old Year saw the end of kaiserisni, and the New Yar sees the end of miserisin. the wcrld will be happy yet.
Other Editors Than Ours B
in every case
IUAVAKI) CHOWDIIU. (Chicago Herald-Examiner. ) It is suggested by friends of MaJ. Gen. Enoch II. Crowdr in the eastern press that he should be made a lieutenant general and retired with that honor. The West may well indorse the suggestion. The progress of the war worked many changes in hUh places in. the army. Staff, corps and departments were largely rtorr-ar.tzed. Their functions were combined or disappeared altogether, and many changes were made in the personnel of the highest grades, resulting, in several Instances, in the virtual elimination from active service of many distinguished otticers. Now that the war is over, the process will continue. Complete reorganization may be expected. New tests will be applied to ofhclal personnel, new duties created and assigned. Many hl?h-ranking otRcers will be given the rewards due to distinguished service and placed upon the retired list inhlgher grades. The new and necessarily largely reduced army will have within it but few places to which officers could be appropriately assigned who have distinguished themselves through long service and by exceptionally merlorious records during the war. While there are several of this class, the best known and most distinguished among them is MaJ. Oen. Orowder. who? long and brilliant miliary career reached a climax in his administration of the draft law as provost marshal general Notwithstanding this, under existing law it is impossible to reward Crowder with a rank hicher than that of major general, and yet it cannot be doubted that he is entitled to be associated in rank at least with an army commander, the grade of lieutenant general. An officer of such distinguished service in a larger and different field cannot appropriately return to his office as judge advocate general. It is only Just, therefore, now that the duties of the. office of the provost marshal general are n.bout ended, that this omctr should be placed upon the retired list, as his service entitles him rtnd as it is understood he prefers, and that the war department wl!l ak congress at the firnt opportunity to enact legislation giving him higher retired rank co-mmer.5urate with and in recognition of the distinguished service he has rendered.
Till: MAY GICKMAX GOVKRNMJlVr AM) 3IHXICO. (Laporte Argos. It was time for the new German government to recall its ambaböador to Mexico, Heinruch von Eckhardt. In justice to the new government at Herlin It mould b: Kald that the ambassador was recalled almost immediately upon tne r.ew government taking office and that he has until nov attempted to ignore the. Herlin authorities, on the probable theory- thut a counter revolution would reseut Wilhelm upon the throne before he could nach Germany. It is lnttre-ting to lind, too, that the German embassy lias been ordered to "cease" antlAmerlcar. agitation and propaganda dnterr.sting because tncre tan b? no doubt but that the anti-American agitation was on under German inspiration during the days of the present ambassador's predecessor, von Hintze. New if the new government at Rerlin will tli.-abue itself of the fool I h notion that we of America iuok with pltasure upon Count von Uernstortf it will be getting upon the rWht track in re&aiii to Uie s title of public opinion in this country.
THE MELTING P07 "Come Take Pot Luck With U$n
mttli; noiiiHirs By William 1'. Kirk.
Bobbie, sed Pa to mc last nite, it is snowing outside them littel snow flaiks which you see falling gentel like to Mother erth is like our llfes, drifting from beginning to end, ed Pa. Hut w e aint so cold as snow flaiks, I sed. We are neerly as cold as snowflaiks in this here fiatt, sed Pa. If the landlord IiaiI Hl unv !-
" " uu irr: .- win an rnwwil ilhH. lie moar cheerfuller & brlter, sed Ma to Pa. This is a hollyday seeron & the Spector of Sorrow- shud not stalk now, sed Mn. I?t her stalk, sed Pa. What cair I? We are graries of dust in the' Whirlwind of destiny, sed Pa. & tho we doant know where we are going we know we are certingly going sum, sed Pa. Iet us go with a wmile. then, sed Ma. espeshully when the bells of the
this way in the gloaming I pause for to refieck, sed Pa. that I have got uway with a whole lot. I guess we all have, sed Ma. L.'.fe sh':d grow deerer and sweeter as we grow oalder, sed Ma. It hud be like a beautiful western sunset, sed Ma. True, sed Pa, true enuff. Moast of the time. I feel like that myself, only tonite, sed Pa. wen I look att them snowflaiks, sed Pa, I reelize how littel a thing life is Sz how less than littel is any one human beeing eeven me, ald Pa. That is a good state of mind in wich to be in, sed Ma. Tharc is much hoap for a mortal which feels that way. It is wen we gt puffed up with pride, sed Ma, that we fall harder than them snowllaiks. I was never that way. sed Pa, I newer let myself get puffed with pride- Father always warned me aggenst that, sed Pa. He was afrade
! there, wuddent be l oom for both of
hollydays is ringing out tharc deer note, sed Ma. Correck. sed Pa. T have these here moods for a minntt sumtimes, fed Pa, but in the words of Emerson. Pa sed. I ain't like the gink which can't shake them off perk up, sed Pa. Even around the first of the month, sed Pa, wen the bills is drifting in like them littel snowfiaiks we wus just watching, sed Pa, eeeen then can I be merry. That is the rjght spirrit, sed Ma. Tonite we are going to the Eouisa Alcott Reeding Cirkei. sed Ma. Thatt shud cheer you, sed Ma. That cheers me like reeding ahout a electrocushun, sed Pa. I look forward to it like a attack of mumps, sed You used to like sum of the ladies' of our bet, sed Ma, that went to that reeding club. I know, sed Pa. but like them fcnowfiaiks they have drifted out of my thots & out of my heart, sed Pa. The wine has lost its bubbels. sed Pa. Deer me, sed Ma. maybe wc better have the dockter. Oh, no. sed Pa, doant have any docktor for me. T was meerly reefieckting on my past life, sed Pa, its lites and shade, its hills & valleys. It has been sum life, at that, ped Pa, sumtimes. Pa sed. wen I set
us in the house if I got puffed up too, sed Pa. &. we had a big house at that. Hut I am different now, sed Pa, I p!ug along & look for a soft spot to lite, sed Pa, like them snowflaiks. I wil now smoak a cigar which was gaiv to me, sed Pa, trust. In the grate power wich maiks the snowflaiks fall. Pa sed.
took Tin: HINT. He had been worshipping her for months, but had never told her, and she. didn't want him to. lie had come often and stayed late very late and fche could only sigh and hope. He was going away the next day on a holiday, and he thought the last night was the time to spring the momentous question. He kept it to himself, however, until the last thing. It was eleven-thirty by the clock, and It was not a very rapid clock. "Miss Mollie," he said tremulously. "I am goim, away tomorrow." "Are you?" she said, with the thoughtlessness of girlhood. "Ye??," ho replied. Are you sorry?" "Yes, very sorry." she murmured. "I thought you might go away this evening." Then lie gazed at the clock wistfully, and said goodnight.
Something About Fossils
ijy GAiutirrr i skuviss. "Recently our science teacher told us something about fossils. She told us they are found in rocks, sometimes whole skeletons turnc- into stone, and sometimes all that is found are just footprints. P.eing very much interested, I went to the library, but could find out no more, so T write you." Sarah P.
You pay me a great compliment. J
and I wish 1 could deserve It, but I too. am dependent on teachers and books; although everybody, of course, ran add to knowledge by thinking about it. Iet u think a little about what you have been told, and have read, concerning fossils. They are found buried and embedded in rocks?, and their appearance shows that they are the remains and '.he marks of animals and plants which were once alive. How. then, did they j?et in anil under the rocks? To answer that question we must first consider what kinds of rocks the fossils arc found in. ITpon examination we discover that they are only rocks which have been formed by the solidification of mud, sand ar.d such other materials as collect at the bottom of bodits of water. These are called stratified rock. because they lie in layers of strata, nr.c can be split up, cr separated, as if they were floors piled one upon another Kind nnd Water 1'osslK We conclude that when the animals and plants whose fossil remains and tracks are found in these recks, were alive, they must either have inhabited the water which then .lowed over the places where the rocks now lie, and have been buried it its bottom, or they must have dwc-lt on land which was later overflowed by water and covered with deposits of mud and sand. It is not difficult to distinguish between the fossils of creatures that lived in water and those that lived on land, and they are often found intermingled because they were brought together in certain places which were once the shoes of lakes and seas now no longer In existence Hut another question arises: How does it happen that fossils are, found in rocks which form hills and mountains, far from any sea or lake, and at elevations thousands of feet above sea-level? To this the reply Is that
those hills and mountains must be i
conposed of rocks wiiose original stcte was that of mud and sand collected in thick deposit j at the bottom of water, that the fossils fonnl in them must represent animals and plants that were buried in those deposits; and that at a latvr time some convulsion of the earth's crust lifted them all up into highlands and mountains. Another branch of geology than that which deals specially with fossils 111 tell you astonishing: facts about the ilse and fall of the lands of the glob. the invasions and retreats of seas and the cj-umplinj; and fracturing of the earth's mighty shell, as If it wer the surface of a bll of drying clay. Hut let us stick to the fossils. There are half a dozen different sorts of fossils. Some consist of the bones or shells, or a portion of the bones or shells, of ancient animals, which have been preserved In the hardened rocks that were mudbankn when th animals were
fossils, are carbonized remains of the original vegetable torms. Coal is that kind of a fossil. A third sort have literally been turned into stone skeletons, since the substance of the bones of the animals or the stems of the plants lias been replaced, particle by particle, by mineral matter which exactly imitates the original forms. How Ages Aro Fixed. A fourth kind of fossil consists of a mould of the original animal, the latter having entirelj- disappeared leaving only a cavity of its own shape in the hardened rock. This cavity has sometimes been filled with other material. Then there are fossils which, like the Siberian mammoths and the nmber-bedded tiles of the lialtic coast, have been entirely preserved, not only in form but In substance. The mammoth i have been cold-storaged, so to speak while tlie Tlies have been embalmed. I'ossil tracks, of course, represent only the impressions made by animals walking or crawling over wet sand or mud on the beaches of ancient lakes and seas, oi the shores of now vanished rivers and swamps. Py careful study, v.id the comparison of the same kinds of strata in different parts of the earth. geologists have been enabled to assign relatives ages to the various stratified rocks, and thus to find out the order in which different species of animals have made their appearance in the world. The strata ore very much broken up in consequence of the convulsions th?t the slowly cooling pl?net has suffered, but yet it is posible to arrange them in a progressive order, the deeper ones being the older, while the upper ones are comparatively recent. Names have been gic n to the successive periods and ages represented by the principal stratification", which may be likened to the pages of a hook, lying with its title pag downward. The fossils are like pictures on the pages, and the earlier in the geological book a fossil-picture occurs, the more ancient must be the time to which it belongs.
GEORGE WYMAN & CO.
'oiik' and --re l
McCall Patterns and Publications for February have arrived and are on sale at the Pattern section first floor.
January Clearance Sales are Now On THROUGHOUT THE STORE Much merchandise ot a highly desirable kind, yet, which must be cleared to make way for Spring slocks, -is put into this January Clearance and as is known the January prices are the lowest of the season.
H f V 1 r,1 hol I J i M i dUJ xj 'm VI rK , -mm J I b Wi: w3m I ?.i V Si h l i - --t3 & I -
Coats Reduced Coats lornurly s 1 5 to $65 are re-priced as follov: $10, $15, $19 $29, $39, $50.00
Suits Reduced
uii i o r m c r 1 v M.75 in s5 :ire reprijea a iu1oa: $15, $19.75, $22.50, $25, $29.75, $35, $45
All Dresses Reduced Women's an J ies' atin, Taileta, Jersey, Geor&'etie and Serce Oresies re-priced as follows: $19.75 Dresses $15 $35 Dresses $27.50 $25.00 Dresses $19 39.75 Dresses 27.50
Undermuslins at January Prices Four tables of Envelope Chemise, Gowns. Corset Covers. Bloomers and Drawers are in this Clearance at the followingprices: Table 1 Table 2 Table 3 Table 4
AT SI. 50 Garments from $1.75 to S2.25.
AT $2.5o Garments from S2.75 to S3. 50.
AT- S3. 50 Garments from S3.5 to $5.00.
AT 'J PRICE Garments lip;htly soiled.
GRANDMOTHER KNEW
There Was Nothing So Good for Congestion and Colds as Mustard But the old-fashioned mustardplaster burned and blistered while it acted. Get the relief and help that mustard plasters gare, without the plaster and vi;hout the blister. Musterole dees it. It is a clean, white ointment, made with oil of mustard. It is scientifically prepared, so that it works wonders, and yet does not blister the tenderest skin. Gently massige Musterole in with the fmcer-tips. Sec how quickly it brings relief how spee dily the pain disappears. Use Musterole fcr sore throat, hron chitis, tonsilitis. croup, stiff neck, asthma, neuralgia, headache, congestion, pleurisy, rheumatism, lumbago, pains and acbe3 of the back or joints, sprains, sore muscles, bruises, chilblains, frosted feet, colds of the chest (it often prevents pneumonia). 30c and COc jars; hospital size $2.50.
IF YOU HAD A WECK
AS LONQ AS THI8 FELLOW,
J AHO HAD SORE THROAT
ALL 1 WAY) 1 DOWN
B Yotul Warnt $12.75, $38.25, $63.75, $127.50 OR MORE
Join Oar Christmas Savings Club
You can start with one penny, three pennies, live cents, ten cents, twenty-live cents, fifty cents, or one or more dollars. and have at the end of fifty Teeks, $12.75, $25.50, $38.25, $63.75, $127.50, $250.00 or more. Have one of these sums to your credit next Christmas You will never miss the small weekly pawnents. We have clubs for babies, school children, and all aes. Iff ror everybody. It's for thofe who do save, and lor those who don't save, but want to commence to ;ave. Tell your friends about it! Come in and let u- show you how easy it is how a small sum grows to a big one. HAVIi A BANK ACCOUNT! St. Joseph Loan & Trust Co. South Bend, Indiana
TONS! LI HE
WOULD QUICKLY P.ELiEVE IT ALL )KUCrClSr3
in in
an i
Tin: mi:iicit; wii.Ij io you fiOOP.
You n'fd a hard jo'.t ence while to r.ialce yoii crry on mor Regressive manner. You hive a lot of ambition
you may think you ;tre doing a" much and as t;oot work, and puttine forth as much effort us a man oupht to, hut changes and improvements you have made a specific. Mines have convinced you that you are not enough wide awake all the time. It is a good thins Tor your competitor to pet the het of you occasionally. It Is heneficial to you to have your employer pick faws in yoi
once in a while in order that you
may improve. There never was a man who did not need an awakening to keep at the top notch of his ability. You are no different .rom the rest of humanity. It dos not jet well for a while, of course.but censure or the los. of a
i good sale is a powerful fortification
against mi.-tuk-s. Take your medicine im matter how hitter, and if y tu are mad i
rVJOTHERS He due e your doctor's
X
bill by keeping 2?f lw.ytonh.nd VfH
'EW PRICES 30c, 60c, JliO
rrit i
Soldier's Teeth Must Be Sound
Lt tbl be .in ohj't le?fn TOC Ojr dntl wurk will f,n1 the te: of ck-sest icnitlDT aJd eramlnatlon. It EWt b rljrtt t our tar.dard
Ra &. H. BLAKE
VHITE DENTAL PARLOR5
HlVi V. Wtüaxt Ae.. Orrr Herr! Book rw
Women's and Misses' Rcady-to-Wcar Garments at Lowest Prices. CHAS. B. SAX & CO.
T"hcn yon thtnk of Ilotnfurnl&hins think of -Sailors.
buried. Others, particularly plant tho rieht stuff, it rcill do ytu grood.
Patronize the advertiser he b there to serve you.
MONEY
On Hoiwliold ;oN and Ii:tno. Horcs. Wacdns etc.
PEACE
of mind ftijoTj Ijy iroinilty tutting your hill tliv fall Ii i your for ttie a.kinj;. Credit is only an coiumodnt ion lv tlr nirr. rhant. lxn t )mim it.
TO
Home 6600 Bell 1618
LOAN
SECURITY LOAN CO.
12 I. O. O. F. BLK.
Opjoit- Nfw Mu.!. ia. r I'.:.!, 'r. W.twl L.i n ai,. lni:i
tiiMiniiinimmnnniiunifniinnnnnniiniiruinnuiiiiiiiinuniiiiiiniiiiiiiinim Read News-Times Want AjJs
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