South Bend News-Times, Volume 36, Number 25, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 25 January 1919 — Page 4
0
rriti.v .iti:iinoon, ja-mky-:, joi THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SOUTH BEND NEWS -TIMES Mor:nng Evening Stinuay. THE NEWS-TIMnj PRINTING CO. Cir.UIEL IL M'MMi:r.,s rrcsleut. J. IL srLi'HKNSo.N. Publisher. . John ikm:v zl v;:u. iij'.tor. Member United Press Associations ilcrnicg Edition, li KM u L ii associated runss. Tfc Associated Vt Is exclusively entitled to tb uw for rtpafclh tlcn vt all new dls;ot t,es reditd to I! or nit other1 criittj Id tLU pK;r, aud io the ImI ri w put!islid terete. TLU düfi not rrpiy to our attT'ii .ir. All rlgM of rtpubJlf atlo of s;e:!iil dpat bt-rei arc reserte tae ublUberi at to both edition.
Horn. Fhon IUI.
OFriCü: 21U W. Colfai AT.
lUil rtai 2100.
Call at the office or telephone above number a'jd for department wantedEditorial. Advertising Circulation or -AecouotlL. or "want tda." if your aum is In tLe telepbons uirectory. bill wlU be UiaiUsd after lurtiuo- lteport lnvtte2llon to butlLfi, il tinutiuu, p,or iJ"livry ut yupen. l.id t.Iepboaa aerrlc. etc, to teaJ of department ivltb wLku Jou are deuiinx. Tb Mewa-Iln'-eg baa thirtf-cu truui huts, all of tilcl reapona t liwie llil aud Ull -KO. SUCSCRliTION KAILS: ULia;: aa l nven'-n? LM'tiorn. Kogl Copy, 3; Sunday, Oc. Delivered by carrier In Soulb ul anl M.abawaku, i.oo pr ydr lu advuu:e, or lit- by t week. Mominf and Eresing hdttiru. (iaily lucljf'ioi; Su:;da. by mail, 4oc per taoDtü; ;o: two month ; .;: jar ui urb tlicre after, oi 4Ou per ear In mlTuo-e. Entered t tL Souti Eud latoirica m w.owd dasa nalL
ADVERTISING lUTt: Ask tLe aIvert'.Ia ilepirttnnt Foreign Adrertiatng liepre-utativea : l"U.VC, ECKENDEN A HOUUMAN, Z-S rlfth Av., .Ne.v York Llt and Adv. UUg. Chicago. The Newa-Tlim- enclea.-or io k-p ita advertitiua column free from Xraudulcu i.iisu prtiitut:i. Auy piioo celrauded tfcrougt paturige of aar ud vcrtistuieui la tui paper will cenfar a lavor uu the uiaiuf .-.la-nt '- eportlog the tavta cotupieteif.
JANUARY 25, 1919.
-d to art ft political conflagration In Central Europe. Ii wan no lor.prrr a rv.rrv (juestion of free speech. It w.is a fjae.tion f punlhinff traitors and murderer?. It was a c;i- of sMf-pn-srvation for Curinany, of thn orderly working out of reconstruction, of afety for 'a!l Europe. The : t Kovernni-nt delayed and dallied with the peril. Finally forced to fiht. It became more stern, re r haps It would have arretted those "Red" leaders I forr lone, or plain them in fair ficht alor.j cith their (.eluded followers if they had stood in the open. But ciivhouv the job in donet and after a little natural raving and foaming at the mouth tlie IJerlin bol.hevlkl arc likely ta F'.ibmit. The Rovcrnrnt-nt's hand3 are etrejicthvr.el. nd alTairs look more hopeful. The incomprehensible thing is that Ienine and Vrotzky r.re not yet lynched.
The Need For Teachers
By Winifred Black
MiliU .MAJORITY RULE hn. Charlta A. Hayerty's r.pre.-ied fear of the tyranny of the majority in his debate of the federal prohibition amendment before the state assembly, listens fo well that it miht almost have rome direct, ither from tlie li'iuor propaganda headiuarters in (,'hicaio, or the bedihevik h ad'i'iarter.s in retrograd, i-'ear of the majority appears to be a ort of nightmare with a lot of people these da not only in America, but even innrfsn in Murop. Kvidently the rohi!itionihts are in the majority, especially in the rul of repre.s-ntation, or we would r.ot be on the swift road to it that we are, and as long sit. we presume to le .1 representative Kovernment that i.i enouuh. Tlie democracy behind representative koyrnment has at;r c1 to that sstem or it could not lo maintained, and the rule of the majority is the piimary rcqui.-ite. ft is well known thai the bol.-hevist party which has ruled Jluy.sia. v.ith a 1-rutal and bloody hand conHitntes a very small part of tin ktis.-dan people. Loninc and TrotzUy have hiiceed-1 not by virtue of general public support, but by personal audacity and armed force. Liebknecht tried to put ou r tlie same trick in (Icrmany. The German bolsh-vbt faction has been admittedly on of the smallest of Germany's many political parties. Its strength, to, was confined mo.-tly to Berlin. The more rational group of socialists controlled by Kbert has ken far stronger numerically all along. Vet Liebknecht for months kept the government and country in terror and almost succeeded in making himself nominal master of Germany and committing the country to a regime of Kussian terrorism. In Bavaria, the second-largest state in Germany, there has been a still more absurd case of the same kind. Limner, and his party, though polling only 70,000 votes out of I'.TGu.tH'U, less than three percent of tho whole, had the nerve to claim the leadership of the new government, though the majority socialists had elected 1U- out of the 1 Ö o members of the new assembly. And incredible us it seems, he succeeded. Th rule of the minority is tyranny no bss Than was the rule of tzar and kaiser. It is the substitution of a new type of autocracy, no less intolerable than the old. It will preail until the masses in Germany, Russia and eNewlure stop acting like sheep and demand a genuinely representative government, in which the will of th majority is the law of the land. n the other hand v. et orators and propagandists, with the audacity to assert that because prohibition has bc":i brought about by representative government, i: is dangerous; that it is government by the repre- . ntatie and not b the people, and that therefore the majtit have no riiint to impose their wishes upon the minority, preach as much a type of boKhevikism as anythiT't: that has been exhibited in central or eastern L.irojte.
GERMANS ARE GERMANS.
"Look how we arc being treated by the allied armies i
of occupation:" complained a German lieutenant' wife, indignantly, in one of the Ithine town. "Why, they won't allow us on the streets after Z o'clock at night!" The woman was reminded that the rules were precisely the same as those which had been enforced by the Germans when they occupied Belgium and northern France. "That may be tiue," admitted the woman, "but war ia war. 'That was during the war. Now the war Is over. And anyhow, we are Germans, and ought not to be treated this way." From which wc gather that Germans indeed aro Germans, and wiil probably remain Germans unto the end of the chapter.
The Russians around Archangel hate white bread. They say they have eaten black bread for 50 years and dislike the change. Why not organize a Black Lrcad Belief society? It might solve the disposal of nil those substitutes which one government made us bay last winter,' but 10 could not make us eat.
One soldier boy went over the top three times without a scratch and then was sent to the hospital as the result of being kicked by a mule whose leg he was bandaging. He will have to console himself with the theory that it's sometimes better to be kicked out than struck out.
All the world's a stage, and the movie camera H filming every act. Pictures were taken the other day in Berlin of the Red battle. Well, there is nothing like the pictures to show up bad actors.
Lots of American- who went away "wops" are coming bacV- "heroes." Don't change the title when they doff their uniforms.
Other Editors Than Ours j
THE ROCK OF PEACE. An a in i a.-ador gem-rally opens his mission at any particular capital with a sp-e h f fulsome praise for the natives and references to the everlasting friendship u the l v o countiies concerned. But there was more than con niiotial diplomatic ( 't:i tes in the maiden utterance of John W. Davis, new American ambassador to Great Britain, when he said. "It r- on the tirm roc of friendship and understanding btiween the Brutish-speaking peophs thai the foundations of a league of nation.- n-.uxt be laid." With all due hoiior a:.ii re.-pe,.; for the other nations with uhih u e h.e been associated in thi war eery intelligent and h"ii.-t-in:r;.l.'d American knows that at its .-los- the l"n:ted State- and Great Britain stand th- two iKer powerful nations in the world, and that their .k :i.t power either military or moral is so great that no other voiueivalle group of nation?, today would think of opposing anything on which thy were completely agreed. Tli.it be:.;g th-- cae, if we may aam that Britain and Amern.a arc te tliy agr d on a league of nations as the aper to be. the conclusion i plain. The Fnqüsl. --peaking nations .ire on tup, not by S'hiih intent so li'.ch as iy inescapable fate possibly by dhi.-.e ord;i-ance. TI.c arc lautu; to use their mlKht openly and fairly te etablisn right on its throne. The rgure of speech used by Ambassador Davis is richly ugg'-sive. It recall the famous words of Jesus to Beter. We micht paraphrase those words, without any irre erer.c pr.d s-.y. "Thou art Anglo-Saxon, and upon Ulis r( k I will found wcrld-peaee."
Tili: SORDID MOTIVli (Saturday livening Post.) You hear continually that French statements and opinions concerning the present regime in Russia are not trustworthy, for France is prejudiced against the bolshevik! because they repudiated Russia's debts to France. Very likely France is prejudiced. We should be in France's place. France holds a great quantity of Russian debts, whic means substantially that Jean, being Industrious, prudent and abstemious, laid by part of his Income every year; while Ivan, being in a more
I backward state, was constantly needing money. When:
he wanted to fence nis farm, get a better breed of cattle and build a larger barn, he borrowed the money of Jean. But, having suffered a great misfortune and
taken a grievous overdose of literary vodka, he burn- ! ed the barn, allowed the cattle to get into the oats,
painted his house red, and announced that lie had embraced a new dispensation, whose llrst tenet forbade the payment of debts. Probably Jean was sore. You would have been in his place. It may bo true enough that It-an's hired man was half lunatic and half rascal, and wasted much of the borrowed money; but that was not Jean's fault. All of those Russian bonds held in France represent French diligence, thrift and abstemiousness. France produced the money that bought them by her labor and prudence. Every franj; of them stands for some French man or woman's e'ffort to produce and save. And, with all the huge wastes of the Czardom, much of the money built railroads, and the like, which the bolshevlki are using now if they have not wrecked them. Of course France wants her money back, or the Interest on it, and is prejudiced against the regime that blandly proposes to bilk her. You are prejudiced against the man who borrows money of you and coolly refuses to pay. You ought to be. A person who has no prejudice against dead beats is himself a proper object of prejudice.
Tlie latest shortage, and a very serious one, is a shortage of teachers. The president has issued an appeal to retired teachers asking them to resume their occupation for a time. The commissioner of edncat'.en at Washington reports that many schools have been closed throughout the country for want of teachers, so it appears that th American school ma'am is cominff. into her own again. There are many reasons asids from the war for this condition, it is not so very long ago, they say. not more than a generation, when teaching was relied upon as the one occupation for an American young woman. Usually she went into the school as a teacher as soon as she left her own educational course. , Taking so many girls of all dispositions and acquisitions, it is not surprising that there were many who found themselves in uncongenial surroundings: on the other hand, experience, the best of all teachers, no doubt brought out all that was best in many young pedagogues, and made them the useful women they afterward came to be. Stamping (hit Illiteracy. Most "of these teachers married before the years had in any degree destroyed their freshness and charm. I know a good many women of the very highest type who tell mc that they began their independent careers as teachers. Tn the puldic schools the young women learned thoroughly some of the best lessons of life; they became acquainted with pupils and parents alike, and those who had any adaptability had an opportunity to become learned in the rich lore of human nature. It is by no means the war alone which has caused this lack of teachers. At present hundreds of occupations are open to women, and among them many pay better than tlie Hchools pay teachers. In some parts of the country teachers are. Paid a pitiful sum, and girls in such places seek more appreciated and remunerative occupations. Now that the supply of teachers :s far short of the demand, there must be certainly tin increase in teachers' salaries in those parts of the country where they arc so low. But the war has revealed one thing which is being written with a
Th
Melting Pot
comf: takk raixucifc with us
largo hand upon our political skies ;f nowhere else. I : F'diot' recent report to th League of Political 'Jdueation is enough to wake up the Hip Van Winkles of our day. He says that almost eight per cent of the men called to the colors hae been found unable to read or write. In addition to these illitern tea. who cannot read the langtiage of the country or any other, many oldi' rs understood Hnglish so little that they were unable to comprehend military orders. A Great Opxrtunity. Congress, is to be appealed to to tike up a plan for stamping out illiteracy in the United States. Federal, state and municipal action will be urged to teach the language of the country and American methods of government to every one within our wide limits. So it seems that there will he an extraordinary demand for new teat hers and old ones, and for many new schools on thoroughly practical lines. 1 like to think of some of the retired teachers who will take up their obi occupation again at the call of necessity. How many of ns remember with deep gratitude the understanding and race and helpfulness .of some teacher who gave us inspiration and assistance over many a ditlicult place in our young lives! I remember one. a woman of such 1. readth ami greatness that she ought to have a monument as high as the Washington shaft if monuments every really counted. How many a little talk with this teacher has thrown a blaze of light upon some baffling problem in boy and girl life! I low many times an apparently chance word of encouragement and understanding helped to straighten out the tangled lines of every-day life! I can feel now the gentle, apparently casual touch of my old teacher's hand on my shoulder as she walked past me one day when she knew I was in trouble, and it was trouble I had made for myself with that fatal facility which wo all have whether in youth or middle life or old age. It is a great opportunity that opens to so many in these days of reconstruction and rehabilitation, when a great nation is arising for
recognized as the welfare of all
GEORGE W.YMAN & CO. Come nml .-oc I". The McCall Patterns and Publications are sold here Pattern Sect "on .st floor.
Laces - Ribbons and Embroideries In Varied New Designs for Trimmings With the approach of a new season comes many new ideas in trimming fancies for dainty lingerie and for the costume. Stop and see the new thin-s ar
riving now. Printed Georgette Crepe, very ne w , in soft, shaded designs, 4o inch. $3.50 yd. Convent Needlework embroidered on line longcloth, j inch to 16 inch. At 6c to 75c yd. Filet Effects, suitable for lingerie. ' i to 4 inch widths, 10c to 45c yd. Torch cn and Cluny Laces of cotton, narrow widths, at 5c yd.
Fancy Taffeta Ribbons, :;. . . Faille .b. ; (iros drain for fancy bags. 50c to .$2.50 yard. Plain Satin Ribbons for cami)ie " girdles, Vt to 7 inch widths, at 50c to 75c yard. Fancy Weave Ribbons for Cun! ie hairhows, girdles, etc. Novelty Ribbons for necovear millinery use, various widths. 20c to 75c yd.
RUGS, CARPETS AND DRAPERIES ON 3RD FLOOR
c:
i
new triumphs at home, and when the welfare of each it- coming teV be
LABOR COMMISSIONERS .SAIL FOR EUROPE TODAY
sot'iAii disi;asi:s ixomfd. (Indiana Daily Times.) so at long lat the public servants, never eager to rush r.htad of the crowd, have adopted a plan for eradicating venereal diseases advocated by the Times. By no means does the Times claim all of the credit nor more than its share of the credit for the establishment of clinics, quarantines and testing stations in connection with the courts for the detection and treatment of diseases constituting society's worst menace. But this newspaper does claim credit for frankly and ftarlesslj advocating that something definite and practical be done at a time when other newspapers felt themselves entirely too nice to touch a dangerous subject. Ami this paper does feel gratified today to know that what :t fought for has been realized and will prove to be a blessing to many persons who were not In i-yniputhy with the campaign. Xo pauent likes to take, his medicine. Tile small boy bucks against quinine, even though his malaria, may kill him if he doesn't take it. The man with the minor :igiU the chloroform and the surgeon's scalpel, although on operation be the only thing that will save his life. So does the public fight improvement and re-
if.rn; we all do individually and collectively. Chil
dren dislike school, adults dillke work. Ufe is a begin agair.st laziness, disease, immorality and our own passions. If we don't win those things will. The wise publicist knows that, fights the good li lit
and keep.-! the faith.
A HISTORIC LYNCHING. Some A-arivaiis l.ae always maintained that l nch law" .i tiichl ai d wise in some case-.. If tins 1 rmciple is t-er to be gr.mte i. the lim bing of Kail l.iebkntcht and Koa I.uem:'irg in Iterlin is probably
a case in
M '
int. The
d. ath
-ems
o
:reat .1 bleii.c.
la Germany and the world that moat of mankind vi!l little cj.jefticn the !i.;hod of tlie.r taking o'f. Kifchlly, of course, the pit -cot G ria..!i tuvi-ri'.r.uMit .hould have s-eii. d those two lircLrands that thrcaiea-
HbMtY POIUs OWN" PHILOSOPHY. (IVarhorn Indcivivdent.) HUh wages, sounds mighty good. That i. to most peepb.
' It L true that a few men seem to think that high jwage;-: will ruin business. Hut the majority of people 'knew better than that. The grocer, the clothier, the jturniture maker, the boot knd shoe man, the banker
all know better. There are short-sighted men who cannot see that lusiness is a bigger thlnjr than any one man's Interests. I'.v.siness is a process of give ami take, live and kt 11. e. It i cooperation betw een many forces and Intel sts.
! Wheaeer o-j bnd a man who believe.- that busifneis is a river whose benertcial How ought to ttop as
dü;; u r n. nes nun. aim j:u no larii.er io reire'a and tin ich other men's tields. ou find a man who
j thinks b. can keep business alive by stopping its clr- ' '"k.tif.-. I Th-.-re are some men who if they got all they wan't-
v, ouM get uverj tnimr, ana skj destroy me ve-y
eo
1 thing thty ieek. This is lack of vision.
"Know thyself," is found somewhere in the great book, and it is an injunction that may well be followed. However, Harry Josephson, clerk of the board of public safety, is having a very hard time following the command contained in the two words. Mr. Josephson has tried hard enough to know himself, in fact he is still trying to gain this knowledge, which teems to be particularly elusive. Now Harry, or Mr. Josephson, as we probably should say, had a birthday on Jan. 17. How old he is docs not make any difference, and does not help him any in his quest for knowledge concerning himself. He already knows his age. However, there are certain little things about his mental make-up that he would like to know, and, therefefre, the safety board clerk has been searching everywhere for a clue by which he may gain this knowledge. The News-Times publishes daily a "Horoscope" column. The horoscope has much to do with stars and planets.-, and their effect on individuals in particular and humanity in general. Although it is the aim of the oi. e who has charge of this "Horoscope" column to have it in tho paper every day, for some unaccountable reason it did not appear on Jan. 17, and so Mr. Josephson is ('eprivee of the means of linding out about himself from an authority tint he considers reliable. Of course his friends have been f ee with information relative to what he wants to know, but this information does, not seem to be just wh'it Harry wanta. In addition to the non-appearance of the "Horoscope'1 in The News-Times on Jan. IV. the copy of what should have appear d cannot be found. Mr. Josephson keeps a complete tile of the paper, and he has gone through it carefully in a serious hunt for this Horoscope," but he has been doomed to disappointment. He doesn't kr.ow any more about himself now than he ever did, except that which people tell him, and he is not always inclined to believe everything people tell him. We are making a diligent search foi the missing copy. We have asked everybody In the office to help us in the search, and if we find it, we will take it right away to Mr. Josephson so that he will be able to lind out all about himself, and what effect the stars have on his mentality, and things like that. Mr. Josephson became interested in the "Horoscope" only a fewmonths ago. but he has been awaiting anxiously for his birthday to arrive so that he could read the one that tells a!! about persons born on the 17th of January. And then somebody oes and lores the one for that day. In the meantime Mr. Josephson is taking the one for Jan. 1C and the one for Jan. 1. and is trying to put thei.i together in an effort to tigure cat what the one fcr Jan. 17 would say if he could find it C. J. c.
Xi:V YOIIK. Jan. 2 5 The department f labor's economic mission, appointcd to make a survey of industrial conditions abroad, partic ularly in the new democracies of middie Kurope, sailed today on the Lapland, it was announced here tonight. Tlie commissioners-, selected from various sections of the country, will be speeded on their way by stec'y of Labor Wilson, who will accompany them to the pier. It. J. Caldwell, head of the mission, declared at a dinner given here today in his honor by friends and business associates that "the way for America to do her part in turning back the hordes of bolshevlsm is to aid the new democracies." This country should be willing, he said, to spend for the construction of peaco as much as for the destruction of wAr. Rep. Fess of Ohio, and Oen. Gugliemetti of the Italian embassy,' were among the other speakers.
R. R. ADMINISTRATION NEEDS $750,000,000 '.VASHINdTOX, Jan. 25. The railroad administration needs $750,000. 0C0 more for Its revolving fund to supplement the $500.000.000 originally provided and now practically exhausted. In preparing this estimate for congress today. Director General Hines explained that J19G.000,000 of this sum . represents loss to the government, incurred in operations last year and the remainder represents advances to railroad companies, to be repaid eventually with interest. Congress will be asked immediately to appropriate this amount which Mr. Hines declared would be necej-sary regardless of whether the railroads were returned to private management within a few months or retained longer.
By Genevieve Kemble SUNDAY AND MONDAY JAN. 26-27 .Sunday tdiould be a day of rat am inactivity excepting where it Is ncs -ary as it 1 advisable to sovVc faor; ?r preferment from superiors or thoit '.a high places. Otherwise it a 3a for avoiding change or traveling, and i ?uard should be kept on net and speecr est these lead to sorrow or disaster. Those whose birthday it Is may expeel oromction, but should guard agslns' uanVl?. disputes and litigation. A chile born on this day will succeed in the em ployment of others. Monday should be a day of q'det anrt probable inertia owing to a not commor. planetary ."ituatlon. There is but one aspect between the stellar bodies either b transit or by mutual astxet, and thi vonnruratlon is a. trine between Lur.-i ?nd Nrtun the pl.inet cf the mystriyj8. the nystlc and eccentric. Under ihla subtlo sidereal force sub-lunary rreatures will probably feel subdued, erene and ntropectIve. with the faculties, feellrga and emotions turned tc Interior forces, with little tendency tc xternal art!vltb? or lierest. Psychic experiences, illumination and elaltatlor. of the higner qualities should be commonly felt. . . Tho?e whose birthday It Is may have i oulet yenr, but one of uplift and higher mfoldmen-.. A child born on this day adll be romantic, impressionable and have bcaut!ful qualities cf rubel :nd s.-e;l
WILSON PLANS SHORT TRIP TO WAR REGIONS
-!
Li
An economy that is a pleasure to exercise Drink a well-made cup of delicious
with a meal, and it will be found that less of other foods will be required, as cocoa is very nutritious, the only popular beverage containing fat. Pure and wholesome.
mo. u. . pat. orr.
PARIS. Jan. 2. Ihes't Wilson plans to make the first of a series of short trips to the devastated regions of France Sunday. He will go by train to Rheims, where he "will be met by an army motor car in which he will make a tour of the surrounding district.
(Booklet of Choice Recipes sent free WALTER BAKER & CO. Ltd. kubfched 1750 DORCHESTER. MASS.
n
i
rdvertisers make profits from volume not prices.
49 U. S. ARMY OFFICERS WEAR ITALIAN RIBBON WASHINGTON. .Tan. Fortyeight othcers of the American air service and one officer of the medical reserve corps who served in Italy, have been authorized by the Italian minister of war to wear the Italian service ribbon, tlie war department was informed today. The officers have relumed to the United States and their official certificates from tire Italian government have l,pn nt to the division of military aeronautics for distribution.
The
officers
decorated include
Lieut. Ttoss It. D'irn, N'oblesville, Ind.. and Lieut. Oliver 11. Stout, In-
1 1 ,
oianapoil
BOLSHEVIK ARMY HEAD HAS BEEN ARRESTED
Eves
Examined
Glasses properly fitted Dr. J. Burke, Op't 230 S. MICHIGAN ST. Both Phone. Broken lenses duplicated the same day. Prices moderate.
Sip 5frmtt5 ß?
Uli
Ctmtt Apptrti to Worten
O PFVHAGFN. .Tan. L"". Fnsiirn ' Krylenko. farmer commander of j th- Itussian bolshevik army, has ! been arrested, nccordimr to report? ! received through Finland. He was !
caught when he attempted to entT the anti-bolshevik army of Gen. KrasnotT for espionage pirP'.es.
YSu look like a new person sijure Resinol cleared ijour skin It is peculiar hnu- skin atYectious produce a sense of desperation and despondency. The unfortunate ones are ready to do anything to obtain relief even rover up the abrasions with cosmetics, in the hope that they will gradually disappear. Cease tampering with your skin. Tc regain sVcin health, that trouble must receive proper treatment. Resit. c Ointment and Retinol Soap for year have brought heartfelt relief to such sufferers. File upon hie of testimonial bear evidence of this fact. Give thi ointment and soap a fair trial. You will not regret it. Seid at r.' druggists. PILES! PILES! PILES!
Williams' tili: OLVTMKXT. ; For Blind. Bleeding and Itching ' Files. For sale by all druKists, ; mail :."c and 51.00. WILLIAMS; MFi. CO.. Props.. Cleveland, Ohbj. j For sale 1-y Central Drug Co. j
Daa't Pay Caxh for Your!
Clothing. Your Oevilt Is Good at GATELY'S, 2SI S. Miehlen St.
POULTRY
3
Purina Scratch $4.00 Sucrene Scratch $3.85 Tip Top Scratch $3.75 Chicken Chowder $45 Compare these prices v!th the price of ecs and 4 lien buv feed from us. Artificial !ce Co. 525-535 N. Emerick St. Home 6123; Bell 2221.
The Latest in LADIES' WEAR. T. S. GARLAND & CO., 139 S. Michrgan St
CITIZENS BANK U TRUST CO. Safety Deposit Boxes $1.50 per year.
WATCH US GROW-
MAX ADLER COMPANY World's Best Clothes. Corner Mich, and Wah. Su.
When jou think of Ilomefarnishizitfs think of "Sailors."
DPw L H. WIRT, DENTIST Sil UNION TEXT ST BLIKJ. X-Itay A rv esthetic. IIOW Pbotu 894; Beil 2627.
Opem
exorxt Wed nrdaj.
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