South Bend News-Times, Volume 36, Number 44, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 13 February 1919 — Page 6

TIU"ItM)AV KVIIXIN'f:. l KllUf.Mtr 13, 1919.

SHE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES

SOUTH BEHD HEWS - TIMES Morning Evening Sunday. THE NliWS-TIMfiS PRINTING CO. JAHUIKL, K. S I'M M Kill I Ir1dnt. J. m. ri:i'ii!;.Ns.o., publiker. JUII.N IIKNIiV ZFVFR, Editor. Member United Press Associations. Morn In Kdttion. MKMItKK -XStKJI ATKli TRI-SS. TT.e A.x:Utrl I'Tt-m In evhsiiTelj entitl-d to the use for re j.uMlrat in .f all h s rtii...'itc-b- credited to it or not ottTnl" rrriJt'-l In lhJ paper, and a!o th o-il n-w published eertio. TM b-. n.r apjdjr to uur aftern n paper. All rights of republi'-ntbm f ülal dipauf.e btreiu are reervej tj th putd2lir an io both edUioua.

IIm I'fcon

110 W. Colfax Av.

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c ountlnjf. (or "want a.J.." If jour nnm is In tbe telephone director. IA'. will be m n U'l after lnrtum. Ilrpott in.ttteuUo:i t' lio!tM)i, bad ete'-ution, poor ld!very of p;iprs. b.id

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i dealing. Tii NVwn-Tim. ha thirteen trunk

wüi'u rHjiuDj to lb iae Phone 1 1 r. 1 and l'.ell 'Jl'jo.

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M -RSCIUPTIOX PATHS: M-rnlnir ph.! KvnlPg Kdltions. ingle Copy. .V; Suc!,m. Idlvered l.v e;rrbr In South J.n-1 an.l .Miihawaka. $7 i prr -ar iu nlvnn-e. or l.V by the T ' ;,''orn,n,f n'1 Irdng LMltlons. dally Including Sunday, hy mall, 4f r.r month; two months; :.. p.-r month tVre-

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n,nipr n raror on the r;uia:U.-tit by rri

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FEBRUARY n, 1019.

think that it was he who did It; indeed, who concr ivo'l it, anfl wisely enough to win the approval and support accorded him. It was Piatt's way of handling men, and of getting them to work, and Pres't Wilson has on mora than one occasion, shown a similar aptitude. Franco. Kn Eland and Italy, inoculated with the Wilson toxin, are unconsciously serving the president's purpose, making th-ir own plans, submitting them, debating thorn, and "compelling" cooperation fast as devolopm'nt.H dictate the fulfillment of those purposes. Accordingly the harmony, where there might otherwise be dischord. Let the entente allies think they discovered it all if they wish. It is the results to be attained, rather than the source, that will be the most lnoficial to the future of the races, while besides, history, the final arbiter, will one day answer and answer the whole question aright, regardless of present day verdicts based on personal egotisms, partisan prejudices, or national prides or poppycock. That fins r around which the president of the United States has wrapped Europe at the, peace tables, letting her wisest have their way, having taught them a wisdom that is his the finger of the schoolmaster, will point back to the Paris conference through long ages, and will be recognized by generations yet unborn, even though the generation with which he lives may boast of its blindness. As a teacher, and a leader of democracy, the process; is ideal. When we talk about the "consent of the governed," theoretically at least, we mean intelligent rathr than enforced consent, emanating from the brain rather than a "big stick," desire first, need next, and attainment third; the process of true democratic evolution. Any other process is auto-

The Melting Pot COME! TAILi: POTLUCK wrni rs

j (-ratio and indulged in the name of democracy, is

Olher Editors Than Ours ji J

"MARSHALINC; THK E:VII)HN'CH."

The gentleman, signing himself -taxpayer," who ad- i naught but hypocrisy.

dresse.i the repuMicm i.rg:m Wednesday jn rritieism of Prosec.,tr Samuel s- lnvartz, may ..r may not have been .some member of the ,.j,y administration, may or may not have been an ex-saloon keeper, may or may not have i,en :i clergyman, but whatever lie is, be disluavx enough of L'nor;i nee ir, i.t... : i.i.

holding hU Identity. I'or so brilliant an ignoramus to I Iulsvlllc Couiicr-Journal.)

'" ''-iHiiy unncr a nusnei is the beginning of his congress convened in December, to tackle, It was wisdom. said, ...ltd to solve r.reat problems of legislation inci-

()f muri. tu., ,r, - i . . , ... dent to the period of reconstruction. The session nears 'II (ourse, the piirpose, as ns'.ial. is to take a the:-. , ... , . , , , , i , 11 its end. The o houses of congress have accomplished i. lame o;f from our ridden ity administration, little. The senate has tackled Pres't Wilson mainly. and very apparently graft-eaten police department, and This session of congress has been characterized, inpb'ce it upon the pro-e-iiior's ,,ifice. The assertion 'hat ofiir as Senate is concerned, by a great deal of it is the duty of the prosecutor to "marshal the evi- '''T'1 f 1 '"U Ml1,nt,",r,, mlKht have occu,,iVd hv"' . .. , si;.es more worthily, if not more constructively. b ' l"'o - ld;ic.ng it J.efore the jury, is all the considering other matters than whether the president (idence one n"'is of soniebo.ly w.mtitig sonicl. )dv else i of. the Ui.iled htf!tes is a sincere public servant, doing

to do the police department's work .md the i:Hni ti,ot i the l ost he c;in to bring about peace upon a basis of months. :!.! the ve.ison

he is bald 1 1 . n 0 0 a ( ;u- f,,r .neb ! I'ooable permanency, or a felf-seeking egotist, doing I change is "Henna."

4 , , ' , .3 luNiau the best 5,0 an to put himself forward. Now. ."Henna" hrir is an inveninic as tho rcniainlfi? ctuirKo is idiotic. , , e , ...

I M'II, III! II i ' .--:iw l- ir- ii,- . lo tlie raer.- of many Sruh lb !t1

South IJend with its many factories, well paved streets, fine schools, excellent parks and many other attributes of a growing city has another distinction that is bringing it fame throughout the entire state. This new distinction, although not of an industrial nature, anJ not one that has been advertised in the newspapers, nevertheless, is one that is certainly placing the metropolis of the St. Joseph valley on the map. as it were. For several months, it has been oticed that there is an ever increasing number of blondes in this city. Now, it is not unnatural that there be blondes in a city of the size of this rapidly growing commonwealth. In fact blondes have been known to ltvc anil thrive in much smaller communities, but when it is discovered that among the rapidly increasing number of those possessed of golden tresses, only those of the gentler sex are numbered, there arises in the minds of citizens generally a desire to know the reason. And the reason has been found. And it is a perfectly good reason. It is a well known fact, established by long research, that the average woman is not entirely satisfied with her general makeup, that is the one nature gave her. Some one of a scientific turn of mind, realizing this salient f;ict in regard to the feminine half of the human species, discovered a way in which woman generally can. with very little effort, and at a comparatively small outlav of money, change the color of her hair, that is if the hair happens to be dark ami the owner wants it o become a soft, golden hue. An authority is responsible for the statement thtt most South Tend women are dark complexioned. That is to say. th"y arc not blondes, and for lm'iiy years this cify worried along without more than its average of golden haired maids and matrons. However. thiiv-s have changed stranelv during the past six

for th:s

Getting the Most Out of Life

Hy IUshop Samuel Fallows.

j the best lie an to put himself forward. Sens. Knox and Lodge, are men of brains, and upon

The pro.-eCut.nt; attorney receives $;.:10m a ear from that account slw.uld be held to stricter accountability

which he most maintain an ottice, and in St. Joseph county employ three deputies at Mishawaka. U'alkerton and South P.rnd. paying the!M out of that salary. He is not allowed a cent for the expenses of his oülee, or with which to hire other help with which to "marshal the evidence." The ii.pior interest;; have seen to it in years ngone that while the prosecuting attorney has ample power in words to do most anything, he is hump'-red by a lack of finances, to keep him from doing any more than their too frequently

than Mr. Jh.le of .Maine, ihe mere son of his father, and .Mr. Sheivr.an of Illinois, who, unlike the monarch who "never said an unwise thing and never did a wise (me," never ha- said anything which vindicated his ehctinn to the senate. Hut these different types have differed not a whit in the pith and purpose of their remarks. They have found congenial if strange company in Mr. Johnson of California, made by the political exigencies of the times the bedfellow of the lettered, aristocratic Lodge and Mr. Knox and the others who have spent the .session fussily in debate for ends purely partisan. Sen. Chamberl ? in on the democratic side

tiii: D.WGint or safkty. Iiy two signs the returning soldier knows that he has arrived In tho land of his birth. One is -Watch your step," the other, "Safety first," and queer enough they must look to him. Our troops were not watching their steps in Belleau Wood or courting safety first at Chateau-Thierry. Here at home, are we instinctively prudent? If so, the warning signs would not abound. And It does not appeir that they enable us to escape the most serious dangers the dangers, that is, of safety. In the France our soldiers are leaving, men exalted safety for years and years. Monsier planned out his life with extreme caution. He saved. He Invested. At 50, having married off his children and endowed them at marriage, he would retire and live on his income. In order to make sure of that happy result, he had but two children. From 50 on monsieur fished In the Seine or lounged on a green bench in the Luxembourg garden. Who was now so utterly and completely safe as monsieur? Hut what came of all that? Northern France is in ruins. Millions of Frenchmen are dead or maimed or blind. France nearly lost the war. Without help from America, she would have lost the war outright. For, hy limiting her popula

tion through regard for the safety-

of this monsieur, and that and the other, France had invited calamity. There were not enough Frenchmen to drive out the invader. No one in his senses despises prudence. Just now we Americans are learning thrift, and it is well that we are. It promotes safety. But what of the new dangers that come with that safety? The world has k'!;g jeered ,nt our greed for dollars. Will thrift make us greedy for nickels? We have long bewailed the materialism of our moneyed class. Will thrift make the rest of us n riatr riali.-tic? We have long denounced race-suicide. Will thrift increase t? Thrift, one nny nrr'Je. merely ox-raess-ep the instinc t of sei f-p-eserva-

GEORGE WYMAN & CO. Come and See Us March McCall Patterns and Putterns and Publications now on Sale Pattern Section 1st Floor

Smart New Tailored Straws For Early Spring Wear In smart tailored styles, like illustration, come these all straw Hats, with a band of gros grain ribbon. Very fashionable for wear right now and' shown in black, navy, brown, purple and taupe. Some have white facing. Priced $2.75 to $10

'r..

controlled police forces, brings to him. The prosecuting cutor uf th(. admInistrall0n for faiiure to function uur-

.iioiue, uuer pajmg nis tnree deputies, and main- ing the war.

taining an office, has but slightly more salary left than our wonderfully cttlcient chief of police, whose business

The "greatest deliberative body" resolved itself into a debating society last December, putting the qucs-

it really is to marshal the evidence.' -for the prose- j at ,hJ p ronf,rt,m ?

cutor to present to the jury

South Hend. .Mr. Taxpayer, has a police department that it is paying $75,000 a year to "marshal the evidence," not $6,;:o0 but i 75, Dim. Why don't you worry a little Lit about where the J7.",00u is going to. and on the question of someone earning it. Are you on-. of the

"grafters." or go-betweens, who lias been collecting

protection from certain of the law violators in the city, and ftar lest the prosecutor may force some sort of action on the part of the police, that will throw a monkey-wrench into your machinery? It comes with decided ill taste for anyone supporting

the present polk -administration to talk about anyone! else doing their work, or foru'ettin. nhli-i tionu u-i.i,.k '

"he thinks he owes the underworld." It requires a 1 raze n hypocrite, a knae or a fool, to pursue such talk, and well, wc cannot bla.m' him any for withholding his name. It evident e-s a lack of abandonment insufficient to xtinguish his sense of shame. and where shame remains, it is natural to seek to corceal it.

tion, and they tell us that "self-

maids and rnstrons. It works wit h J .,rrser axion N nature's first law." Is remarkable rapidity. If you hap-..; though? observe the baby. Left pen to see rt dsrV. hi'ired bdy enter I to j,, ,,v, n devices for five minutes most any di ng store in the eity. and i ti;n little rascal will poke beans up yen wait about :'e minutes, you ;irt'l,. noe. swallow a tack, steal your just as likely as nut to see be- come , , ,,-Ml poison himself with purloined out of the drug s'o'e, cor.t ob : eh-. .,M , j,.jnr 0 nj fress on f ro. and changed Ys to th" color of her ha ir. ( ,. ., p from a fourth-story window. The only trouble with the whob J Si df-de-t -uctbn is his dream, thing is- that a little ton much ofj Whole clar-ses of us instinctively litis Henna" stuff is liable to gi e cr, pjtalize dnzer. There i no difa sort of pirl.i -'t hue unlike a nv- . -( .;,p v jn -orru ?tin g policemen. There thing anyone cer siv: in hair cob r. : ;trp always enough firemen. In an Hut it must not 1 imagined that ; r!,-.f rg.-ncy there are always enough every Idondo in the city b:s v.s.'d and evcy volunteer wants this new invention. Far from it. 1 a commission in the flying eorp?. Do but tb rc c.r many wh have. and. ( vou take it from all this th.it Nature

these that hive place; South ; calls s-.-'f-preservatlon her first law:

Mr. Lodge, Mr. Knot. Mr. Hale, Mr. Sherman, Mr. Johnson and a few others for the negative, Mr. Lewis, Mr. Thomas and a few others for the atfirmative, have

succeedetl in getting upon the front page from time to time. That has been the whole of the work of the senate upon the floor of the senate. It is, of course, un- i dorstood that speech-making is not law-making; that '

.! committee rooms and executive sessions are scenes of

more actual doing than the open sessions of the sen-

ate, but a senate voiceless upon other matters, con- j tinuously vocal upon the question raised by meddlesome politicians when the only concern of the public 1 is to see the various powers get together in a covenant ; instead of getting together in a clinch, is a depressing example of "failure to function." Not one constructive suggestion has emanated from the "greatest deliberative body" since the session be- ;

gan. No senator has in any way proclaimed himself a ;

leader of thought. Not one has connected his name with an idea that has proved worthy of discussion, if we omit from consideration a few brief protests such as that of Sen. Martin of Virginia against surrendering a tried and proved democracy for socialism as a means

of settling the problem of railroad ownership. arling

it b

Herol on th' map Hlndes."

as the 'Citv .f C. J. C

PRES'T WILSON'S LEADERSHIP. It becomes more and mote evident with developments that Pres't Wilson went to Franc' just as an American president should have gone ; went as a broadsense democrat, net a an autocrat; as a delegate, not a dictator. lie has been a leader there, appealing to the intelligence, the righteous minde.lne.-s, and high

purposes, of those with whom tact, rather than assuming th:

waving a "big stkk," threatening and fuming with insistence that eerthmg be done his ua. or that he would invoke world rum. The president's part, and the way in which he has played it, ij significant of the difference between b inoc,atic le.nb-rship an.l autocratic rule perhaps one of the best illustrations available in modern times. Had the president gone to France with the blueprints of a new international machine, am! specifications all worked out. tilling this European country and that shat they must, and what they must not ilo a many Americans criticised him fearing that he would, while others damned him insisting that he wouldn't he would no doubt have met all sorts of opposition and resentment, some of which might properly have rrpulted in open rupture-?. Tint would have been the way of the autocrat, and we must confess that there are Americans who would have been just autocratic minded enough to have- done that very sort of thing. The j resident's way lias been to take certain abstract principles his fourteen points. as ideals to be practicalized. incidentally schoolmastering Kurope into wanting them practicalized, for faith-keeping and permanent results, and then along with the rest, inventing th machinery to make them ftective there at th boards. In other words, as we take it from reports that come across, the president has been pliing the game of international politics, after much tho same fashion, as to leadership, as th- late Tom Piatt, known us the asy bn.-," plaed th" game of New York state and rational politics. Mr. Plntt r.er directed, seldom alise'. rarely suggested, and "bossed" only by being apparently reluctantly won oer to approval of exactly the. things that through indirection he had caused to be brought to him. Piatt h.d a faculty for quktly inspiring ethers to war t the things that he wanted without tlhng th m and then falling in with it after be.ng "convinced." thus leaving the other fellow to

The Public Pulse

Conimuni.-iitbtim for tM column may !' sigial .-uxui ynin i-dy but tntist he neeoin p.-miei! by tlie toime f the writer t insure g.xid faith. No reBponMbility fr f.nts or sonthnents oxpresed will be as-aimed. Honest riif-iinslon of public question is InTited. but with the right reserved to eliminate vicious and ohje tion.ihle matter. The column Is free. But, be reasonable.

Watch your step. On proper oc

casions v : ek safety first. Hut beware lost prudence unfit you for legitimate

r.d entirely praiseworthy adventure. V'oard the sinking "Titanic." .'h.irlcs Froh man said, "Death is a re.it adventure." and Theodore l.'oosevelt said it in those same words when his son Quentin fell from an irpHne in France, hut the greatest .uUenturo is not the momentary exp rience we call death. It Is the long-drawn, wonderful experience v-e call life. (Copyright. 1019.")

Ribbon Special 29c yd. A s s o r t e d fancy weaves in light or dark shades for hair bows, girdles, etc. In various widths. Special at 29c yard. New line of wide ribbons for bags at 50c to $2.50 vard.

Crepe de Chine and Georgette Blouses

In white, flesh and new suit shades here are brand new models in plain tailored or fanrily embroidered styles. Georgette or Crepe de Chine materials. Both high and low neck. As a feature of our blouse section they are offered for Friday and Saturday. Special at $5.00 and $6.75

New Slip on Sweaters at $5.00 Slip on sweaters, all wool and in plain models and plain shades or in models wirh brushed wool collars and cuffs. Colors are Rose, Kelly Green, Purple, Copen Blue and Black. Offered for Friday and Saturday Special at S5.oo.

New Daylight Basement to be ready about April 1st

liliili!!!

l'MtltlHt!!!!!!!Min!IM!Mf! I ! HP ! HI' ! ' ! ni' l ! 'l.

M 1 1 I I I 111 1 I I ill I I 1 ' I i I I I M 1 t 1 ! t I I i I . ( . 1 ! I ' ! ! i i ' f ! M

itiiililiililltiuiüHiiiiiiiitinuiii.iiiiii.ttUiiiua.i-

ii

AN J

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Montague Glass has written cn ntirely new. series of adventures :r his famous comedy pair. Potash jand Perluiutter. These are exrlnsively for readers of The News-

To the Kditor of The South Hend ! Times in youth Hend. l'rinted in News-Times: j this piper for the first time anyMeredith Nicholson, in his address. ! wht re "r in nny form beginning

in ii:n:.si: or n Miniori n.

South P.end. Ind.. Feb. 12, 19 11.

"The Valley of Democracy," before

mil nipping at the heels of the president has been the the Woman's club of South Hend.

major occupation of senators of various grades, from the erudite Lolge to the blatant Sherman. The senate has preclaimed itself the merest scold. It has earned for itself the disapproval of an irritated public made up of millions who are advocates of Pres't Wilson and of millions who are not, hut of 100,000.000 who want peace as soon as it can he procured and secured, and will not be utterly miserable if the president, having

preured it and secure! it, comes home known by tho

he has come in con- ! world as a successful intercessor.

role of a herdsman.

TO FINISH THK SAIiOOX. (Henry Porti' Vekly.) I National prohibition, coming by way of ratification of a constitutional amendment, was one of the reforms which lo(.mel big in the future, whose arrival we expected would ä'iak. the world. Iiehold. It came as silently as the dawn, and makes illegal in another yeav the manufacture, sale and transportation of alcoholic beverages and ruts out of business 300.000 saloons. Hetween noon and night the r.Sth state, cast its vote, two mote states silently followed, more are certain to give their assent, and that which once was the center of battle is now a commonplace accepted of all. It tempts to reilectlon. first upon the long fight against the saloon by people who had suffered from it, or who had suffered vicariously in the plight of its victims; ant then it tempts to reflection upon the fond hopes which zealous people built upon the day of the victory. Twenty years ago nothing seemed more millenial than the nation voluntarily banishing drink. It was prophesied that with whisky pone, most human ills would vanish. People who gave themselves to the crusade endured calumny and scorn for the vision which they held. Well, it is quite true that the abolition of liquor makes a difference wherever it has been achieved. In all the arguments that have been used for the saloon there never was a good one, and latterly there were not even poor arguments offered in defense. The whole traffic and all its effects were indefensible. It will be many a long year before even a philosophical defense of drinking will be received in patience. And yet, it is very much the same old world with us, because other problems engage other enthusiasts, and other millenial dawns are promised for future day of victory. It is thus the race advance?. Thousands of wives and mothers would have given their all to have live.l to see national prohibition pass all the states, and yet it passed as the new year comes, without sound of g in. Th world is on new stretches of progress now. That

fr which one generation worked and wept and praved I mouth ideals today.

- - - i

and paid, is out u supping stone towara oiner des'.rej , partmoutn nae set a watn on

next Sunday. AdW

last evening, implied that a spirit of

pacifism antagonistic to democracy is creeping into our leading institutions of learning. Toprove his point he cited an example of a foolish young student in

Dartmouth college who was intlu- 1 enced lfy the intriguing seditious ut- ! terances of a (Jerman professor to become a pacifist. j If such a spirit of pacifism were ' prevalent at Dartmouth college since the declaration of war in 1917, it was swallowed up in that greater, nobler spirit of patriotism that emblazoned TOO and more stars upon Dartmouth ! service flag in the first few months! of 1917. j From the opening of hostilities, un- ' til the demobilization of the S. A. T. C. unit in December of 1918. there was not to my knowledge a sir.glseditious utterar.ee forthcoming from an instructor in the Ciermnn department. My own instructor was very careful not to .antagonize or create a sentiment favorable to pacifism or Kultur in his classes. Instead, the professors helped to win tho war hy : joining with others of the faculty in ' cultivating several acres of corn, the proceels of which were donated to ; tho Red Cross. ; Anyone who is acquainted with' the rocky, hilly fields of New ITampshire will laugh to think of pacifists j venturing upon such a project. How much pacifism can there be ' in a school nourished by 130 years; of unquestioned loyalty and demo- j cratic real? In a school that is with- i out a doubt the mo si democratic of all eastern colleges? To conlfmn j Dartmouth college because of a sin-

gle instance of weak-minded paci- j

hsm would be unfair. In the song. "Men of Dartmouth." are these lines "Men of Dartmouth s"t a watch lest th obi traditions fail." The obi traditions nnrr included pa"ifism nr do the Dart-

Th mi n

"We have a chestnut coke mixture for magazine coal stoves at $10 per ton. Coal Service; Dell 351; Home GC62. Advt. 13470-13

Arrive in Paris and So Does the President

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i

Sore Throat Prurience

of

objecti. And so the world goe. on. We have seen a great event occur. Ve have seen what the practical mind of a few years ago deemed

impossible. And even whll It was occurring, our eyes.;

were set on other desirable ends in process of accomplishment. This is life 'the wages of going on and not to di-"

This is the title of the first of the new series of the ad ventures of Potash and Perlmutter by Montague Glass, which will appear next Sunday in The News-Times, The first story is a corker a fair sample of what there is to come. If you are a follower of these inimitable partners you will, as a matter of course, be on the lookout for these new stories. And if you have not read of their previous adventures, now is the opportune time to make their acquaintance; you'll be mighty well entertained. The new Potash and Perlmutter stories will be printed exclusively in South Bend in The News-Times. This will be their first publication anywhere in any form.

HE

READ THEM, BEGINNING Sunday, February 16, in

NEWS-TIMES

whose

T-e-it pTCit'm never venture?. r.nnNAKD a. kkltnfh. Dartmouth College.

Oirir.li I"act. A married rounder usually has a hard time trying to square hi "

Greatest Bargains in Town. Economy Cloak Dept. Economy Dept Second Floor, 219-211 S. Michigan. Over Geo. ILraft Co. B and 10 Cent Store.

Eyoa Examined by

LE1V.ONTREE

Your medicine shelf is not well stocked ;.i 4. c - frnwcit ivr f .

don't know what moment it may be

nreuea to reiin?i!uuu-a usi.-ii wo Throat, relieving Sore Throat is TONSILINE'S frecial mission. Itis made for that advertised fir that sold for thnt one purpose. TONSIUNE ii the National Sore Throat Remedy. It is sold ia rverv State in the Union. You

I vill need TONSIUNE cue cf cX

the drur? store ia closed better '1

have a bottle ready at heme vhea ycu r.eed it most. 3öc.t tad COc Hospital Size, ei.OO.

XfeatTt Lading OptoxtrUt MAaafctQrtDx Optician.

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