South Bend News-Times, Volume 36, Number 52, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 21 February 1919 — Page 4
mnAY i:vi;xt.v;, n:nuciiY 21, 191.
THE SOUTH BEND INEWS-T1ME5
SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES M 0 rni n z E ven i n Sun d ay. THO NEWS-TIMES PRINTING CO. GABRIEL It. FlMMKItlt l-rsicl,.ni. J. iL ä'lXl'IlLNSUN. PuMlLer.
JOHN HKMtY ZL'VKIt. IMltor. I
Member United Press Associations. Momlnj Kdltlon. MF.MHKk A.VS'IAT1;I mrss. The ApiKVlat-! iTfM In r-iehnlrely ntltWd to the us1 for rpnhli ftion of nil nw ditpat'-r. rrMtM to It or nt otherwise credited In (Lit paper, and alo tL Kh1 d-w publltkhed herein. Ihlt tlji- riot aiilj to cir rtmvn 1 .'a per. All rightt of rpuMlrtluu of lai iip;it h-s fcn-iu are reerred by the putdlOera ai to both edition!.
OFFICE: Home Phone 1151.
210 W. Colfax Av.
Iiell I'hone 2100.
Call at the offloj or telephone bor n ambers nnd fufc fr oepartment wnntd-Kdltorial. Advertising Circulation or AeconntlBjc. lor "want a'i," If your nam Is In th telephone d. reefry. bill will le mallei after insertion. Report inattention to boa!iia, bad eiecutlon. poor l!lvery of paper, bad teiephon nerrlre, etr.t to bead of depu rt mmt with wMcli you l Tr' W-Time La thirteen trunk lines all of which respond to Horn Phne 11.11 and üell HI 00. SL'BSCRipTio.v RATES: Mirnlnjj anl r.venlng Kdltlon. e. nfle Copy. Zr; Suri!.iy. r I Uveretl bv rnrrif-r In South iend and Mlshaw akn. f7. r-r nr in nlrr.ncp. or li: by the eek. Morning and I.venlng IMltions. lallv including Sunday,
ir montn: tm two months; . rcr mmitn inre
V . ' J.r u r year In advance, postoir.ce aa s-ronl class mall.
i:ntr-d at th- South ltend
km?, financial, lndu.trlal and political, which menace, nnd to which these name workers mnv return at the
cloe of the day, however wearied and fearful of the future, to lo healed, rested and encouraged. Homes like th?e .-ye the bulwark of any nation. From them spread soundness and purity and thosu principles without which any national life, though locked up In yteel, must falL
ADVERTISING It ATI'S: AkIc the advertising department. rt?w;fn..AdTfrt,s,nif !:"prenttiTe: com:, loi:kn'i:n H OODMAN L-Jft Mftl. Ar.. Neu York City, and Art.- Hide -.nrSQ. Ice .N'ewg.'flmofl nde.TTors to keep its advertising 'tllUrtlBI fre frnm frail JnU.,t ... I ...-.,..... I , - nra.i,i
""u,jr" nintiiya pntronnge of nny adrertlyernont in thT4, . Amwua, j3 "' f
THE PURPOSE OF THE FLEET. It becomes CSvioua enough now what 'that bi American navy is Intended for. The Learue of Nations plan makes the matter plain, and with no special threat behind It. It was an international aa well as a national contemplation. The principal device adopted to preserve peace and punish law-breaking nations Is the blockade. When sufficient provocation is eiven, the executive council of the league will order the Fuspenin of all economic Intercourse with the offender. An we know from the present war, a blockade will mean, in most cascst first of .'ill the use of a bis navy to cloe the seas to the guilty nation. The effective blockade of Germany was lon? maintained by Great I.rltaln almost alone. The task was made Immensely easier when we Joined our navy with hers. It may be assumed that such sea-police work he.?after will fall mostly to the two Kreat sea powers.
The Melting Pot OOMEJ TAK12 POTIXCCK WITH US
r n f er a favor on the man.-izement bv reporting ttfe facta totnpteiy.
FEBRUARY 21, 1919.
WHAT WASHINGTON WANTED. Washington birthday is probably more impressive this year than ever betöre. It sets everybody to thinking about the things that Washington stood for, and .wondering what he himself would think of the present t ituation.
In a way, it ser-ms as if the old Wushingtonlan policy that so lonp guided the destiny of the nation were beIr.K completely overturned. He wanted his country to F'.and aloof from European affairs; and here we are, in the very heart of those affairs, and really dominating them. He wanted "no entangling alliances;" and in tho proposed league of nations it is po.swible to see thu greatest of all alliance.", entangling us in international responsibilities from winch we .hall nevermore be free.
Hut this is a superficial view
ided the other powers take can? of the complementary task of supplying most of the troopa needed for the economic blockade by land. In Europe, France and Italy are in good position to do that. The executive council of the league will recommend to the various members the land and sea forces they will be expected to furnish. Acquiescence will be vol-untp.rj-, but certainly Hritain and America will not shirk their sea duty. And by making our own navy about equal to Britain's with or without Britain's approval we Fhall be ready.
THE GREAT GODDESS. One of the people who emerged from the comparative obscurity in which It pleases him to live, to welcome our boys in France, wrs Edouard Ia Fonge, who war, sculptor of the head of the statue of Liberty n New York harbor. Even as his compatriot Clemenceau saw his ideas, advanced long ago, and long held In scorn, come to
Vnyone thinking the fruition in the return of Alsace-Lorraine, bo this man
matter clear through, open-mindedly, knowing the tharacter of this age, is forced to believe that this is r.ot the destruction of what Washington aimed at, but the realization of it, on a grander scale than the father of his country could ever have dreamed. In Washington's day isolation and provincialism were the guarantees f peace, lie wanted to keep away from Europe so that Europe would Keep away from America. The ocean was big and broad then. Europe was far ;.v...y. Now transportation and communication have nwilf the. whole world one community. We did try, up to the last, to keep away from Europe but Europe would not let us. We sought to avoid the entanglements of the war, but the war was driven home to us and forced upon u.. And once in, the die was cast. itlll less than we could avoid the war can we now avoid the logical consequences of that war. Thus the outward situation is reversed. What wo Mill aim at Is peace and safety. I?ut the way to attain them now is not by seeking a cloistered seclusion that ha. become impossible. Th way to attain them is to face realities, ;nd to avail ourselves of our new position of world-leadership to make a peaceful world. We are to use our prestige and power to put out the tires of war, wherever they may arise, so that no confagration may reach us again. The little United States of a century and a quarter ago could never have imagined the possibility of doing this. We can do it; v.o are big and strong enough. And by so doing we are not only protecting ourselve but are bringing to all nations the blessings that Wash-
ivho worked in stone as the other worked In living mediums has seen his great contribution to the cause
of liberty grow in meaning and attain in these last few months a significance far beyond anything it had formerly approached. When the statue was placed on guard over the gates of our country It was with the belief that here freedom was a thing established beyond all question. Thi first gun of the war awoke men to the fact that evan here liberty was menaced from within and without. Outraged, her defenders Hocked to her standard. Now, saved by her faithful adherents, the Great Goddess, her torch relighted, stands indeed a symbol of freedom not only for our country, but of a new freedom, wider, better, farther reaching than any the world has known before. The beams of that blazing lamp now penetrate the farthest corners of the earth and the Islands of the sea. Well may the old sculptor think with honest pride of his work, the people of our nation view the statue of Liberty with love and reverence. She may neeni a thing of stone, but she is in truth a flaming spirit.
Other Editor Than Ours " 1 1 i j
I'RKSS AX1 PIlOFESSOll, (IxuLsllle Courier-Journal.) The senate sub-committee will get nowhere In its
investigation of bolshevik propaganda in this country
lnton and his great associates brought to ours in the 1 by taking the testimony of college professors who ac-
bcglnniig.
FILL ALL THE JOBS. J. o. Winslow director of the special and profesMonal section of the L'. ,S. employment service, sas that in spite of the crowds of soldiers returning from ihe front the Setter class of positions at salaries from jn.eCO to i lO.C'O a year are going beggirg. There are not enough men to IUI them. Men with executive ability arc constantly in demand. ThU is pretty k'ood evidence of the truth of that old .aylng- thnt there is always room at the top. It Is nlso evidence of something else, and that Is the tendency to cortsiur the top as something entirely remote and removed from the bottom. If there is an txecutlve po.-jtion to be rilled, why not push all tho toys in the ottice or in the plant up one step, and then fill the vacancy at the bottom with the man who needs a job but bus not learned the business? On the other hand, the process of Utting our boys tor army service proved that yo'JMg, inexperienced men could be quickly trained as orticers, and filled competently positions demanding initiative, courage and tommon sense. They commanded companies on the neld or administered complicated operations in regard to the handling of supplies with marked success, a little of the bair.e experimental process in busines might develop an equal ability in administration in unexpected quarters. When unemployment is fo grae a pro'dem as today the unfilled Jobs at the top point to jvst as poor management as would cilicerlcss companies of i-oldiera in an army.
"HOME SWEET HOME." What is the greatest catastrophe of the war? Is it the destruction of life, or the tremendous financial lass, or the fostering of bitterness between great nation? It is none of ths. These all are bad, but there 1. something von. It is the destruction of thou.inds of homes tig and little, rich and por. It is the unletting of millions of other homes, filling them with the anguish of death, the slir.g of poverty and the seeds of a frreat unrest. It was to save our homes from the physical ruin which befell tho"v of Europe that our men went Into the field. They have performed their task nobly, and r.ow there is an oblliratlon upon the home-makers. It Is to prejerv the. homes from the unret which war has own world-wide, and which must not penetrate cur domsti3 life if wcrld-wiUe chaos is not to result. We need as nc r before home in the old sAveet fccne, the home of the herth-nre and the lighted lamp. A refuge froia which thos moral r.'- cf the household who xuu-t toil in the vur!d out. -J do go forth in the best mental and physical ondiUon to battle with the prob-
quire their information in their libraries. There was, for instance. Prof. Harper, of the University of Chicago, "a student of Russian affairs," who appeared before the committee and who, after "explaining the development of tho bolshevik theory," added the assertion that there had been much misrepresentation of Russia in the American pread, but declared that enough evidence had come through to demonstrate that bols!.ievism had been a failure in most ways. Just how is it worth a trip from Chicago to Washington to tell a committee that sort of thing? Just how does a Chicago professor In his travels between his study and his class room acquire euch superior information on affairs In Russia as to constitute him an authority qualified to dismiss with a sneer the information obtained by the press? The information furnished by tho rreas Is about all the country has on the subject. It is the business of the press to furnish all the information on the matter that is procurable, and In Its attempt- to procure It the presa has sent courageous and trustworthy reports directly to Russia, the bource of the Information desired. In what way did Prof. Harper acquire his information, which he regards as so much better than that of the press? If he has any light on the subject other than that of hi library table lamp he could have made himself a great deal more interesting to the committee. Does he know anything about affairs In Russia today that the presi doesn't know?
If he does, how does he know It? If he does, what Is it? If he does, it is his duty to disclose what It Is. What is wanted Is facts, not library lucubrations.
And it is of no Interest to anybody lookinr for facts that a college protessor should pronounce misrepresentations the facts presented by the press If ha has no facts of his own that warrant such a charge.
JirWS ILONi:itATK1. (Indiana Dally Tiim.) One thing made plainer each day by the newa from Russia and by the statement of Rev. Dr. Georgo S. Simons, before the senate committee investigating radicalism, on conditions in that forry land is that the Jews as a race are not to blame for any of the outrages the Kuian reds are perpetrating. The Jew in Russia always has been the sufferer. He has been preyed on and persecuted by the Russian for centuries. His only response to mistreatment has been humility ami application to his work. JewUh women have been forced to submit to damnable outrages, and Jewish children have had to starve. Hut never have the Jews as a people ought revenge. At tlrrres they have cried out to the heavens to bo saved. And more than once have the- powers Intervened diplomatically to prevent massacres. The United States even broke off a treaty with Russia once because of the mistreatment of Jews there. And now to learn that th Jewish people of Russia are not taking part in the revolutionary riots is further confirmation of th honesty and aobrlcty of the Hebrew character. Because Leon Trotsky is Jewish his race has been accused of aiding and abetting him. A few Jews may have been deflected from the main body of this atolld people, but they are few. It la good to learn that in the heart of chaotic, riotous Russia a patient people still remains serene and true to lis ideals.
Crowds surged in and out of the . Ftoren In South Rend's business dls- I trlct all day Thursday. ,It was "Dol- ! lar day," and the gVeat Impulse of the crowds was to take advantage j
of the bargains being effered at the various stores throughout the city.
In one store there was an unusual!
crowd, and the bargains offered were of the exceptional sort to be found everywhu in the business district. One could buy a suit of clothes for a stated sum, and by the payment of an additional dollar, duplicate the article for which tated sum was asked. In this particular store were being offered beautiful green colored
silk underskirts at an exceptional bargain. One rotund lady admired these bargains in particular, but try as she would, she could not find one that would fit her. They were all too small around the waste line. After trying on all the green colored underskirts on the bargain counter, the rotund lady left the store, but she returned a short time later, forcing her way through the
throngs that crowded the aisle, and
made a purchase. a She bought one of the beautiful underskirts anyhow. She made the purchase, however, from another of the clerks than the one with whom she had been negotiating a few moments before. As she was leaving the store she met the clerk with whom she had tried to find an underskirt that would fit her. "I bought ohe of thos skirts," she told the clerk gleefully. "Why did, you buy one of them when none of them would fit you?" inquired the clerk. "I'm going to make a beautiful lamp shade out of it," the lady replied, as she happily left the store. In another store they were selling beautiful, clinging dresses at a bargain. A tall, graceful young lady was working her way through the crowds; trying to get to the counter. Suddenly the tall, graceful young lady was accosted by a large lady who wäh holding at arm's length ono of the beautiful clinging dresses, ana gazing at it with admiring eyes.
a a "Don't you think that this would
look like fine on my Lena?" asked
the large lady of the tall, graceful
one. a a "It certainly would," replied tho tall, graceful young lady, and right
away the large lady bought the dress
and took it home to give to Lena. C. J. C. An Old Favorite. The frills and the lace had fashIon and grnce Or so all we boys used to think. It was just superfine, was the old valentine So dainty tinted with pink.
To-day their regards on the stylish
new cards The beaux of the period trace. But I'll write a line for the old valentine So lavish with tinsel and lace. All tho World a Stage. "If you keep going to these big musical shows you get the habit." 'Huh?" "Get so you expect the girls on the sidewalk to dance in chorus." "Many of 'em are dressed for it. at that." Ymi Chn Ret On It. Boston Transcript.) In throwing her hat into the ring. Chicago's woman candidate for Mayor doubtless saw to it that It was a beautiful hat, trimmed in the latest up-to-the-minute style. a Good Idea. "Having seen about a thousand imitations of Harry Lauder " "Yes?" "I'm kind of interested. Think I'd like to see- Harry Lauder." a a a What Many Husbands Hear.
"John!" "Ye?, dear?" "Mix our callers a highball, but don't you take any." Mlsht Go. "A new form of oath is suggested."
"What is it?" Do you swear to tell the truth. th whole truth, or as much of It as the, lawyers will let your' a a Not Much Satisfaction. (Rütte Miner.) Czar Ienlne and Associate. Czar Trotzky are not getting much satisfaction out of what their agents have been trying to do in Seattle.
The Public Pulse
Communications for th1a eotnmn may be ilgced anonymoasly bet muit be aerompa-nled by the name of LL trrlter io Insure good faith. No rejKwwtMHtj for facts or sentiment exprewwd "fil be awimed. Honet db"uion of pchlle question la lnrited. but with the rieht reserred to eliminate Tlrioss and objectionable matter. The coin ma la free. But, be reasonable.
GEORGE WYMAN & CO.
Come and See Us.
Our entire stock, about 5,000 yards of all wool dress materials is to go into this sale at reductions which at this time are out of the ordinary.
ABOLT SINN I'KIN. South Bend. Feb. 19, 1919. Editor News-Tin.es: Sir Pardon me if I take a little of your space to answer tome of the assertions on the Sinn Fein movement made through the columns of your paper. In today's issue, the Notre Dame branch of the Friends of Irish Freedom, among other wild and misleading statements says: "We defy Rev. Greene to prove that Sinn Fien fired on American sailors in Cork, because we know definitely that the newspaper reports from which he derives his information was a bald lie." As a matter of fact not only were American soldiers and sailors Insulted and fired at on tho streets of Cork but the matter became so serious in other towns that tho Americans were forced to leave for safer havens. Again, showing how utterly mis
leading these assertions from the !
local Sinn Fein are, might I be al
lowed to quote from a dispatch from
Dublin which appeared In The NewSTlmes July 28 last. It said: "The Irish Independent Thursday morning reported that Fr. O'Flanagan of Roscommon, vice president of the Sinn Fein society, has been suspended by his bishop for his activities in the East Cavan election last Juno when the Sinn Fein leader, though under arrest, was elected to the house of commons." Another dispatch from Dublin published In The News-Times Nov. 28 last, pays: "Some of the older parish priests particularly in County Wexford, have been speaking out strongly against the Sinn Feiners, Very Rev. Canon Walsh, presiding at a meeting of the Crossabeg and Ballymurn branch of the United Irish league, Faid the prospect before Ireland was a gloomy one, as the 'criminal lunacy of Sinn Fein was turning
all Ireland's friend against her.' Byinsulting and trampling upon the American Flag and cheering for Emperor Wrilliam, they said the 'unruly Sinn 1eln faction was turning the French republic, the American nation and the English democracy into bitter enmity of Ireland.' "Rather than gain independence for Ireland they were more likely to gain 20 years, of coercion and martial law. if any general support was accorded by Irishmen to the antics of
the 'miserable faction whose record paid Canon Walsh, ro far, was one of distention, disruption and disaster. The democracy of England, he continued, was favorably disposed toward Irishmen and was willing to do them Justice, but they would never consent to the sheer lunacy of total separation and, until the evil spirit of Sinn Fein was banished from the land, Ireland would labor under the yoke of oppression." Resolutions were passed at the meeting condemning the latest German outrage In murdering seven innocent fishermen off the Galway coast; and denouncing the Gaelic league as a "feeder of Sinn Fein." There you are. These two dispatches are copied verbatim from The News-Times, and would seem to do away with the assertion that tho Irish Catholic church is solidly behind-the Sinn Fein, excepting in South Bend. The Literary lOigest carried a
numner or stones in rciermc iv Jf yQU feel Ured out out of sortfl
attacKs upon American Buiuiers uu . ,,ABnondftnt mntallv or rjhvaical v
sailors which were taken from Irish j flepres9ed and laek tho dealro to acnewspapers, and were never denied, j compll8n things, get a 50-cent box I think it is about time that the, of WendeU-g Ambition Pills at WetSouth Rend Sinn Fein element let up tlclc.s Cut-Rate Drug Store today on this kind of propaganda which is j and uke tho flrat blff gtep toward
notning more nor less man iur u.u . tinse btter right away.
McCall Patterns and Publications for March are on Sale here 1st Floor Right Aisle. Unusual Sale of Woolen Dress Goods AT SAVINGS FROM REGULAR PRICES
Some ot the materials
were
bought before the war. Some were recently bought in New York at less than actual cost of manufacturers.
At these reductions many women will choose dresses, skirrs, suits and coats at real savings. Early selections are advised, as at these prices assortments cannot be guaranteed to last. Selling Starts Tomorrow Saturday 40in. All Wool French Serge, Navv and Colors. Regular $2.25. Sale $1.29 yd. 40 in. All Wool French Serge, Navy ani Colors. Regular $2.50. Sale $1.95 yd. 56 in. All Wool French Serge, Navy only. Regular $4.00. Sale $2.50 yd. 56 in. All Wool Poplin, Navv only. Regular $4.00. Sale $2.50 yd. 54 in. All Wool Mannish Suiting. Regular $5.00. Sale $2.50 yd. 5o in. All Wool French Plaids and Stripes. Regular $5.00. Sale $2.50 yd. 50 in. All Wool Strped Broadcloth. Regular $5.00. Sale $2.50 yd. 5o in. All Wool Brazlian Coating, colors. Regular S6.00. Sale $2.50 yd. 54 in. All Wool Epingle, colors. Regular $5.00. Sale $2.50 yd. 54 in. All Wool Velour, colors. Reguhr S6.00. Sale $4.50 yd.
50 to 54 inch Chiffon Broadcloth $3.95 Choice of Our $5.00 to $7.00 per yard Our entire stock of all street and evening shades and Mack, formerly piiccd from S5 to S the yard. Sale at $3.9y yd.
All Wool Black Goods Most extraordinary values are to be found in our Black Goods offering as every piece was bought at 'least two years ago, and is of the quality obtainable then. 36 in. All Wool Albatross, black. Regular $1.25. Sale 69c yd. 36 in. All Wool French Serge, black. Regular S1.75. Sale 98c yd. 36 in. All Wool Nuns' Veiling, black. Regular $1.85. Sale 98c yd. 42 in. All Wool Imported Henrietta, blick. Regular $2.50. Sale $1.50 yd. 42 in. All Wool French Serge, black. Regular $2.50. Sale $1.69 yd. 45 in. All Wool French Serge, black. Regular $3.00. Sale $1.95 yd. 54 in. All Wool Storm Serge, black. Regular $3.50. Sale $1.95 yd. 5() in. All Wool French Serge, black. Regular $4.00. Sale $2.50 yd. 50 in. All Wool Chiffon Broadcloth, black. Regular $5.00. Sale $2.69 yd. 54 in. All Wool French Serge, black. Regular $5.00. Sal $2.95 yd. See These Woolen Fabrics in Our Windows. Sale Starts Tomorrow
ßariish
Ner
vousness
Put Vigor and Ambition Into Run-Down, Tired Out People,
purpose of making trouble between America and Great Britain, and backed by German money. MIKE GO Ft M ALLY.
Potentialities' of Heroism. (Chlcaco Newa.) Remember, woman, it was only after we "perfect 4 5s" were included In the draft that the Hindenburg line rave completely away! Very Considerate. (New York World.) They ar digging up Ilroadway again perhaps to make the town look more homelike to returning troops. iVrisli Uk Thought, "We won't stand for gag law." "What't the matter? Surely nobody U trying to rag a lawyer." Ijnt of Mall. "The Kaliwr's mall is said to be Increasing"." "I sjppoe he did get a lot of ugly valentine.'
"Find Mother some coffee! What's the brand?" "Why, John, how quickly
you noticed the change! I've stopped buying coffee with premiums; you're drinking Golden Sun. Isn't it delightful?"
olden Sun
Coffee
is pure coffee free from chaff and dust. It is sold only by grocers never by peddlers who are here today and gone tomorrow with your money that will never have a chance to do your town a bit of good.
Trading with Aomfowa jrroccra u tkm proper tpirit ihtte day It pay.
If you drink too much, emoke too
much, or are nervous because ol overwork of any kind. Wendell's Ambition Pills will make you feel better In three days or mony back from Wettlck' Cut-RaU Drug Store on the first box purchased. For all affections of the nervous ryitem, constlpaUon, loss of appetlta, lack of confidence, trembling kidney or liver complaint!. Bleep JeHsness. exhausted vitality or weak nesa of any kind, get a box of Wen deir Ambition Pills today on the xaonej back plan. Adv.
ft
Boy
Asks that You Help Him
Solon; King ühon Feverish
tvn't rank th minute of bothrina with T2Drtln reinila for Clry King I pnrelr vegetable formula node Into a palatable tea is nature' h-l remedy fnr eonttrpf i3on. cpst stomach, coated tonro an5 alck headache. It'a ih nnx old remedy tbat tfcontnds iwfr by and only a few eer.ts tor a j-meroaa package.
Taxe it meiy and gnre u 10 u mm j
11
He is working hard to pay his way through school. Here are some of the ways that you can do it: Pay him promptly each week for your paper, as he is required to pay each week for all the papers he uses. If you do not pay him he b not only short his profit, but also the price of the paper. The boy gets a commission for all new subscribers and you can help him by letting him know about new families. and also about anyone who you think might take the paper. Remember that your newsboy's life is just
starting and that he needs to be encouraged, U not discouraged. j
1
!
i
wiea croaa and fVveriafe.
c
I3 . m
THE WOOLSON SPICE COMPANY TUIo Ohio
Get Rid of That Persistent Cough Rttrp that weakening. rrsitnt rus;h
or cold, threatening thrnnt or lang aff'- j tions. with Krknmn's Altratlr. the toul-
mm4 r vi 1 1 ! a a vr 'HI r a it Afvflj. f m 1 it a
sOc and $1.0) bottleg from druggltt, or from ITCKMAN LABORATORY. rhlla1elphti
1 1 1 ! 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 f 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 f 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 f 1 1 1 f 1 1 1 f i x 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 f 1 1 1 1 1 m 1 1 1 1 1 r j 1 1 1 f 1 1 1 f 1 1 r 1 1 1 1 1 f 1 1 1 1 1 1 f 1 1 1 L
I Large Shipments of New
Spring Goods Arriving Daily. 1
Trading with advertisers mein more for tess cash.
77H STYLE SHOP SoU WOAtl
;ii!iii!iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiijiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiimiiiimiiiiiiiiiji
i FIRST IN THE NEWS-TiäEi FIRST IN THE NF.Wb-TIME
