South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 128, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 8 May 1921 — Page 24
24
sr.VHAY, MAY . 1921. THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES Morning Evening Sunday ?. M. JTErilE.NSON. PrM!!ir. JOHN HKXRY ZCVETt, ESlter.
Member United Press an dthe International News Service Morning IMlMon. Member Associated Press TB AMv!tM rrttt If ticluilTtlj tntltied t tb :im for rrMiraiion cf 11 n?vri !1irtcte crtUtM to it or cot tnrfrltM la tb nomine 4it1n cf tMf rl-r. anrt ill tr Jpri tewt publ!e4 LfrtJn. Tfcln 'WJ not arr'T to tee irtrnoon edition. All riiht of rf pahlltlon of 'V pitches Lerrin ire reterTel bj tta iubliLer at tu Lo.i ca.-
rror. Main Sion. Prlvit brmnch txrbng. Olre r;,r"" j
Cine rf rrion rr drartmfnt trtntt.l. Aitr ö p. y cmrt-Main rtdO. rlM!fif1 department: Mln TIM. "iy Ultnr; M.i I a 21 Co, xrletj editor; Mata 2103, olrculatica Jprtcent. M!55rK irTION TlATE?Ti MnrrTnr od TOerttriP ndlMnn. T'.rz Copr, .T?; FundnT. 10r. 7llT?re1 by rurrirr tn Souto Üf-vt and MliRinaka. fl-ifo 7r in 4an. cr CV br ti k. Mornlnf r Jlrninr Edition, dally inludln sunalj. Uattred at tfc Scuta Hnd roffl" aa ernl cMm mall. RATES HY MAIL. 1 Tr Mm. Mot. 1 Mo. 12 ISOO 12.75 11 M $ 3 A 4 f CO ?r 1.73 .70 ft A T.O" 3.75 2 00 tt 7 4k 5 K.no 4 25 SO Foreign Kit, fl.tö per rcontb. AnvnnTISING nATrfll Aak tfc adTrtlPlnc drartfrnt. Fore'cn Adrrltflr.r Irr''ntatlTM : COSH, lirNTN t70Jl)f AN. INC. Fifth it., Nu York CU. 72 W. Adaai t.. CtI"ro: Arrrli-an Miff.. Detroit, Victor tldff : KanMt t'Stj. and Conatltrjtlon bide Atlanta. 7h News-Time flarort keep Its lirertlilrr colnmni fre from fnudaleni rr.tire prtenttlon. Any rron defrauded tbroujrh patron' TT any adTert!srr;nt In fhn paper will rofifer a faror oa itt tr.inaremerit bj reporting the facta completely.
MAY 8. 1921
REMEMBER FLORENCE NIGHTINGALE. In tho days of special observance, celebrations, r'ccori'tnn cf fpcci.il honor, etc., an opportunity Is affordM for next Thur.day which should have more considTntion than it i jroln? to pet, especially locally. It is the birthday of Florence Nightingale: the I01?t anniversary. d?i?natcd a.s Hospital clay. It was Florence Nighting-ale, who. in 183 4, organized the firfit corps of army nurses. She went to the battlefields of the Crimean v.ar with a ftaff of i8 "nngelf of mercy." That was before the day of the Hod Cro.w. It wa the first organized movement to alleviate soldiers' suffering by taking women nurses to the front Whn soldiers returned to South F.end from the Civil war, they wor?hlpred Florence NightlnKalc for the army hospital fwrvice which Rhe helped iTsranlre. She wafi the greatest nurso that ever lived, wa M!m Nightingale. largely due. to her effort, nursing was organized into a definite and honorable occupation for women. Hospital day is not a "tag day." nor a day oa whirh any sort of drive on your pockctbook Is planned. It '3 merely a day on which hospitals and thrir patients invite you to drop In and learn th? wonders of modern hospital work. You are urged to participate in thesr activities. If you have ever been a patient in a modern hospital or visited a friend there, you know that the hcfpital 1 probably the finest institution that our civilization ha. rroduced. The ?ervico rendered by hospital in vaster th.in you Imagine. Arizona, with many tuberculosis patients, has a hospital bed for every 77 people in the state. That's the highest rat Mississippi ranks last, with n hospital bed for every 1.22.' people. hio. norm! in health and hospital development, has a hospital bed f'r ever- 162 resident. This probably illutrate?i the average importance of hospital service in American communities that at all times one in every persons may receivo hrv Jt.il treatment. National Hospital day hereafter will be r.hvcrvod every year. It should become as murh a fixture In your mind as Thanksgiving.
. o-
'TRUTH ABOUT THE PEACE TREATY." Somebody has Mipsnod a:u thcr live-foot fhelf of hooks Imitative, my. of the Harvard (Mansies, but classics of an even more specialized nature. Instead of a "Prexy" Kliot. :is compiler, however, what it need is a hun orist. The shelf Ls to be made up entirely of volumes under the general title: "Tho truth about the peace treaty." Tbc niggeütion is not bad. except that the shelf cught to be capable of cxUnion to an indefinite length. Judging by th- rapidity wi;h which tho peace treaty literature H romint; from the presses. During the treaty negotiation.--, and for some time, after, the world w.s led to believe that the only men who knew what was going on at Paris wero th "Fig Four" Wilson, tieorge. Clemenceau and Orlando. Nearly everybody else disclaimed all rcsi'on.sibility for tho famous or Infamous document en the ground that all of the important decisions lipen which it b:?sed were arrived at In "Bis Four" .secrecy. Now it .'Cr.; as though, despite the much advertised fcfcrecy. r.bout cverybcnly who was in or near Tarls in those hectic days considers himself qualified to trl "iho truth, about the treaty." Naturally, each cno hM a different "truth" to tell, depending on hl nationality and what he wants to prove. Having read all "f the ' truths" up to now. we feel that we Kn v !- about what really happened than before we rcd any of them. Incidentally, it might he noted that the four men who really know what th- truth i have not taken th. tr pens in hand to tell t. If and when they do. it , !l be worth re idirih, which i more than can ... k,! of n.ost of the "truths" by self-appointed .u;b" teller?. Probably the most worth whlje of the. ' t.-uth.;" Is the latest one by Andre Tardicu. who. necordir. to hU book, was in the "Pig Four" holy of hohe f-eyeral times. but about the bet t.iat can be raid cf his "Truth About the Treaty" is that it is not as unconvincing p-n Inadequate as tho othe;-.-." WE ARE IMPROVING. We are interested in ourselves, and in what peoj le think cf us. If thero any man in Furope for whoe good opinion we have reason to cafe. It I Viscount James. Fryce. Ills book. "The American Commonwealth." still stands as the most rotable Interpretation of our institutions since P Tocqueille. Comes now his now work. "Modern Democraies." the fruit of his matured Judgment. It la -t .iicmn book In pome of its aspect?, and net without warning to America n.s wr'.l as to the res of the world. Tut liere is what he says about America Bow and 50 years ago: "Fifty years ago administration was wow and politics mvre corrupt than they are today, but reformers were fewer and found far fewer l;ter.frs. Today they nrf heard gladly, bcauae thf public conscience and tho public enso of what America mans for the world is more enaritive. Fvery fresh effort ytlmulntefl these feel-ing-and Veerv the need fcr Improvement befnr the minis of tnoe who lead. When I compare the o'.ume rf dLscu.vion of political. ?ocirtl and economic huhjeots which lue from the American press today, descriptions of present evils, analyses of their source, suggestions for their extinction, with the scanty consideration thf-" milters formerly received, and with a spirit of lurubrlous despondency that chilled the reformers of those dajs. I am astonished at the change, and welcome it as auguring well for future progress." Thcie is comfort in this. We are not 50 pood as
Progress and Fullbacks By John Henry Zuvcr XXI AT the foot of almost every Deler.table Mountain there lies a Slough of Despond. Men do so dislike change and to cling to the security of the Tut. It is the way of the conservative and the way of the orthodox. It is also the way of the laggard, even the sluggard. Now and then the lower extremity is so definitely reached that whatever it is rebounds. The dark ages broke into the reformation because they had become so dark that they were intolerable. Chicago might never have been the city that she is but for the Chicago fire. Galveston, Dayton. San Francisco, and hundreds of other spots, loom larger on the map than they ever might have loomed but for a catastrophe. "Sweet." indeed, "are the uses of adversity." They quicken, sometime purify, provoke new determinations, are the beginning of a new start. The old saying that "necessity is the mother of invention," rings true in a million ways. When a man tells you that the time isn't ripe for thia or that reform, he may not mean, but what he says is, that humanity has not sunken low enough into the Slough of Despond as yet, to make the Delectable Mountain an obj'ect of ambition; that humanity has not suffered enough as yet, at the hands of its own folly. People simply will not see the necessity of things, or even sometimes, the desirable, until down in to the very gutter, and it is the same with reforms in cities, in the state, and the nation, as with individuals. Easy-going mankind prefers the good old way, is "wisely" cynical, too busy to improve, and follows the "line of least resistance until it wears the line out. By that time the pioneers are gone, the pathfinders far enough ahead to be at least supposedly forgotten, and the mushroom "progressives," product of a particular soil, and suddenly in a hurry, rush forward as though they have discovered something new, perhaps "put it over," and lay claim to great accomplishment. Society never moves faster and progress is bound in the rear to the most determined laggards; not always ignoramuses but more generally the Pharisees and Sadducees in religion, and by virtue of the same mental attitudes, the same in politics, in business, and social advancement. It is the eminently respectables, super-intellectuals; conventionalists of power, position, influence, that brake the wheels of progress and necessitate necessity to pull them through. They cling to the past because their materialistic minds are able to conceive it, while the future, to peer into which requires vision, is to such a blank, and a leap in the dark. Thus the American revolution was held in abeyance until George Third and his bigoted advisers, because of their tyrannies, became unbearable. Could truth, logic, poetry or eloquence have converted northern statesmen and southern politicians the civil war would never have occured, but both were deaf to the cry for liberty and the people were dumb until the firing on Ft. Sumter aroused them to action. We were never able to see our full duty in the Cuban war for freedom until as Pres't McKinley reported it to congress, Spain had "proven her inability to assure safety to the ships of a friendly nation peacefully harbored in her ports." America dared not enter the world war, because the American people were not mentally ready, until Germany's submarine warfare had insulted our dignity beyond excuse, and evidence of a conspiracy with' Japan and Mexico threatening an invasion of our own soil. Talk about people fighting with their backs to the wall I It seems characteristic of humanity not to fight, until it can no longer be avoided; that is, perhaps, except in the case of bullies. And yet nothing long resists full-flung determination, and uninterrupted achievement testifies from what barren beginnings the race has climbed upon the ladders of will. The world cannot go bankrupt until knowledge dies, confidence surrenders, stick-to-it-iveness capitulates, and every backbone is broken. Imagination, the golden hen, is ceaselessly hatching fresh wealths in ideals; "iTr ambitions in government, industry, religion, education, social betterment,' all for the treasuries of civilization. It is the beckoning star, and like the star in the east, attracts, enthuses, draws, leads even the wise men. and when they come to the place where lies
tne babe, they bless it with their frankincense and myrrh. The ideal has be come real.
MRS. SOLOMON SAYS By Helen Rowland Being Confessions of Wife 700th
Piatd stockings do not i When she
My. said
make a golf-pUyer, nor torioisc-
shejl spectacles, a highbrow. Neither doth a knowledge of the moving-pictured make a wi;-e man. For in thj photo-play, all sirens are as one siren, nr.d that one obvious; hut. in liabylon, there dwell reyen tinus yvrr. vari-dies of VAMPS, and every one an Fxpert. Lo, I charge thee, when a damsel looketh at thee through her lashes; when she practNeth the side-glance; when fcbe dropped her eyes significantly, when rh" gareth at thee soulfully, as one si-eing vision?, be not hypnotized, but take heed. For, this is tho Optic-Vamp, who mesmerize th hr victims, ha the rat charmeth the bird. And what she seeth in thine ryes is but the reflection of her own conquest. When a damsel sunneth her locks upon the beach; when sho tosseth them in the wind: when she shaketh her bobbed curls; when' she .centeth her hair with spikenard and Chypre, I charge thee have a caution. For this is the Mermaid-Vamp; and many a rood bachelor and wise hath mistaken her trtssca for a halo, and been caught in the n?t of her ringlets. When a damsel hearkcr.eth unto thy speech with rapt attention, when she hangeth upon thy words, and
applaudeth thy judgments; when she
I wncn she oringem mrxn m I chafir.g-dish. and feedeth thee the
ambrosial Neuurgh. and the nectarine home-srew; when she donnt th a fascinating apron; when she lichteth thy ripe, saying. "DO smcke! For it Is so chummy!", when ?he offcrcth to lathe thine aching head In eau-de-cologne and maketh the cushion more "comfy" at thy back. I bid thee be not moved. For this in the Motherly-Vamp. And. unless thou ycarneet for a kitchenette-npartment-for-two, run 'ere thou succumbest! When ffhc wcareth the exceeding short skirt and the infinitesimal sleeve; when she displaycth dimpled elbows, much neck, and more back; when she sdttefh more near and is pensive. I bid thee depart in haste. For thU is the Sex-Appeal-Vamp; and fhe is more insidious than bolshevik propaganda, and more heady than a June moon. Yea. and there be many other Vamps; the h mlllng-Vamp. tho Tla-tonlc-Vamp. tho Sympathetic-Vamp: tho Sophisticattd-Vamp: and the Vamp-of-Vanpf, which is the BABY VAMT ! Therefore, my Son, be not wise in thine own cenrcit, concerning thy knowledge of women; for they are as the Paris hats, no two of which are alike.
Behold, the fool hath said in his
is "CONVlIiSED" at thv iokes. andlheart: "Iw 1 know them all! Yea,
laugheth deliriously at thy witticisms j by heart, havo T their 'numbers'!"
I charge thee flee while there is yet time. For this is the Watchful-Waiting Vamp, and already is she close upon thy trail.
Yet, upon the morrow, peradventure. a DIFFFUCNT vamp shall vanquish him! And his tongue shall be broken agait-st him. (Copyright, 1921.
J. P. McEvoy Di!L
we ought to be. hut we once were worse! The "good obi time" were not no good as fond memory paints them. There were evils in the olden time, and they had friends In high places. It was not easy to dislodge them, and many of them are still firmly entrenched. But our generous and sympathetic as well as discriminating critic, believes that we are better than we were a half century ag-o. with a finer public spirit, and a spirit as reflected in our press that haa in it much hope for the future. Thank you. Sir Jame: That is encouraging. We are net as good as we ought to be; we are glad you think us better than we were. We hope youv are rlsht. Iet us inform you in strict confidence, we intend to be better ftill!
IS YOUR CHILD A PRODIGY? Thero may be parents in South Bend who read with envy the stories about child prodigies of whom nn unusual crop has -ar peared lately. And they may wonder with resentment at the ways of nature that make of their boys Just ordinary youngsters, while endowing a boy in New York with such a mind that at four and one-half years he cuts ha teeth on big words like "psychology," which he spells and uses familiarly. This child has been interviewed and la quoted as saying: "Children are 11 very well, but they do not understand me. They co I am intcrcfltcd In teaching thorn things, and they vart to do nothing but play. I like to play, but it's a different sort of playing. It could be called playins with a purpose. Tho kids around hero play for no rcawn at all." Poor little prodigry! Natur has Riven him a srown-up brain and robbed him rf his childhood. Ho like to play "with a purpose." Other children play because their Joyous being tells them to. There's no purpose In their play, but the Joy of It. rTodlglra must bo lonely children, because they are not understood by the children of their elze, and are too small to bo the companions of children of their mental age. Give us the average, regular boy, who plays hard, juft for the fun of it; and works hard when he has to; and makes a gc-pd showing in school, though not shining; and can put up a good fight, though he never looks for one. The men who count for something were regular boys. Charles F. Brush bristles up and tells tho American Philosophical society that he doubts the Einstein theory. Brufh brushes Einstein aside witn arguments almost as easily understood as Einstein's. o - It appears that etrlkes anr lockouts may develop from the diaisreerncnt between the German Economics union and the Allied Employers' association. c Chinese "yellow bark brandy." distilled from wormwood, is admitted to America as "Ng IC. Pi" a medicine. This answers the question, "What's in a name?" o Surgeon points out that human anatomy resembles a hog. He must have dissected one of the fcllons who stops his machine on a street crossing. o Wonder how long It'll be until some circus eidcthow imports a flock of Yap-anese. ' o It may be iRniflcant that Germany has to sav ' "yes" or "no" about Indemnities on' the eve of Friday, the 13th
A bout Figures
BY ARTHUR .BROOKS BAKER.
I met a knight of palmistry, of fic
tion a la carte
To warm the cooling cockles of the
common sucker's heart. I asked him how he found contemporaneous finance:
He showed me boodle stored In even'
pocket of his pants; f
Said he: "A ro?y future is precisely
what they need. , You bet your life they pay for it with willingness and speed." I miet the gay commander of a sprightly bucket shop. Said he: "I make my profit, though the market rise or drop; For futures are attractive to the yearning human race; My client would be glad to stake the nose upor. his face; He'll go and nut his dollar watch and Sunday socks in pawn To get the prom.se of some wealth a
A diary miht be. described as a one passenger run-about with a self-starter. That is, it starts itself and runs about a month. Then it rolls over on iU back with a low moan. Anybody can keep a diary but few can keep at it. The excitement is too intense. Imagine the strain of making daily entries like those: Jan. 4th. Woke up and found it was morning. Ain't nature wonderful! Dressed ir: customary manner, carefully putting on my Kocks first before attempting to draw on my shoes Had breakfast of two softboiled eggs, three slices of toast and two cups of coffee. Caught the 8:09 and decided to wall: to the office from the station but changed my mind and took a stret car. Fare eight cents. Worked all morning packing kippered herrings. Ate corned beef haih for lunch with a poached egg. Price, 0 cents. Worked all afternoon grating nutmegs
Caught 0:10 train home. Another
day. Fooled them npraln. Jan. 6th Slept till 5 o'clock. R olldovecrlk PJJJetaoinshrdlu Kolled over nnd slept till 10 o'clock. Rolled over again and slept till 11 o'clock. Cot up. Breakfast. Started reading Sunday paper. Aren't these comic artists comical, especially when the Mttle boy hits his father on the head with an axe. Fell asleep again and work up late in the afternoon. Laid down for a nap and slept till supper time. Supper. Forget what It was. but it doesn't matter. Had company after supper.
little later on." I met a superannuated parson, dry and old. Who'd guided many thousands to the city pave 1 with gold. He looked a most dilapidated, unrewarded guy With discontentment in his heart and hunger in his eye. Said he: "In future happiness the people long to join. But they've a radical distaste for parting with their coin."
Ferget what they talked about. It doesn't matter. Went to bed. Another day! Most diiriey are dull. That is because mot people are. However the jazz diary is something else again, Clarice. This Is otherwise known as the vamp diary and is kept by ladles who keep all sorts of things, including other ladles' husbands and late hourt. Tho first things a vamp buy after investing in an eyebrow pencil and rouge stick is a diary in which she makes entries somewhat as follows: Jan. 3rd. The sun beats into my room pitilessly this morning He has gone away after throwing a saucer at tho canary. Why arc men so impetuous? And yet, I love him. As Ella Jean Fairfax sings: "Love and a crust of bread Rags and r: red nose. And whit does it nutter What all the world knows. If so. Jan. 5th. This cannot go on. And yet, It must. But can it? No! And yet why not? Why not, indeed. I wonder . . . And is this all? Is love always like this? ... or llkek that? I must be mad . . . yes, . . . that must be it. He met me on the street tod iy and said "Good morning," just that, nothing more. And It made little ino happy, o!i, so happy all day. What if ho had not said "Good morning?" It would have been "Good night" for him. I'll tell tho world. Yesterday I bought a gun .... Jan. 6th. Will I shoot him today? I think I will. Jan. 7th. I did. (Copyright, 1921.)
When an old bachelor muses on the past, he thinks tenderly and wistfully of all the woman who made him happy by letting him slip through their fingers.
Always listen respectfully to a divorcee; in tho ?chool of experience, a little private tuition from a postgraduate is never to bo despised.
SHORT FURROWS
By Kin Hubbard
We're llvln in th' greatest advertisin period in th' history o' th world, an' it would be interestin' t' know jest what part advertlsin' Is playin In shap'n' our daily lives our diet, our dress, an' our Inclinations. Th' art o writin' appcalin advertisements has almost reached th limit, while pictorial magarine an billboard advertis-emrntw have left absolutely r.othin' fer th' imagination. Ham an' eggs, a pile o' pancakes, or grapefruit salad, have all been pictured so realistically in advertisements that we kin hardly wait till dinner time. We've all been affected by th' beautifully colored ten-sheet poster ehowin a whole family, mother, father, non an' a couple o' long-legged daughters an a Airedale dog. all seated in a handsome auto on a dizzy precipice lookirr down Inf th Grand Canyon, or North Adams. Massachusetts. Enrlish walnuts an' pecans are billed like Barnum an Bailey, vhiel a great poster advertlsin a certain tonic takes us back t' th' third act o th famous ole Frohman success. "Th Wife.' One brand o'
chewin' gum alrne '11 use more show
paper In one town than Duprez an' Benedict's minstrels used in a tour acro?s th mn'incnt. Clgarct an' smokin t'bacco ads afford a neverendin panoram t fcr th' transcontinental touri?t. Jes t stop V think what it costs t stain a garage an' then try t' e-timate th cost o all th Mgn palntin it takes F put one particular brani o cigarets on a payin' basis. Eok at the realistic, rou ir.cin an' apealin underwear ads that look like th' Nolson family o acrobats waitm t' rntrr th' center ring. Overalls, oleomargarine, white lead, rubber heels, corn molars rcthin's too ho.ncly an' ordinary t' be brought forward an dignified an' played up on th billboards by th means o costly lithographic posters. Take th' full rae department store ads that are gotten up by a regular editor an' slews cf asistants at an expense that would make th' payroll of ; country newspaper look like a 'school teacher's salary. I-ook M th' midlines! O course we cradn begin F look at all o them, but we kin skim over 73 or IAO. Ever etory ever' article In 'em is continued on a page
next t' an advertisement. Ixok at th intoxicitin' carpet sweeper ads. Doubtless many a cirl has bee n lured F th' altar with th hope that nhe may preside over a home an' dress up in her best an' operate one e'
jth sweepers. Thtn thrr's th' washin"
rnacnlne ads showin a f milin mother standin' near one o th machir.es jest as if she wuz standin' by a $7,000 limousine. Iook at our hoys that comb ther hair like th collar ads. Then ther's th beauty cream ads, but we don't see any girls that look like they'd stepped out o them. They look more like they'd rolled out of a Diamor d Dye ad. Has anybuddy up t date resisted th music box show bills thn lock like th last act c II Trovatore? Is ther anybuddy that haint at least hi 1 a music box left at th' house on trial? I kin remember when you could travel fer week" without see-in anything f relieve th monotony but an occasional spavin cure ad. But all this adverti..n. all th lurid billboard pictures keeps us in touch with th' tim.-s an' gives us somethin' t think about an' strive fer. , (Copyright. 1021.)
IL
8
Corns Will Go while you sleep if you do this
APPLY Blue-jay to a Jt corn tonight the liquid or the plaster. It is done in a moment. The corn ache win end; the removal of the corn will begin.
Hour by hour Blue- TJ
jay will gently undermine that com. In a little while the corn will loosen and come out.
Q
The way is easy, gentle, sure and scientific. A famous chemist perfected it. A laboratory cf worldwide repute prepares it. Millions of corns every year are removed by it. Countless people, by its use, keep free from corn pains always.
Cease your wrong methods. Try thi3 modern, this efficient way. There is no need for harsh treatment, no r.esd for soreness. And paring is futile and dangerous. All about you are people delighted with the Blue-jay method. Find out what they know about it. Try it tonight,
Plaster or Liquid
Blue j ay The Scientific Corn Ender , DAUER & BLACK Chicago New York Toronto Mler. f D B Steril 5urticl Dr..in AUiJ Prlt
as
IKS KH
r a
b ! 1
- it'
nn UVt
MS,
si
A gas range is a cool range with a college education. This education i more complete and better than ever before.
Gas ranges have definite characteristics and established reputations. No two arc exactly alike. We cany the ranges that experience has proved to be satisfactory and efficient. We are vitally interested in giving you the best possible service at the lowest possible cost. MAY is GAS RANGE MONTH and we are featuring several special types of ranges. Northern Indiana Gas and Electric Company 219 N. MICHIGAN STREET
?i .LOfjß, the Dentist
Formerly Located at Michigan and Washington Sts., Has Moved to Room 404, in ' The Dean Building
i
You Make What We Lose
Fire
Prices
Are
20
own
Trade In Your Old Tires On New Ones At This New Low Price GOODRICH SILVERTOWN CORDS PENNSYLVANIA VACUUM CUPS FEDERAL We Give A Tube Free With Every Pennsylvania Vacuum Cup Tire
0. E. Ludwig Auto Supply 409 South Michigan St. "Everything For Your Auto"
ry fews-Times Want Ads
1
