South Bend News-Times, Volume 38, Number 186, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 5 July 1921 — Page 12
12
THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES TUESDAY MORNING. JULY 5. 1 02 T
1
HIS RECOVERY WAS SURPRISE
Terre Haute Man, After 7 Years Suffering, Restored to Perfect Health.
"It-, r ! h . m I j f r - d'n. 1
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Th- wittb i-m.s of Hri. Sawwr. th jr ;dnt'H ;hy.cian, continue to rii.tk'- it dirhoilt er the r.a-
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il apüal to k P a straight face n. Swv-r tol l tin s crr tarirs
. I 1 1 i number of rnn?rcs. at a t ri.--tir.tr th- ohr niht that wh n ' h- w as at i pulted -uddnly into th- . j ':? f hrik' di r- n ral h found himself rather i-hy on military in
formation.
S""n after I pot my new uni-
1
u ':.;- r! - form," lu- .aid. "I was invited
w :th
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I d.d at
i.rn ;i, -1 til .1
j- -rn.- 1 ! 'o wr"n
r.o a t ' ; r : t and t)i
1.1 1: t -. 1 m . I h i'l awful
h-ada at ;;:nr, t'-o. aril ::d .- nrvous th'- ba-'t x it :nnt woul 1
mo tr ml- inc Iiw a ! tf. I hardwr pot a P'-o.l nipht'A r.-t and f-n I would t arid walk th"
hour.-. I f it vw:k .'in !
tha t ( r,r r.. w i:h ! hou.-
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rt o u; my j I pot Tani i- in " I i fori I hul onl l.ott:.- I f. ;t w h tt'-'l u; my t .ii 1 h in an;.1, h i'.i- a K h"
ali r.i'ht ami P' t fc-imp tin-. Th.
wef ail s'Jrpi :.-- il at rh-'iniT'- in m. an-l .-oiiK' . vf r- in 10 'l of mf-'lim
ht I u-.oil.l ;a- to
out. in- Kj.y I' .r m im-.
la k -n all 1 - f t h- -c -
a r. v mm. It ?; .in-l nut my orlor. I n'VT w, ? ;i lik a 1 04
u ; i n th" morning hoys at t hi .-!i";
t h ru who h'-pin t ik-
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n
ir. p Tan Li'-, ton, an th'-m Jut lik" it 'li l lie v it ( r f-iiis." Tanl.K- is '...hi in th" (Vr.tral Irup S: lru-.pi.,..
'. it his hIj"'l m-. I lon't South I!.-n'l t.y on ;inil h-.i'linp
hy
out to dinner at hirf
Vh n I arriv'l, a ,-r.try
it th. prtti- with hin ripht h tml xcuyrd
r 1 ;.! to his for htatl. I wan huy thinkinp ahut sornethlnK and did not ra!iZ" until somt- days later that I was h inp .a luted. That sentry looked like he wan a thorouphhre.l military man and I win Let dollars to tlouphnuts that hv is ;i!l x'.an linp at attention, waitinp f"r it. tr return the falue." At another pathrinp hcjo durinp the last I'"W day.-. (ln. Sawyer told
another f-tory run. It wan 1 ' ri n c a.s
farther than Hep. Thompson and would send prunes to a number of other cabinet olücialrt if he thought it would do any pood. He thoupht a few prunes might he valuable in npulatlnp the department of Justice. Ir. I-Yss di-ru-sed the rrune as an ally of education, wayinp it had h'dpej many an ambitlou youth alonp to a depree. He declined to discuss it as an article of diet. Hep. Theodore Burton was 50 busily enpaped ith matters before the foreign affairs committee, of which hf is i member, that he begged to
from any comment on
the prune, saying his acquaintance with it was but slight and not high
ly favorable. j Nowadays when a visitor calls on j on Ohio member the member does not offer the invitatio nthat the gov- j nrtiiir nf N'nrth Carolina extended
to the governor of .South Carolina. He dimply siy?, "Have a prune?" AH of which goes to show how time have changed since Mr. Volstead
1 1 1 r r 1 1 1 1 T 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 T 1 1 1 1 T T 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 T I J 1 1 1 1 f 1 1 ! I T I T 1 1 r I T 1 1 1 :i 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 1 T I f 1 1 I Confessions Of A Husband! I I The Mans Side of Married Life 1
IIIUlJlIlllIlllllllIlllIllllllllUlllItllllllllllllllllUXUIIIlllllllXXiJIlllIlIlIIIIIllIJIHILl
"ü, it'.s really rmkhty kind of yu to offer to tak" car-' of him. but I
) know Iot uouMrt i-t him po even ! f r a dav."
"She trusts rmIf she doesn't w.l verv I'.atterinir to
th.it is having
called from his long a practicing physician.
big ' volplaned into public life.
ADLER BROS Ob 21chlaA at WaiiinxtWi fclnoo 18 4.
TUT3 CTOIU: FOR, UEX AXD
no ys
Edwards Iron Works CI7T OUR PRICE Reinforcing. Channolj, I Reams, Angles. Ran. 21! S. MAIN ST. ri.372ä
i Samuel C Lontz & Sons
The Home of fCIe?:a fwJ Eait Colfax Avcnu
fix
Union Tnut Company
&Mlm Detolt Uaxem with pecUJ
CacHUIm tr til 9 pirncy cl totnr.
Tba IUff Electric 09 S. D. Moran & Son TTfrtsx Rtxlrlc-
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' 1
E1AI
a r
Elf.
Our New Telephone Two Trunk Lines Main 302 ARTIFICIAL ICE CO.
1 -
hi
MONE
Fi
Our loans are mad pvomptlT ) n? on the eecurity you art P
4 ab to give, household goods, planes or live stock, etc J Long or hört tliu. ! SECURITY LOAN CO.
:1
A m rvous man went to his doctor for treatment. "I-d-d-o-o-c-tor," ho said. "I've p-p-pot the n-n-n-nervous jimj.ims;-g-y-uimme sDniethin' for it." "I (diserve," said tlie doctor, "that you stutt r. How much of the time do you stutter'.'" "D-d-d-doctor." replie.l the nervous man, "I only s-s-t-t-u-t-ter when I talk." Tin: prtmis ham: it: "Oh. prune'" This expression usually indicates derision, or at least dissatisfaction, but as it is heard around the offices of the Ohio members of congress these days it stands for pleasure and satisfaction. Kvery Ohio solon has reeived a large and ornate package of California prunes with the com
pliments of Ken. Free of that state.
iThev are "Free" prunes in every sense of the word, as the member is ; not even called on to pay the war (tax, and that Mr. Frei; has been jvery "free" with his prunes is dem;onstrated by the fact that there are ! 4.:5 members of the house and a j 1 nire package of prunes for every i member, to say nothing of the atj t u hes of the house who also are
reveling in prunes, means in the aggregate a large consignment of primes. So it happens that the prune has been the prop and mainstay of Ohio members of oonprf ss durinp the last few days and several of them are ready to testify that they can do more foot-pounds of labor on a prune diet than they ever have been able to accomplish on a regulation i-ourre of ham and epps. A canvass today of Ohio members "f congress to learn their atti
tude toward the prune in the lisht '
of several days' feasting on California prunes was very complimentary to the prune. "I feel like saying 'Oh, you prine eery time I see that bip package, of prunes on my desk," said Rep. James T. Hegg of Sandusky. "You can uuote mo as being strong for the prune." Itep. John I-. Cable, of Lima, made th- following statement: "As: soon as I opened my package
of prunes I recognized an old fa- I
miliar face. 1 ou see. when 1 vvas,of
strux'-'ling along to get an education I belonged to a boarding club which v as organized by the students to pet their meals at the lowest possible cost. In those days the prune was our friend and constant companion. "I owe a preat deal to the prune, ami my feeling of gratitude is such that no newspaper man. however
j i lever and adroit he may be. will i e. r- t me to say anything against j the prune. I am grateful for the j oi porui i:ty you afford me t." pay j tliis flight eulogy to the prune." j Itep. Koy Fitzgerald's expression j was brief and to the point, j "I low prunes." he said. "I could I live on them." ' Hep. Charles J. Thompson, of I etiance, said : "My acquaintance with the prune : is only slight, as I have barely tap
pe ii the top 01 me large pox that was sent to me. If I thought a
vigorous course of prunes would lnjduco Postmaster den. Hays to kick
out of cilice a lot of democratic postmasters who are likely to ruin this
republican admini.l ration I would J
send him my prunes and order half a carload more for him from California."
INI
Says Try Luck on Iinn. Sen. Pomerene's letters to his constituents are frequently characterized by homely philosophy. One of the mysteries which the senator cannot quite fathom is why young men who are without means will drift to the congested centers of population, rather thin embrace the opportunities that await every- red-blooded boy on the farm. In writing to Mrs. lithe I. Rafferty of Madisonville, Ky., whose son's career is in the formative, stape, the senator pupgested that he try his luck on the farm. "I do not understand," wrote Sen. T'omerene, "why more young men do not go to the country and work on the firm In order to earn money to help them through their college courses. It is true that the wage is not always great, but it very rarely happens that they do not have a good home with good board and a good bod, and while In the country they are away from extravagant expenditures and in the end most of them wi'l have more money and better heal'.h than they would have if the same length of time were spent In a shop or a mine or on a steamboat." Is Tennis Fan. Rep. Roy Fitzgerald of the Dayton district is a ter.nis fan of the first order of enthusiasm, and if he has his way tennis will soon become the popular congiessional sport. He has conceived the idea of establishing a tennis court in the inside enclosure o the house oflice building, which has a beautiful lawn and is said to be splendidly adapted for this out-door amusement. As the enclosure is entirely surrounded by
1 live tiers of unices of members of
( congress the games played there
would not only furnish amusement for the players but also for the work-brittle members and their office assistants who could look on through the open windows, and there would never be any lack of rooters.
j On Sunday morning 1 sug?ete4 ; that I take Hobt. jo out for an airj ing; it would afford pot a little rei lief from his care. So our child was j put into Tis go-cart, and I was soon 1 pushing him toward the park. ! On the way I encountered I'dith ' She burst into nn exclamation of j wonder at Itobbie. Dot had dress..,! ' him very carefully, and I was compelled to admit that the little fel
low looked his b.t. "Why, he's simf'y beautiful!" Kdith exclaimed. "I haven't seen him for a few weeks, but each timt he getH better looking." Robbie obligingly "showed off" to the extent of a few words. He seemed to take to Kdith. "I'm just crazy about kiddles." Kdith confided to me. She had never before said anything about this infatuation of hers, so I could mer V murmur absent. "I'd lik to borrow him for a week," she went on. "Dot has fo much else to do, don't you think she would lend him to me?" "Of course, she'll be plad to get rid of him." I replied lightly. "No, I'm in earnest. Don't you think Dot would kt me have him." I'd take awfully good care of him." "Dot might content, but I never would." "Why not?" "I'm afraid you'd vamp him." "Then his father would be saf from my wiles-. I should think that would he an argument in favor of letting me have him a while."
with her husband. :h her child il i.-n'; VCU."
Murphy said he would go
Cor.
r j
Main nnd WaIilntoa . j
lis.. South RenJ. t
Alain 1U
rr
And TV-ado Marks Obtained Irj all Countries. Advice Free. GLO. J.
Ol TSC II. Registered lutcnt Attj,
Sil iii!rhnLp Tlldr Krtufh
I I lend. Ind.
Mrs. Harding a (iardener. The "first lady of the land," Mrs.
Warren G. Harding, has a private
garden, the existence of which is seldom suspected by the thousands
visitors who are now permitted
to enter the front doors of the white house and peek through or over the back yard hedge and iron fence. Here Mrs. Harding spends many happy hours, occasionally entertaining personal friends in the beautiful enclosure. The white house gardens are kept in the finest artistic condition by Charles Henlock, private gardener to the mistress of the white house, who has been on the job here for 3 3 years and who for the last 13 years has been in full charge of the white house grounds and propagating gardens, lie came directly to Washington from Kngland, where he had been employed under the late Archbishop Rarron, superintendent of the Royal Horticultural Society gardens at Chlswicl:. The remodeled "east garden." which is a model of attractiveness, resulted from the co-operation of the first Mrs. Woodrow Wilson and Mr. Henlock. The planting of the herbacious borders and the four panel beds was personally supervised by Mrs. Wilson, who. trowel in hand, actually planted many of her favorite Mowers. Her excellent taste for blending colors was demonstrated In the beautiful and artistic results. Some of the varieties of roses in the gardens arc: Antoine Revoire, Kiliarneys. Duchess tie Rrabant and Ladv Hillington.
U! oirscn i:ii-:n
r
I'.dtti.gs fi-v an awi.i.v f s-ven egp per ('. . I 11 i.T t.i -n.; i: :i t !" La!!i i:i iLc f w !.!! tu,. CaT'ls :ir- f.". a!' I !; n iture t.i adult a'd .1.- i;-i'.d if li.Mt'.g in f, tif '. II"v i. ..ivy !'oI!i;!;s ci;M oii hae in a .ir if ! ft eue f.TJiale er egg e:.!.i :. ! ! f.. 7 etl Tea! ' To rid t'.ie p.-'kx ! I"' y.- ; . :m readily M-e liO'A tear ! : t t: .1 j-r-M'r.itK'n that di kio i:. a Teli : tl.e l.e 1". 1 . !..o- b-eti d. nienstr.it-i t v tt-.' o.n.g l.e-jdta '.. II." teN and 11 !;:- 1 I 4' v t: C .t ft e 5-ifet Mt.d :u": ."M'ln!;.: a I wiy tv t. rut 'ire peu-r.iti !. "f l'-i:gs r- 1 .. V.e:n arid ar.ts i- ! '.' t'i- new .!:.-.v-et lvkv I'.m d- !.:: ti:. "V I. A r.- J 0 k.u - . f P I. (J. i :.ik.-s a
jart. rao-igh ta kill n million bedbugs. r..a h-u. M a nnd nties and at tfc fine t i me destroy tl.elr egfts. Inip i'.d.' f.r thin tj exit wh?n P. I .. ! properly us d. Prep, patent !po:t in every p.i.-kage to pet th peskv devils in the Lard to-gf t-at-pl.ioes anil nave the Jul . Spo. ial H.dtül nnd Ht,l t!-e makes 'lve gallons of P. I. Q your dri'ircisf !..i it er an et It f.r n. t s.ut pr.-pai 1 Upen re-et;d of prie Tiv t:.e u.vl c:.e nb al Co.. Terre Haute. Ind. Su-. of P. I. Q. hau cat: W imlta-t'i-.: sentdn P I. i.V is rover p-ddld. S.dd by Amri.'.in Drug store. lVjitr.il Prug r.ro. south Hend: Id Cai Iartiia.-y. Misr waka : npera . I'rum.n Prug store. Plkhart. Ind. Adv.
Ries Semi-Annual
Furniture Sale Bi reductions on our entire stock "A Ries Sale is a Real Sale'
More Truth Than Pootru
Tili: llVSUlNT C.RAIT When ri'.bert. the Mimtlammer, falls to the fact That the people of Dake Oven. Ore., And other points West -are not keen to invest Their cash in g !d-bricks any more, He ccnu-s to New York on the very first train And enters a broker's employ. And is presently found toting bankstock around In tho role of a messenger boy. And when he is given a million to tote He hastens abrcad on the earliest boat.
When Bertram the Burglar has serva few terms In the hoose-gow at Little Rock, Ark. He finds doing time for his crude form of crime I nothing one might term a lark. So he hurries away, when he's finished the bit That he did for his last little prank. To the street that's called Wall. where the buildings loom tall. And at once c -s to work for a . bank. The next day they hand him five million in bends And ;if you II believe me) he promptly absconds.
p.obbie L- more im-
"Naturally
portant than I." We walkt d .1 few
Then Kdith niid: "You se. m very muc h with the baby. I can't George with a child; I'm
b
wouldn't have
handle it." He'd barn." It was h r habitual ferring to her husband.
fdeps- in silence.
at ea so imagin ? sure he a how to
way ci rrShe never
mentii.ntd him except slightingly. True, ;t would have .'ten dirlicult to jdcture G. orge as a hero, but I did not fee the necessity cd' her continually belittling him. It made me think tli.it she had b. come so fond of i.a-'ging at him
that she could not foivgo the p!
when he w.
out of
oas-her
ure een
sight. Kdith was about to turn down the street that b-d to h r home. "Are yi'U gtdtvg to p'.ay nursemaid tliis afternoon?" she asked. "Th.it d per.dn upon how Iot feels. If I think the r st will do ha r goi.l I may make I. er stay home while J take Ilobbie out." "You're a model husband." She looked me full in the face. "I may be walking up tliis way about half past two."
1 YOUR HEALTH j What That Curious Defect
Color Blind
W
ness Reallv Is
By ROYAL S. COPELAND, 31. D. Commissioner of Health, iNcw Ycrk City
E used to read, now and then, oi a terrible accident where an engineer drove past tho
signal licht and dashed into another train.
killing a lot of people. He may have been asleep in his cab. He may have been intoxicated. More lue! he was color blind. Such an accident Is not common in these days. Shorter hours of labor have left tho engineer free from tho dangers of undue fatigue. The rules of transportation lines prohibited the use of strong drink even before the prohibition act. And the strict examination of engincrnen has excluded the victim of color blindness.
Color blindness has become of Interest merelv as a c
a strarge condition and no s-atisfactory explanation has been found for it
r'
U.'v. COFElANL
iosity. It ü
I..j t
It crops up In unexroted places
When I wj a small boy a cousin lived Jn a house within plain view of mine. "Wo had tad about idnalllnj? at rea, und It occurred to rr." It woulJ bo a gocx plan to devise a cod and arrange a sot cf signals. We had red and blue and yellow and green and whlt squares of cloth. Their arrangement determined the measag In accordance with our code. From above down, rd, blue, yellow, preen meant: Everybody has grn rut. Come over and we'll have nomo fun." It soon developed that mv cousin
couldn't read my !tnals and his s!pnil
mant nothing to me. At first we didn
understand why, hut we discovered h was color blind and was Incapable of Ulllnf red frum green or yellow from blUtf. Vaiiou ther-1e have been advanced to explain color blindness. On theory Is that In tho ae!r.s rrt of the rye the rrtlna ara three sets of color-receiving elements. These am .et for the primary colors, red. gTeen nnd violet, reepectlvely. Each cf theso colors !s recognized because of Its stimulation of th? correspordirig element of the retina. All the other colors are mada .y combination of the primary colors, and they are recognized by the eye becnuse of th? ftlmulrvtlon of two of the three receiving: dement. In color blindness one of thes elemfnta !s lacking. For Instance, red may not be pocognlied at all. and all the combination In which red Is Included would lack this color. Yellow Is made of red and irren. but If the red clement of the retina were lacking, yellow would be seen an green. There Is ncdhlr.fr to be done for one
born eclor bbnd. a I exactly as if IN were born wita a mlssin? finger, or as K he fa!li to cut le norir.il number oß teeth. He simply lacks the color sense, nnd that Is all there is about It. Hy patient training he may become capable of distinguishing lanterns showing th-i primary colors, depending upon th quantity and vedutne of lipht, rather than upon the color Itself, as we do. i Color blindness Is not a disease. It H a raturR.1 defect. Jest as astimat!?n and near-stghtendnes3 are natural defects.
c
THREE-MINUTE JOURNEYS
Where Men Strive to Capture Spirits of Dead Relatives
F
By TEMPLE MANNING
!C the interior of China, where pDerty
bo dire that starvation Is never far
off, there Is carel;.mef ? about deatli
which Is astonishing to the average Visitor. Indeod, the calmness w ith which ja Chinese "will face certain death even jnarchlngr to his execution unmoved Is jan amarlng- thlnt? to most of us of the western world. But what N not so calm2y viewed la the tcdy after life has dajvirted. Many Chinese may not fear death for themselves, but tho average Chinese is
! terror-strlclcen with fear cf the spirit of
j relative which Is puproscd to haunt the
I eld home. Almost beton the breath is Time was when the gentry who live I ru of the body It Is hustled Into Its by their wits i coffin and the lid is swiftly 9hut down Made'prcy on the credulous hick! to prevent the escape of the spirit.
Whose habitat lif-s under wild western skies Whore the bushes and sheriffs are thick. Hut now that tho movies have put 'em all wi?e From Rütte- to the Ited River fork. The grafters are found where the suckers abound, To w it, when he's robed. geLs auspicious and stern Rut bankers and brokers seem never to learn! (Copyright. 1021) o o ni-:.is. Kindergarten beads will amuse the very young child. String them lo--ly on a shoe lace and he i-ure that they are in many colors.
iti:xt i,i:.Tiii;n. To lengthen the life of patent leather phoep. warm them slightly before putting th'-m on for the first time. When ycu do not intend to use them immediately go over them with a good quality of vaseline.
STAINS. Grease j;pots, grass stains or varnish stain? can be removed by tho use of chloroform. This is les dangerous than ether and r.on-ir.f lam-able.
A small rocky island off the coast of New Zealand is the only home of the tuatara lizard, a queer little creature that is regarded by naturalists as a survival of an earlier age in the world.'s history. The tuatara has a primitive bodily structure and extraordinarily sluggish hab;:s. It appears to have no kindred in the world today, but th remains of similar creatures have been found in the fossil rocks. Experts consider that the survival of the tuatara on Steven island is accounted for by complete Isolation and the absence of natural
The lizards have I:v d
TO
.711 if
1U K
V
aces, and tl
e
eiu-mv s.
there for countless
latest reports from th- island, which is strictly protected by the New Zealand government, indicate that they may still be there in aces to come. Christian Science Monitor.
YOt". TOO. can profitably use
Clus
ads.
CUing a "Spirit." It Is this fenr of pplr:ts which Is at ths root of a most surprising custom. When the your men march to vir-and there have ten may wars within the boundaries of China Itself In r..cr.t yeirs-thj hon-.s folks hope they may r-turn saf and sound for mor than V-.c u.ual reason of family arT-ctln. For If the young man should die away from home, how can the hom folks be suro that his spirit Is burled? Sometimes In a far stretch of country there will cono to the cars of a traveler a sound which at first is low tnd then rises In pitch and growj la volume. It Is a most v.elrd noise, indescribably uncanny e.nd pathet:c. If the traveler hears this in wartime h may te sure that news has Just come to this village that some cf Its sons have fallen on the fid of battle. The home folk are calling to the spirits of the dead. They ere tryln to ttrfl.ct their attention cr.d brlrg then near. If a tiry r-st of wlr.i stirs a del leaf, or a spurt cf dust !s blrwn Into the ir, or.e cf the mourners throws a cloth 5ver lt. II has c-i iht the spirit of th lead rtlatlve. Vcu may te ure that -he family ef it is rr-Jierly turld so t will not trouVe trem. Curious ar.d perhaps funny this may seem to us. It Li a very reil ar.d most Important part of the ilfe rf many l poor Chine lava tourrst!tlon.
at Brandon s
Beautiful Summer Frocks
In Sheerest Fabrics In Our Great Clearance Sale
. 3 -r - ' i , i I - 13
.11 .JJ
LOST SO MF.THI N C, ? "Lost and Found'' ads.
Read th-
Pretty Dresses in delightful voiles and mnghams. Prettv stvles; nicelv trimmed. q n Qr In our Clearance Sale $Z,SJ.
WATCH US GROW
S W. Corner MWhtynn St. uul Jcücrco Illy d.
L 7Vis I
TH - liier e es
W orld
u
mteresf
n
Readisiig
A.dl
vera
-O-U-R Daily
Newspaper is far brighter and more
interesting for the advertisements it contains. You get information from them. You learn all about many little things that are of so much personal importance in your life. They keep you posted. They tell you what is new and desirable. Sometimes they keep you from making an unwise purchase by pointing out just the reasons why one article suits your needs better than another, Re ad i n g advertisements helps you to economize. You know that economy is not alone a matter of saving money but of spending money to advantage. Advertising identifies goods of unquestioned value. Cf When a store or manufacturer puts a name on goods and tells you about them you may be sure they are worth while because it does not pay to advertise merchandise that is not good.
"f z? - --'1J
' v-jrV- ;aV- . :.-. ,v..-'iv..-.-,v f- - -i W ' L , -. Z V- v I ' ' V : ;.C7 iV V ''.?; '
An
Make a practice of reading advertisements read them as nezes from the business zcorld -published for your benefit
They icill help you to live better and dress better and make more of your income in every way
TT
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