The Seattle Star Newspaper, October 12, 1918, Page 6

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THE SEATTLE STAR 1307 Seventh Ave. Nene Us AGUK OF NEW MEMBER OF SCRIPPS NORTHWEST Telearaph , Entered as Matter May & at the Postoffice et Seattle, r the Act of Congress Marek & Us? 5 41,80; @ montha, $2.78 h out of. Bae per month; & month: nt of city, BSe per month; 3 mont . the per By mail. S year, $5.00, in the State of Washington w or } month, $4.50 for 6 moptha, or $9.00 per year, By carrier, olty, Te | Der week — Published Datty » « SPAN. BMGT If ‘you dont know how LEARN HOW THIS 15 AMERICA This is a sign we believe in. : It points the way to a thoroly American nation. It is a warning to those in America who would cling to the German language, German words, German thoughts and German customs while enjoying American liberty, freedom ivileges. ie his pts spreads over the whole country. It gives good advice to all persons of German birth or German parentage, and should be heeded. Speak English! If you don’t know This is America! : f : If you don’t want to speak English; if you don’t want to learn how, America is no place for you. You should go to Germany where the German language is popular, even how, learn how! hospital wreckers, baby killers. A Regular Mother There is plenty of sentiment about motherhood—but little romance. Essayists and editors w ho write about motherhood with call it a “profes- | freater and more lasting con- tho it is the language of the kaiser, bombers, U-boat crew | THE SEATTLE STAR SATURDAY, OCTOBER WHICH WILL YOU You must choose between liberty and bondage. Two to defend the liberty of free peoples, ourselves included. pathways lie before all the people of this country, and be-! Millions of our bravest boys have taken their choice. fore all the people of all the world, One leads to bondage They have chosen the gun, They have gone “over there” by beneath the iron heel of the Hun oppressor, The other leads/ the thousands and the tens of thousands to fight. The to liberty, honor and justice. doing tremendously more than we can do even tho we Not only must each every dollar. American choose between the They are giving their life two, but having chosen to fol blood! TAKE? PARAARAAPLAPAL ALP PAPL ALL LLP low the path toward ‘liberty, We are not asked to he must choose the vehicle in GIVE our dollars. which he will travel along It is not, to YOU, a ques that roadway. This is no easy tion of GIVING your life or your dollars. It is merely putting it up to you-TO EVERY AMERI path to climb. There are foot- tearing rocks, jagged stones, precipices, and all manner of re and bly tions along CAN—to choose between the ne way, hat, however, two, shouldering a gun for compels the climber to ¢ your country’s defense, or t 3 , LENDING your money. viction of the true worth of liberty. It is much easier to go | down into bondage. One need country will give back to every living soldier as much of his body as the enemy has will be returned to you WITH INTEREST! You cannot lose i, ie tedkide we eouet as long as this nation js free; fight to defend our liberty and the liberty of other peoples,|as long as the Hun is foiled in his attempt to enslave that we must choose between two vehicles in which we may | America, and it is to frustrate this fearful aim of the Han go along the path toward everlasting liberty. We must—j|that some of us must fight and all the rest of us must FIGHT OR FINANCE! janance this. war. PS agent a | Choose: Gun or Bond! Take a gun or take a bond! | Both are vitally necessary to the winning of the war. There aren’t enough of us that any one of us may shirk} oth together will carry us to liberty. his war duty. The Hun isn’t beaten yet. And until he is Without both, OR EITHER, the Hun will win, and we |beaten—decisively and eternally—we must FIGHT or will have come to the low gutter of bondage. in our daily work and life over here, thru the most awful hell of death that the world! generations will mark the shirker and the blot can never be d so that we and our children from now hence- removed, It will stain the shirker forever. Choose, and choose quickly. are going ever witnes i ‘ forth and forever may never have to fight the Huns again! FINANCE, Some are doing both. Soldiers in the trenches __ If you haven’t a gun on your shoulder, arm yourself| are buying Liberty Bonds. They are giving their lives, too. with Liberty Bonds. Public opinion will not tolerate the They are giving their arms, and eyes, and legs, too, They shirker in America. Americans of today and of all future Copyrii 19) By the ‘New vn Enterprise Ass'n, “This girl in what Americans call “hoodoo,” he sald viciously, Hig Imle blue eyes were evil below the bandage, and hin cap, perched umes tainly upon hin wwathed head, ag THE UBOAT 18 ORDERED | Higne wo will rid’ the shin ot ths | TO SUBMER LEAVING | bondoc - om Toe i ME ON DECK yy “Vive Ia France!” 1 erled, If © didn’t have much to do with the sub. ject, but It was the mont defiant phrase I could find to offend him wit! When the war ends the|y. jaa waid that it My success was Instantaneour and complete. ‘The U-boat chief drawled out my sentence insolent f he wished h nyllable to torture me, hen we go up for air tonight,” he ordered, “take the girl up with ou en we submerge, LEAVE HER ON DECK!" The crime of the Belgian Prince My scream s#brilled thru the cabig, The crew stirred nervous! The captain fled, was ¢ before I hurl after him, again and a to remind him of a deed of fiend I think I screamed, not because I feared what the future held for ma, |but because my memory was developing the details of that supreme atrogs ity which only Teutonic minds could invent and carry ow When Bob read the story told by the survivors of the Belgian Prines wan a tale which should be e 1 back and forth acroms the earth until “allied vengeance followed allie letory to Bertinr’ boat commander ed the el, in the lifeboats, Under fire, they wer Then their captain wan sent below torpe Al away 1 Prince. Forty-four mea compelled to board the The n were stripped sot submarine {do nothing else than lie inert not shot away. Some willlot tneir tife belts, which the Huns kicked into the nea y were Fon }and await the conqueror’s have given their arms, their|ot their overcoats and valuables, Their lifeboats were smashed up. Thea heel. legs, their eyes, and these can|th* Huns disappeared down the conning tower, ran thelr craft several But we > a aver be give: . oe | miles with her deck awash and THEN SUBMERGED! Only three meq a - t We are Americans. never be given back to them.) , A, to be picked up next day that they might plead with civilential ur forefathers bequethed a Some immortal heroes will) to destroy the last remnant of kaiserism! precious heritage of liberty to never come back to us. | In just th way, this U-boat would sink slowly beneath my feet, | Fate, at Jant, was tired of toying with me each of us, and we stand Sut to you who LEND a & sl . —e, The men were lunching, here and there, In corners ready to defend that inherit- your dollars, your COUNTY] coi food, canned meat between slices of coarse bread "The emell of Dated : ance—to fight for it on the will make PAYMENT IN filled the place battlefields “over there” and FULL! Every dollar you lend Itrerner untied my hands. They were tiny and cold and white in his, : too pitifully frail to harm even an enemy He placed a cup of coffee in my fingets. | “Drink this,” he said, and his tone was almost eompassionate. Some thing in his volce quieted my nerves. This man was not a coward like hig superior officer, My pride made a new demand upon my courage. Neither Bremer nor any other man should hear me shriek again. (To be continued.) Briere TeGespin. Grr Chiefs of Police | they need it. Dress modestly on the Under Ex-Mayor Gill | Streets, girls, and act accordingly 1@ Dear Mises Grey: Who was act.| Public, and you will never need any gp ogo . er }other protection, ing am — © of Seattle under ‘. MALE OBSERVER. OUTOF-TOWN READER. " os Hiram Gill served more than | She Seeks to Win Back one term as mayor; but I pre The Great Love Dear Mine Grey: sume you wish Information re- t dm teutng ae a capital M and a tremlo tone grandly 7 ” EE garding hin last term. ‘There | tee <p ite ae se ¢ ry cps en | e.8 Top 6 rr rae if a a8 a REED out mere ae gents ft en who served in nt : Actual mothers know it is a job. ; , | Se N\a wt Were four ee niet during |nusband ts im love with another | There are picture mothers—attired in lacy negligees SS \ TE 1} “ , ‘ corp cco Ste ney were | COUN, S86 Ain with Rim whah and bending tenderly above pink babies in silk-lined baskets. STARSHELLS Cc oO. Lae Editor S Mail } Austin N. Griffiths, Louis Lang, | Gevotedly? ” ‘ he Or poem mothers with silver hair gracefully disposed — > Lh eemsie ee tas ae tersions HEARTBROKEN WIFE _ under white caps, sitting, testament in hand, by cheerful me CONCERNING SUGAR |e cer of aber by Be coment on het aoe mist oo ia to ty A ; P, »: Tr of editor 1 rm | w firesides or windows flooded with sunset. i i FAIR EXCHANGE FRary x The tar: oh teve® sue! mayor. eater ee you. Of popular song mothers whose whole business is to) A man wee 8 Lo Sommggen ged have sugar bottles pl ened | ‘ dom continue long. With care { be “waiting day by day” for some ungrateful son who is| (Orr on starting te Prva taurant tables and lunch counters in | Must Obtain | and patience your love will win But what is a “REGULAR” mother? bakery, he m an indignant com- are ould deposit sugar lumps? py, Mie 9 ey? te Canadian) (ne ote wees oe am John off to the army, and Mary off to her typewriter, and) yo. sorry air,” sald the sales, could then give it to the Tted Croas,| to a vote in the United States? | father down to the shop, and little Bill away to Sixth| woman, “I ‘can’t give you another PO AES AD EGE Ee peas The Outcome of ; " bun, & ” | ‘8 Note—Certainly any plan ® not a 9 | Grade, A—and generally makes the world go .round and reese wth eine’ beg preety Day of the Great Discow Faith Cavett! | that * profiteering Pe food | until he receives his final citi- Secret Engagement i | _ stay in its tracks. ly Swe ee re vadag tee-Dring Tae Thur body fell commodities that are being con-| zenship papers. Dear Miss Grey: I am beginning qn A regular mother hasn’t any time to “look the part.” NO HINDRANCE And all of us gasped out our piteous word. poet tha ate: rain patriotio| M } : : oa oa Fogger dg Sa 4 - . ahr » ANCE * + ae attetlh jencrifices, ix worth nile. Under ] > | No silk negligees, or white caps, or waiting-day-by-day for) yiiam Jennings Bryan was eae aie tee present conditions elec persed Mere Songs hi her for three years, Our engage her! 4 erheteies. to letee Os The womanly and brave, th sink a feuet does not care for sugar, altho he Ghimpese | bagi Mere you [ment is necessarily pee because 4 ir isn’t silw vhi f on acc wee sony opaes Monge ge Poaceae sponges ’ 4s paid for it. te ear 5 , 4 Be Generally the regular mother’s hair isn’t silver white {eds eooniad ert nes se, pactant of < Our pity la for those beasts of the herd has paid for it, leaves his portion| . uid like the opinion of one of the Brg Bgl panei | at all. It’s that pepper-and-salt_ mixture Ce ere red ree Oe ne come thie. tale Not one of whom had maniiness to cry with the restaurant man, who tUrD5| men regarding the question of un- ee eres «Ege | white that signifies strength, common sense—and “the) gram to the committees ( siwe - and by hie own oe Moe sround and selis it again). welcome attentions and modest she shows an undue desire for the | | best wearing qualities.” Nor is it smooth and soft—it’s! “Cannot reach Kentville on time ee seers on at aaeeed. Co WOULD CHARGE BY MILE — | Greweing: which has Peen discussed | admiration and attention of othe | Fe i “ i Wash out on the line . . } oh, .|in your columns by the wives young men. I consider that she usually a little rumpled by the rush to “get the family off aera coda’ tha nami eo) ie Who may not now, or ever for all time Star; As a property| Oiler and a sailor. 1 believe the| nes tetrayed my te ber. Aa to work” or “get dinner on the table.” leon sar pei , Excape the xickening stench and the foul allme ich a et ee So sailor's wife “S, W." hits the nail/1 not justified in telling her I have! Nor are the regular mother’s eyes “dim with tears” or ver mind your wash. Buy an precmusigr ati omnes eee ee |tnes.’ "A. private’ company can san| ‘rectly on the head, when she says | decided she would be untrus | with memories!” Please tell us what a regular shirt at our expense and come , ee ee wnsthing Chesper thas thie ‘city, un} that modest dressing on the streets / worthy as a wife, as she has been a& 0 4 " Whose name still sings altho ber tongue ls mute, e oouncae t . + \i@ ample protection from any un-|q sweetheart? D. 8. mother’s eyes would do with tears and memories when Sruapemiin Hk Gane Whose love ix sung on every port's lute, Lay yoni ee. Seatee bab te Te ie aan fiilia 46 Sneed Te pod fails that ly sou . she’s got to see everything from the hole in Bill's stockings Ladies’ Home Journal. | Who of us dares to pity, when we tell ie ae ee ots tas sx like a sport, and you will] must tell the girl so. There | to that new blush Mary wears when Jim calls up to make tas The rosary Of cur wordst on > big tax and upkeep of streats, | Tecelve the a peg pod igo) is, however, considerable poupa 4 2 sur work Ix done, sama eee es page Phim ‘la look at the wo y ‘or her, No person @& date! : 5 7 ( ESSURE! And yet, mayhap, your work is but begun. bridges, etc., that the traction com) Vy consciously fail into three classes: | gaged and not engaged at the And when it comes to dress there’s mighty little silk ve thrown a | Ayo, 80 we ever wonder! Would you could tell Tm Soak deny to wake the -ate je| Coe homes, working or, game time. As noone but your. | and lace about a regular mother. crows to the Ra dag ig Al cing ae y ow i Sra ia ge pay 1s to charge by the mile, ana| #0! 6 and “chickene"—the | « self knows 6 (3s Gupaguuee™ She's satisfied with a clean white shirtwaist with its} ‘her mds to help | Seat teat sreride erebenened yout What beekel ape make the people pay for what they | Miter being only « polite name toe ts eee 4 crocheted edge on the collar (to save the cost of lace), with Big tian: Dunmed t am glories of San Salvador, ee ee eee foolish half-baked kids that think| others as tho engaged to you. / a fresh apron over her “durable” serge skirt, and for jew-| Our boys “Over There” Bravest of scoverera gone before? eaaak ior ae: ager ee ent they have to doll up like a chicken! Rither square yourseit with the els, only her scratched wedding ring, and the little old gold Have the nozzle right ; " ae ‘st vege lto receive any attention. If these| parents and have engage: , ca In the mi of it What the reward across the unknown seas nbn | very foolish little girls could hear! ment announced or give up the aur pals ee ee TON) rhe cal Som foe When onr » shall freshen to that breeze ser Ackens {wie remarks of many” men they| gir ‘There i really no place, | F L— . End of the line is Following the wnke of gr souls wuch as these? roel “RS | pase, they would never have any| for jealousy when you cannot A “« ye ; Editor The t you think , § So if the sentimental “Mother” of the cheap picture ' (Copyright, 1918, N. B.A) that our big business firma would | wither, use for paint their chosen | offer an open promise to her, ? and the poem and the popular song brings the quick tears go nger on the Fourth band | W0U a he Abe Solseuidh theme finda! i to our homesick eyes—it’s only because we have had a a ileal han they are doing if the work or| times hard to distingul j REGULAR mother—and know her as a thousand times more already Le ge en barged " a nig s¢|_ It Would seem to a mere man, |} DISCOVERERS i ! h engine | 9s se Sifea ganecue - oY ne low. ked dr ‘ w : wonderful than these! sh where the firms are putting 11 Egtirvotinge eae spelirs of folly, } BY CHARLES B. DRIBCMAL ; eee Finch Se ‘ emption ¢ « for their employes 1 ~ wd Written for the United Press) {— “ and understand, I do not mean the |} ( e) j ° i j wh their places can and are being modest ¢ but the really low/} In three frail barks they ; Is There a Bond in Your Home? Weve got to fire up, fied by women. Thewe patriots DUY | Omen rey are not Im Keeping with |} away. ‘ : rn + * And get up steam . oe Se . ° srroundings and in cool } ‘9 unkno’ re ; When Belgium was invaded, the 165th German regi- Sead ails Sean on eT Ak see ae eats Sa ___| the working man to take them oft|(h® |, Surronnit the same may |} And #0, one bright October day, ment passed thru Les Communes. The place was so small their hands \be said of summer furs. They cer-|{ A great, New World was 3 . oo, _ ~—— ————) If you invertigate some o! se > that it was only found on the military maps. : Cob Wi nat dine eek ave eset oe ar ldjotic | faa. When found f The soldiers of this regiment set fire to the church SON th 1 W. Jaznes you would Pag 1 taste does not jibe \. cui § vagy * ta ip 3ONDS! 0} in se c . were Ten on certainly would seem that |) Columbus, in your shining 1 and the houses, shot the inhabitants and threw the dead ses a INDS — i € ~~ oT pro Hun ‘nests | gcc ae. te te ween } ‘The world you gave to men} and dying bodies into the flames. Neither helpless youth an urrs on our rousers oe ee |rather than fashion. {In mighty fleets is sailing back {7 nor helpless age was spared, and women shared the same| .T#¥I ig wer wes i aceaeh nah them w anaes ® prude, and like to see |} To Europe's shores again. i fate as men. Think of the poor Bony family. Aged 34.) eee eee een eee nine BY THE KEV. CHARLES STELZLE. r.%. |S re Rerecenes between 8°well } ntrepls snertacta cane San Leanard Bony died; his wife, Alexandrine Vieillevoie, aged) tc these last two or ex in the fall_woods which give a tang to life such es ait | Qressed woman and a sportily clad Leave love and home bebind, )- 24, shared his fate, and Hubertine, thefr 2-year-old daugh-| thr her time of ear | ALASKANS INHOSPITABLE? | Voman. ‘This letter may jar the |) Upon a_ distant, mystic | shore {) ter, was also killed ix Man—Oh, ‘ell soon be ttracted me to the dark-green growth of shrubbery just| Miter The Star: In accord with) songibilities of some of your readers,|} A great New World to find ‘ * rf « ‘ r «| well now. You see, the last day or e my old-time wont to roam the hills) nut i¢ it gets by the censor, I think | Mathieu Renier, aged 52, was accompanied in his| (Vo {t's been a funeral horse I've there's alwaye & thorn to every rose—onty thie time, it was a {S04 Vales of the great north. ex-|7\ | Se ——$—— ia martyrdom by his daughter Therese, aged 20, and his son} been a-serving out burr—no, burrs, for I found them in great variety or form and of clinging bof things interesting. | é cin Oliver, aged 19, and by his friend and neighbor, Noel) Ad and pricking qualities, aa/T rambled thru the brush t We aie acl eel ! ! Ly ; i * GHT wo hey hered me . OK ne » Ky ne ‘ «| Outers, aged 70. ; ; ; es oe boas wha For Tam a city man and much things are to me like buga and ants|! Want to say if it had not been| e e ° er in ; t Jacques Flamand did not die unaccompanied. His wife, How did you get along with the jana things that craw wn one’s neck and up one's trousers. named beforehand, and two or thi e d fe 4 Marie, and his father, aged 94, shared his fate. heavy pe oo a a? I was afraid, too, that somebody might see the beastly burra on my | men wearing badges 2 would not | s { | Another family wiped out by German soldiers started) ot them now.” clothes—and that would have been disgracetul—for a man from the city. | rough, Ver eRe eppepetfer the Yi * n ; bg | nd how was I ever to get rid of the abominable creatures—for by this " be days 0 ome with Daniel Bourdouzhe, aged 76, and Marguerite, his wife,| BF he time they had become almost alive He reaturee—for by this! i, nartner, and have a snack” are 1 es { aged 75; Josephine, 27, their daughter, was also murdered WE GET YOU, SAM I managed to get to the strect car line without any serious mishap, | Marly forgotten | and, to complete the list, the two daughters of Josephine,|. “H«lle. Sam! In uniform, eh? T| excepting that certain black, sliver-like stickers, about half an inch root it wal Dé good-bye to the good). yorty-sght miles east, apd 33 palo definite action to incest | one age 5 and the other 2. The German army had won | thought you were working and sharpened at both ends—and I was generously covered with them— | ld days of cordial fellowship, when | miies north of Seattle, Hes Berlin—| the postal department or | if . r . J d I wa ah; but dey decided I was | began to work their w thru my trousers a hae 7 , | the rich and poor fraternized gladly ” do! » a/| authorities to make a change. 2 io Piss s | rs and became knitted into my Inot the Berlin of Hundom, but aj } great victory over this helpless family. It is true the|in one o' dem nonsensical occupa | socks 4 garments, until I thought I wae being attacked by an; 1" the old days the banker, the/tgwn that the same name| Now come# the Pennsylvanis) son-in-law escaped, perhaps to die another day, but not) ton army putians, armed with tiny bayonet capitalist, the lawyer, the doctor, the| a4 the kaiser’s capital | City aitors’ association with 6 one HELPLESS man, woman or child survived. Gs - When the car started toward town I began the Job which I at first |™#Ner: the prospector, sat down to-|""poriin, Washington, Is situated on|letter to each of the 35 outlet BUY LIBERTY BONT HELVING SOME ht I would turn over to an obliging bootblack or porter, to whom 1|S@ther at a table of split logs and] i. gouth Fork of the Skykomish named Berlin in the United States reais yi ‘ui Husband—Have you 4 your | Was going to,pay as much as a qua if he could remove the bulk of the|%t®, bacon and beans and flapjacks| yor, in King county, At the pri-| | “Call your town Pershing, tae! ‘A ox best to economize this month, Mary, | burrs. and hgrabes and called it good, and) iar election 17 voters from Ber- | 8t ”" advise the Eastern ; ° us I requeste But I became so interested in the attack that T continued plucking, |"' ® hungry man ever passed Our) i) Drecinct recorded their political | men Hi Time to Wake Up! Wife (brightly)—Oh I spoke to| Plucking, plucking—and almost before I knew it I had one aide of one {4or. With this in mind I think the esp si : | With one other exception, Wass” ‘§ ‘ int Ithe grocer, the butcher and the land. | trouser leg pretty well cleaned up. |Yukon Pioneer society owes an! "rH a amall town, this Berlin on| ington state is singularly free Instead of lagging, Seattle ought to be oversubscribing | iord, and got them to put off sending And I argued that if I could do that so effectively to part of my ADO} to the friends, tho strangers! 4,6 Skykomish and Great North-|towns with Teutonic names her Fourth Liberty Bond quota. in thelr bills til! next month-stray | «tothe, there was no wood reason why K couldn't do-it to" all of my| "0, tor the food its iadividue [erm but Just tho same it bas ajother exception is Krupp, of & , straini ‘ : wes . Stories clothen vad the right sticking qualities: aus be }@ food a indivic rm * si s few residents | County, ashington. Instead of straining and pulling to reach the $27,000,-\°""" Tou neo, it. wan really @ tat of my grit members packed home again as for |/MAMS which even its f ees ae at Krupp would like 000 mark, we ought to be galloping along so fast that we) nw So I tackled the Job again the very unpatriotic attitude dis bedi det Gad opabeg potent ir tewn, it| name for thelr town, H couldn’t stop at the first objec q } THE ore we reached the city I waa completely rid of the nightmare of | P!ye4 H. BW. {i said, but as yet no one has|. How would “Wilson” or “Liberty” ‘ > 2 to 2 , ae P ie Aten }| burrs that threatened to spoil a perfectly good afternoo! . hecatiane stabi ected do? : iin the German ae on fa aki rh st be et PILOT I'm guug ageieoot, ee RAISES WIDOW'S RENT {sua aera Sete " serman ar s are breaking down along aR nei eh tact Dal No burrs shall frighten me Editor The Star: I deals | | ) whole West front, would spread dismay from one end of] Ty}i,'0" enilens heavens My oods are « 0 ention to a caso 0 f " § g ame 2 of | Th nh | The woods are great at this time of tho ye especally for your attention to a caso of W Germany to the other. The Germans would. think of the|The nena ot the Maser Puce” |from the city, who needa to have the cobwebs vrushed cut ef tho bear | ‘The writer's mother, a widow with HOW TO DODGE || J ns, ships and men to come as a res re ae Suides each flaming #un And cobwebs on the brair cad than busta On Souk teadaiee |five children, has for two years oc SPANISH FLU d Bowe age amy , ult of the loan, and —_—_—_——- ast lt crcl del Jeupied a house on Washington at | Leach. in William der Grosse would waver. | At the time she moved in, two years Keep feet and clothing dry. nd Seattle can over-subscribe. a nee” | nee ee near WAS Sieh Se tek Oe Pe Ang TAILO! ING CO. : . Cribe. < spel enh ae ey, ri bir gh tigr te ey alone deem pci your nose and mouth RI Oe | If all of us follow the example of employes of 45 local! Bailodhy cna is eans You kd ye | ' : tor inves yeara || 1%. the presence of = firms, we will over-subseribe. These worker: ack Ghee tee: avctiltemmpent JA \2M |naving been vacant for three years the presence of sneczers 5 subs ; as rkers doubled their! vetul tone as Vi before that. Four months ‘ago th Gargle your throat — three adquar for quotas yesterday. They decided to be “200 per cent” Ameri-| 30. Benito Egy OOO again d uy LIBERTY BONDS - ir rent was raised to $22.50 and later|| times a day with a mild antt Hec ters i tan. |"Bo the shelter of (ue land ‘A remnneneerenmmmetiee |to $25. Now it haa been raised tolf septic, if only aalt and water Suits, Coats i i " fi * | | ‘ onth The rT e s I t eglect col : a And if the employes of 45 firms can do this, the rest of | “¥!*, our anen o'er Piandor tietas, | ichneeaptenein ES SaaS SEARS Sab of etter ied thn Sth ity ie yes gy One-Piece Dresses | us can. And put Shy holy ar 1 ause the tenant had put p as much as possible in “4 Probably we _ : ‘ ag in a winter's supply of caal, and it|f the sunshine. if ) y we have heard nothing of the Clown would | Don't get “scared.” 425 Union Street 4 It’s time to WAKE UP! cost $25 to $30 @ hav x. Quince because he hasn't stopped running yet. moved, a, \ it!

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