The Seattle Star Newspaper, January 24, 1919, Page 6

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Coming Home With the Yanks! SEATTLE STAR] 1397 Seventh Ava Near Unten St. wR OF SCRIFES NORTHWIST LEAGUE oF Nrwsrarnns Telearaph News Service of th United Preqe Association As Second-Class Matter Me 1599, at_ the Postoffice at Woah. under the Act cl Congress March 8, 1870 3 ~ Ege per month; 2 months $1.50; 6 ¢ State of Washington, Outside the @ months, or $2.0 per year, By cere! ams ae Petvete Delly by The Star Publishing: Co. Phone Main G8 exchenge he ell AEN SD - ° Are Fought With Social Surplus ' Wars are fought with the social surplus. This is the m above what is required to keep society running. It is is left after the workers are given enough to keep efficient and enough has been put aside to maintain extend industry. ne : This surplus is the beginning of civilization. Until it p man can rise little above the beast. There can be ing of comfort, culture or art. Its use decides the r of civilization. ‘It built Egyptian pyramids and temples. It fostered ik sculpture and philosophy. In Rome it lavished lux- upon the few and bread and circuses upon the many i Middle Ages it built cathedrals, outfitted Crusaders ‘decorated the Field of ‘the Cloth of Gold. fe have been accustomed to bestow it upon the owners and pretended that it was a reward for organi- nd management. use our wonderful machinery and industrial meth- ed so much this surplus grew to the incredible ns that made this war possible. Last year’s war d have swallowed the social surplus of generations | other age. | world now produces so much that $160,000,000,000 | be taken in four years without destroying society.) Tesources and productive powers are so much greater) an those of any other nation that taking in one year a twice as large as the total wealth of the nation at the of the Civil War did not seriously impair our strength. on fe have learned that the financial limit is now off. anything this nation wishes it can have if it wishes enough to use its great social surplus for social We have at our disposal wealth beyond the most vid imagination of other ages. Treasury Department estimates our national in- } at somewhere around eighty billion dollars. We took Elmer—Well, if you think you cau cook, sew and serub floors be than I can, welh—? ea cd 50 LONG, OL’ TIMER one-half of that for war purposes last year and our’ 62 QWat ee TN ny eee A ae ™ were better fed, clothed and housed than ever before. *D'C Pu ae Sn: Nee ee, know now that we can send every child to school ,. pene pen een until they are 18 for less than it costs to main- OF Jobnay bey : sn a standing army. We know we can abolish tuberculosis "53° (34" Ea! in die world ob strife, ling a price equal to“a few battleships. We can), pe a ne eee ae lives of half a million babies each year at a cost, ence tonnes de Ca oe ted by the children’s bureau, of much less than was THE SEATTLE STAR—SATURDAY, JANUARY 25, 1919. iter ‘ STARSHELLS | to kill as many Germans. And involuntary poverty os wii thes ec a Vanish before the application of a smal! per cent of Ans mam.” der : surplus. gg 8 mom mf . De heb Kk and chickadees won't t ne ma’ fo’ po me. ndred H. P. for Every Family malt ope Seng ee ge Mg “ ‘An American engineer says the war made the world goed me wilt grieve when yo" am gone, i a civilization resting on power-driven machines every . Liew, farewell, Jom rieyoo aaa t i quickly translated into a cry for more power. Man's ty to work or war depends upon the power he can nome, and the police of a lot of to the task. The demand for ships, food, clothing,| others pees hitions or transport is but a call for power. Leisure, A woRD FROM Di we tion, ‘progress wait upon power. JOSH WISE Hindenburg has been placed in n’s tools today draw their strength from the energy! You can't get| charge of troops to guard Germany's eastern and falling water, not from the muscles of men or anywhere runnin’ he finds In peace or war the strength of modern nations , around a ring. strength of the mechanical power its citizens wield. : : lions of men could go to war because power-driven ee 2 See Cae WELL ¥ AGER, THIS ISNT THE did their work. These men were moved across wham fohensolinen talks continy ita Wik ci d continents and hurled into battle by similar ma-\aiy. Hump. He always did Ceeree te The military decision finally followed the weight| The difference + ° ife'n bed and rd and ini power. ne age pays any @ bs At r . he t ri ed out . n — r ch American worker wields twice the power of a ae too cold. I had.to find a bed, Ava I of any other nation. Therefore America worked! New York police have opened a don't intend to contract tebe cn rht with resistless force. fivestory club house in Morningside hor name and won't be responsible the fearful strain of war brought power hunger |G"), We con romember nen the for ar Sawer year 9 America. Our machines were too few and there | was right between the lleutenant’s wont. oftice and the entrance to the cells. a a cree fa ee Ped ae i oe ear son es| BRITISH GET WEALTH know that we are peeking thru the keyhole of the 3°? “eporters. Hoping you catch FROM BINS OF DUST that leads to power possibilities. Only the ig- see (Special to The Star by N. BE. A) LONDON, Jan. 25 Engiand vaging the contents of her Fresh eggs may be a 4 but a man can buy @ $1 ra doren and timidity of the many and the incompetence and of the few keep as outside that doorway. silk shirt single line of advertising. But Hen. UP on the ranges. possesses eight tireless mechanical slaves who, if their Canada is unlocking the heat of her The United States is testing “Liberty | of energy. it lignite beds. paper and cotton wool. Spirtt le for airplanes are made from old am Hohenzollern did not watch the old year out. Pill has seen enough i, examining oil-bearing shale rocks and, with all other] old things go out to last him the te. Old boots make fertilizer is, turning to the “white coal” of foaming water reat of hin life. eT ae one @ Our national geological survey has located between 30,-| wwater and Light Jobe Given to - _— 9,000 and 40,000,000 horse power now running wastefully| supt. Youngs,” save a headline. We DAUGHTER OF KING ito the sea. All our heat produced power amounts to less consratulate him on the light jobs HEV yb seems to be looking © Doubling present power will not draw further upon FREED BY BOLS STOCKHOLM rs + 2 Jelena, daughter of King Peter iG still almost boundless stores of coal, oil, alcohol, peat,| icsned are partial tus aoe tems and gas. The peacemakers, after being for months a p: ; is not power to tha ampers the satisfac-| "or they the Bolsheviki. The princess It i po produce that hampers the satisfac-| For"! otbind: - er te ve mina A of wants. Iceland is having trouble again. It is in the grip of nish influenza. The volcano of Kalta is in eruption. supplies are short. The weather is cold. The people 3 r. The counti s bleak, barren, cold. | landers in America are sending help to Premier musson in Reykjavik. America is the world’s helper. This is no new thing, this misery in Iceland. It is only New combination of forms of misery. Only a few y famine stalked. People made flour of the bark . They ate moss. These Islanders are a brave, hardy, generally pious peo-| They are democratic, liberty-loving, yet with all their iligence they cling to homes in one of the most unin- fing spots on the globe. Volcanoes, bitter frost, wild is, lava land, short seasons, all these things they face “and fight for their lives and livelihood. | : ad do people cling to such undesirable spots of Phe inhabitants of Pompeii and Herculaneum knew ‘their peril long before the volcano's fire-streams engulfed —- Naples and the Vesuvian villages of today know ix constant danger. The ancients stayed. The moderns| stay. Why? | Not because “the world is growing small and crowded.” That's gossamer balderdash, not fact. South America, Africa, Alaska, vast tracts in Western America wait the settler. The world still has room for mil- lions of more safe homes in most inviting regions, where the elements of prosperity lie strewn about waiting to be gathered. What the Be ing spirit. of the great w ROOSEVELT The hunter, tiring of the chase, Across the hills and streams, Has drawn his blanket to his face And lost himself in dream, The soldier, scarred and seamed by war, Is wearied of the fight, Nor all the thunders of a Thor Shall break his rest this night. The orator, whose voice was heard Above the crash of day, Now—how, we startle at the word, The Word he does not say. The statesman—he whose whisper rolled Thru corridors and halls, Has sought the quiet, cloistered fold Of ancient earthly vy | The author drops his heavy quill; | What forceful words are penned? The whole world leans to read their thrill And reads but this: The End. —EDMUND VANCE (Copyright, 1919, N A) world needs is more of the pioneer, de And this ought to be one of the legacic COOKE r, | B Ee f a for $9.76 the soil of her rifle ranges, ‘Thou ‘Today we use about one horse power per family. Each) ers sands of dollars’ worth of metal is power equals the strength of eight men. Each family) He Ford's newspaper hasn't a! recovered fr the bullets gathered harbed wire sent i i ji i ; " ry doesn’t have to worry Hin son western front battle were properly applied and rightfully distributed, would | Fy eee ee ee to.000 a yen z crushed into blocks by comfort to all. jand if the paper busts Henry can constructed machine and ut it could as easily be a hundred. The power hunger | tive with the boy version into ste war sought and found everywhere new and limitless} . ae : othing are being An Amsterdam dispatch says Wil- * into new cloth a brown ven bot. and IKI Princess of was With the whole world Ivan Constantinovit Her rolease oat Pe ae manenere=s & 6.0 from the Boleheviki was obtained by for Ex ple Conscience makes cowards of the Norwegian legation j PAGE LETTERS TO THE EDITOR] | { { | AND THE TRADE UNION { { 4 THE INDUSTRIAL UNION © GOB COMPLAINS PASSENGERS BLAMED Kditor The Bur: 1 would like to| Editor The Btar: 1 noticed a cou Fi i i express the opinion of a majority of | Pie ¢ cies in regard ¢ BY THE KEV, CHARLES STELZ the ‘enlisted men’ stationed at the | 10 Benttle fen et tthe taoe tn It in nald that in this country the re fully one amet Hous savy yard in regard | tion of the authorn to the fact tb is maid thi country : piel yin 14! cll Femara) in the past year patrons of the| during the past year in the building alone, on a te nating ttle atreet car lines exercised no| dictional troubler a r ' in helping to keep It was not a quertion as to WHO bape 7 of the enlisted men have hy . | a carpenter, a tinemith, a plasterer tr a) na and now that the war in end:/ is.) nad just been washed and dlair what UNION he belonged to. a \ ¥ € ted outside and inside, that made The contractor wa ng to ha he lone if expect our discharge from active | cr ane eee eee morning union men, and he didn't care much WHICH uniog orvice, All attempts on Our part | are would be unfit for paneer the men belonged to, He was willing to be guided to get any information on this mat éerdida'the rent of the ay, Thane entirely by what the men themselves wanted , ter are met with disapproval wae epittla all over tha ¢ Me yee But the unions couldn't agree among themecives, #@% in nome canes, brig: sentences have |” Ciaue be eeaset ain it became @ case of one union fighting another union been given for this so-called offense. |" aH daiate te Wek Sateen with the result that both the bosses and the meng We believe it is due us, am intel we not cooperate with the street car wuffered gent citizen of ee untr to 1 ractic 0 nis charac Usen a fr a to | compat and enforee the health Clearly, policies and practices of th racter tg lage gage eo gay Tyerrorged not help the cause of organized labor, either in Ay vcgy holly ¢ ‘3g sor eed re . A MUNICIPAL MOTORMAN mind of the none ae pi enti uiiee: 98 Sea , war “i, we were al Jurisdictional strife is cauned chiefly by the minuteg ne do anything that might be of TRIBUTE TO DRY ARMY STELZLE subdivision of Jabor and the close or; vation of the ‘ OOF OEY, OO | nie Bis Mian “Steoh | gre | Workers into separate unions in a particular industry which were once ; soe . ee es ch ed of the bra dee ie and herote included in only ne. . - q cess sate Wei at the tnon| encritides tint hive taken place is One remedy for this situation in the organization of workers by pomions. Pree OSE SOE SN og Tk seed, ‘Thess {INDUSTRIES rather than by TRADES here have jobs waiting them, regard sopalig iaek geased. ‘The A good example of this is found in the Miners’ union, which is com lean of statements to the contrary. | ™ A uae es ren gh posed of all men working in a about the mines, whether they use the Our meals or chow, ae we call 10.) Sh pda Pree netic an pickax, or drive mules, or run engines, or repair machinery, or attend are getting worse instead of better, !F . + ¢ . to electrical appliances they were never anything tc att ATES 60 Oe BrOn On They all belong to the Miners’ union, And this Is one reason why ag about. The only time we get “My, with its countless heroes, that Miners’ union is probably the strongest union in Americ ri a oe Se ol Fore 5 gra pre gery Be It ian't fair to hold the bons responsible for the stubbornness of work ert I have never known a man “Pajorith ag the fa Cronduldes |. ue are unable gree among themselves, Jurisdictional differ- to stay in camp and eat the govern. | 0f bitterest eriticlam, sarcasm, Jences should be hammered out in the labor hall, not before the public, oy ment chow. when he could go out oo oo sar After year. | even before the boss side and buy his own moa umpalgn after has ntoor Ive like a family quarrel, When we're alone, in the privacy of oup When the armistice was signed, firmly at the fron ae oh we. ae xpeak plainly, tho not unkindly; but to outsiders—w. we all expected to get more liberty | Pisces and in low, tll at last, in thin | Nomen, We Mah Sete Mo may about our friends what we ourselves and have a few of the restrictions | fina) grand sweep, it has “gone over |i) in effect at that Ume removed. 1/ the top” to free an outraged woman, |*00U% ie esssmasdabd — — ~ — have belonged to the same company |h0ed and a crushed and blighted | practically all of the seven months | Childhood from a@ tyrant whose in-| T have been in thin camp, and we|timoun deeds blacken the pages of| are getting leas liberty than at any | Mistory | UUme since entering the service All, MAIL! ye white-bannered |} 1 am writing this to you, knowing se | that your paper has always atood for huldrene voces ““*°F*)) — Comments, Views, Thoughts, Smiles and Throbs sil febonaiie i ask that dren's voices }? - ou use your infiuendd in eur bel The gates of heaven are |} Gleaned Here and There A thoro investigadion will. show and the flood tide of a mighty |} > ——__——_ harnony echoes from shore |} BY HEBA he at ) Ah, ye warriors, ye have brought | 5 Among the many imp and — = heaven so near that it seems but a times startling changes wrought WOULD LIMIT IT TO NEEDY , sometimn: Lohengrin egeiredbgen 1 (A a New Appraisement | fi"popuiar thought by the war, none, | Gitor pe Star om & . L. G. LINKLETTER. perhaps, will more certainly gain the ) citizen, who has and always have born Americ than the of view of Labor’s Worth interest of observant people led around w widespread shift in point me Interested In polities RAPS THE Y MCA Editor The r as taken place with reference to the intrinsic and relative value and social problems. Note that y the letter of O. L. « | pape en up the ery of “ . 3 nical labor. Thousands of eyebrows have been raised during the the aeldiere g0002 ure, give Mn, ee carn over the high wages demanded and obtained by skilled oe . hs deserven it . : kere; and to justify the surprise almost universally manifested for a , , me it became quite the fashion to compare, for example, what a carpenter ‘ t $300 would co: fruit was OO | way getting in Wages with what a shop assistant was receiving: what a one and onefourth billions of Grower®' | hiwcksmith was getting in comparison with a bookkeeper; and what a a big sum, raved to the liocomotive engineer was receiving in comparison with, say, a traveling > spend in any way that | gobs, thru the amar bo: of the American In speaking of vies, mun Those who lifted their eyebrows, shook their heads, and indulged in one-fourth billions | ale and other en Inment»—they | dark forebodings with regard to the future, because people who worked own were donated by different film cor-l wien their hands, in the ordinary sense, were now obtaining remuneration each and every one, with | Porations. Hut by the time we maw! caual to, and often greater than, the compensation allowed those whose $200, would be a them they were so old that nost of) work was of a mental character, in the ordinary sense, had fallen into of juatior, however, | the Kobs had ween them before enter line way of thinking and believing that, somehow, the man in the office ng {eliows have the na All entertainme vd be as atter of course, entitled to more consideration than the man American army furnished by talen: who donat-|\y notwithstanding that, as between the two, the latter did ' tt extent of |¢@ their services. Does it take 4/1), and perhaps the more useful day’s work. It is to reasoning ‘ many time fn many | ™ or two m foliare « that the man in a natty business suit is entitled to They were shy in ways, men e ans of livelihood than the man in overalls that @ tal, moral and physical, and were arge percer of the labor disputes of the past may be attributed Some had only a ne there has, from time to time, been either a silent or an expressed pin fiele vision of wociety and t | protest, among the very large and important element of the population world, and their army exper bies, games, telephone that ix not engaged in productive manual labor, against further advances haa been a higher education to them. | literature free. @ in too bad thatlin wages to another very large and important element of the population Others never had km eo, | We wou id not get the use of writ that is so engaged. self restraint or social duties and got | tables built with government lumber Almost without exception, In the past, demands of the trades for nome very beneficial enlistenment. | 8nd made by gob carpenters Wel increases have first met with resistance from employers, and then with Others are actually money ahead, | 80 Ket free phone service in most! moral resistance from the employed claases in other than the mechanical For instance, those who had home-|@ny store in Seattle and general manual lines. An illustration of this may be found in the Booka bet mg to the American Li wteads had their army pay and got railroad labor controversies of recent years. The railroad boards of n valuable homestead duty besides. /Prary association. Free games—let| directors, the railroad executives, and the high-salaried railroad officials Some had been accustomed to short| Mr. Erickson show me one gob whOl have almost invariably opposed demands for wage advances by the nd uncertain habits of working and has played a free game of pool in the | shopmen, the trackmen, and the trainmen. and it is a fact frequently vome never did save any of it, any-/Y. MC. A. You can play checkers. /taxen ax indicating want of sympathy that the general administrative and way. Perhaps those fellows ought) Which, I suppose, were donated. by | ier forces of the lines are seldom or never associated with organized to be presented $200 and nome one. The Y. M. C. A. was nev-| in appeals or demands for wage increases. When economists of a they had not jer Known to give anything away UN-| certain school are, as now, in search of a clinching argument against the On the other hand, there are thou. | less it was ated by some one else. | povernment control of railroads, for instance, the first point they raise, sands of Americans who got over The best niy organization I*/ a4 the point they cling to the longest, is the fact that under government who were in the scrap and who are | the American Red Cross, control the wages of railroad workers have been greatly increased. It is Incapaciated for becaune of \ REGULAR GOB. |. favorite argument among them to point to some worker in overall. who wounds. Others made supreme rac is now receiving higher compensation than some chief stenographer or rifices and left dependents. McADOO FAILED well-dressed accountant who is handling important detail in the executive Would The Star have the patriota| Editor The Star: I am a reader of | Creicen who made good share the same as| The Star, and take notice what has In Chicago an inquiry has been made with the view of detérmining the ones who fimply got a few)been said about the railroads and/ whether or not the wage scale In one of the great industries is Tow, fair, weeks’ or a few months’ vacation | What « good man Mr. McAdoo is and) o- excessive. In an effort to obtain a basis for calculating what ie a with pay and free entertainment | ¥? tone, raising wages, 40d | reasonable wage, certain experts in handling merchandise have been thrown in? Is it not a fact that the | how money was p Out I |questioned, One of these, a clothing merchant, was asked, the other day, propaganda of $300 to all alike| back p Did Mr. McAdoo attend to| concerning prospective prices for wearing apparel, and he gave the. | emacks harshly of the “divide it ail me cee nat (he back | information that dealers were buying on a falling market. Presumably, of the Bolsheviki and 0; he Gk 4 the aim of one side in this inquiry ts to show that, with the end of the and the release of wool, bringing about a decline in the price of that % railroad man many who has received o one of Iam a working man and ardently y & part! commodity, the cost of clothing, and of living, will be lower, and therefore, desire a better world to labor in. | of the back pay. Where ts our back line need of high wages will be leas pressing or, perhaps, will no longer # We will never get it, tho, by falling | Pay for last May, 1918—lost in the | vice for all the Boisheviki stuff no-called | "now ot ree, this is begging the question. What labor is worth, not labor leaders” are putting o T hope the present director Reneral| ine price of clothing’ next summer, is the point that interests both the everywhere. It in rotten, and will) will find out why we do not get the! cnniove and the far-sighted employer. Labor is undergoing an appraise- emash up unionism as quickly as| back pay, so we can buy more Lib together independent of the old question of determining on how nything can _ | Sehr bone. gta. Shake hae Este @ 208 n allowance it can manage to sustain itself. It is being appraised . 4 give the soldier one and| said in the papers about week tee clearly at its intrinsic value as a commodity, Its value is being irth billions, two or three bil. haa boon Gone t at has pF Aim ired by its earning capaggy. It is no longer being marked down 1 f it can be done in a way that | dor Abe Glin WAEmeeasS aaa, because it is in overalls; it is™being marked up because it is a prime will rehabiiitate him and stabilize | air society, and I will wear necond clothes in order to buy the neces bonds to put it over e of the greatest industrial leaders of the country, and of the times, have long since prociaimed their conversion to the newer and fairer sary methog of apprasing the value of the labor that has helped to make great However, to indiscriminat i Rev. |industries possible and prosperous. Bonuses and profit-sharing are no out $300 ax a queationable ve . nger novelties. Nor is it any longer an old thing for employers volun- oken, resulting from the successful | M. A M tth jtarily to raise the entire scale of wages for their workers. The other framing of inister _ professidna a . atthews a well-known motor company, of Detroit, Michigan, which had framists Is stuff that vill bear fur ; formerly voluntarily advanced the minimum wage of its force to $5 a thor investigatic ote bored ope will preach a sermon day, increased it to $6. By this latter act 26,000 men were affected, and to any discussion nu pet sat os Sunday morning th statement made by the principal owner in the concern expresses a From a union J 2 sentiment that is widely prevalent in America. “This increase,” said he, other ide nioniam than Duncan: | entitled, eeig? : ° ota thes os is only a just reward to the men who remained with us during those jem and colsm, an¢ 18 * hustling days,” referring to the war period. And he added, “I hope mf yo Bee And he ed, ope the means of pmenting on it mea CLEFT FOR ME |time will come when every man in the company will own his own home." ron wa op over eran Le for | : | If a nation estimates labor at its true valwe, respects it for its worth, writer, 1 7 ' 12 in In the evening he will jand rewards it for its loyalty, there would seem to be left no excuse or surance is p up, and his folke 5 i ‘oom for anarchis' “hris Science Monitor ntl take: geod: Ube of the tones discuss the subject, ee ere ees ee eee A. * It is impossible to take very seri ously the warnings now being put in circulation that Bolshevism is grow ing into a first rate menace here in x. America, In Russia, in Finland and | Poland, Bolshevism has made head |way only where the economic conditions of the masses were intolerable. In Germany and Austria the menace of Bolshevism nees and recedes |as condit of employment and of the food supply grow worse or better, If economic conditions here were now extremely distressing, we should have to be on the lookeut for a serious Rols ist movement. But where the evidence of unexampled economic distress. Y ent or prospective? Of course it is well to prepare against unforeseeable contingencies, But the to prepare is not to enlarge our jails or to perpetuate our odious ¢ laws or expand our already hypertrophied secret service, but to »p every possible method of placing the individual worker where he can be useful and happy. There is more security for us in the employ: ment service than in the secret service. There is more security for us in i well-organized scheme of relief works to obviate the evils of an uneni ployment crisis than there can be in jails or standing armies, Of course if Bolshevism fastens itself upon us we shall have to look to a cure. But just now we had better be looking to prevention, and prevention means keeping up the social health and good spirits.—New Republic London’s Heaviest Loss in Air Raids Was $10,000,000 (Special to Star by N. FE. A.) | The greatest loss of life occurred LONDON, Jan London suf-!on June 13, 1917, in the first of the fered $10,000,000 damage by the Zep-| daylight raids, when 147 were killed “SYRUP OF Fis” CHILD'S LAXATIVE Look at tongue! Remove poi-! sons from stomach, liver | and bowels Where Bolshevik i] 4 CHRISTIAN | | Ideas Will Spread MANHOOD ON TRIAL Elaborate programs of music by quartet of artists and vested choir. You are very cor- dially invited to our services, | way pspiona ldeve FIRST PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH eventh and Spring pelin raid of Sep r 8, 1915 and 432 injured. In this raid 120 TAII ORING CO. This and o' facts concerning the | children were killed or injut Accept "Callfornia* Syrup of f° numerous raids which could not be| ‘The Strand theatre was hit by a Figs only—took for the name Call- published during the war are now be-|bomb in one of the faids, while Hered fornia on tho package, then you|| Mfleadquarters for | coming known ‘Terry was appearing in “The Scarlet lare mute voter Child ib having ‘the ; ‘Tho greatest damage was done in| Pimpernel one was injured, best and most harmless laxative or | Suits, Coats and warehouses, and the loss of life was/and there was no panic. ‘ physic for tho little stomach, liver G slight—but eight or nine killed.| On March 7 more than 400 hout p | * arch 7 more tha uses and bowels, Children love its de-| One-Piece Dresses Bombs fell close to the Bank of! were damaged by a 600-pound bomb, |'clous fruity taste, Full directions | for child's dose on each bottle. Give it without fear, England, which was evidently one of the objectives, and the Tower of Lon- [aon narrowly escaped destruction, Tt was in this raid that M Lenora Ford, writer of the song, “Keep the Home Fires Burning,” was killed 425 Union Street

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