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es se The Van Owners’ Association has x 3 ‘under consideration now @ movement + 1 to show real ‘extate owners tite im- 4 port attering the expiration | bia PREPARE 10 MOVE: a ae ii ia to have n in the apart | using an enor: | At present all) taken into base-| “Met, 1 Lease Custom Brings ~ Deplorable Condition, Says Moving Association Head Lot pra re ‘i oO. ALL VICTIMS OF ‘ror Saitora” Benerit | ECZEMA’S ITCH | And Realizes $15,600 | By Sylvester Rawling. NEED POSLAM yor” Stone Poslam Soap, 1 THIS W ham’s Vegetable Compound Restored Her Health. Philadelphia, Pa.— "I wa alwavs tired, my hack ) Tells How Lydia E. Pink- | NKING ANO FINANCIAL | f) Liberty Bonds | MINNESOTA NOW IN PORT b Bought for Cash AFTER STRIKING A MIKE WASHINGTON, Sept. %0.-The b hipM Telenhone, Hector Mh Caos } 2. LIBERTY BONDS ws DIDRICHSEN & CO., RP hs vine hey Now vere A Televhone John it T betetin?, =i LIBERTY BONDS, ! ) BOUGHT—CAS!i IMMEDIATLY B larket Prices and Accrue! Interest Pai |. RIALTOTRADINGCO, 1.200 West 34th Street 9A. M tos PM 10 . : a Diego of Sunday _ “I don't believe in war. It is unbelievable to me that any man with a shadow of love for his fellow men should believeinwar. ButI do believe in THIS war! 4 ’ ij ) See page 248 ae wl, : Hearst's Magazine for October i Te back up what he says, Henry Ford is turning out tanks and artillery caissons by the thousand, and steel helméts by the million. ‘As soon as I saw the war situation in Europe first hand,’’ says Henry Ford, “I was convinced that this war could be ended only by crushing the foes of peace.’”’ } To do his share of the crushing, Henry Ford launches every day a complete “Eagle” boat—220 feet long—that spells a new death to submarines. ‘‘ The proposition is coldly logical,’’ says Henry Ford. “To defeat militarism forever we must crushingly defeat Germany. This is our Job as a Nation!’’ EAD “Our Job as a Nation” in Hearst’s for October. It is, perhaps, the most remarkable anti-pacifist docu- ment the War has yet produced. No bellicose publican, welcoming war with willing words, compares in determi- nation with the quiet sincerity of this man who hates war —and sees its grim necessity nevertheless! If you ever wonder whether all your sacrifices are really worth while—whether any peace wouldn’t be better than another Winter in the trenches— whether, after all, we really know what we are fighting for—don’t fail to read what Henry Ford has to say in the October number of Hears ts MAGAZINE The Magazine with a Mission — gee Dect ye Ee 7 a eae TE — ea —_ =