WHAT TO COOK AND HOW, m www ww winfi ww A UliLU HAILS U1L. oil nun nit in paii tALUillLL, riLLO rUK, Klee and Cheese. UVER AND ROWELS rice. 3 egg-whites. Givo "California Syrup of Flea' cro, slckr feverish. , . , constipated. , liook back at your childhood dave. Remember the "done" mother Insist, ed on castor oil, calomel, eatharltcs. How you bated them, how youfouitbt against taking them. With our children It's different. Mothers who cling to the old form of physic simply don't realise what they do. The children's revolt is well founded. Their tender Insldes" are Injured by them If your child's stomach, liver and bowels need cleansing, give onlv de licious "California 8yrup of Fis." Its action Is; positive, but gentle. Millions of mothers keep this harm less "fruit" laxative" handy: thev know children love to take It: that It never fails to clean the liver anA 3 cupfuls boiled 1 cupful light cream or rich milk, 3 teaspoon iu is If butter, 1 cupfuls grated American cheese, cracker-crumbs. Butter a pudding-dish and sprinkle with cracker crumbs. Place the rice, which should be warm. In a bowl and beat till very light. Add the egg-whites whipped till stiff, and beat these to gether. Spread In one-tnira or fne rice, sprinkle thickly with one-third of the cheese, dot with one teaspoon f ul of butter, and sprinkle with little cracker crumbs. Repeat till there are three layers; then pour in the cream and bake thirty minutes in a moder ate oven. Oatmeal Bread. 1 cupful rolled oats, cupful molasses, 1 teaspoon tul salt, yeast-cake, bread-floor, 1 pint boiling water. Pour the water "77's" BOOM PUNCTUATES GUNPIT .SERMON Hoys at the Front Re fuse to have Their Sabbath Service In terrupted by Crash ot Hun Shells Sit In tent, Listening to Homely Phrases of itinerant Evangelist Who Had Come Far to Talk to Them. P bowels and sweeten the stomach, and OTr the oats, then set aside In a cot- mat a leaspoonful given today saves ered dish till luke-warm; add the sick cnna tomorrow. ..A.BlJ your draIt for a bottle of California Syrup of Figs." which has full directions for hhi kii- molasses, the yeast-cake dissolved In a little warm water, and a cup and a half of bread-flour. When this is spongy, add the salt and enough flour to make a dough stiff enough to lift in the hand. Let rise till double in bulk, cut down, and turn Into oiled tins. Let rise again, and bake about three-quarters of an hour In an oven I not quite as hot as for white bread. This makes two loaves and if started w siaases li tne doctor advfaea about two o'clock. jwu io no so. . . . Ke ana ror rrown-uos plainly on each bottle. Beware of counterfeits sold here. See that it ZffSSiJglX. r other kind TO KEEP YOTJR ETES tS GOOD cxjJTDrnojr. Don't use your eyes in a . W-I i ...... - " Aiiccenng ugnt. ' Hav the light shine on your work or book nbt In your eves. Hold your work or book: li or IS incnes rrom your eyes. - no your eyes with dirty 'Do?1? People's towels, wash cloths, handkerchiefs, etc. . Have tor eyes and granulated lids treated promptly, and as Ion? aoctor thinks necessary. y muay vjv xrouDie, see a doctor at once. Don't let any one but a doctor ex amine your eyes. Baked Kidney Beans. 3 cupfuls kidney beans, 4 large onions, 1 pint canned or stewed tomatoes. tea- spoonful pepper, pound fat salt pork, 1 tablespoonful sugar, 1 table- spoonful salt. Soak the beans over night; in the morning parboil togeth er with the ' onions. Pat into the beanpot and stir In the tomatoes, salt, sugar, and pepper. Bury pork in the beans, having water barely to cover. Two hours before the beans will be done bring pork to top to j brown. Bake about rive hours in a slow oven. Feather Gingerbread. cupful sugar, cupful molasses, cupful melted lard, U cupful sweet milk M, Don't use poulUees or tea-leaves. 1 mnfni nnr miiv t nnrni nnn -1 - ff . . I " " , - - we m Bee I teaspoonful soda, 1 teaspoonful eln- Bt careful of your eyes during- and lonftii rtnr l weii.wton. -w- scanet lever ana measles, sift together the drr inrredlentai I hi And all that rmIn art A Ka t in tha That TrrfhU HVk. I . . ' . . ; if . - . . ; i uour-mixiure. uaae in a sinzie iav- , mm. . nyae,-rtomestead .Michel . , - writes: ! had that .rrihiV h,,v! pan in, a moderate oven for ebe and tired out feeling, scarcely j about twenty minutes. muim xo o my, woTK, but find by I Celery Savory, 2 large stalks cel- uiHB- U.ey aaney Vlllt at I SOOn -r- l 1.rr nnlnn 9 rrn ,n-r- zeei.like a new person." Foley Kid hey Pills help the kidneys throw out poisons that cause backache, rheu matic pains and aching Joints. J. c, .. ? BLASTEVa STtlXFS. 2 tablespoonfuls butter. Chop all rather coarsely and fry slowly in the Butter till tender. Serve with steak. Fish Hash. Pick up any left-over fish, being particular to remove every bit of bono. Have ready twice the amount of fish in boiled potatoes chopped fine, mix well, add a cup of BY MAXIMILLIAN FOSTER ARIS, Sept. L The gucpit stood at the end of a little vi. artfntlv hidden by a camouflage of interwoven branches tnrine.1 tnto an arbor overhead. In the midst of this the gun, a blunt nosed howitzer, squatted like a toad. Its grim, significant viclousness con trasting strangely with the quiet of the green fields and the thicket sur rounding it. The day was Sanday. There are no Sabbaths in this war. The day was Sunday, trae, but it is the way of war that yon do murder on Sundays or weekdays, seven days in the week. Remember ing this, it was queer to see what was going on In that gnnpit. Fifty ot sixty khakl-c!ad boys were clus tered in the slight depression. Some sat on their bunkers, rerting their backs against the gun-carriage. .Others stretched themselves on the trampled earth and there were some prone In the grass at the gunpit's edge. War may cot stop for Sun days, yet these sixty boys were there for Sabbath worship. - CIRCUIT-RIDER IN FRANCE The preacher stood at the center of the pit. He was a man of fifty or thereaboutsi-tal spare, angular, with grizzled hair and stooping shoulders a plain, awkward fellow a man of the people. Three gen erations ago, any Sunday morning, you might have seen one of his kind, riding his rounds in tha back woods region of some Far Western community, bent on carrying the Gospel from one ontlying congrega tion to another. This was what this man was doing, too. His type may long have 'passed in America, but In Franco that Itinerant evangel, the circuit-rider, seems to have come into bl3 own again. This one had ridden far to-aay. J He had come up from behind the I lines, making, his way to the front by railroad and army truck. Tbtt last few miles of the Journey he did afoot,' trudging with his pack . and bedding roll along a shell-swept road unsafe for any vehicle. As it was. every now and' then a shell would ebrae trundling over the cret of the hill nearby and fall with a flat, clat te:ing crash in the fields alongside. The preacher, however, had not seemed to think of that Tho small leather-bouDd Volume In his hand Cts book of texts seemed to occupy him more. It was a serious business for him this business of his Sunday text. He must pick one appropriate to the occasion. UNIFORM DUST COVERED His congregation rose as he came among them. His uniform, the same as theirs, was rumpled and dishev elled, too. Dust and mud covered it. Dust, too, covered his face, the dust of the roads he had trudged that day. As for the man himself, link and ungainly, he stood there fitted with awkward shyness. One would have said, certainly, there was nothing very heroie in his looks. But the boys In khaki did not seem to think of that Most of them came forward to great him person ally. As he stretched out his hand to them.' the mussed, rumpled, uni form gathered In ill-fitting hillocks on his arms and shoulders. There was nothing very smart, very swag ger, about that uniform. It looked as if its wearer .often had slept in It. On the right arm blazed the lied Triangle of the Y. M. a A. -Hello, Doc." the boys in khaki said to him. "Hello, boys." be re pllet TALK COYS' LANGUAGE One dow crt r?Tr.etr?lH-r the tsxt he gave that day. The preacher, in fact, lacked much that would have made him prominent and. pnular . say, a New York or a Chicago congregation.' ' However, be had something about him thnt many an eminent -divine might hae aiven much to possess. What it w one cannot say readily, but all he til J his hearers seemed vividly to' com prehend. He talked to thea in their own language the lunrwajre boys can understand. They did re wrig gle or sqvlrm or scuff!e their feet as boys do in church at home. They sat intent. As I say, I do not re member what the text was he choae that day. There was an Interrup tion Just as he uttered It. The shell It was a 77 came by way of the woods a mile or more be yond. One beard it coming before It struck. Where it hit was fifty yards or more from the guaplt's edge. Having flnlshcl the text, half of it unheard, the preacher's face turned inquiringly toward the spot where a shower of earth, rocks and other debris had ascended skyward In a sudden belch ot Same and smoke and dust. The crash that came with It shook one's teeth but the preacher seemed not Jarred. As rocks and earth came thudding back to the ground, his inquiring eyes turned again to his congregation. Some of the boys had stirred ab ruptly. One lad at the edge of the gunpit had gone rabhltllng over the crest, and now was hidden from view. The preacher smiled, his bony feature exprecnlve of whimsi cal humor. Crrrrh Blast budded another helL The Han evidently was feel ing out the range. . "Boys, you know more about these things than I do." said the preacher, "hsll I go on or wait awhUef" . likimf Another shell. This one. though, was further off, "Go on. Doer shouted back tho hoys. On doe not recall much of tho sermon. It was punctuated at inter vals with thoee emphatic exclama tion points. On not accustomed to war's alarms listened more to thoeo resounding 7Ts than to the Ubcred. homely awkward figures of speech falling from the preacher's lips. Bat between times it was evident that the others, those boys la khaki, lis tened. An ot them sat there Btm intent. Not once but halt a doaea times the preacher had to pause, warned by the ripping clatter of a bbr one. tearing by doe at hand. More than once. too. on of them exploding la the field alongside, Cinglac its splinters tnto the gwaptt. ASKED TO COME BACK When the preacher's talk was fin ished, he picked up his pack and bedding roll, his book ot texts safely la his pocket. One by on tho boys in khaki cam op to bid him rood bra. "So long. Doc" they said to him. "Com again soon, will jour "Yon bet, boys," was tho reply.. Up the road as he hurtled along to the next place a dugout la tho trench the shells still wer bant ing ta the fields. The preacher still did not seem to heed them. -Yea." he chuckled, "I always tefl the boys they know more about those things than I do. Thai's so they can light eat it they Ilk, and not seem impolite," . Then he smiled anew, this tlm at the dlstanos. "Qneer. tal dry always stay. Thy waat somees to talk to them, tbos boys. K'i of pathetic too. Iv got a c&c; i of boys boys of my own. yom over here la the treccbe. Tl&ra what set tarn to thinking. I was. dered if they had anyone to talk ta. and that coal to wooder who u talking to all lb other toys, so 1 cam along ." JUST A BUSINESS UAJC My preacher. I cam to tsj tt was not even aa orOaiaod praaceer. II had been a bwaiaoa acaa la a Mlddss Western town, "It's a great work." he said. "cVj I wish sometime I could sesk a IltUe better. It's woaderf ol ta wv ta boy like) someoa c txlt them, It don t seem to matter r-J what a f.Uow talks about; err craxy to bear him, Maybe ft tr.ii 'em a Lttle nearer home," I looked at him la the dvrk. C- forgot for the moment his cxrx.': .i cess, that and the aalst aaccV nes ot his spoech, Many farms men, women too, are over here tak ing to the beys. The Y. M, C A brings them over en every ahly; ttt about this oae maa was tcethi.-g I say suy ooe woald ft t hn It was the esalUthm ct slms r-r enaess. la the dusk, as he treUaa along, his face eecmed to shtaa So tha circuit rider t U ceo into his own Again, , tetnttp-ptininj powder Is put up in Stick bt on and a half br elrht A-V. .-. Imfllr m. IIHTa owl in 1nlA and narnlev locnes. adoui e oi taese com in a i ' - d-tonnd htA.Hi t m1!t icn- aeason, with a few bits of red pep- LVTERESTTXa ITEMS. Getting Together. The ehurches representatives from the Massachus etts Agricultural College, at a luncheon in that city. All ate the Uted that ait It-inch stump will re-lper "pllt tablespoonful of butter in j hope to participate in the get-togeth-'new dishes and pronounced them ex- tjtre 5 sticks of powder; a 24-inch, I aoo in tun ana luwier movement mai is expeciea o v i.v.. . 1 li.t... ..'I until well browned. Serve very hot, I materialize after the war. ' ' inch, '20 stickl, etc U the soil Is loos and sandy, one-half more of the powder win re required. The powder works best when the temperature is about 70 degrees Fahrenheit. It you are to us it In cold weather, find some method ot keeping It warm that ooe not lnciud fire say the ma nure pile.4 Always remember that powder is highly explosive and re quires careful handling. Make a hole beneath the stump and put the p6w- tter as nearly as possible beneath the center of the stump. It has more ef feet Whea th SOU Is weU wet, but In Wet plaees, where th, soil is satuc a frying pan, add th fish and toss until well browned. Serve very hot, Meat Patties With Tomatoes. One pound ground meat; add minced onion and parsley, salt and pepper. one-half loaf soaked bread, one egg. Work together and make Into flat patties. In a dish put one can toma toes," one large enp water, a little salt and one-half teaspoonful sugar. Lay patties in and bake or simmer one hour, then thicken with flour. Serve with small flour dumplings. Cocoanut Cookies. For cocoanut cookies, cream four ounces of butter with a cupful of sugar. Add a table spoonful ot milk, halt a cupful of grated cocoanut, a beaten egg, a tea- er movement mat is expeciea io materialize after the war. A world conference of faith and order is already being planned, and among its English sponsors are none other than the archbishops of York and Canterbury- All creeds will bo asked to par ticipate and be fully represented, and a serious effort will be made to find what, it anything, keeps them apart. When It comes to casting up the good results of a frightful war the unification of the world's churches may have a shining place in the record. Cottage Cheese Luncheon Repeat edWhen the department of agri- aVedV let th wrappers remain on the "Poonful of flour and a teaspoonful culture opened the national cam- vtlcks of powder Protect th Children. . Children are aa likely to get the smp ana influenza as grown-ups. Foley's Honey and Tar gives quick relief from all kinds of coughs, colds, - croup . and - whooping cough; covers raw, inflamed surfaces with a healing,' soothing coating; clears air passages, cheeks strangling, choking coughing. . Contains no opi ates,, J..C Perry. ' GOVERNMENT WHITEWASH. To make government whitewash, slake a halt bushel of fresh lime with boiling water.- After it la thoroughly slaked, drain 'the liquid through a tin sieve and add seven pounds of tin salt previously dissolved In warm water; three -pounds of ground rice boiled to a thin paste and stirred in boiling hot; one-half pound bolter's whiting and one pound of glue pre vicrutly soaked In cold water until swollen,' thea melted over a fire. To this talxtur add five gallons of hot wsxer, stir wen ana let stand for a few days, keeping it covered. One plat of government whitewash will cover eight or ten square feet and Is exceptionally whit and durable for outxldawork. It should be applied of. baking powder. If this amount or flour does .not mak a batter stiff enough to roll, add more flour, and a teaspoonful of baking powder. Roll thin and cut with a cookie cutter. Sprinkle cookies with sugar and bake brown. Marshmallow Rice Pudding. Take cold boiled rice and add sugar, spices or flavoring, with a beaten egg and milk for an ordinary rice pudding. Then place on top a dozen marshmal- lows which have been soaked in milk for three hours and bake until a light brown. scajlopea Salmon. Butter an earthenware baking dish and cover the bottom with a layer ot cold boiled or canned salmon, flaked Into small pieces. Over this arrange a layer bt fine bread crumbs. Repeat until the salmon Is all used up. Melt 2 table spoonfuls butter and stir in 2 table spoonfuls of flour; also a little salt and pepper, and 1 pint ot milk. Cook this over th fir until smooth, then pour it over the salmon and crumbs. Make th top layer of crumbs and dot it over with small pieces of butter. Bake about SO minutes, Pout Inttto a Cold or the Grin. ' If you , feel ?'stuf fed. up," bloated. bilious, languid or have sick head ache, sour stomsch, coated tongue, bad breath or other condition caused by alowed hp digestion, a Foley's Ca thartic Tablet will give prompt re- t lief. It Is a gentle, wholesome, thor oughly cleansing physic that leaves no bad after-effects. J. C. Perry. paign to encourage the production and use ot cottage cheese, officials of the department and ot th Food Administration were guests at a luncheon at the dairy division In which every dish had cottage cheese as a basis. The cottage-cheese menu used at that time was repeated re cently by the Rotary Club of Spring field, Mass.. with the assistance of cellent. The menn Included cream ot cottage cheese soup, cottage-cheese sausage with creamed potatoes, cot tage cheese salad, cottage eheete tarts, whey honey and wney punch. In addition to mints and coffee. These dishes, and many others hav ing this cheese as a basis, are de scribed in a circular recently pub lished by the department "Cottage Cheese Dishes." Tangelo, New Fruit, Produced. A new type of fruit, which has been named the tangelo, has been produc ed by the bureau ot plant Industry through a cross between the tanger ine orange and the grapefruit, or pomelo. As a class the tangelos re semble round oranges more than either ot their parents and are ex ceedingly variable. Two well-recog- nlzed varieties have been thoroughly tested and have been distributed to cooperators for further trial. The tangelo has little aeldltiy and re sembles a tender and good-flavored orange more man a grapefruit or tangerine. Movie Star Weds Soldier. Mar THE STUMP PASTURE. Land is usually pastured several years after the small growth Is dis posed of before it is stumped. When land is kept in pasture for several years before any stumps are removed, many of the small stumps will entire ly decay and the fibrous roots of the larger ones will have become ' so weakened by decay that ft is much easier to remove them. 0FYOU KNEW of tomeone who wants to buy a used car at the price yon are willing to sell yours for, HOW LONG would it take 700 to get then? A Statesman Classified Ad "will find that person for you. Try one at once 1 day, le a word; 3 days, 2c a word; 1 week, 3c a word; 1 month 8c a word gaerlte Clark, th well-known he tress and motion picture star, was married recently at Greenwich. Con a., to Lieut. M. P. Williams, of the engineering corps, U. 8. A- Miss Clark was formerly an Ohio glrL Tapestry for Philadelphia. A Gobelia tapestry 1 foot long by II wide is being made In the Gobelin factory and will be given to the city of Philadelphia by the neoole of France. The tapestry will picture in colors troops leaving Philadelphia for France and on panels below will be these phrases from President Wil son's messagees: "Right is more precious than peace." "We have no selfish end to serve and desire no conquest and no domination. "We shall fight for democracy." War Benefits Women. One of the results of the war will be that American women will become better mothers, asserts Dr. Harvey Wiley, the famous food expert. When the war industries board ruled that cor set-making was not a necessary In dustry and refused the corset-mak ers pnonny on steel, it took a step tor Detter womanhood, and when it set its face against the French-heel ed shoes It made another advance," "Our change In diet as a result of me war nas improved the race at home." Dr. Wiley continued. "We were eating too much in volume, too much Ih variety and too rich in qua! uy. e are eating less, fewer and simpler now. well be a stronger race as a result. And the present diet has a greater nutritive value." Making Food From Waste. Keep this thought In mind in considering the growing of more poultry ai war necessity: rouiiry means of converting into good food mater- ials that can not be utilized by man. that can not be eaten by any other kind of stock, and that without the poultry would be absolute wast. very clearly it becomes a national as well as an Individual duty to keep enough poultry to take up all " wie maienais. as long as fowls take the b ulk of their feed from such sources and require to be fed on grain or other garnered feeds only as a finishing process, addition al food Is blng created. uoneson's Daughters In Navy. Several months ago Miss Lucy Berle- son. daughter of Postmaster General uurieson. created a considerable stir in Washington soclall circles by ac cepting a position as yeowoman in COMMISSIONERS' COURT (Continued from page I). Culver. 8 Z. do Baldwin. Mrs Kelll O, do Judson, Lewis E, do ...... Kuntx. P J. do v Baldwin. A J. do Bishop, Hazel, do , Kuntx. Ardallne. do ....... Judson. Leonard B, do ... Mullen. Mary. Do , Gooding. J N. do McDonald. Mary, do Drentano. Joan F Theo B. do Davidson. Clara, do ...... Cook. J L. do Merten. 3 J, do Gooding. Jos H, do Coleman. F R. do Tiuyserle, I F, do Scollard. Wm. do McCormlck. Chas. do ...... Srollart. Nora, do MrCormlck. Carrie, do Miller. Leo I, do Wells. Ed. do Whitney. Geo. do McCormlek, J A. do Scollard. J. C. do McCormlck. J. T.. do Whltlock. F. p.. do Myers. G. W.. do Smith. Zella C. do Mtilvlhill. Hnby 11.. do llartman. Joule, do Hartman, C. D do Whltlock. R. L.. do Host;. W. T.. do Rchledler. Frank, do Sanders. O. A., do Keen. II. A., do Peterson. Ernest V.. do.... Putnam. O. I., du Chamberlain. Dan T do.... llowd. Wm. II.. do Slmpron. Nellie n., do Todd. E.. do Flnlar, Mrs. Gertrude. Meier. Chas. Jr.. do 3 Barnett. Ft&nk. do Hullt, Jessie, do Neal. Eugenie, do Neal, Emma, do KImsey, J. E.. do Rabens. Albert, do Hobart, A. F.. do Stcen. Hans.-do Loe. E. O.. do Behrends. n. 11.. do Miller, I. W.. do Youngsren. C. W.. do King. Chas. If., do Hamre. Edwin P., do Hartley. L O.. do Loe. C. K.. do Thompson. O. H., do Bowers. F. 8., do Klssllnr. W. J., do Da hi. Otto A., do Krug. Fred J. Jr.. do Moser. J. H.. do Browne. H. E.. do Stewart. A. K.. do Durno, Clsra. do Welch. Anna L., do Kerr, D. C. do Bentson. R.. do Hnhbs. Blanche E.. do Davis, Cora E.. do , Rewte. May M do Cuslter. Geo., do Plarkcrby, SorphU M, do.. Aim. Julius. do.... Palmer. Peart, do... . . . . do. 4 3.00 s.es 3.00 s.co 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.0 3.00 3.00 3.00 7.40 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.0 .40 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 S. 3. 3.0 x.no 3.40 3.00 f.00 2.M 3.00 3.00 3.00 C.0A 6.0 X.40 .0 S.00 COO 8.S0 COO coo COO coo coo coo 0.00 11.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 COO 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 8.00 COO COO COO COO COO 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 3.00 Wellsoa. Minnie, do..... SUrr. J. 8 do. .......... Anderson. SIna. do Eastman. Myrtle, do...... Anderson. Amanda A. o.. McCalL E4aa, do Keech. Geo., do ... Spanlol. Geo- do Follla. Roe E. do Thomas. Eva TU, do.., Fisher. Max zl. do Tate. Lee. do K earns. J. T do.... Fisher. Joseph, da......... Benaett. II. E-. do Masker. Bertram W., de... Downing. E. A do Oblen. X. J- do...... ...I lllederer. Antolne. do Brewer. Ed a a, do Mistier, Lily M., do w Hewett, W. do....:.... Sanders, T. Lw. do Blakely. W. F.. do Lathy. C A- do Good. V. A., do McLaughlin. N. 8- do Howard. Ceo. B do Hammer. L IL. do Con d it, Addlo. do Walker. LI da I, do Barrows. A. C. do........ Zlmmermsa. F. A- do Ditter. John A., do....;..; Scott. Myrtle M.. do Downrnr. Nettle M, do Darst, Chaa. P do.. .... Etrel. Peter J- do Bell. Ceo. II.. do Kcotf, Geo. D-. do Tate. W. E.. do. Glrardln. John, do Hunsaker. G. W do Small. Lt. M.. do. WitxeL R. O.. do Hastier. P. P do Petx. Tl. R.. do Miller. M. T.. do Hunaaker. Robert C-. o., Boaeo. A. L.. do McKay. G. A- do King. 1L E do Doerfler. Melvlea. do... Jones, Amelia, do. Gibson. Matthew. do..... Humphreys. O. W.. do..,.. Palmer. E. M.. do Savage. J. C. do.... Hall. C. M.. do Patterson. Ray, do. Ft an. A. J., do. .... Hall. Fred 8.. do. Simmons. Caleb A.. do, Goulet. Glenn A., do. Beach. Geo., do . Coe. TL L.. do Bitney, I M-. do Feller, Francis, do Scott. Robert. d Ptanard. E. J.. Jo Hepp. L. O.. do GUI. Connie B.. do Whitman. C. Frtsk. do... Iddlns. Jonathaa.do..... Chapman. Lydla M.. d... Scollard. Marv B . d ; Becker. Geo. N.. do....---Moore. J. W.. do V If : t If 1 is I i i x i t : i V t t I 1 It 1 I i 4 M H t jH M H 10 t 1M I V !' !' !' ir if 1 J ! V 1! r j i the navy department. S.00 3.00 Read the Classified Ads. Read the Classified Ads.1 Shorey. Lvmaa. do.. jr Read the Classified Ads, 3.00 3.00 ievra. imine, - MUhler. W. do V