Newspaper Page Text
4A
Greatest Actress Declares Emotions of “Divine
Sex” Clothed in Robes of Merecy, Instead of
Beautiful Gowns of Coquetry.
Wme. Bernhardt, who is resting om Long Island after an illness that
pearly cost her life, ix one of the most patviotic French women, as she is
undoubitedly the greatest lving actress. In a remarkable interview she de
gcribes the part of the Amervican women in the war
By SARAH BERNHARDT,
. “Among the many awakening jdeals
shat the war has brought to this mar-
Nvelous generation is a somewhat dif
«ferent aspect of the woman's place in
‘the world
* Ido not mean that the ‘divine sex,'
‘as it has been called, could have ar
rived on greater heights than we
‘2eally have always held in a domain
il 1 believe, controlled by man; but
.that the modern woman is today an
mcknowleged heroine of the war means
Ahat woman has achieved more for the
Jonor of her sex than ever before in
the history of the world.
“Exceptional women have been in
all ages, but I am not speaking of
them. It is woman, not of gne race
wor of one country that I am thinking,
“but of all women born to meet the
“burdens of this era of horror into
~which we have all been plunged by a
common enemy.
“She has developed the ‘war heart)
“It is a little diMicult to describe,
“Decause man is a skeptical being when
4t comes to understanding *the heart
‘of a woman, He is so bound down
By stupid traditions of what a wom
_an’'s heart should be, or what it really
should express, that to discount his
i;hltlnnry 1 shall have to point out to
im his misguided views about wom
an.
« “As many previous traditions of the
‘wenturies have been swept away by
“fire In the present war, so the mod
_ern woman has undergone a change
_of heart—she hag emerged,
~ "Her emotions are now clothed in
_yobes of mercy instead of beautiful
~&Lowns of coquetry,
. “Her eyes look tenderly, anxiously
“Anto the eyes of men who have looked
4nto the grim face of death,
* “Her delicate hands now bind the
fatal wounds of men with indiscrim
;’l‘ate generosity.
: Her Men Dying for Her.
© “Her heart beats for men because
they are dying to defend her.
"‘(u and women, in Europe at
kut, have rediscovered the}nselves in
& new guise, in a different world of
wm than either had ever thought
ore.
~ “She has discovered a mew organic
Mm, in her being, the ‘war heart,’
~ "It is new, however, only because
has always been misunderstood
man. Her emotions have always
- Just what she is demonstrating
“in Europe now, emotions of herolsm,
_of tenderness, devotion to some great
cause for the spirit of men. She has
mr been fiwudly. her bravery has
. often the sustaining force
“of men, their inspiration.
__ "When it was my privilege to go to
3. front in France, I saw this change
i the relations between men and
Poglam possesses healing energy so
Righly concentrated that one ounce of
Poslam is worth a pound of ‘ordinary
Ointments less efficient in the treatment
©f Eczema or any eruptional condition
of the skin
Talk with those who have been healed
of aggravated skin troubles, who have
used all Mx;ui of remedies AND THEN
USED POSTAM, and they will say this
®ven more emphadcally
Results come quickly Itching stops
MNgry skin i 8 soothed; uncertainty is
wispelled, so little Poslam does so much.
Bold everywhere For free sample,
write to Emergency Laboratories, 243
WWeat 47th St., New York City.—Adver
Risement
Délay in having your teeth attended to is dangerous, for bad teeth often cause disease. Delay gen.
erally causes loss of money, too, for the longer delayed the more work is necessary and the more it
costs. Consult me now; my prices are low. Ido the highest class work and use the best materials.
NAN PP PPNAPPS NN N N N AN NN NN NI \”‘
\ I HAVE PRACTICED DENTISTRY FOURTEEN YEARS }
J During my long dental practice of more than 14 years I have served many hundreds of patients, and H
{ I have yet to learn of one who had any well-founded, reasonable cause of dissatisfaction. It has been §
{ mainly through the recommendations of my satisfied patients that many others have come to me. ?
WHY MY PRICES ARE LOW
My prices are the lowest at which the best work can be done, because my office is conducted on a business
basis. All work is cash. I have no bad debts. You pay for your own work only. My expenses are not
heavy; every patient gets an honest, square deal here.
ALL WORK GUARANTEED---EXAMINATION FREE
m
Regular $5 Quality ]
1 & '
i
I W
i |
L &\ |
A 4 "
Made of the finest gold possible to
buy; pure 22-k. gold, built for serv
fce and guaranteed in every re
spect. Beautiful examples of scien
tific dentistry.
DR. 1. S. OLLIFF’S PAINLESS DENTAL ROOMS
OVER CARLTON SHOE AND cLoTHING co. 36% Whitehall Street
women, this spiritualizing influence
which the war had brought In them.
“Every woman has always known
that she had in her the herolc capac-
Aties that she has shown In this great
war, but 1 am certain that men did
not realize her true greatness, her ex
ceptional courage, her maternity of
love for all men in accord with their
physical and their moral danger,
There are so many instances that
demonstrate the sacrifices that wom
en have made, for no other reason
than the instincts of their good hearts
and their loyalty of patriotism to the
cause for which the men are fighting.
The history of this war is a daily rec
ord of the ‘war heart’ of women,
“It seems unnecessary to go into
the actual detalls of what their work
has been, how they have done it, of
the real dangers they have faced to
stimulate the wounded, to bury the
dead, That is one of the trying du
ties of the war nurses, to prepare the
bodies of the dead for bur?ll.
Deep Emotions Brought Out.
“No woman who has performed tfut
desperate dut{ can ever look upon life
again with the same degree of su
perficiality that she may have done in
her social world, The war has brought
out her deep fund of emotions that
have been lying dormant in her heart,
often unsuspected by her man,
“You see women do not exploit
their sacred emotions as men do,
They do not bluster about their
strength, their courage, their endur
ance, They take no spectacular pride
In their sportsmanship. Because they
have always encouraged the men to
show their strength the men have
grown to believe themselves to be the
masterful power of life.
“In this war there have been wom- |
en who have shown more strength
than men, more ntren{th in the emo
tional confusion o pain, more
strength in the spiritual survival in
the agony of their wounds,
“It was the women who were asked
to give up the lives of those they
loved, which was often asking them
to do more than to give thelr own.
“It was a sacrifice of love, as most
of women's sacrifices are. They did
it willingly and followed the men to
comfort t%em. This was to be ex
pected of the European women, be
cause it was their own men who were
in danger, but It was not expected ot‘
the American women, who have done
such brave and unselfish work in the
war,
“It is to the American women that
I especlally wish to speak, for to them
the ‘War Heart’ has come also. To
them the war s now a personal obli
gation, its anxjeties are on the thresh
old of their homes. |
Superwoman of World. |
“To the American woman no hu
mility of emotion has come. The nm|
in America have always placed her on
a pedestal. Bhe has been the super
woman of the world, and therefore
much is expected of her. She has been
spared the traditions of Ruropean
women, who, for centuries, have
learned obedience to the will of thelr
men,
“The American woman finds her
place in the war preordained for her,
She has been given‘a splendid heri
tage of supreme liberty, which the
women of Europe have in great meas
ure been denjed until now, when they
have confirmed their heroism, their
{"ighl to share the war heart of the Al
es,
“How will the American woman rise
to the tragedy of war? Will she meet
the monster with the same assurance
of individual faith in herself that has
made her so distinguished a figure at
the front?
“I have heard the pacifists, the re
bellious, the philosophers in this coun
try deploring the sacrifice of your
young men in the war, The ‘slacker’
was @ rare animal in Europe, and his
chief enemy was women. In England
Regular $lO Quality
@
Teeth that fit. Made of the best ma
terials and guaranteed in every re
spect. No better teeth made.
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newgpgmr for Peonle Who Think - SUNDAY, JULY 22, 1917
o —————————— S reel i —————— - —— e ——— ——————————————————————
she adorned him with the white feath.
er, It was the stout, unflinching,
fighting heart of the women in Kurope
that dfd #0 muech to stimulate the
weaker hearts of some men, There
were not many who needed it, but
those who did were scorned and driven
to the front by the women,
“This Is the wsplendid hour for
American women, who must disentan -
gle their lives from American luxury,
to be free and definite in their sacri
fices for war,
“The men whom you wsend across
the sea will come back as many men
who have been fighting for over two
years in Europe have come back.
“You must stand as firmly behind
them, with the same steadiness of
purpose and courage, with which they
themselves leave you,
Let Men See “War Heart.”
“You must let them msee that you,
too, have the ‘war heart,’
“It Is not probable that the Ameri
can women who are left behind in this
country will face any of the horrors of
war such as the women in Europe
have had to encounter, It ig not con
celvabie that the enemy will come to
America, but American women can
‘swell the great army of BEuropean
women at the front, and share the sac
rifices and dangers of the battlefield
with them.
"It will not be dificult to raise such
an army of women in this country,
‘because the executive temperament of
women in America demonstrates their
Independence in the affairs of the
beart,
“It is the women who lead over here
and the men who obey, That is a re
versal of the emotional conditions that
have prevalled in Burope between the
sexen. There will be plenty of work
for these American women in the bat
tleflelds, of a character, perhaps,
which is new to them, but which they
will readily assume, as many of them
have already.
“The most difficult thing, probably
for the American womew to adjust, in
this new responsibility of her ‘war
heart,’ will be to forego the love of
pleasure which she has so brilliantly
pursued according to the standards of
American life. She must be prepared
to meet great personal sacrifices, of
comfort, of luxuries that have become
necessities to her. But I am told that
there is In American women a sto
lelsm of courage that was splendidly
revealed in the early days of her an
cestors during the early settlement of
this great country. In those days of
revolution and rebellion she fought
side by side with the men, shared
their hardships and risked with them
their dangers,
“The ‘war heart’ of the American
women should be unprecedented.”
7 Bulls Run Wild
In Streets of City
—
LOSB ANGELES, July 21.—One
person was shot and wounded seriously
and a panic was caused in the down
town district when seven bulls broke
from thelr pens in a rallroad yard
here and ran wild In the streets. Four
bulls were killed by police officers
end citizens.
Conrad Koerner was hit in the rlfht
leg by a stray bullet when the police
opened fire on one of the bulls at the
Junction of Main and Spring streets,
within three blocks of the center of the
business distriet.
Patrolman Allan Bo.ldrldie shot the
animal, which had been chased along
Broadway, the prineipal business thor
ouxhhn of the city,
second bull was killed following a
chase along B{ou!wuy and out into the
resldence section. Edward Sanders, a
policeman, killed it as it charged him.
Three were rounded up in a vacant
lot and two others were *illed in dif
ferent parts of the resldence section of
the city after a chase in which men
afoot, mounted on horses and riding on
motorcyeles had participated.
‘Gent] ' Burgl
entleman’ Burglar
't C G
Wouldn't Carry Gun
(l& International News Service.)
NEW YORK, July 21.-—Although but
twenty years old and with oheeks that
were reminiscent of gome buxom coun
try girl, John Sumner confessed a score
or more if big robberies to the Brook
lyn police.
“I never carry a gun.” he told them.
"{ ta_m too much of a gentleman for
at.”
He added that he refused to enter a
house late at night because somebody
might be frightened. He always made
his entrances and exits shortly after
dinner, when the residents were either
out or talking things over downstairs
while he was rifling the jewel cases and
taking valuables upstairs.
JAIL MAKES HER HAPPY,
BEAVER, PA., Jul¥ 21.—"1 am glad
to :o back to my cell; it will keep me
away from a troublesome world,” said
?ln. Mary Caler, 74, when recommitted
o Jjall followln“ a hearing on a con
tempt of court ¢ ugo. She has been in
jall since May 12 because she refused
to turn over Plp.rl belonging to her
husband’'s estate.
Regular $5 Quality
v T g
"‘\:; )
‘'* (&) e
Ao
! i
Made of the finest materials possi
ble to buy, backed by my personal
guarantee, from fine 22. k. gold.
Many people have paid $25 to SSO
for work not as good.
Water Stretched Rawhide Noose
and Enabled Bear Claw to
Foil Bandits.
ANTLERS, OKLA, July 21~
“Bear Claw,” an Indian, escaped death
by hanging here through a providen
tial rain., He had been suspended
from a tree by a noose of rawhide
»fibout his neck and had been left for
ead by a gang of bandits. Rain,
however, caused the rawhide to
stretch, and the Indian was able to
liberate himself,
“Bear Claw"” s of the highest type
of red man. He 18 educated, but a
firm believer in the old phrase that
“clothes do not make the man.” ‘
He owng a cattle ranch in the hills
ot the old Indian Territory, and is the
terror of all cattle and horse thieves
in the reglon of the Jack Fork moun
tains, |
Recently, in pursuit of several of
these gentry, who had stolen some of
his stock, he chased them until dark,
when he was waylaid and captured,
"The robbers strung him up to the
‘branches of a tree with a rawhide
Jlariat,
~ In the darkness the noose was not
placed correctly. Expectant of the
pursuit of Bear Claw’s fricnds, and a
sudden rain coming up, the thieves
‘hurriedly departed, in the firm belief
that the Indian would soon be in the
“happy hunting grounds.”
But the rain caused the rawhide to
‘stretch, and in a few minutes Bear
‘L‘uw was free,
Only a short time before that a bear
;cnrnerod the Indian in a cul de sac in,
‘the Jack Fork Mountains, Bear Claw
' had no weapon except his beloved
‘tnmahawk. Nevertheles, in the scrim
‘mage that followed, the bear was left
' with a split skull .and the Indian
without a scratch. He still wears a
necklace of Bruin's claws, though
‘that is not the cause of his name.
~ Less than a week before this ad
venture, in the same wild region, he
saved the life of a 10-year-old boy.
The boy’'s parents were camping in
the neighborhood, and the child had
wandered out of hearing of the camp
when a panther had knocked him
senseless by a blow of his paw, and
was In the act of dragging the body
away when Bear Claw arrived. But
this time he was armed with a Win
chester rifle, and made short work of
the beast.
Bear Claw now wears the gold
medal presented to him by the boy's
grateful father. - Not on cent of
money would the Indian .zcept.
Although Bear Claw has success
fully terminated more than a dozen
fierce battles with savage animals
and no less savage human beings, and
most of them with no other weapon
than his “little hatchet,” which he
prefers to all other means of defense,
he bears but few slight marks of the
deadly combats.
How to Overcome
Foot Troubles
Unless a person has actually suffered
with tired, aching, burning feet or
painful corns or calluses, they can not
appreciate the misery that such afflic
tions bring.
Reports now show that over M}aer
cent 81 the American people suffer
from ®ome form of foot troubleg and
modern footwear is sald to be causing
an alarming increase in this percent
age. Therefore, the following should
prove of special interest to readers.
Recently in the treatment of these
foot troubles by patients using Ice-
Mint, these distinctive features were
noticeable, Tired, m-hlni. burning'
and swollen feet invariably become
cool, easy and comfortable after the
first application, while in the treatment
of corns and calluses, it was noticed
that after a few nights' application,
the corn or callus had a tendency (o
loosen, and in a short time could eas
ily be lifted out with the fingers—root
and a]l—lnvlnf the surrounding skin
in normal, healthy condition.
This, together with the faet that
Ice-Mint costs little and is so eal{ and
Eleasant to apply—and {s absolutely
armless—is no doubt responsible for
the high indorsement given it b‘{ spe
cialists as the surest, safest and most
efficacious treatment for distressing
foot troubles.
When you stop to consider that the
simple, pleasant process of rubbing a
little lee-Mint on the foot at night
will shortli' rid one of every Kulnrul
corn or callus, and will keep the feet
cool, comfortable and rested even on
the hottest days, it is easy to under
stand its great popularity and why it
is now used in nenrl¥ every American
home. Any one suffering from foot
troubles is advised to give Ice-Mint a
trial. There is nothing better.— Advt.
AN
R RO RSN
N L
Re A :
SRR :‘-‘zf"; X
SO g e :
:"\/‘N(\)“\}\‘*\"» fi 4 <N§ 3 X
AR 3
Vatrn VAT SR
Sy N ‘
g:?g’ it T S
il w gl
ORI O Tk 8
o AR N L &
RN AN S L
, N a
b NBV R
TSR ) N
N “'\\ $ S N " )‘)
S S b
{&'}” X
My practice is large enough
that I do not have to resort
to questionable methods and
exagreration to keep busy.
I have only one standard-—
high-class dentistry,
In this office you are not
turned over to an under.
study to practice on you.
| do all my own work and
every patient who leaves
my office goes away with
the satisfaction of know.
Ing that he has gotten the
best dental work that can
be had In Atlanta at about
half prige.
PA A A A AAA A A e
;Offlce Hours, Daily 8!
la, m. to 6 p.m, Sun-!
{ days 9 a. m. to 12 noon. |
.
Pro-Germanism Not
.
Insanity, Says Court
Reverses Jury Decision That Set
Aside Will of Wealthy Ligquor
Dealer,
KANSAS CITY, July 21.—A decision
that ltmn{ prejudice in favor of Ger
many is not insanity was made by Judge
Bird, of the Cireuit Court, in reversing
a recent jury decision that sets aside
the will of the late Frederick W. Meyer,
~ Mr. Meyer was a wholesale liquor
'doalfir, He left an estate of $560,000 when
he took his own life, March 17, The es
tate was willed to Mrs, Josephine V.,
Boden, No. 3311 East Thirty-sixth street,
and Miss Clementine Meyer, daughters,
A provision was inserted In the will
that Mrs. Boden should have only the
fncome from her half of the estate, the
grc'aperty to remain Intact and go to her
eirs.
Mrs. Boden and her husband, George
Boden, sued to set aside the will. They
charged in a trial of their sult three
months a[fo that Meyer was prejudiced
against Boden because he once had
served in the American navy. That
preindies, they charged, was caused by
loyalty to Germany that had made the
aged man's mind become unbalanced.
lT In’
Youngest ‘Tommie
Is Given Medal
LONDON, Julr 21.—0 One of the young
est British soldiers to be decornzvd for
bravery in the field {s Private Freder.
ick Howeroft, of the Fssex Raaiment,
§h3flhu been awarded the Military
edal.
' Private Howeceroft, whose home is in
Stepney, was only 18 years old when he
Joined Kitchener's Army, but his sturdy
nngflrsnea enabled him to pass for 19,
When he ?erlormm his exploit last year
he was on { 17.
His family heard of his bravery In a
letter from his colnel, praising him for
his devotion and coajness, and stating
that ra had been recvnmended for the
medal for rescuing several of his com
rades from a shelled trench,
."':.".“”; :v 3 \;. 'v.!‘ .; » ! (e l“’ x % o .‘~A’- . ‘!" sy W 4
s~-"_ 3 Jole Pl § s ¢ .-",4‘:.',‘»‘.’- a 2 : ie,;' : : '
G SOl ST .
’ i N M Rs G Lt 0 !
nght Fours e A r’“ f‘,‘zt“',:‘f::—fl :“‘:':—’;:;.‘.;:::}:::r:-
S "n'wl'.‘;r‘ 4Wh AL ;‘i.—*“—::i——.....___;“—:":—":'.“ e —
i 3 '.~.‘:»",1v., e 4:.;1;.,‘«_:;;_.: X
"1 yAI T| % ‘{’"iv'.b'v,"’ - ‘;::%__—:*: = , ; '
AN IR Rl 40P YT / i = 7 ’
U LR T - v"" e
. {3 oIR (o p TR ooy, —J;::._t:j:_-_:_ e
¢ Y M o o 7:'?:._.:';—-:‘:/ v
Road B
ster - $735 Ao
J.o. b, Tol übject to change witheut notice A A S B b
i B a 5 T e ‘ g : |
£ : i “(1“‘{“;;{?«.:‘:W\.“:‘j i) ;
* /f’/«*f/ ',///’;#;fx}‘*grfisf‘.‘.» ey
B P e PR AR AR f
eX m e / » S TRt :
i /’% a 1 s S ~, ;«»3\\‘\\\\}\‘\’;* ¥
13 rag ] Y RS ”’ RARR e ‘
\ R / RN & s P "«-»v-;» \:}{,}& R .
e ] N 3 RO B BONEL LoA NE . y /¢,::\.{. -\&‘\:Nb‘m“"-\\‘; 5 ;
* vl \*‘{T\‘\ i "" TN ”” -' A /‘\ '\)ffl e
- — = e =]‘ oA -. . ’ ".(', ”-' 1 « ‘!”,' <’ :
~ B\ // ¥ \'.- > ” ¥ B 3” g e £ !"‘r'»u‘-.", o A
< —'.'k - A\ : 54 i #) PR
".J g P2O N I __-—\-‘g’(!l—‘.g—— oo We il R
S .‘\‘ L e iih ee IR LA Rk i 5
1 4 A%~ T N 2 . 4 g 5 t TP o ..‘.~ b ')'_“‘:q' : ) ) A ‘
- i sPy 2 ot i - ‘ on { :
’. "‘J . : < : -\;VI VL‘L"“‘ =2 j " T— ,' 3o 4 % e i~ Y.» ‘_vw
£ il R, A L% %
e S e VT
< NG )oS TR (R ek
25 rs Moy : \fi-‘” : . er!‘:—,-f,:ér_{;?:."::) \t et \/' A ’
] PR ¢ e [+ = «;e:’.'«,":&,—,—,;:_a : £ ‘;; %3 :
'< ‘"“ A P BRI APy L
/ —\‘»\ 3¥: 3(-/ \‘\ : / f-??"‘ & < it
LAERY R ek ‘
/"‘\ ‘\4 v/ f 3 : %(R (: g L:r ; Y
e g iy f : : ge iy
— (’ iz o i B r ‘%l& g
& N %V' '(" :
- 2 i ¢ B ke
: Nok 4l
2000 a Week
of This One Model Alone
Think of it!
A brand new model January Ist and over
fifty thousand already mnnh:g.
That’s an accomplishment!
It’s also a mighty safe guide as to what
to buy.
The car is right mechanically, of course, but
more than that
—among touring cars of its size it is by long
odds the most beautiful ;
—and when it comes to roominess and easy
riding nothing that even approaches its
—-—-*—
Both Cloth and Dye Were Im
ported, but Cotton and Wool
Are Substituted.
KANSAB CITY, July 21.—1 n speak.
ing of the uniforms worn by the sol
diers in the regular army and the mi
litla, do not speak of them as khakl,
It is incorrect, because the soldiers do
not wear khaki, and, besides, the sol.
diers are not at all partial to the
word,
The uniforms worn now are de
sceribed by the War Department as
“Cotton, O. D,)” or “Wool, O, D." The
0. D.” means olive drab, and is de
gcriptive of the color of the uniforms,
Cotton uniforms are worn in the sum
mer and wool in the winter,
Khaki is a word of East Indian ori
gin, meaning dusty, and comeg from
the word khak, meaning dust, It is a
‘('lay. or dust-colored, cloth originally
‘cmninx from India. IL was first worn
by the native British troops, and later
by all British troops serving abroad or
on campaign,
It later was adopted by the Uhnited
States Government for both field and
colonial service, becuuse of its serv
iceable qualities, and because it was
supposed to make it harder for the
enemy to detect the soldiers. The
color of the uniforms was supposed to
merge into the color of the ground.
Khaki is lighter in color than olive
drab, and the khaki cloth is said to
be superior to the cotton uniforms
now being worn in the army. The
Light Four Touring Car Specifications
Five passeng Stiding ansmission—3 speeds
32 hwnpowcr"m bloc motor s{flww«r’d‘:'m‘i’ reverse
106-inch wheelbase rt turning radius
Auto-Lite starting and lighting « 42-inch cm’(‘gm rear springs
Electric swilches on steering Pour inch tires
column Magnetic speedometer
Willys-Overland, Inc., 469 Peachtree Street,
“ Phone Ivy 4270. |
change was made about four years
ago.
Here is the explanation offered by
Captain O. R. Cole, aftached to the
regular army recruiting office:
“The khaki dyes and cloth were im
ported, mostly from England,” the
captain said, “The Government felt
trat all army uniforms should be
manufactured in the United States, of
cloth made in this country, The army
wants to depend upon the United
States for everything It uses. It was
thought best to discard the khaki for
cotton cloth manufactured at home,
and the olive drab was adopted bg
cause of its simiflarity to the khaki
color, and because the olive drab dyes
are manufactured at home.,”
BABY BORN WITH TWO TEETH.
LEWISTOWN, IDAHO, July 2le
When a daughter was born recently to
Dr. and Mrs, Walter Braddock, of Lew
{stown, Idaho, they found she had two
teeth with which to start life. This is
sald to be the first instance on record
In which a child had teeth at birth. The
father 1s a dentist, which may have
something to do with it,
e
L \
'E ‘, ‘lm‘\
|
u
NP
ATLANTA MINERAL WATERS (0, '*' Siseweod
compact size, is anything like as com
fortable.
This latest Overland Touring Model—the
Light Four—is the greatest combination
of style and comfort that ever sold for so
low a price—§s7so.
And it’s as economical to run as it is to buy.
As a combination pleasure-utility car it is
giving its owners more solid satisfaction
for the money than any other car we
know anything about.
Come in and see us about the Overland Light
Four—Touring Car s7so—Roadster $735.
Dog Guards Pups
While House Burns
MINNEAPOLIS, July 21.-With 4
mother's~devotion, Fidelia, a St, Ber
nard dog, biinded by smoke and flying
embers, crouched in protection over her
two recently born pups in the basement
of a house destro{'od b{‘ fire,
Firemen and Mrs, Maude Adame,
owner of the house and of Fidelia
called in vain for thol{hnt Bt. Bernard
to escape, Paul W. Dwyer, a fireman,
finally erawled into the furnacelike base.
ment and rescued the pups. Fidelia,
seeing that her offspring were in safe
ty, attached herself as protecticn to
Dwyer in the nflht against the nre,
Mrs. Adams, her young son and the
St. Bernards are being cared for by
friends. "
7,000 LOST PIPES RETURNED,
LONDON, July 21.—More than 7,000
lost pipes, which were plcked up on
trains on the Motrog‘olltan Rallway Rnes
have been !horoug ly cleaned and re
stemmed _and are being sent to the sol
diers in France,
Smart Set Ginger Ale
Good
FOR THE
Digestion
DELICIOUS REFRESHING
SATISFYING
Order a Case for Your Home or Office.
PHONE IVY 130.