Decatur Daily Democrat, Volume 11, Number 64, Decatur, Adams County, 15 March 1913 — Page 4
A CLERK WHO BANKS $3. A WEEK Not quite two years ago a clerk in a store started in to Bank $3. a week. He was getting $lO, a week. He alwaysputs in Bank each week as he receives his wages $3. He now has in Bank $267.45, If you are an ambitious young man working on a salary why not open an account here? It will start you on the road to independence. We welcome small accounts from sl, upward. FIRST NATIONAL BANK Decatur, Indiana. 6 THE DAILY MARKET REPORTS © tv JU w Corrected Every Aftenoon jj'[ Iry-rar?- isicuHSFr -"taw ™-vcw- -i wmi w llj li l
■■ il I l Wil X ii-i" EAST BUFFALO. But Buffalo, N. Y., Mar. 15—(Special to Daily Democrat)—Receipts, 3,520; shipments, 2,280; official to New York yesterday, 1,1330; hogs closing slow. Medium and heavy, [email protected]; , light mixed and Yorkers, $9.50(i/$9.60: light Yorkers and pigs, [email protected]; roughs, [email protected]; stags, $6.50@ $7.50; sheep, 2,400; steady; lambs, 10c lower; tops, $9.25; cattle, 350; steady. G. T. BURK. New ear corn 60c No. 2 Red wheat 98c No. 2 White wheat 95c Oats 29c Sample svatnew oats 26c Rye 53c Barley 38c @ 45c Feeding ba.ley 45c Alsike seed $10.75 No. 1 timothy hay $10.60 —$10.50 No. 1 mixed $9.50 No. 1 clover $8.50 Rye straw $5.00 Wheat straw $5.00 Clover seed $9.75 Timothy seed SI.OO COAL PRICES. Stove and &gg, Sard $8.75 Chestnut, hard $9.00 Pea, Hard $7.50 Poca., Egg and Lump $5.50 W. Ash $4.50 Spring chicks 9c V. Splint $4.50' H. Valley $4.25 R. Lion $4.50 Cannell $6.00
PILES! PILES! PILES! WILLIAMS* INDIAN PILE OINTMENT Will cure Blind, Bleeding and Itching Piles. It absorbs the tumors, allays Itching at once acts as a poultice, gives instant relief. For sale by all druggists, mail 50c and 11.00 WILLIAMS MEG. CO., Props., Cleveland, Ohio For Sale BY ENTERPRISE DRUG CO. ~~5%~” Monev All you want. Abstracts' made and Titles Guaranteed. 1 Insurance Writers Office Rooms on first floor : oppisite interurban Station Graham and Walters I MONEY I Get It Here I Any amount you want up to I SIOO.OO on Furniture, Pianos, I Teams, etc., without removal. “8 '! We give you a written state- I ment of your contract Also al- I low extra time without charge I in case of sickness or loss of I work. § 84c is the weekly payment on S a $35.00 loan for fifty weeks. I Larger or smaller amounts at ■ same proportion. d If you need money fill out B and mail us this blauk and our K Agent " 111 call on you. Name I Address I Amount wanted I I Our agent is in Decatur every i Tuesday. £ Reliable. Private. I K. W?yn« Um conpanj 1 Established 1896. Room 2, Sec- j ond Floor, 706 Calhoun Street. | Home ’Phone, 833. Fcrt Wayne, Ind
J- Hill • 15,00 , Kentucky $4.5 J < Lurig j 4 »o ’ w I FULLENKAMPS. i ] Eggs Butter 20@28e 1 Lard , ——l NIBLICK & CO. £ Butter 20@27c ( Eggs He { £ H. BERLING. ( 1 Ducks loc i Fowls y c Geese . 9c I Turkeys 15c t Old roostors 9c | < KALVER MARKETS. t f Beef hides 10c f Calf 12c 1 Tallow 5c < Sheep pelts [email protected] < Muskrats sc@4sc Skunk [email protected] 1 Coon : [email protected] > Possum 10cQ>70c * Mink ......7 [email protected] < LOCAL PRODUCE MARKET. 1 Spring chicks 10c ‘ Ducks 10c , Fowls 10c 1 i Geese 8c I Eggs 18c ' Butter 18c ! Turkeys 11c i Old roostenj •5c 1 1
1 AN ORDINANCE — Requiring a license and fixing the therefor for the carrying on of cer-r tain businesses in the City of Deca-i 1 tur, Indiana. f Section 1. Be It ordained by the : common council in and for the City of Decatur, Indiana, that every manager of any show, circus or menagerie, ' which shall exhibit within the corpor-' ’ ate limits of said city or within two miles thereof shall pay the treasurer : of said city the sum of not less than ’ $5, nor more than $35; said sum to be , fixed by the Mayor of said city, for . each day they so exhibit. That every manager of any theatri- ; cal entertainment, minstrel entertain- 1 ment, concert or other entertainment, shall pay to the city treasurer of said city the sum of $2.50 per day for each ! day they so operate in said city. That every patent medicine vender: shall pay to the city treasurer the sum , of $2.00 per day for every day he so operates in said city. Every peddler of goods, wares and merchandise shall pay to the city | treasurer the sum of $2.00 per day for I every day he so operates in said city. That every vendor of buggies, waglons, or other vehicles shall pay the I city treasurer the sum of $5.00 per day 1 I for every day he so operates in said, I city. That every owner or manager of a [merry-go-round shall pay to the treasi urer of said city the sum of $5.00 per day for every day he so operates within the City of Decatur, Indiana. All other amusements on the streets not herein mentioned shall pay to the 1 city treasurer the sum of $1 per day L for each day so showing. I Sec. 2. Be it further ordained by I I said common council that any person 1 violating any of the provisions of this I ordinance shall upon conviction thereI of be fined in any sum not exceeding I $25.00. I j Sec. 3. Be it further ordained that ran emergency ax i ß t ß for the Immediate ■ taking effect of this ordinance. It ■ shall therefore be in full force and es- ■ I feet from and after its passages and 5 two weeks’ publication once each wook |l n r th t o o ru eek /J n the Democrat, I in the City of Decatur, Indiana II Passed and adopted by the common I’MMCh, 1913? en Be ’ Blon thlß 4th day of , JUDSON W. TEEPLE, Mayor ' H. M. DeVOSS, Clerk. 7 ■ L r" Proved signed by the Mayor 3 this 7th day of March, 1913 JUDSON W. TEEPLE, Mayor H H. M. DeVOSS. Clerk. 845 S FOR SALE—Two acreo of land near new beet sugar factory. Excellent H building site. Easy terms. Address S FOR SALE —Body Brussels carpet; D large; plush couch. Call on J. Q. _ Niblick at Adams County bank. 43tf •
MAKING THE FORD An Interesting Story of the Greatest Automobile Plant in the World. TOLD BY MANAGER Output Has Grown in Marvelous Manner—Factory That is City of Itself. More wonderful than the most fantastic tales evolved by the writers of fiction was the story of the Ford antomoble told Thursday night ty men of the sales force of Indiana, Ohio and Pennsylvania at the banquet given at the 'Fuller hotel in Detroit, at which were present many Adams county men by Norval A. Hawkins, general sales manager of the Ford Motor company. In simple, direct statement, without frills and unnecessary elaboration, Mr.[ Hawkins moved his audience to fer-' vent applause as he traced, step by , step, the evolutions of a Detroit Industry, the success of which has astonished and dazzled the world. In less than a decade the Ford organization, from a modest beginning, has become a tower of strength, spreading its name and fame to the innermost corners of the globe. The story of Aladdin and his wonderful lamp is no more wonderful than the story of Ford and his wonderful car,” said Mr. Hawkins. “Organized in June, 1903, not quite ten years old,this business has grown from annual sales of less than $200,000 to annual sales of more than $100,000,000, shid from annual of only a few hundred cars, to an annual output of 200,000 cars. “Mr. Ford, the head of the company[ bearing his name, is one of those rare men in whom inventive and mechanical genius is combined with keen intuitive commercial sense, and he halal ways had the courage of his convictions, which has been fully evident in ; every plan and policy of his great bus- 1 iness. Mr. Ford is a man of no bad habits —he never uses tobacco or llq-. uor in any form — and he has had much to do with changing the automobile game to a real business. “The Ford company has all the elements of a successful enterprise, it manufactures a useful article, its company is properly organized, it is amply financed, entirely within itself to successfully carry on its operations, its policy is clear and well defined, its management Is capable, tactful and honest, its factory Is well designed, fully equipped and suitably located, its product is perfect in design and quality, its selling force is efficiently the largest of Its kind in the world, and backed by plain, honest, advertising, with complete service to owners. “The Ford is an organization of all young men. Not an executive head has been added to a single department of the business in more than six years, during which period the output of cars and annual sales have nearly doubled each year. All this great business has .been built up from an original cash . capital of only $28,000 and without jever borrowing a dollar or issuing any ' paper. We used banks only as depositories to look up money and earn interest, and this season is planning a production of 200,000 ears we never consulted with a banker. | “We are at present employing In our factories and at our branch houses 18,061 men and all day-workers, not a piece-worker In the plants, and disbursing monthly about $700,000 for pay ; rolls. Every day except Saturday is pay day. and our average runs between $30,000 and $35,000 daily. We recently figured out that the total number of [men/- employed tn various plants throughout the country making Ford parts would populate an entire city .like Atlanta, Ga., or Columbus, Ohio. “Our factory, which now practically covers 65 acres, is about as complete and up-to-the-minute as modern architecture and latest machinery and labor sdvlng appliances can make it. As an Illustration, we have a multiple drill that makes 45 holes In one operation in the motor casting and does 1,000 castings a (jay. A plant building only 10,000 or even 20,000 cars in a year would have only about 10 or 20 days’ ' work during the season for such a machine. We have two special piston i machines that take machines, doing all the necessary operations on eight I pistons every one and one-half minutes. These are the things that reduce costs and make a better and more nearly standardized article. There | isn t a vise in the Ford factory, no r I chance to do any bench work to I straighten out thq defects, in any im»j perfect parts, they must fit or go back I to the k rep heap. >•] “Our going inventories of raw mater.lais, parts, accessories, etc., are run-
ning along now at an average of about $7,000,060, and, mind you, every car that we build each day Is shipped the same day, so none of this amount is for finished cars. “To give a better idea of the company In producing in a factory like the Ford just one model or chassis, and to continue building the same for six | years, listen to some of the figures and items: I i “June 24 last a schedule of manufae- ■ turtßg our 1913 output of 200,600 wan [decided uron. To handle this production we require 1,000,000 lamps, 800,000 wheels, 800,000 tires. 90,000 tons I of steel, the hides from 400,000 cattle . to furnish the leather for upholstering the bodies, the hair or bristles from 6,000,000 hogs to stuff into the upholstering, 12,000,000 hickory billets for wheel spokes, nearly 2,000,600 square feet of glass for the windshields, 750,-; 000 pounds of soft soap, 15,000 t<B*of mo'ding sand to make our castings,; *2,000,000 cubic feet of gas per day for heat-treating, etc. "January 13 last, we built and ship-, ped 1,336 finished Model T’s, a business for one day amounting to nearly $700,000 and requiring more than 200 [freight cars to handle the shipments, or five full train loads of more than ,40 cars to the train. I “On the basis of the mileage from Detroit to New York City if we had delivered this- day’s output to New York branch by driving the cars over- ■ land, we would have had a procession j of Model T’s —just a mile apart—-and' when the first car w r as coming into New York the last one would be leav-i ing the factory. “During January we built and ship-' ped 17,601 finished cars net volume In dollars and cents/Of nearly $9,000,000 —more cars than built and shipped during the first five months of last sea_son. Ry the end or March the close of our six months for 1913—we will have shipped more than 80,000 cars as against 25,559 for the same period a year ago. , I “In spite of our increased facilities for producing, our daily orders are in excess of our daily output as evidence iby the fact that in spite of all the great shipments we have made we still have on file for immediate attention 43,714 orders or a sufficient quantity to take us through the month of April at the rate of 1,000 cars a day. • : “Our traffic manager recently advised that we) -*ould require 35,000 freight cars to move our 1913 output. | “According to our output this season and according to the most authentic estimates of other car makers, we will produce every other car that is built in this country in 1913. “One day last week we gave one tire concern our check for a little less than $2,000,000, and every other single part that goes into tne construction of j our cars bears a similar comparison to the completed job—from cotter pins to springs and tops—so you can get some idea of quantity production. “By September 30 we hope to have at least 400,000 satisfied users voicing our sentiments. The 400,000 Ford owners means 400,000 voters for good roads, because most Ford owners are their drivers and when good links are linked up all over the country I hate tothink about our annual production to supply the demand for these individual Ford transportation lines. “The great demand for Ford cars has not been brought about without a fair amount of advertising and careful study of the selling problems. “The Ford company believes in advertising. It knows full well what a tremendous power advertising really i is. The right sort of advertising • should reduce the selling costs by increasing the demand and consequently i lowering the cost of manufacturing i and distributing. 1 “Ford’s small space and peculiar copy are being commented upon all ’ over the country. Some of the com- ’ ments are favorable and some are un--1 favorable—but at any rate, so long as ’ interest Is excited the ads are properly f read, and W'e benefit accordingly. ' "Today there are 500 things brought ’ to the reader’s attention where there r were 20 a decade ago. New and stories, and books and adver- ' tisements almost without end, fairly ! yelling for attention. If more of us • got into the receiving end of our advertising the copy turned out would ' probably pull more prospects and you 1 know today’s prospects are tomorrow’s 1 business builders to a far greater ex--1 tent than today’s buyers. “Advertising is not unlike any othf'.er operation In business requiring a few well-grounded principles—backed with an ordinary supply of common 1 horse sense. ? | “Besides an advertisement must f make a successful appeal to the eye l "; if it Is to force the hand to the pocketB book, so use taste in the lay-up. e | “Don’t advertise anything for a dole lar that isn’t worth a dollar. °j “Good, truthful advertising, suppleo mented by a correspondingly worth '• product, sold by intelligent clean and k courteous salesmen and backed by service that Is prompt and fair, will seldom fall to bring to any manufac- >■ turer the success and prosperity for
which we all are so earnestly working. | “Advertising is salesmanship in tabloid form, and is monopolistic tn form because after all the greatest advertising success is that gained by edu- [ eating the public to the use of something better than it has ever known before. "I want to say that when Mr. Fold started this business ten years ago, he was no different from hundreds of pothers, except that he has original , ideas, looked a long way aliead and didn’t allow any one to change his fixity of purpose. ' “IL was level-headed, clear-sighted policy, strictly adhered to, that led Mr. Ford to his present success. His methods haven’t changed much rrom the earlier days and hfs ideas were as far advanced then as they are today. [ ‘'We had more to contend with from i [a selling standpoint in the days of Sei- . : don litigation than any other concern j in the industry, and at no time did i j we change our policy. [ “You know all big things are usually I .done without precedent and I believe | the Ford Motor company is a shining .example of this sort of a big thing. In "The strictest sense of the form, there are no big men connected with the Ford organization—they are ju.it an ordinary plain, economical bunch of fellows —with no high-flown ideas either their pocketbooks or ■ themselves and who work at the top j speed every day from 8 to 6 and see to lit that everybody around the place does likewise. j “Our entire office is equipped with , plain glass partitions—without screens or private offices and with no guilt letters to keep people out. “There has never been anything of mystery connected with the designs of a car, and almost any crowd of financiers or able business men could get together, employ a designer, build a factory, equip it with men, machines, and material, and produce a car. The business has always been most competitive, no control, no monopoly, no cinch of any part, so you must find the answer to the Ford success in Mr. Ford's ideas, his infinite plans, farsightedness, stick-to-itlveness and absolute honesty. “Nothing offered by an automobile [manufacturer is of greater value than - service, and therefor the quality of the aervice extended to buyers is just as vital to his success. “Ford service is one of our greatest assets. The January sales <jf Ford cars were nearly $9,000,000, or more than twice the gross receipts of the Grand Trunk railway system for the same month. “In closing I want to add that fantastic as it may sound, this Ford story , could be repeated in a court of record , without ever one approaching the perjury line.” Introducing Mr. Hawkins, it was de- ■ dared that the Ford sales manager had placed the order book next to the Bible and that he had even inserted a hew commandment in the latter: , “Thou shalt not take orders in small quantities.” The evening was one of unusual en--1 tertainment, a fine program having ■ been given, including vaudeville numbers and musical selections. — —— — PUBLIC SALE OF LIVERY STOCK. I The undersigned has decided to go . [out of the livery business and will sell at public auction at his stable on East . Jefferson street, opposite the Decatur t Lumber, Company, Decatur, Ind., on Saturday, March 22, 1913, beginning at . 10 o’clock a. m., hts entire stock 5f horses, buggies, harness, etc., consisting of twenty head of horses; Black .[mare, well broke, 5 years old; brown mare, lA. years old, family broke; bay Mare, 12 years old, well broke; brown ( horse, 6 years old, lady broke; pacing horse, 7 years old, can show three minute gait on road; bay horse, weight 1100 lbs., well broke; brown mare, 7 years old, well broke. The rest are all good livery horses, ranging in age t from 5 to 10 years, and all well broke. Buggies and Caorriages: 17 single ( buggies in good condition, practically as good as new; 2 phaetons, one open surrey, 1 closed surrey; 2 light spring wagons, 2 road wagdns, 2 sleighs. Harness: Sixteen single harness, ’ good as new; 4 sets of double harness, good as new; storm fronts, robes: ‘ blankets, pair of clippers, 1 buggy pole, set of single heavy wagon harness and numerous other articles. Terms All sums of $5 and under ’ cash in hand; ovft- $5 a credit of 6 } months will be given, purchaser giving note with approved security; 3 per cent off for cash; no property to be ( removed until settled for. . NOLAN KING, Mgr. John Spuhler, Auct. —o- —— _ FOR SALE—Good dwelling house, 3 lots on 13th St., one square from . brick street.—J. H. Ellck. 53 t .. ! WANTED—GirI for general house--1 work; only two l t family. Inquire r J. H. Stone, 215 «. Second 6066 1 FORD FOR SALE OR TRADS-At Watson’s garage.—O. A. Burdg, Qer catur Ind.
AT THE CHURCHES reformed church. 9:30, Sunday school; lesson; Gen, ] 22. ’ 10-i'SO, confirmation service; text, Ps. 36:9, “The Fountain of Life.” 6:30, C. E. meeting; .topic, "Am- i brose.” 1 7:00, English service; text,, Luke ’ 5:31-32, “The Teaching of Jesus Concerning Sin.” 1 Lenten service, Wednesday evening. 1 —o- - — • ■ EVANGELICAL CHURCH.’ I —— " I Sunday school at 9:30. Preaching at 10:30 and 7:00. i Y. P. A. at 6:15, Mrs. Rilling leader, i Prayer and song service Wednesday i ' evening. Both morning and evening subjects ’are of special interest. [ A welcome to the public. > J. H. RILLING, Pastor. PRESBYTERIAN CHURCH. . I 9:15 a. m., Sunday school. 10:30 a. m., and 7:00 p. m., public . worship. Palm Sunday sermon in morning.’. Evening theme, “What*Christ Saw I from the Cross.” 6:00 p. m., Christian Endeavor. All are welcome. WM. H. GLEISER, Pastor. ■ - VJ ■' - METHODIST CHURCH. Sunday school, 9:15. Public worship, 10:30 and 7:30. Epworth League, 6:30. The pastor will preach a Palm Sunday sermon on the theme, “Twentieth Century Triumphs of Christ” at the morning hour. At night he will give a lecture on "Livingstone.” Appropriate music. R. L SEMANS, Pastor. LUTHERAN CHURCH. The catechumens will be examined 1 and confirmed. The theme for the sermon will be: "Whence earnest thou? and whither’ wilt thou go??” Gen. 16:8. Services will be conducted also on Monday, Thursday and on Good. Fri-l day. I UNITED BRETHREN CHURCH. ( Sunday school, 9:30. Preaching, 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. 1 Privilege of uniting with the church 1 will be given at both services. Junior C. E., 2:30. Senior C. E., 6:15. All are invited. L. W. LOVE, Pastor. Ft. Wayne & Springfield Ry. Company. TIME TABLE. Cars Leave Decatur at 5:50 a. m., 8:30 am., 11:30 a. m., 2:30 p. m., 5:30 p. m., and 9:30 p. m. Cars Leave Fort Wayne at 7:00 a. m„ 10:00 a. m., 1:00 a m.. 4:00 p. m., 7:00 p. m. and 11:00 p. m. Special attention is given to theater and picnic parties. Connections are made at Fort Wayne with the FVjrt Wayne and Northern Indiana Traction Co., The Toledo & Chicago Interurban Railway Company, the Ohio Electric, and Indiana Union Traction Company; also; with the Pennsylvania, Wabash, Nickel Plate, L S. & M. S., C. H. & D., and G. R. & I. railroads. FREIGHT SERVICE. Freight service consists of one train each way daily: Leaving Decatur at 8:00 am., and returning, leaving Fort Wayne at 12:00 m. This enables shippers to telephone orders and receive shipments promptly. W. H. FLEDDERJOHANN, General Manager, . Decatur, Ind. PROPERTY FOR SALE. 7- tract outside city limits, good 9-room house, barn 24x32, plenty of fruit This is a fine home for anyone wanting a small tract of land. Price, $5,300.00. • 33 acres Inside city limits, at $5,000, or will sell you acre tracts at S2OO per acre. 8- house with barn, plenty of fruit on West Monroe street. Price, $2,500.00. HARVEY 4. LEONARD, Office with Graham and Walters. 62t3 o—— FOR sale. An ideal poultry farm for sale; 20 acres, well drained and well fenced land; mostly black soil, on stone road. Six-room house, barn 26x40 Poultry house 10x32, com crip, pl cc ty of fruit; 2\4 miles from a live town, % mile to good school. Possession on or before April Ist Price $2,450. 54tf HARVEY & LEONARD. FOR SATJS -.Good work horse, coming 4 years old; $75.00, if taken at ° DCe „ Inqulre W. B. Nidlinger R. R. No>l2 ’ 61tS
PUBLIC SALE. Having rented his farm and decld eu to quit farming, the undersigned will offer at public sale at his resl ilence, 1 mile south and 1 mile west O s Monroe, on Friday, March 21, 1913 ttie following property, to-wlt. beginning at 10 o'clock a. m., prompt: Two Head of Horses, Including 1 five-year-old mare, sound, weighing about 1400 tbs and 1 elght-year-old work horse’ weighing about 1500 tbs., sound. Three e Head of Cattle, aged 4 and 5 years; all will be fresh in April. Hogs: Tv>o brood sows, with pigs by side; 1 niabj hog, a good O. I. C.; 25 head o f shoats, weighing from 50 to 100 !b a . each. Machinery: McCormick mow. ing machine, grain drill, hay rake corn cultivator, breaking plow, shovel plow, single shovel plow, 6. tooth spike harrow, corn sheller, hand fodder cutter, 2-horse Turnbull wagon with double bed; i-horse wagon, bobsleds, hay rigging, buggy, set doubly work harness, set buggy harness, 2 turkey hens and 1 gobbler, 3 hen ducks and 1 drake, chickens, corn in crib, hay and straw in the mow, about /0 shocks of fodder in the field, 10 bu. good seed .oats, iron kettle, 2 log chains, some household furniture cook stove and numerous other articles. Terms:—All sums of $5.00 and under, cash in hand; oter $5.00 a credit |of 10 months will be given, purchaser giving note with approved security; 4 per cent off for cash. No property to be removed until settled for. JOHN WAGONER. J. N. Burkhead, Auct. Geo. McManama, Clerk. • . ELY’C CREAM BALM OPENS CLOGGED NOSTRILS AND HEADCATARRH GOES. Instantly Clears .Air Passages—You Breathe Freely, Nasty Discharge Stops, Head Colds and Dull Headache Vanish. Get a small bottle anyway, just to ( trp It—Apply a little in the nostrils and instantly your clogged and stop--1 ped-up air passages of the head will 'open; you will bheathe freely; dullness and headache disappear. By morning! .the catarrh, cold-in-head, or a catarrhal sore throat will be gone. End such misery, now! Get the small bottle of “Ely’s Cream Balm” at any drug store. Thfs sweet, fragrant [balm dissolves by the heat of the nostrils; penetrates and heals the infiain[ed, swollen membrane which lines the nose, head and throat; clears the air ’passages; stops nasty discharges and/ a feeling of cleansing, soothing relief comes immediately. Don't lay awake tonight struggling ’for breath, with head stuffed; nostrils [closed, hawking and blowing. Ca(tarrh or a cold, with Its running nose, Tout mucous dropping into the throat, and raw dryness is distressing but truly needless. Putu your faith—just once—in Ely’s Cream Balm and your cold or catarrh Will surely disappear. The Holthouse Drug Co. t-t-s (Advertisement) *■ ■ o L. F. MAILAND —s, ; Is the nifty dresser’s friend. If you’d look well your old clothes send To this house for clothes ill Where they all orders quickly fill. Send to Mailand, have them made new ‘ And at a very low figure, too. Have clothes cleaned and pressed, Keep them clean and be well dressed. ’Tls not so much what you wear As how you keep it in repair.Here, ladies’ clothes get special care; If yours needs pressing, there. L. F, MAILAND, Over Model Cigar Store. 59t6 o NOTICE. 1 Say—don’t forget the West End bar- . ber shop. Has two first-class barbers. . Come In and try them. Clean towels so reach customer. Everything sanitary. Union shop, by the G. R. & Irailway. Welcome to one and all. LESTER BAUGHMAN, 59t6-e-o-d Proprietor. t o PREACHING AT CALVARY. There will be preaching services at Calvary Evangelical church Sunday morning, March 16. A good attendance Is desired. Revival services also continue Indefinitely at Salem Evangelical church. The public is cordially in- > vited. E. B. JONES, Pastor. 1 0 , WANTED. A good young man to pass papers , through the week. Apply at City News stand. ELGIN KING, 60t3 Prop. o HU) tCE. Money to loan at 5 and 6 per oont t interest. No commission. . 288tf ERWIN’S OFFICE. (AdvertlMinent)
