Greencastle Herald, Greencastle, Putnam County, 15 July 1910 — Page 2
PAOti TBIUm
GREENCAdTLE HERALL
FRIDAY, JULY 15, ittio.
HIE HERALD Founded Vhtt PUBLISHED EVENING
Except Sunday by the Star and Democrat Publishing Company at 17 and lir Mouth Jackson Street, Greenca.'-tle, Ir*o
: Of Interest to Women
t
SUMMING UP AT MESSINA.
Th’ Lc ;es n Life and Money, and the Outlook.
Uni; the b;
V. C. TILDES - - - - C. J. ARNOLD —Editors—
Terius of Subao-rlftiiloii. One Year. In Advance |J 0l> By Carrier In City, per week . 6 cents Single Copies 1! cents
tdierllelnit Hstew I |m»ii A|>i*ll«-ulloo VtLEkL* STAR DKAIOCRA 1
I + + +
i Woman and The Ballot—Female | [ Cry Of The Hour “Equality With j Men" is a Ptea Not for a Few, But for All Women A Real Genius ' Rarest Among the Fair Sex.
: pet of M^S- . pebLiug merely
Of Interest to Women
onoinlcs, its that of liujw many arf dead wt
JU™
Lsiablished ISuS ihe otticial county papur, sent to any 'lidres-i In the Lnlled Steles, tor tl.uu / >i,er —Payable .•*!! < sly in advun< e.
Few thintts can appear more curl uus to a dispassionate observer than the foam of discontent v ethlug up amongst women at the pn-si-nt day Any discontent, If It be strum; enough will produce revolution; but a not un
like and Kin
filtered as seco.iii‘cidu»s intil riiattvi at the UreeQ« nil Ip, imi.
1 clrph title
The CTawfordaville Journal is httetuptlng to aitaik the iH-nio-ctaUc parly on the option plank in its platform The Journal must remember that Mr. Taft had the open and avowed support of all the liquor interests of the country during his campaign, and that so fat as the records go Mr. Roosevelt does not care a whoop about temperance Reople who live in glass houses should not throw stones at Mr Bryan. Incidentally it might be mentioned that the Republican state convention failed to mention the option law, and that several districts of the state hate nominated avowedly wet Republican candidates for Representative
common result of revolution Is a
re j
close esi
coil Into a more despotic absohil
i s ru •
\j esi
sina
than any that existed before the r ' •
peri;
he<l
lion, it is possible that such a r<
suit !
will follow on the present revo
t Of <
150. (
Min.
womankind; meantime, couple.!
yvith j
the
conv
another equally prominent feat'ii
e Of |
ihita'
their sex in tin- present time
t is
certainly one of the tro.-t curio .
s or |
our social phenomena. We t
lave j
studied it as such wilii ■ oine d*--
/ree 1
of ttention. and we have t< : »
• t(‘ I
the conclusion that, despite the p
om
t He
’ Ti l IX rapp
inence of its school, it is not alto..
♦ th
er so original as it believe and H
111* c
does not very clearly kiio" wh.i actually aims at and requin -
t "
wlie (ron
"Equality with men.’ "> ti
an
j peril
ajts
swered. But lids is exceeding y
tlifli
ely h
cult to define. Of course t 1 pet
feet
K:
ly easy to pass Jests upon, ntul
con !
;j rbr
n p<
cod witticisms out of. sie h a ibj
ect;
< OUl
IllUIi*
Teething children have more or less diarrhoea, which can be controlled by giving Chamberlain's Colic, Cholera and Dlarrheoa Remedy. All that Is necessary ie to give the prescribed dose after each operation of the bowels more than natural and then castor oil to cleanse the system. It is safe and sure. Sold by all dealers
Electricity Hound a Corner. A curious experiment witn an electric discharge conducted round a right-angled corner is described by Prof. Francis E. Nlpher. Thu corner was formed in bending sharply the conducting wire. A photogruphis place enclosed in a hard rubber hnld er was placed under the wire in such a way that the discharge would descend toward it, then turn at a right angle, and pass horizontally above it. It was found that when a negative discharge passed down the wire to the angle the electric*, particles kept straight on their way Instead of turn Ing. penetrated the rubber cover and affected the enclosed plate. But when the dischaige was positive no such effect was produced. The current apparently turned the right-angled corner without, so to speak, shooting off at the bind.
Foghorn Arouses Birds. There has Just been erected on the Bass Hock, the preulpltous Island in the Frith of Froth, off the Haddlng tonshlre coast, a new foghorn which has coat $200,00* It will be Interest Ing to note the effect of the hooter on the nerves of the sea birds, of which thousands of one kind and an Other are to he found on this desolate spot. At dusk the captains of the pas seuger steamers in passing generally sound their whistle or siren for the amusement of their passengers, and it is a sight not easily forgotten to watch myriads of sleepy birds tly a short distance and then return, after uttering • their protest after the manner of the own in "Gtay’s Elegy.” The new fog horn will give three blasts every two minutes
they suggest themselves by the mil lion. The harder effort is to avoid the attractively and faclleiy lud rou jlde of Ihe subject and write upon t seriously All jests apart, it is in thing difficult to di line this • ni.ilitv with men that Is the female cry <>t the hour. If equality in privilegebe taken, equality in liabilities must De enforced also. Are women to go to this extreme? —to becoi.ie oM.erIf they become statesmen? V\ ■ <1 t.bt if they are prepart d to re length; but unless 'hey are. the de sire for “equality with men" is only another phase of the desire for every privilege and the exemption from every penalty. We can thoroughly sympathize with the Impatience of a clever woman at seeing herself excluded from an arena of public life in which some masculine fools and many masi ulhn mediocrities succeed. We are fully prepared to admit that here and there may arise a woman of such brilliant abilities that she would be fully capable of governing an empire or ma noeuvring an array. But such women come once In live centuries; and thiquestion is not of exceptional, but ot all, women. The equality demandou Is not for the few, but for the many It Is of the admission of the many to Its rights and exercises that .ve have to treat; not cf the admission of tti two or three great women who may adorn a century, and who, he it noted generally contrive to do well for themselves and rarely are participants in the cry of which we have heard so much in late years. Where real gout us appears it levels sex; but this is at all times rare. In women rarest and it Is of the vast mass of “the gen eral” that we speak. Maria Then a Catherine, Manon, Roland. Hypatin Corlnna, Sappho, will always makt their own mark on the world’s his lory; hut the plea now raised is foi the admission of all women—on the simple score of womanhood—to the possession of the paths aud thrones of men
v. i know exactly, but the maur a tolerable e ti,mate art at hand—in the tondition ot the rough statistics of the and the impressions of the - vers in the hr-; hours and ibe catastrophe. On who, t. e Angeiis, < ■ .! • i 'he dead _ in the villages toward tl.e siting also the ruins of tiie n a inrsition to make i pretty timate. In the commune of
siaa he believes so.Ouo souls have in lied, or considerably more than
upulaltori which was roughly My reckoning was made on ciion that two-thirds of the ts of ihe city proper, oong P2,40o jieople. had perished,
hree-quarters inslanr h slow exhaustion The first shock of j ilieve, either kilh i | b- than n >.ooo peop'»
in the outlying district, horn cs are lower, the deaths quent exposure and famine reeded those caused flnme-
the shock.
across the straits, had aa
irhr.n population of iil.tMki The who! ■
a large one, had ll.Oio tn11 ere help came slowly; x- no un. haken prosperous r by to give aid and asylum,
tidal wav it Hegel
+ + + Rag Doll Philanthropist Supports Widow and Sends Her Son to Col. iege- Secret of Success Lies In the Fact That Doll. Were Well Made and Had Pleasing Faces.
.
ihrottf
th
nit
i lc
■d n
iiahitan there v towns i
(1
hardly U
drowned many, (the commune) than 30.00. Wo
<idd the dead in Sicily outsid immune ot Messina, and in Cala hi -i who perished outside o
c. How many these were is n.
gtii . But I think HMmiO is not - ive estimate. In these out di 'ricts. with dearth of food, ui . ual aid, tiie death rate j refugees was appalling. It that in tiie entire field of dei 120,0o0 men, women and P risked, we shall not be !
' fat irui i the facts, and , 1 think, ,
11 within them.
er am >ng ti
ildt
e Maltlno of
Naples, which is |
ininolily well
informed in this !
wiili "We
may reckon as de-
e*l the hoses
ed If ti.isin iniiabi-
in the provi
nce of Reggio, and
h.'i'to in that <
>f Met ina." it pro- i
. to qualify ti:
e figuiert in a fav-
. e, but
roughI> tltey give
in ' Ure of tin
work tit at must be
Stencil Design. •3v /ovyk j! ^ 'p !
Apple on the Berry Bush. To those particularly Intel csted In the growing of tipplca an experiment made at Di Ita Idaho, w ill be of value. In tiie Spring of last year Thomas and Francis Hauch, two miners, who keep a garden and grow straw berries and vegetables, experimented in grafting a iron of a four-year old apple tree into a service berry tree body, and to their delight the limb not only grew but blossomed this year and two wi i developed yellow apples ripened The tree from which tin scion was cut has never bloomed, yet the scion wlua grafted into a berry bush blo.-motned and bore fruit the next year. La Grande Observer.
i 11
c Nearly half a million people i be m mitl in this region. The . i. casing its figures on official a a ; ima i the value of the di .iivi.l liau es on the tax roll at 1 .(i including the little houses o t ixed, and the cost ot rebuilding c pufiii. structures, the construction aid ;u i it i.innot I- les.-' than $24,- ■ uttO. Kvidontly This k a wide ■ Hi.I lie building is notoriously ■:I“iisive in Italy, while It is doubtI if private owners will lie in haste 0 i build. But something like $20,- ■ limy i' : rc-eiit the 1 ss in real • ate. Hut recent emigration from uer-a rcrums makes me suspect that the figur.: tire based on a census of ei; It: at - ago. The true figures m • be Mimewhat smaller. i l iii!' tlic proprietor who can 1 1 ii> calculate his loss and plan • i v ie id, toward repairing it may l. • . tc ceil luckv We have here at ( pri a Mes-hiian capitalist every cent of win . c investment was in local r"!ii; h. Suppo.-e he avails himself of ■ \ c. nnK iit assistance and rebuilds, id. he may not lie allowed to use uld sites at all. He surely will not l" “iii ' ' put up high apartment - hue those that have fallen, and k. : lie may by law be required to seIci i a form of iiiii ■ iin that ’.ill no ret u n i prohl on it. cost. I cite tliesi
,1:1.
nt i
:
i ” tern’s of vv 'iiich are il: ; stood. The prest Hly condemned H
0 ^ 0 $ 0 {j W
How Does the Gipsy Moth Spread? Heretofore, says Dr. L. O. Howard it ha.-t been supposed tiint the gipsy moth w as distributed only by i uterpil , lara carried by moving objects, such us carriages. The moths cannot fly, and the part taken by birds and winds in distributing them or the caterpillars he regards as problematical. Yet recently isolated colonies of these moths have been found in the woods far from roads and paths, and the • question arises. "How did they get ’ there?" Doctor Howard requests In - formation and suggestions on this , point.
If
NaiEP H »r razin lie i t m irenernl
it of the
di ntly it to recrcr
tacts, bi cause there pit il prating a'lout story, and rising like I I ■ ri 'luhitation ol ni.rmoii.i problem, the
s yet httrdlv sitp is alnoving the q.'est ion, a
of the walls anl leveling us, i t i. ! th ‘ expense pr.Td ieabllit ,v of wiiicli
I i utrnu’ * d Tiie emeigcticv ■ Hie building rogulaticns
' i i i nf I i
re viou •. Evi,cv nut he humanly posslbb
. --'real eotiiiuercial city in
fa:lit >ti.
Curtain Done on Icrirrt.
s. <■ intalne.l many wetilthv eiii/- ii: it’d i.d i great trade in till pied.nt- of the di. Her kariwn re-
ceived annnall 2tn
steanuhlps vvitli
CASTOR IA
For Inlantr and Childreti
rim Kind You Have Always Bought
B “ rs
NtgiiatUie of
The Most Beautiful Women. “When Kudin, the sculptor, was re cently asked what eo utrj produced the most beautiful vvonu n,” say an English periodical, his reply was . All of them. Each country lias itown beauty ' He added. 'What is beauty? No exact definition can be given. Those who most 11-l iable the classic type are some of the Hal ian models from the South, and from Sicily, really tiie Greek part of Italy I'hese also have a peculiarity rarely found nowadays with us. that the second toe being longer titan the big !i ‘. One finds it invariably In Greek statutes Ai 'ither rlnssic feature, tin nose continuing tiie line of Hie fore head, is rarer, i once saw it in a young An.ctlean woman, Miss D., who had produced It artificial!v by injecting paraffine to fill up the hollow at 'I c bride of the uosa l he effect wa: very ugly.'”
•xport . Cotm
d import t on tin-e of 500,-
f ailing
In-hhui Cal
iniu and K
aim: . i>, hut r \ i-
d»H11 y v ith Iter super
l> si: : at ion and
iong-csi a hi
bed li ule
ie; ina cannot
remain a ’
ildern<>h
I.et tne
mid that if
tiie mind rests
chleflv on
the woeful
sp ieiacle of ihe
deutrov I’d
■ . , iln un ma iked damage
In the fiiJ<
1 has also
hi en exit;u>l il-
nary. Tin
-• terraced
i i.i’chaids ami
garden pic
us shook tl
own their high
facing of iimin < ,1
one junt before
a series (
torrentia
! rains. Much
of the precious loam
thai ha-- tieen
created by
1 he labor '
if centuriee has
been swep
t down int
.1 tl”' : a. To
set tin i-ur
■ ' iiopttl.Tlioi
i of 'he e nrov-
hires on tl
leir feet ug.
i:i will rrouire
months in
d jjerhnpa
i< irs of w 11-
dirciTcd aid. Front 1
et t o Finuk
J '.fit her.
Ji .in the .v
■ i 1 ' 1 .. i.. c^-
There are many dolls which are noted for their sweet dispositions and H eir willingness to sit still by the luiur and da exactly aa they are told But these virtues are negative in their nature, and one would not expect a doll, no matter how amiable, to become an active philanthropist, and besides helping to support a famH., to go so far as to send a young n through college. But that is Just what one do., did. Slie came Into being a little before Christmas. It had been a difficult emblem for a certain widow, whose iiauie shall be Leighton, to provide enough Christmas gifts, and at the hist, when only a week remained, she .ddenly recollected that her niece Alice had been forgotten. She couiJ afford to buy nothing more, so she de ti rudned to make something with her i .. n hands, aim in recollection of her own girlhood, decided that it should be a rag doll. The proportions were exceedingly g< nerous more than two feet long : luige as a rea 1 baby. For uiatet oil nothing was needed except som* pine sawdust, easily procured frot the mill, and some strong, new cotton
cloth.
Rnltenis were tirst cut from Hit tough paper which hardware dealer it- and were tried and modiHed un t, they seemed right. Tiie head amt body were of one piece, aud each limb .aa made separate. When the patterns were satisfac tory, the cloth was cut and sewed up leaving openings for introducing tin stuffing of sawdust, which was care fully sifted first. Then the arms and legs, brought to a thin edge at the upper ends, were owed on in such a way as to allow them to move freely. 1 he head was tiie greatest triumph Md Leightoi could draw creditably Site procured some oil-paints, and c.,\e Arabella’s head a generous prim ing of white lead and oil. When this was dry. a second coat was laid on over it. and over that again a coat oi t: h color. On tiie back were paint ; aglets of brown, and on the front a charming face, with rosy cheeks and wide blue eyes and a calm and placid smile. Her protile may not have been all ti. it could be desired. It is certain that she toed out, aud that her fin gers were merely divisons of a "blub’ ot cotton cloth marked out by rows ot stitching. Never mind. Properly dressed, site made her appearance at Alice’s home on Christmas morning and became a' once the most impor U.nt personage in the house. Three days later a carriage stop ped at Mrs. Leighton’s door, and a well dresssed woman got out. She announced her errand at once: "My little daughter has seen the doll you made for your niece, and is perfectly delighted with it. She can’t talk of anything else. 1 called to see if you would he willing to make her one Just like it. Could you afford to make one fur five dollars? 1 would gladly jiay that." Yes, Mrs. Leighton could make one for that price, and would. But before stie hud liuished it two other women had come witn similar requests, and in the light of the first offer, Mrs. Leighton had courage to name five dollars as her price to them also. That was the beginning. Order aftei order came In, and then came a letter from a wealthy woman, who wished to make i contribution to a hospital fair, and wanted to know if Mrs Li * g ii ton would undertake to make fifty o' the dolls to be put on sale; e ) she offered the same price Iii 'otnititssfon decided tile ques tun s ti whether or not tiie only i;n should eo to college, lie had de ' Idl'd to go D work, and tiie idea ol h ' : tpported for four years by a r ■ dl did not please him. Finally iinvcver. his t,other persuaded him tl H it "as a duty which lie owed ■ Hi to hiii sell and to her. aud he
went.
Vdvertised by their rtends. the rag dolls ontinued to sell until the v .ng : in had finished his college : ' and the making of the dolls " ■ no iotiger necessary. '' hat was the reason for the sueol this simple industry? Rag do Is are as old as history, and there nothing especially novel in Mrs. !• : hton s Arabellas. The secret piobably lies in the fact that these dods vvete well made, and had pleas Inc faces, which could be washed, and were not easily marred, and "he h wore, moreover, the expression ti nt little girls like.
ARTIFICIAL PUMICE STONE.
Answers Many Purposes Made by Mixing Sand and Clay. Consol General Guenther of Frankfort reports a Germ a r invention by which artificial pumice stone is produced by a mixture of saint and day He writes: "Pumice stone, aside from its use as a cleaning agent, belongs to the most important polishing substances. While emery is used for polishing tools, polishing paper for stone and glass, oxide of iron for fine glassawre and lime for ineutls, pumice stone is employed for polishing softer articles Pumics-stone as found in nature is, according to its composition, nothing but lava which has received its foam-like porosity through the foot that the volcanic stone substance was cooled very rapidly under strong development of gases. Natural pumice stone, which, for industrial purposes, comes almost exclusively from the island of Upari. is of little firmness, and for some reason experiments have been made for some time to find an artificial substitute of gi eater durability. This seems now to have been accomplished through a German invention, under which artificial pumice stone is made by mixing sand aud clay. This artificial pumice stone is made in five different kinds. The first is either hard or soft, with a coarse grain and used for lea her, water-proof garments and for the felt and woolen industry. The second can also ire supplied hard or soft. It has a medium grain and is mainly used for stucco and sculptural work, as also for rubbing wood before painting. The third is soft, of fine grain and is recommended for polishing wood and tin. The fourth is ol medium hardness and line grain and gives to wood the right polish before being finished with oil. The flf h is haid and of fine grain and used for polishing stone, especially lithographic stone The manner of u.-!ng is the same as for natural pumise stone. For wool it is first used dry, afterward mixed with oil.”
Ru'es for Ironing Iron itii and embroidery on the wrong side only. Iron frills, lace, bands, sleeves and collars first. Iron the main part last, being very careful not to crease the work already done. Iron fine silks and muslin through a piece of cambric. Iron handkerchiefs and serviettes whilst they are quite damp, finishing in tiie center. Iron body linen on the right side only and table linen both sides, wrong side first
Valuable Vestments. The vestments in use at St Pa rick's Cathedral. New York, compare very favorably with those in many of the famous cathedraJs i« Europe a.m they are the finest in any cathedral i, America. Archbishop Corrigan presented to the ca hedral the only com plete set of Holy Thursday vestments in the world. They are valued ai $20,000. In the set are thirteen enaeutiles, ten dalmatics, nine tunics, two copes and lace albs, amices and other i eatments to correspond to the Holy Thursday service alone. These vestments are of the finest white satin, embroidered with gold ninety per cent Hue. The principal ornaments are the passion Hower. wheat sht-af and grapes, embroidered in silk and gold, emblematic of Holy Week The body of the vestment is worked with sprays of fuchsias. The remainder of Hie vestments in this set are made of tiie finest moire antique, enibronleied in the fines' silk and gold to i rrespond. This magnificent set of vestments w r as made by the Dominican Sisters at Hunt’s Point. It took fifteen nuns an entire year, working eight hours a day. The chasubles are studded with pearls and rubies. The arohiepiscopal sets worn when the Archbishop pontifleates, are of the finest red silk velvet. There are eight sets, which cost *5.000 each. They are embroidered in pure gold. A famous set of vestments now hi the old sacristy was a gift :o the late Archibishop Hughes, On these vestments, which are of the finest gold cloth, is worked the Archbishop’s coat of arms. They are embroidered with gold and encrusted with jewels. The set comprises wstmen s for twelve priests besides the Archbishop. Arch bishop Corrigan wore these vestments occasional! Another set of vestments which has ittractid attention from admirers of iri'tii embroidery was prevented to l.'dshOp Corrigan. They are rose olored and are worn on two days only of the year and are permitted to ’♦! tdr , 's and collegiate inetiaitions pH throughout tiie world. They are iiibrolder-d In fin gold and artistic needlework On the chasuble is the usual cross, and the figures on the cross and designs on the frontispiece are worked in silks of different colors, pedd and silver on geild. Another hands' me set Is one worn for j intlfiedal requiem masses, it is of Mack moire antique silk. A set "f ie tments whieh was prepared speci 'Hy for Archbishop Corrigan is used for ceb I.rating the nup ial masses. It is made of white satin, and around the outer rdre is worked a vine of forget-me-nots in colors that blend. Around the cross in the back of the chasuble are v orked sprays of marguerites in vine shape.
Nature Teaches Inventors. ’’Wo get our hints from nature.” 'Tip Inventor said. "Take, for intanee. the hollow pillar, which is stronger than the solid one. The wheat straw showed us the superior strength of the hollow pillar. Solid, the wheat straw would be unable to support its head of grain. ’’Whore did man get his idea for carriage springs? From the hoofs of the horse, which, like the springs derived from them are made from parallel plates. “Scissors we get from the jaws of the tortoise, which are natural scissors: chisels from the squirrel, who carries them in his mouth; adzes from the hippopotamus, whose ivories are ad;' es of the heal design; the plane from the bee's Jaws: the triphammer front [ the woodpecker.
ll.a 1 oSt
Antiques are Popular. Antiques in jewelry are appreciated by the present day fashionables. I
Chrysanthemums, it is said, wer~ cultivated In China before the cioi euth century.
ALCOHOL 3 PEK t I N I , AVcgetable Preprint! :<■ r r i similauttbitk’fMiUkjKr linguaSkmacteandBc’iidi.'t t
CASTS
For Infants and Children ill The Kind You Havii
Always Bought
B.'ars the
Infants /Cjhi d« eh
£
a
llo
si -
Promotes Pitystumf hrerful ness and KesiX uniams piTitkr Opium Murph ne nor Mineral Nor Narc otic.
,7.
«^0 fTirfi
foripe u/Utd PrS 1A1 tU Ii UJJl hmiih.i Sftd *■ HbJkHt Suit* - j^L» Xetd * J+lVtitoinf- . Moirtvt uk Lda* HrmSrrd CtonM Sugar • huttoyavH Himr.
Signature
utsz
Aterfeci Remedy forCrmslifa lion, Sour StomachiDiaiTiniea Worms,Convulsioiis.Ft >i’rish
ness and LOSS OF Shl.U’
Facsimile Signature uf
E c ut L
NEW YORK.
Fife'S
^^L^umr.intocd under tD Exact Copy uf Wrapper.
in Use For Over Thirty Years TOlii
TMI .■•'TAUft COMPAffT Ml .# V. AC l
IM FKI UBAN TIME TABLE. IN EFFECT FEB. 21. East Bound Vest Bound
A. M
A. 1
♦LOB
1:45
7:11
6:45
3:11
7:45
S: 23
Limited
8:45
10:11
Limited
9:38
1 l ;1I
10:45 11:45
P. M
P. M
12:28
— Limited -
1238
IV
1:45
2:11
2:45
3:28
—Limited—
3:38
4.H
4:45
5:13
5:45
6:2* 7:11
—Limited—
6’38
Limited
1 8:37
9:08 11:02
1 tinned
10:38
MONON TIME CARD
NORTH BOUND
l Chicago Mail ...... 1. H r, aa
C Chicago Express 12:23 pn 10 F. Lick and Laf acco q 42 ai| 12 F. Lick and I^f. acco . ts p»
SOUTH BOUND
3 Louisville Mall .... :• .n Louisville Express . . . . 11 p» 1 I Laf. and F. Lick acco , he !> Laf. and F. Lick act t. . .'i pa All trains run dally.
N. B. Ilct’d. Leu
New Busines; Deal
Trains arrive here from Terre Haul? dally at 8:11 p m. and 12:35 1. nt. aud stay at Greencastle station »vey night.
PUSH MatiufaFt»'retf
ICi
Rhone No. 5t: for rubber tired cabs fo mi train.' ji city calls, day or night Price D ents Prompt service p Ithelj guaranteed at all times tjiv • syoir all and we will do the rest Cubs ’’or uartics and fmien In nl iort notice.
HARRY t X (1,1,1 ’>.*•
.cccssor to II. W. Gill. Gi iiriu" TTanster c'oiiipMiiy
We are prepared to serve our patrons with a good quality of manu faoturej Re every day.
All 1‘HONR its?
Akoner bror
Location of |*lre Alarm Boxes
CHiUHESTEK S
THIlIM A *t« IJ> Eli
I-MtlI* 1.1 Ami* jtiur
iMu*
iHifttii tT
I ' I It •• I It Ii « J ft' t 4a 1 ■ I 1 I »«■•*. «ehlcJ With I c J a *»!.«' tin »th»-r I? . . • t hr.ii'ct-f A : r t H I «
1L3
f
tn ATo\l» , K I N ;
\ C . 1 t at 1
Sl'lDUYUKUmiohD
-TI'. 1 I •. 1 i Vi
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For Fire Dept. Call Phone No. 4 1 LOCATION NO College Avenue and Liberty .. 21 Hanna and Indiana .. 31 Jackson and Daegy ... 11 Madison and Liberty f,] Walnut and Madison Cl •Fire Dept. Headquarters .. .321 ’ Hanna and Crown ust | Bloomington and Anderson .... 42; Seminary and Arlington 52 Washingtno and Durham . . . 62 ! Washington and Locust 72 j Seminary and Locust 212 i Howard and Crown 23 Main and Ohio 4;: College Ave. and DeMotte Alley . 53 l^ocust and Sycamore 03 1—2—1, Fire Out. * Bor rung for all telephone calls
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