Indianapolis Times, Volume 35, Number 105, Indianapolis, Marion County, 11 September 1922 — Page 4
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The Indianapolis Times Earie E. Murttr.. Editor-to-Chief. Roy W. Howard, President. V. B. Peters. Editor. O. F. Johnson, Business Manager. Published daily except Sunday by The Indiana Daily Time* Company. 25-29 S. Meri lian St.. Indianapolis. Member of the Scripps-Meßae League of Newspapers. Client of the United Press, United News. United Financial and NEA Service and member of the Seripps Newspaper Alliance. Member of the Audit Bureau of Circulation. Subscription Petes Indianapolis—Ten Cents a Week. Elsewhere—Twelve Cents a Week. TELEPHONE—MAIN 3500
He hath given meat unto them that fear him; he will ever be mindful of his covenant. —Psalms 111:5. Daugherty Not Omnipotent U \ TTOKXEY GENERAL DAUGHERTY,” says the New York World, “lias suddenly come to regard himself as the heroic champion of the open shop and lias muddled the entire railroad situation in an endeavor to give to his personal economic theories the force of law.” By the attorney general’s own admission, one of the main objects of the Daugherty injunction is to maintain the open shop. In his address to the court Mr. Daugherty said: ‘‘But it may be understood that so long and to the extent that I can speak for the government of the United States T will use the power of the government to prevent the labor unions of the country from destroying the open shop.” Mr. Daugherty might with equal authority of the constitution have said that to tlie extent that he could speak for the government of the United States no flapper would he allowed to wear skirts that were more than six inches from the floor. It is none of Mr. Daugherty’s business as attorney general whether shops are open or closed. It is none of his bus’ness whether industry is carried on exclusively by members of the trades unions, or exclusively by people who do not belong to trades unions. So far as labor unions are concerned, the right of organization has been formally declared hv Congress in the Clayton act. So far as the unions are concerned in the railroad strike, the transportation act. which was passed by a Republican Congress, specifically recognized them as one of the agencies through which the government must deal in helping to determine ihe rate of wages. Why the attorney general should have dragged his open shop theories into this controversy is one of the mysteries of the “best minds” | which the ordinary intellect is incapable of fathoming.
Some day Mr. Daugherty ought to take an hour or two and read the constitution of the United States. If he read it carefully he would discover that the Federal government is not omnipotent, that it was never intended to he omnipotent, and that by inference the attorney general of the United States is not omnipotent. Why Farmers Leave Home INSECTS are the greatest enemies of man. A joyful thing happened the other day. A man in an airplane dosed boll weevils on cotton by covering the plants with an arsenical dust faster than forty men could do it in any other way. Air navigators make clothes cheaper. Could any one have foreseen that the M rights were working for cheap clothes when they built their first plane? Fifty years ago the potato crop seemed doomed. But we found we could kill the bugs with arsenic. And a deadly poison thus feeds the human race. Although there were numerous demonstrations at the State hair we have only begun to see insecticides. Yet we would have no fruit crop without them, no potato crop, very little of other crops. Soon we shall poison the insects that feed on grass and grains. The Department of Agriculture predicts that when the farmers once start using arsenic on cotton the demand will grow at the rate of 50 per cent a year!
Arsenic in this country comes principally from the fumes of smelters. Did you ever see a country blighted by the smudge that comes from a smelter chimney until it looked like a desert? That is caused mainly by the arsenic in the ores. So the laws are forcing the smelters to take out the arsenic instead of poisoning the people and the vegetation by emitting it into the air. Cleanse the air, and poison the insects! Could anything be more proper? And, you see, the smelters just have to make the arsenic or commit a nuisance every time they start their tires. Even so. they can not make all the arsenic we need. We have to import it. And when we use as much of it as we should it will be scarcer and scarcer the world over. But it must he cheap or the farmers can’t afford to use it. Congress is now making an appeal to farmers for support Yet it stabbed the farmers in the back when it framed the tariff hill. Especially on arsenic. It put a duty of 2 cents a pound on white arsenic “to encourage an infant industry,” to INDUCE the smelters to make a thing which the law OBLIGES them to make. It is a tarirr atrocity. It is a blow at cotton, potatoes, fruits, and the farmer generally.
Six Per Cent Stinnes T ~1 ' CO IS 1 IXXUS, Germany s industrial king, has agreed to X X reconstruct the devastated area of northern France with German material at a net profit for the industries which will furnish the goods for fi per cent. Opponents of Stinnes call him the i per cent patriot. But there is no reason why his scheme will not H °rk. U it does, G per cent is a small price to pay for the efficiency at the command of the Stinnes organization.
1 he reconstruction of the war ravages in northern France is an affair for business men and not for politicians. The politicians of France have appropriated ninety billion francs for the devastated area and the work of repair is far from being done. Ibis money is being charged in the French budget against the German indemnity account, and France is not likely to receive the major part of it. But. by the Stinnes proposal. Germany will supply her own material to replace the damage done by the German army. 1 here will be no monetary payment to France on reconstruction account, but the work of reconstruction will get done. Hitherto the trench government has declined to permit German goods to he used for reconstruction purposes. The intention has been to spend German money for French materials. But German money is vanishing, tor international payments, while German materials can hi* had in abundance, So, France will lie wise if the Stinnes offer is accepted, especially since Stinnes’ 6 per cent will be paid him. not by France, hut by Germany in paper marks. If Stinnes is satisfied, France ought to be.
£>■ YOU ARE WELL BRED J-ymi know it is a broach of etiquette invite a wife to dinner without her Wishand ■ An invitation is always addressed rro the husband and wife together and individually to other members of the family. AH dinner invitations require an acceptance or refusal immediately after they are received.
25 TAKE INITIATION Local Voiture No. 146 of 40 Hommes et 8 Cheveaux conducted arf initiation of twenty-five candidates Saturday night at the athletic Club. The initiation was preceded by a promenade and banquet. The next promenade will be held in Terre Haute during the State convention *f the American Legion.
REED CHAMPIONS MELLON AFFAIRS ■ IN PRESENT BOLE Pennsylvania's New Senator Evidences Strong Favor to Capital. Bu c. C. LVOV Correspondent WASHINGTON, Sept. 11.-—ln the Senate but a few weeks. Senator Reed of Pennsylvania, is already a figure of national importance because | of the way he has lined up on issues directly affecting the everyday American citizen. Senator Reed, after voting for exorbitant tariff duties on aluminum and its products—one of the biggest aluminum concerns in the country belonging to the Mellon interests —now takes the lead in the fight to prevent Congress putting a curb on coal profiteers. Interests Varied In private life this year Reed was sitting as a director in some ten corporations and banks controlled by the “Mellon interests' of Pittsburg, of which Secretary of the Treasury Antrew tv. Mellon was head until he went into the Cabinet. Reed's father. James H. Reed, is chief counsel for the vast Mellon interests arid sits as a director in twenty-seven Mellon corporations. I The Pittsburgh Coal Company, ,-ie I largest producers of coal In the bituminous fields of Pennsylvania, is controlled by the Mellons. In his argument against the enactment of any coal price-fixing lcgisla tion. Senator Reed insisted it would j he "unconstitutional.” Even if it were I not unconstitutional, he said, it would j he most unwise and unjust for the I Government, in the "slight emer- j geney" that has resulted from the | coal strike, "to take from all proiiuc- i ers of coal a part of the market value of their property, without a shadow of compensation for it.”
Lenroot Replies Senator Eenroot, Republican, of Wisconsin made this reply to Reed's speech: "If I correctly understand the argument of the Senator from Pennsylvania it is that the right to profi teer In coal and charge extortionate prices is under nil* circumstances and conditions a vested right which cannot in any way he interfered with by the Government of the I'nited tSates. "But the entire country is crying out today because, in a crisis like this, the States having no power, the Government is refusing to exercise such power as it may have to bring relief to the people.” Reed is up for re-election this year. Reed’s corporation connections as a lawyer and directors ami his stand on such national issttes are to he the chief point of attack by his independent Republican and Democratic opponents. THE REFEREE * Bp ALBERT APPLB STINNES Hugo Stinnes tackles the biggest job of his career. Ho negotiates to' provide thirteen billion francs' worth of German materials for rebuilding war devastated France. In this you see common sense at last returning to Europe. Germany '
APPLE
cannot pay the reparitions bill In gold. She can pay in materials—frozen labor. There Is hope for Europe as galleryplaying diplomats are forced to the background and business
men begin to take charge of reconstruction. Europe's greatest problem today, as before the war, is her professional politicians. LIQUyII The 40,000,000 gallons of "hard" liquor, now stored in 300 bonded warehouses all over the country, will he concentrated In thirty warehouses, announces Internal Revenue Commissioner Blair. The fewer the warehouses. the harder for forgers, counterfeiters, burglars and murderers to get what's inside. For thirty warehouses, thirty Marines or thirty Texas rangers should be sufficient guards. The thirsty will note that the bonded stock is less than a quart and a half for each American. BRAINS Spitzka, top-notch American brain specialist and insanity expert, is dead at the age of 46. One of his most interesting jobs was dissecting the brain of Anarchist Czolgosz, McKinley’s assassin. Spitzka undoubtedly learned-a lot about ihe mechanics of thought—the brain-machine that eventually goes to dust. As to the nature of the intellectual force that operates the brainmachine, he was as much in the dark ns the rest of us. That force’s importance is usually exaggerated. It controls not more than a tenth of hu man activities. Instinct and emotions govern the rest.
AS MOTHER SEES IT / Bit BERT OX RRAEEY. MV brood is off to school again, beneath the teacher’s rule again, And though I love them dearly I am glad to see them go, For when they only play around I always have to stay around To keep them out. of mischief; that's a mother's job. you know. But none the less my attitude is one of heart felt gratitude To have the youngsters off my hands a portion of the day, So I can loaf and rest a lilt, recuperate my zest a bit And have some time for gossip or for housework or for play. I FOUND the children's books for them (I brought them from strange nooks for them), I got a suit for Eddie and a brand new dress for Sue; Their wailings were lamentable while 1 made them presentable (They’ll probably remain so for at least a day or two). The thought of studies fretted them. I scolded, soothed and petted them And sent them on their way at last—and breathed a grateful sigh. Vacation days are jolly days and children love their holidays But they're the hardest sort of days for mothers such as 1. HOW sturdy and how neat they looked, how very dear and sweet they looked As off they trudged together to the schoolhouse on the hill! Oh, teacher, take good care of them, for how I love the pair of them Nobody else con understand, nobody ever will: Some day, full grown, they'll start away and take m.v very heart away And 1 shall watch them, smiling very much as I do now; They’ll face the great world fearlessly while I wave to them tearlessly, And I’ll get on without them—though I can't imagine how! (Copyright, 1922, NEA Service.)
THE INDIANAPOLIS TIMES
WORLD WILL FEEL GERMANY’S PLIGHT, VANDERLIP OBSER VES
Bu MII.TOS BROWER LONDON. Sept. 11.—Bread riots are the next great menace in Germany—an explosion that will be felt in America and the rest of the world. That is the gloomy forecast made by Frank A. Vanderlip, famous American banker and student of economics. Vanderlip is on his way home after a five months’ tour of Germany, France. Italy. Switzerland, Hungary, Austria, Roumania and Ozecho-Slova-kia, during which he traveled by auto in order to reach rural villages as well as the big cities. "I fear serious trouble in Germany." Vanderlip said. "Before long you may see some recovery in the price of the German mark, and the people will say the trouble is all over. But don't he fooled by this false normalcy. "Next winter, when coni is scarce and food is dear, there will he critical times in Germany. The danger will he from bread riots. Sixty-five million Germans will not take their troubles as quietly as the Austrians have done. .Monarchists Clever “However. I do not look for any attempt at a monarchlal coup. The monarchists are too clever for tliat. They know if they seized power now they would be grabbing a falling market: they could not bring about cheaper food and greater production, and they would be cursed for every ail ment existing." Vanderlip emphasized that his tour of Europe was not as an official or unofficial observer for the United Stages Government, but merely a tour of personal study. “Reople call me a pessimist about
Education Is America’s Greatest Force of Civilization, Says U. S. School Head
BY JOHN J. TIGERT U. S. Commissioner of Education America has made no more noble contribution to civilization than public education. Our school system is "Made in America." The child of any resident in the Union may pass through the kindergarten to the university, with proper study and the observance of reasonable rules of conduct. The cost is borne by taxation. ; Ho great is the perstige of Ameri- ! can education that no important general educational reorganization has taken place during the past genany part of the world which did no*, show the influence of American ideas. Expenditures Great j America spends more money for j education than for any other purpose. and the expenditures for schools are greater per capita than those of : any other nation. As compared with children of other ! countries, the American pupil's per j sonality is carefully respected. The lair of humility often found in European schools has no place in America. Education here aims to the requisition of knowledge no more than at the development of character and of independence of thought and action. Notwithstanding our greater ex penditures, we are still far behind > some of the European countries in e.vj sential respects. Even in the cities. ’ where educational conditions are most! favorable, there is too much illiteracy. ! Tito average for the entire country, j six illiterates in every hundred per j
Road to Cherished Goal Is Beset With Many Obstacles
To the Editor of The Times ' For months wage earners have been j told they should willingly stand their ! share of the marking down r.e-ossary I to get “back to normalcy;'’ that nn-r j chants and others have stood theirs; ; that, high freight charges stand in the | way of reasonable transportation of the Nation's commodifies; that the farmers, who control neither the prices of the things they sell nor of those that they buy and who have been "deflated" almost to the breaking point, have stood theirs; that therefore the patriotic duty of labor is to stand reductions. This consent to reasonable reductions was being secured all along the line. Though the train on the road back to normalcy showed every evidence of proceeding over a rough track, yet the passengers and crew have stood it all with much cheerful ness. Before the President has called the station “Normalcy," anew crew takes charge and begins to run the train in the other direction and this so far as is yet known without any rebuke from the conductor, the President. They now demand large increases in living costs. Other bandits have usually been willing to rifle the mail car or to take some of the valuables of passengers. These demand the whole train as their property. Check writing profiteers seemingly are determined to get what they assume they have paid the Republican leaders for, an indulgence to loot the American people whether soldiers get
I B sj; jm FRANK A. VANDERLIP Europe,” lie said. "The piain truth is tiiat it is very easy to be an optimist if one stays in America, and very hard not to be a pessimist if cne conies over and studies Europe. “All over Europe 1 found the plain people—the city workers and th" peas ant farmers —sick of war. and yet fearing it; all hungry for pence, and
Skhf •• * \ 14 JOHN J. TIGERT
sons over 10 years of age, is dis tressingiy high. It is evident that large numbers of Americans do not avail ib-'.'ii.----:ves I of the advantages offered them, tad that the compulsory attendance laws are not sufficiently effeciixr. Also, wo have not yet attained that equality of opportunity for all rh.l
theirs or not; and this in violation of The promise of tin- makers if tinlast Republican national platform to defer revision until conditions In come more normal. No wonder that the resistance of labor leaders is stiffened against any further “deflation'' while profiteers show their greed to obtain a resumption of war profits. Are they not reading in the newspapers advertisements advising the people to buy their winter supplies now, before prices of same are raised by the new tariff? Naturally, they feel that the at tempt of those who want to destroy I the unions is to place the man with the dinner pail between the mill stones of 'driven-down wages and ascending costs. More than one aspirant for a senatorial seat sees old "Schedul-- K" sitting, like Banquo’s ghost, in the j seat he would occupy. They also find many Americans of German birth or extraction, presenting this new effort to bar the industrious workers if the now German republic from marketing any goods in the Unit'd Slates, j which would help them pay their j indemnities. They find the "Ituilj Moose" generally saying (bat the re ! actionaries are trying now to get a high tariff they will not get when more of their I’rogressives gei into Congress.
The hold-up fellows say to the American people, “Hermit us to tob you and you will enable us to return some of the loot.” But will they? Some of them say they want to cover the difference between wages here and abroad. In what countries.’ The wages in revenue-tariff (ire,-it iirita.in are higher than in high, protective countries of the continent. Mr. .\irnes (!. Blaine said that if there were any difference between the wages of work ingmen in Britain and the United States the same was more than compensated by the longer hours of labor of the latter and their greater efficiency. If the labor cost of the average article is 30 per cent, of same, and if the wages of Englishmen were 25 per cent lower on the average than those of American workingmen, an average tariff of one fourth of 30 per cent, that is. "U jeer cent would cover this difference between English and American labor cost. However, few if any of our citizens ask any reductions from the present Unerwood tariff duties. American labor, the highest paid, with labor-saving machinery, is the cheapest on earth, because most efficient. Privilege classes are usually blind to coming storms. The American people are too near the brink of revolution to stand complacently a monstrosity, enacted as the swan song of two retiring reactionaries, fastened on the country for at least two or three years. Even yet it should be fought as the Force bill was fought—to kill it. FRED T. LOFTIN.
yet feeling that they haven't got it on dny secure terms. “Every tirne you turn around you find the situation full of vicious circles. Take the matter of the allied debts to us. I am not one of those who have advocated cancellation of those obligations. Problems Feared “Here begins the' vicious circle that makes one almost fear the problem is insoluble—the allied nations can only pay us in gold or in goods; they haven’t got the gold and can't get it; and if they seek to pay us with goods, we at once put up a protective tariff waif' to shut out these products; if we don't, there is danger that our own factories would be closed and our own workmen thrown out of jobs.
History Relates One Man Served As U. S. Senator for Three States
Q Was any one man ever Senator from three Stattes? A. Yes, Jam'-s Shields, a native of Ireland, who emigrated to the United States, and was breveted major general during the Mexican War “for gallant and meritorious conduct at the battle of Uerro, Mexico." was elected Senator from Illinois, serving from March 4. 1849, to March 3, 1855; he moved to Minnesota in 1885 and was elected to the United States Senate from Minnesota, serving from May 12, 1858. to March. 1859: moved to I'ali fornia and served in the Union Army as brigadier general of volunteers from Aug. 19, 1851, until his resigna-
dren which is the first article in America's educational creed. Some of the schools in the sparsely settled districts are still deficient as regards length of term, character of equipment and qualification of teachers. Wo have ilone much, hut there is j still much more to be done. | t.EARN A WORD TODAY Today’s word is—BLATANT. It's pronounced—blatant, with ac- | cent on the first syllable, and the first j "a” long, as in "play." but good au- j i thorities say originally it probably ! was short, as in "cat.’’
It means—bellowing, like r calf: bawling, clamorous, offensively cbtru- : sive, demanding undue or involuntary ! attention. The w .rid s origin is uncertain. It’s used like this —"'Nothing.' says ; Senator Robins-.n of Arkansas, 'need be feared by tills country from those who make blatant attacks upon its i institutions, but beware of those who 'condone violations of its laws and ! constitution.’ "
jt . Lewis F. Short ii., ,v ,:iuure Main 0583 t'hH*. T. 1 nil'll 11IS State Life Bids. < irole 1505:
S^fli iif jt tiro ,1. O'fuimor 516 * I AVash St Irvington (Kill 1.. :. Fuller •Hit Kuhn Bldg. M tin (iladn (. Bchouf 615 I enickc Bldg. Main 0877 4. lUr VA wver 510 Occidental Bldg. Main 6555 j
A. .1. Brttlct-foril Ig'l Slat.- Life ISlillt. Main -■ 100 IV W. Cheek, 1111 V Illinois St. < ireie IS7 5 VV. 11. Cr.lKn, Sr. 506 Odd I'ellovv Bldg. Main 0212 Uni. I'. lleniM-liel (111 Odd l-ell.i.v Bide. Lincoln 3603
F.tnnm F. A ickrcy ••626 Roosevelt Ave. AVeti. 9IOG
American Clinique of (Chiropractic Jlcseard)
"I do not agree with those Americans who say we have no interest in Europe. And I put the economic interest the lowest in the scale. A restored Europe would, of course, buy our surplus cotton and wheat and raw materials and manufactured goods. “But America has more than a dollar and cent interest in Europe. The greatest loss to us and the world would be if Europe crashed, and ceased to he a great intellectual, artistic and scientific center of activity. "I think America should he represented on the reparations commission. Entirely apart from our claims to repayment by the allies, we have a very great, interest and desire to see Europe restored to real peace.”
tion March 28, 1863; moved to Carrollton. Mo., and was United States Senator from Missouri from Jan. 24, 1879, to March 3, 1879. Q. Can the President and Vice President both come from the, same State? A. Article XII of the first ten amendments to the Constitution of the United States reads: "The electors shall meet in their respective States, and vote by ballot for President and Vice President, one of whom, at least, shall not be an inhabitant of the same State with themselves."
UNUSUAL FOLK flu SEA Service WASHINGTON, Sept. 11.—Babies deprived of their natural food are no-
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MRS. SCHWARZ Agriculture has some billions of bacteria that it thinks a great deal of. j True, ihe department gets them — ! some of them from far away and at j great expense—not from any love of them as germs, but to study their ; ways, in order to keep the various i families of them under control, hut to , do this it must keep them well fed.
O. I .Wally 510 O.lrl Krilov Hide. I.ineoln 1310 Siott 4V. \lllson 520 Occidental Bldg. Main 0355
WE BELIEVE
DEFINITION The practice of Chiropractic consists of tin* adjustment, with the hands, of the movable segments of tlie spinal column to normal position for the purpose of releasing the prisoned impulse.
1 n 1 lu* If KUi r of the SI( 'K to call a ('hristian Scientist if Christian Science is preferred; In the KKJIIT of the SICK who believe in healing by prayer to live or die in that faith, without molestation, if prayer is preferred. Therefore, AYE BELIEVE in the RIGHT of the SICK to have Chiropractic Health Service if PREFERRED; And thousands upon thousands of the SICK who have given Chiropractic Adjustments a 1 borough, fair and faithful trial PREFER CHIROPRACTIC SERVICE to get them well and KEEP THEM WELL.
Eva Louise Shoe/ 115 N. Delaware Alain 583
toriously cranky about what they eat. Baby bacteria are no exception to this rule. Either they have to have just the kind of nourishment they like, or else tjiey curl up and die .Somelimes they are entirely welcome to do so, but there are other times when they are not. For instance, the Department of
E. K. Brlinnt 015 l.rinrk.- lildc Main 0877 IVm. 4. Miller 520 Occidental Bide. Xlain 0355 '
M in. a. Kinao 332 Yz Mass. Av. Oecr stout's Store Circle 5881 j E. AV. Vickrey 2636 Roosevelt Ave. Web.
in the RIGHT of the SICK to GET AVELL; In the RIGHT of the SICK to CHOOSE the method preferred to GET AVELL; In the RIGHT of the SICK to call a medical doctor if a medical doctor is preferred ; In the RIGHT of the SICK to call an osteopath if an osteopath is preferred;
li. ( hosier Peirce | 51i> Occidental Bldg. Main 6355 I
4 cjj AA . Preston '2l Occidental Bldg. Alain 105*
SEPT. 11, 1922
ARM? OFFICIOS IN EH ARE IN PITIFUL WAY Price of Victory Dear to Former Heroes of Britain's Forces in World War. Bu Vnited Acte* LONDON, Sept. 11. —Four years after the armistice the desperate plight of former British army officers today forms pitiful testimony to the price England is paying for "victory.” Former majors, captains and lieu tenants—men cited for gallantry on the western front —are selling matches on the streets of London, giving "musical” concerts on the curb, with masks covering their faces to hide their identity, or doing the manual work of porters for a few sh.lhngs a week. Hundreds of others are doing nothing. Unable to find work of any kind, they have raised their las/ distress signals, spent their gratuity, sold everything they possessed and are probably in debt for a week's lodging. Tragedy Is Revealed. The tragedy of these men is revealed in poignant human documents, “in extremis” circulars which are issued weekly to members of the Lon don Rotary Club. Most of the club members are employers of labor. Circulars sent out by the ministry of labor, give details of the two most urgent cases among about 4,000 ex officers who are looking for jobs. Winners of the V. C. and D. S. O are among the petitioners. Here arc examples: Captain, age 44. twenty-seven years' army service, would accept anything At present living on proceeds of selling oranges. Lieutenant, age 45, former secretary of the London Coalition Liberal organ ization and representative of textile houses. Willing to accept anything. Captain Is Penniless Captain, age 29, five years private see etary to a member of Parliament Shorthand, typist, knowledge of French and German. At the end of his resources. Accept anything; go anywhere. Cne cause of these cases of distress among ex-officers, according to officials of the ministry of labor, is the fact that they married during the war with the expectation that their civilian status would he equal to their army positions. Wives who expected to o: cupy well-furnished homes and live on generous incomes are now existing in the lowest poverty in garrets and basements.
We Will Help You to Save Safely Jf letcficr £?abtruis anti £rust Cos
TY ' j *-*■ i# (-has. 1,. ttovre 0 AA. Morris St. Drevel **7.l* •I. L. French 874 Mr Virginia Ave. l)rox*l 0067 Sw m I E. M. Ryan Fountain Sq. | Chiropractor ' 106(1*2 Virginia Drove! 611!) ; Blanch M. Hentscliel 611 Odd Fellow Bldg. 1 nii.i .uni-; H. V. Griffin 506 Odd Fellow Bldg. Main 6212 George AV. Shea 516*J E. AVash St. I ■i; i; i.. 0311 Ibinte 1.. Conner 101 Kahn Bldg. Main 3130 ■ = \■■ '' ■ 135 Occidental Bldg. Main 1403
