Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 120, 7 March 1910 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUX-TELEGK A3I, MONDAY, MARCH 7. 1910.
r AGE FIVE
ENTERTAINS TICKNOR CLUB. Airs. .1. M. Wampler entertains the Tlcknor club this afternoon at her home on North Seventh street in'its weekly session, the reading of "Richard II," in the club's study of Shakespeare's plays being continued, Mrs. James Carr and Mrs. Edwin Rupe being the readers for the day. Mrs. David Dennis and Miss Susan Kelsey will discuss "Current Events." j8 FORMER RESIDENT PROMINENT. Mr. Gansey R. Johnston, of Columbus, Ohio, a native of this city, where he received his education, has been appointed general manager of the Independent Telephone system of the state of Ohio, having been promoted from the general managership in Columbus. Mr. Johnston is a brother of Mrs. E, II. Grosvenor of this city. Jit WILL GO TO EUROPE. Professor and Mrs. Robert L. Sackett, former residents of this city, now of Lafayette, where Mr. Sackett occupies a chair in Purdue university, will spend the summer in Europe, going abroad to attend the Passion Play. J 1 J VISITORS AT GLEN MILLER. Mr. Russell Phelps, of New Castle, and Mr. Glen Moody, of Hagerstown, spent Sunday with Mr. Edward Hollem, superintendent of parks, in the latter's home in Glen Miller. sC WILL VISIT IN RICHMOND. Mrs. Louis G. Reynolds, of Dayton, will come tomorrow for a few days visit with her father, Mr. E. G. Vaughan, of North Tenth street. Miss Mary Reynolds, who was the guest of Miss Dorothy Vaughan last week and attended the Wednesday Assembly dance has returned to Dayton. MRS. DOWNING AS A COMPOSER. Mrs. Lulu Jones Downing, formerly of this city, now of Chicago, Is the subject of an extended notice in the last issue of "The Music News" a leading musical journal which says, in introduction : "Mrs. Downing finished, at the end of last week, a short trip, during which she appeared in programs of her own songs exclusively, at Ft. Wayne. Richmond. Muncie and Indianapolis. Everywhere her songs were received with the greatest acclaim, and her recitals were voted as among the most artistic events of the season. Some excerpts from the very complimentary press notices given are here appended." The Music News going on with quotation from the Ft. Wayne News, Muncie Star and a Richmond paper, ail of which speak of Mrs. Downing as a composed of eclat and a woman of delightful personality, receptions having been given- the musician in connection with her recitals. jl WILL ATTEND PASSION PLAY. Miss 'Mary Baer, with Miss Alice Shedd, of Boston, Mass., will leave in April for Europe, Miss Baex and Miss Shedd to remain abroad for some months. They will attend the Passion Play to be given this summer in Oberamergau, which will be a mecca for thousands of Americans. The Tassion Play, as is well known, is giv- , en every ten years and it is said that this will be the last year it is to be presented as it has been in the past. Miss Shedd has frequently visited in Richmond, having spent last summer in this city. v J WILL GO TO EUROPE. Miss Alice Locke, supervisor in drawing in the public schools, will go abroard this summer. Jt Jt J IN INDIANAPOLIS. Mrs. Walter J. Hutton. of North Fifteenth street, is spending several months in Indianapolis. j o SEAFORD TO GO TO BOSTON. Mr. John A. Seaford. the well known HDay After uiln"ted Popular Fkg: 10c. Family Size 15c
J
"The Memory Lingers"
rostum Cereal Co., Ltd., Battle Creek, Mich., U. S. A.
EDITED BY ELIZABETH R. THOMAS.
local artist, expects to leave in about a fortnight for Boston to remain indefinitely, Boston having been Mr. Seaford's place of residence for some years. Mr. Seaford has lately been showing some charming examples of his art in the windows of the Starr Piano company. . & WILL NOT RECEIVE TOMORROW. Mrs. Harry N. Holmes will not oUserve her usual "at home" tomorrow. j & J EAST END SOCIETY. The East End Aid society of the Christian church will meet tomorrow afternoon at half past two v o'clock with Mrs. Harriet Finney, 1128VS East Main street. jC Jt MEETS THIS EVENING. The Young Ladies Mission Circle of the Christian church, will meet this evening with Mrs. T. li. Kuhn, 30 South Thirteenth street. j jS . LECTURE BY STATE OFFICIALS. One of the interesting events of the near future is the free lecture to bo given under the auspices of the City Federation of Clubs by E. II. Barnard. state food and drug commissioner and Dr. Hurty. secretary of the state board of health, on the tuberculin test, the date of which has not been definitely announced. The various committees appointed to look after the arrangements for the convention of the State Federation of Clubs which will meet here in October, are occupied with different phases for the entertainment of that body, tentative reports to be made at the time of the next regular meeting of the Federation which will be held the third Thursday in March. t GOING TO EUROPE. Miss Martha Whitacre. of the high school faculty, and Miss Inez Trueblood will spend the summer vacation in Europe. tit ENTERTAINED INFORMALLY. Mr. and Mrs. Byram Robbins entertained informally last evening with an indoor picnic in their home on South Fourteenth street, those invited being the younger married set. Mr. Owen Kuhn of Oklahoma City, was an out of town guest. J J RETURNED TO SPRINGFIELD. Mr. and Mrs. Thomas and Miss Lueretia Thomas, of Springfield, Ohio, who have been with Mr. and Mrs. James Carr, at their home in Westcott Place, returned to Springfield, yesterday afternoon, Mr. Thomas having joined Mrs. and Miss Thomas yesterday afternoon. Mrs. and Miss Thomas received many social attentions while visiting Mr. and Mrs. Carr, a number of parties having been given in their honor. . MAGAZINE CLUB. Mrs. John M. Lontz is the reader at the Magazine club which is meeting with Mrs. Sarah Stutson, of South Thirteenth street, this afternoon. MISS THOMAS TO CHICAGO. Miss Elizabeth Thomas went to Chicago for the week end. J jS RETURNED HOME. Miss Harriet Gebhardt, of Dayton, who has been visiting Miss Ruth Kinsey, of North Eighth street, since Friday, will return home this afternoon. t jt SPRING GROVE SEWING CIRCLE. The Spring Grove Sewing Circle will meet tomorrow afternoon with Mrs. Sarah Crockett. J ,4 MISS DOAN ENTERTAINS. Miss Ruth Garver of Tippecanoe City, Ohio, who is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Walter Garver of South Ninth street, and who has been much entertained during the past week, was the guest yesterday afternoon of Miss Day One will find Post Toastics a constant delight The food is crisp and wholesome and so dainty and tempting, that it appeals to the appetite all the time morning, noon and night. Some folks have pronounced Post Toasties the choicest flavoured bits of cereal food ever produced. J
PHONE 1121
Marguerite Doan, Miss Doan and Miss Garver receiving a number of callers informally. TO ENTERTAIN CHOIR. Miss Frances Cunningham will entertain tke choir of the Grace M. E. church at her home on North Eleventh street, tomorrow evening. The affair will be in the nature of an indoor picnic. FOOLED HIS SUPERIOR. An Astonished Pasha and a Lieutenant Who Won Promotion. Kassim Pasha when minister of war for Egypt was very particular in regard to the personal appearance of his officers and issued stringent orders that they should never appear unshaven in public. One day he met upon the street a lieutenant vrho had bearded the pasha and disregarded his orders. "To what regiment do you belong?" demanded the Indignant minister. "To the regiment, at Abasseuh," replied the frightened lieutenant "Get into my carriage at once so that I can carry you to the encampment and have you publicly punished," was the stern command which followed. The young man obeyed, and the twain rode along gloomily enough for some time, when the pasha stopped his carriage and entered an office where he would be detained for some time on business. Seizing the opportunity, the culprit sprang from the vehicle, darted into a neighboring barber's stall and regained his post before the return of his jailer minus his beard. For the remainder of the route the officer buried his face in his hands and seemed the picture of apprehension. Abasseuh was reached at last, and all the officers were assembled to witness the degradation of their comrade, who all the while kept well In the rear of his chief. "Come forward, you son of a dog!" cried the irate pasha, when there stepped before him an officer with a face as clean as a baby's and a look of the most supreme Innocence. His excellency gave one look of blank astonishment and then, with an appreciative smile breaking over his war worn features, turned to the assembled officers and said. "Here, gentlemen, your old minister is a fool, and your young lieutenant is a captain." THE HOMEMAKER. Man's Chivalry to the Fried Goddess of the Fireside. As we men frequently admit, it Is our chivalrous regard for woman which leads us to desire that she shall confine her wholly admirable energies to the making of our home and the keeping of our houses. She is tender and frail, and so we urge that she shall not for a moment drop her role as the goddess of the household. There is nothing that so rouses our almost sacred admiration as to see our own particular goddess with a dishrag in one hand and a frying pan in the other. Let us never desert this high Ideal of womanhood and its lofty purpose In life. Particularly let us not do so because if a woman does not keep the house it will not be kept Would we men engineer and prepare 1,095 meals in one year? Would we wash dishes 1,095 times, wipe them 1.095 times, sew, darn, mend, devote our lives to a gray monotony of treadmill effort? Not on your life! Our chivalrous regard for adored woman would not permit it. And we would go crazy within i sir months if we tried. I know of nothing that we should cling to more closely than this chivalrous regard for our womankind. It saves the cost of many and many a hired girl. I have penned this little tribute to man's chivalrous regard for woman because anybody can see that it deserves it. Woman, the housekeeper (and nothing else), the fried goddess of the fireside, the queen of her domestic domain, with a stewpan for a tiara and a stove hook for a scepter, let us together pledge her, while we register our chivalrous vow that we will keep her where she Is unless we men need her as a stenographer or something else, in which event our chivalrous regard may stretch a few points. California Monthly. Drink and Diplomacy. Prince Bismarck once boasted that In his youth he drank a bottle of champagne at one draft from a "puzzle goblet so constructed that one could not bring it close to one's lips, yet one was not allowed to spill a drop. Not a single drop fell on my waistcoat. Every one was Immensely surprised, but I said. 'Give me another.' Such tricks were formerly an indispensable part of the diplomats' trade. They drank the weaker vessels under the table, wormed all they wanted to know out of them and made them agree to things contrary to their instructions. When they got sober they could not imagine why they had acted so." What They Were Hawking. At an exhibition of paintings in London in one of the galleries hung the notable picture "Ilawking In the Olden Times." An elderly farmer and his wife paused before this picture, viewing it with evident satisfaction. "John." said the old lady, -what's that?" John then turned over the leaves of the catalogue he carried. "They ca It 'Hawking 1' th' Owden Time.' said he. "Hawking: Why. what are they hawking?" she Inquired. "I dunno. he replied, "but I spect tbasra tcrlnjf to sell them birds." --
""" THE BAMBOO, HAIR.
A Slow but Sure Poison That Is Used I by th Javanese. The young shoots of the bamboo are covered with a number of very fine hairs that are seen under the microscope to be hollow and spiked like bayonets. These hairs are commonly called bamboo poison by the white men resident In Java for the reason that murder Is frequently committed through their agency. When a Javanese woman takes a fancy to a European, according to an official Dutch report, she will either have him or poison him if she gets the chance. She seeks any and every opportunity of mixing these infinitesimal hairs among his food, and they serve the purpose of irritating the whole length of the alimentary canal and setting up malignant dysentery. It may take a long time and many doses of this so called poison to effect the purpose, but the native woman does not tire, and death will surely result The male native will also try this method of revenge for an affront. The planters know all this and dread the bamboo hair, but It is always difficult to determine whether the dysentery is caused by the poison or comes about naturally. When a planter finds himself a prey to attacks of that complaint his best course Is to take a voyage to Europe. Pearson's Weekly. BOILING TO DEATH. Terrible Torture That Was Once the Law In England. In England during the reign of nenry VIII. the public mind became greatly excited through several cases of poisoning, and parliament enacted a law making boiling to death the penalty. This law was on the statute books about sixteen years. It was made retroactive, so as to take in a case that chiefly prompted Its enactmentthat of Richard Itosse, otherwise Coke, the bishop of Rochester's cook, who poisoned seventeen persons, two of whom died. Coke was boiled at Rochester. The infliction was attended with peculiar cruelty, as Coke was put into a caldron of cold water and gradually cooked to death. A few years later, in March, 1542, a young woman uamed Margaret Davy was punished In a similar way on conviction of poisoning. The public was not satisfied as to her guilt and. notwithstanding the comparatively slow travel of news in those days, the story of Margaret Davy's trial and punishment soon spread through the kingdom and aroused universal horror. Boiling to death remained on the statute books, however, as long as Henry reigned, perhaps because the monarch himself had a dread of being poisoned. Immediately after his death parliament repealed the law. Helping a Man to Suicide. It is remarkable how a suicide by a certain method or in a certain place j will lead to another of the same kind, A surgeon, of the Middlesex hospital In London went into a barber shop to be shaved. The barber spoke of a man who had been unsuccessful in an at-
tempt to kill himself by cutting his Shumaker can gather in regard to conthroat ditions in the state showing the need "He could easily have managed it" for state wide prohibition he expects said the surgeon, "had he been ac- to present before the next legislature qualnted with the situation of the convenes in preparation for the effort carotid artery." j t() get the legislature to adopt a resolu"Where should he have cut?" asked tjon calling for an amendment to the the barber. The surgeon told him. He . constitution providing for state-wide
at once left the room. and. not returning as soon as was expected, the surgeon went to look for him and discovered him in the yard with bis head nearly severed from his body. London Mail. A Solar Plexus. On one occasion Sam Berger, the brawny fight manager, was in a small California town sounding some of the residents as to the possibility of holding a prizefight. The local police force, a clownish looking individual, with a huge badge, heard of Sam's investigations. "You can't hold no prizefight in this here town," said the police force threateningly in his best "I be the marshal" tones. "It is agin the law, and I wou't stand for it" "Aw, beat It" said Berger In disgust "What do you know about law? Why, your very appearance in public is a misdemeanor." Lippincott's. Rapidly Spreading Over the World And Its Reputation Is Great in This Locality. The knowledge of the wonderful merits of Root Juice is rapidly spreading all over the world. Newspapers of nearly every state are publishing reports of the great good it is doing. Many local people, who have tried the remedy, are loud in praise of it. It seems to be unexcelled for chronic
stomach troubles, liver and kidney dis- j same time the friends of the law deorders, and when it does euro rhJc,arp that already it has made good
cure seems to be permanent, as those who took the remedy when it was first plared on the market continue to praise it. Root Jui'-e is very healing to the stomach, bowels, bladder, liver and kidneys, and has a wonderful tonic action on the blood, making and blood filtering organs. It seems to benefit every one who takes it from the very start. It prevents fermantation in the stomach and bowels, creates a good appetite, rids the system of acids and other poisons, by healing and toning up the filtering organs. Many who suffered with rheumatism a long time say that after taking a few bottles of Root Juice they could almost feel the disease melting away. Others who suffered intensely with stomach trouble say the first dose of Root Juice made them feel better and that after taking a bottle pr so of the great medicine they felt hungry all the time and could eat anything and digest It The people at the Luken & Co. drug store are chuck full of reliable information concerning the great remedy.
Wayne County Is Red on Shumaker' s Map He Is Showing, Lucidly, in4 His Fight for Prohibition, Where the Wet Spots Are Political Gossip From Over the State.
(Palladium Special) Indianapolis. Ind., March 7. Independent of any politka 1 party E. S. Shumaker, superintendent of the Indiana anti-saloon league is preparing information to show that the state is in need of state wide prohibition and that present conditions will make the people ready for state wide by VM:. Mr. Shumaker says that he has no fault to find with the county option law. Hp believes it has worked great good, btit he also declares frankly that in his opinion the county option law does not fill the bill. The only thing he says which will fill the bill is a state-wide prohibition provision. With all this in mind Mr. Shumaker is now preparing a lengthy statement to show what great harm the wet counties of the state are doing and how they are resjionslble for the drinking In the dry territory of the state and for the many blind tigers in such territo ry, in tnis connection he is preparing a map in which all of the wet ; counties of the state, either entirely wet. or partially wet, are shown in red. There are twenty-two such counties, as follows: Lake, Porter, Laporte, St. Joseph, Tippecanoe. Cass, Allen. Blackford, Marion, Vigo, Franklin. Ripley, Dearborn, Knox, Posey, Vanderburg. Spencer, Dubois. Perry, Floyd and Clark. Vanderburg is the only one of these counties whit-h is entirely wet. The others have been made partially dry by remonstrance. 70 Dry Counties. There are therefore, 7o dry counties in the state and Mr. Shumaker points out that ;s of the dry counties may be reached directly by interurban or steam lines; and :!'' of these dry counties he says may be reached from Indianapolis by interurban lines. Six of the dry counties he points out may be reached by interurban from lagansport, a wet city: three from Lafayette, a wet city; three from Hartford City: twelve from Fort Wayne; two from Richmond: five from Terre Haute: two from Evansville: four from Jeffersonville; seven from South Bend: and one from Vincennes. On his map Mr. Shumaker is showing in red lines how the interurban lines and steam lines radiate over the state connecting the wet centers with the dry territory. He has no fault to find with the transiortation lines. But he says, nevertheless, that the liquor which is carried from the wet centers into the dry territory is responsible for all of the bad conditions in the dry territory. Mr. Shumaker also makes the statement that the theory that most of the liquor which is found in blind tigers is whiskey, is not correct. He says that in a large number of blind tigers which have been raided .the chief arti cle handled has been found to be beer. All of the information which Mr. prohibition. Are Well Fortified. It is expected that the friends of the public accounting law of Indiana and of the state board of accounts will be well fortified for any attack which may be made on the law in the next session of the legislature. When the bill was up in the last session of the legislature there was a kick on the great expense which it would entail and since that time there have been complaints because the state board in adopting forms of records and reports has clashed with the officers in some counties. It was pointed out for example that the expense of examiners would run up to $1,000 a day, there being 100 examiners and each receiving $10 a day. And then in addition to this there is the salary of the chief accountant at $4,000 a year, two deputies at $u,000 a year and other office force. But in spite of this expense, the friends of the law point out now that it is but a trifle compared with the saving effected by the law. The work of the board has not fairly begun yet and not much has been done except in the examination of 'township trustees and yet there have been immense shortages discovered already. In some instances a single shortage has run up to $$.000 or $10.00. and then there are any number of smaller ones. The argument of the friends of the bill is that not only will the savings amount to the expense, but that after a while when conditions have been improved, shortages will be avoided and there will still be a saving and at the same time much trouble and disgrace will' be avoided by public officers. It is not understood that there will be any effort against the law in the next session of the legislature, but at the I SUBURBAN HOME We have for sale a choice of Suburban property. WM. H. BRADBURY & SON, Rooms 1 & 3 Westcott Block. Windstorm Insurance 20c per $100.00 for one year. 40c per $100.00 for three years. 6Cc per $10C.C0 for five years. E. B. KNOLLENBERC, Room 6, Knollenberg Annex.
and that it will more than make good i in the future.
Wait for Governor. It is said in Democratic political c.rcies mat mere ju. uu u.u,- o , set the date for the state conrenuon ! until Hnvrrnnr Marshall has returned, from ArlzOM. lt ls cted that the Governor will return the middle -of j this week, perhaps on Thursday. The . unuersianaing w to ur- ,u.L governor snail De iaaen pretty iuuy into the confidence of State Chairman Jackson and the state committee when it comes to arranging the plans for the convention. One story is that the friends of Taggart wish to show all possible courtesy to the governor in the mimioi-t-ant things to that when the time rou.fs to tlio!e of the important .natters they will not find the goveri.or opposing them. It is pretty well understood that Taggart and his friends would like to have In the state platform a resolution declaring for township and ward local option and against the county option law. It is also pretty well understood that the governor will oppose any declaration against the county option law and that he will wHh the state platform to say little about the Honor question. Can Handle Marshall. Some time aso the governor was credited with the statement that he proposi-d to have something to say aboat the stale platform regardless of circumstances jt.i1 no matter how j hard he had to fight. But the Taggart men. it is said, have come to the con-j elusion that the governor may be handled by tact. They projwse to take him in on the preliminary plans for the state convention and it may be that Thomas Taggart being busy in his trial at French Lick will not even be around the committee rooms when the time for the convention is fixed. The theory is that the governor believing that he has been treated pretty well by the state committee and the Taggart bunch will be willing to recede somewhat from his previously stated position on the platform when it comes time for that. Just how well this plan will succeed will not be known until after the governor returns. The coventor when he went to Arizona recentlv for his health, cut the wires behind him it seems. The only word that has been received from him was a letter written when he was on the train enroute to the Southwest. His friends however, presume that since he is not writing, he is getting along all right. Hueh Miller Suggested. There is considerable discussion among republicans as to whom shall Le selected an permanent chairman of the republican state convention April o. lt has been suggested from some sources that Senator Beveridge himself be the chairman as he understands conditions and would be in a better position than any one else to sound the battle cry. In case Senator Beveridge does not act as chairman it has been suggested that Hugh Miller of Columbus, candidate for the nomination for governor, two years ago, would make an excellent chairman. As a presiding officer 'ic has no superior. He is not known particularly as an orator but it is believed by his friends that he would be able to make a logical and acceptable keynote speech. It has been suggested front still other sources that Charles W. Miller formerly attorney general would make a good presiding officer. There Is one objection, however to both Charles W. Miller and Hush Miller and that is 7lO St- itlCUMOSO The Flower Shop 1010 Main St Phone 1102 Fine Horses Like People I; die: k Therefore, if you have any val- Jt a uable ones, insure them against 1 death from any cause. For par- ! S tlculars call on or 'phone S DOUGAN & CO. Room 1, I. O. O. F. Bldg. Phone 1330. at x hevy mpooabilitud netdUmjgm taMP in Aaht U7iK eta m Wsvm a s 1 of feehaff that th Mrmat to Jass
Td) Urn
eooagh to eieaa up the Ioh ia abort tun sod mall eaoofk to avoid bacoiuaf a draff. That's RICHMOND, ftrtt irlna nf masim iliafii lin j mm as
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that both may be candidates for th nomination for governor next time
land in that event the republicans vould not wish to show honors to one any nifre than to the other. Another SURWSli Wn that James liins. atlorne penera, mouU be an . JTSL M nas never eeu ,iesilHU.d vxnen u canie to working tu "-jthe interest of the republican party The question of a presidiug officer it is said, has not been taken up by .State Chairman l.ee of the republican committee. He will wlh to find A man who can make a pointed speech and who at the tame time can hold the proper rein over th convention. Th Right Sort. A yonng gentletuau vbo submitted himself fur the examination tor diplomacy knew tiothing about tb subject and treated the questions tu a highly imaginative manner. He thought that the cheek of his answers was enough to plow any man. but Instead he was passed head of the list. Later be bad an opportunity of asking one of tb examiners the cause of his success. -Oh." replied the examiner, "of course we a w that you knew nothing of your subject but you took the mat ter so calmly and replied with. o much resource, with sueb an entlr freedom from any embarrassment, that we all said. That's the sort of man for diplomacy r "London Truth. Sore Throat Colds. Coughs. Croup and Catarrh relieved in two Minutes. Is your throat sore? Breathe Hyomei. Have you catarrh? Breathe Hyomei. Have you a cough? Breathe Hyomei. Have you a cold? Breathe Hyomei. Hyomei is the best reraeeV for all nose, throat and lung troubles. It does rot contain any cocaine or morpbino and all that is necessary Is to breath it through the little black pocket inhaler that comes with each outfit. A complete outfit costs only $1.00 at druggists everywhere and at L. II. Fihe's, and Hyomei Is" guaranteed to cure catarrh, croup, coughs, colds, sore throat and bronchitis, or money back. A Hyomei Inhaler lasts a lifetime and extra bottles of Hyomei can be obtained from druggists for only 50 cents. Sample of Hyomei and booklet free. Address Booth's Hyomei Co.. Buffalo. N. Y. "SMS" Cures indigestion It relieves stomach misery, sour atom ach, belching, and cures all stomach dis ease, or money back. Large box of tab wta. ou oenu. uruggutsmam DON'T WORRY We have the most complete lint of Rice's Tested Garden Seeds ever shown. Same prices prevail as last year. We have 40 different varieties peas, beans and corn; 90 varieties of small seeds such as lettuce, radishes, etc Special mixed lawn seed, will grow in shady places. Also blue grass, timothy and white clover seed. ONION SETS, white, 12Vc Quart Full line of Flower Seeds. GEORGE BREHM CO.. Open Every Evening. 517 MAIN ST. PHONE 1747. TO OUR PATRONS After this date, bundles coming Into the Lou n dry later than Friday noon, will not be fin i. bed until the following week. We do this in order to let our employes out early Saturday afternoon. We hope our customers will assist us in this and see that their work is in before noon Friday. MONARCH LAUNDRY
PKEVATE LOANS
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yoonelf 3 rd floor Colonial Bldg, 1 mfm i Sinn risbc Urn PHONE 1341 . ROOM 40.' 'wr V 0 WrW yvi
