Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 274, 10 August 1911 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AJEfD SUN-TELiEGHAUg THURSDAY, AUGUST 10, 1911;
Re nictnior.d Pallafllcni
S:a-Telfcrtni Pebliahed and owned by the rAXXAoiim PRurriMo co. T 4rs Mk wk. evenings ea auogar anoi-nine;. Offjee--Corner North tth and A streets. rtla4ium and Sun-Telee-ram Phones gestae Office, 2M; Editorial Rooms. RICHMOND. INDIANA. Slaelk 0. ..Bdltw it caitev K Salter j K7BSCRIPTION TERMS, la ftlshssond fS.e jer year Ito advenes) or iso per week. RURAL. ROUT KM One yaar, la advance MM ssonths. la advenes tjf ne .ssonta, la advenes Add -U rhlnr iil mm nttmwt mm HlrM'. ,tota new aad eld addressee sous too HMflbri will dIhm remit wltb order, which should bo alven for a PMCiflod torm: namo will not bo enter's aatll ormai.t oMiva4. KAIL. SUBSCRIPTION. . io roar, la advance 55 Wa months. In advance ? One month, in advance 1 Entered at Richmond. Indiana, "ost office as sooond elate mall mattor. 'Now Tor Represent ! Parn dt IT tine, 10-34 West lrd street, and lifts West llnd street. New York. N. T. Chicago Representatives Pnyno 4k 'ami. 717-741 Marquette bulldlna. hlcago. I1L TWINKLES ' -COMFORTING DISTRACTION ?Why do you Insist on going about looking for Bomebody to reform?" v "It helps me to forget my own vices." , 1 1 ' A FAN'S OPINION. "Do you expect universal peace?" "Yes. but not until the base ball season is over." CO-OPERATION. Oh, weather prophet, to your rule , Hold on with a heroic zest. Keep on predicting wavelets cool, While we keep hoping for the best. 8PECIAL PRIVILEGE. h "Isn't it against the law to be loud nd boisterous in the street?" t "It Is," replied Mr. Chuggins, "unless ryou do so with a mechanical screecher attached to a motor car." ENFORCED IDLENESS. "Why are so many athletes stale so hearty In life?" "I suppose" replied Mr. Orowcher, Hit's because they have to pass so touch time before the camera that fthey neglect their training." AUGUST. pBlrds all sang de sweeten' song Long befo' July done pass. Blossoms dat was sfilin' strong Droop among de yaller grass. Whe lien wo waits for autumn's share I Of de old year to begin, I'Thout no welcome anywhere, I August comes a -but tin in. Katydid sing loud at night, : Hot-bug holler Turn de tree lAu' de moon so round an' white Looks as tired as she kin be. LNo one axed her foh to call; No one treats her same as kin, fCs'se she don' belong at all. August Jes' comes but tin' in! ; IThisJs My 42 nd Birthday GIL80N WILLETS Otlson Wlllets, who as a wide repu tation as an author, journalist and traveler was born in Hempstead, L. I., ugust 10, 1S69, and received his education in the public school of New York city. In 1890 he began his newspaper career as editor of a paper in Yonkers, N.' Y. Two years later he quit the newspaper field for magazine work and for several years he held editorial positions with several of the leading magazines. At the beginning of the war with Spain he returned to active newspaper work and since that time he has acted as a correspondent in many strange nooks and corners of the world. He was in Havana from the time the Maine blew up until the declaration of war and when peace was concluded he was the first correspondent to journey through Cuba from Havana to San tiago. Two years later he toured the rEast Indian plakue district. Since rthen he has braved dangers and gath ered facts in the West Indies, Europe, the Arctic Circle and the great Southwest PLEAPED IN FRONT OF RY. GASOLINE MOTOR LOS ANGELES, Cal., Aug. 9. I Leaping in front of a fast gasoline txnotor of the Southern Pacific near Bu'rbank, last evening, Chester A. Elwell, formerly of Detroit, was so mangled that he died almost before he -could be laid upon the operating table. It waa only when the body reached Bresse brothers morgue that anything like an Identification was obtained through the contents of his pockets. There was a gold watch, on the Inside of the case of which was engraved, "from Papa to Chester on his twenty-first birthday. Feb. 1905." A bill for plumbing and two notes for $250 each, signed by E. 17. or E. W. Rider and made payable to C. A. Elwell, Majesttc St, Detroit, were found on bis body. MASONIC CALENDAR ., ! (- 1 - 4..-.': Friday, Aug. 11th. 1911 King Solomon's Chapter, No. 4, R. A. M. Stated convocation.
i1T The Aseocintioa of Amor ( 1 ( i flrlll I ' Advertisers has ox- , , ViVJ amkioo! and certified to S w theclrcnlstioaofthlspnb- i' licatlea. The figures of circalatioa ' i oontsinod in the Association's re- i 1 port only are guaranteed. Assstiatici of Aaeriai Advertisers ; i No. 169. Wklttaan U. i. T. City !
77ft? Small Consumer Pays It was no news when Mr. Dill told the citizens of Richmond at the council meeting this week that the burden of the rates in the water works contract would fall on those least able to pay them. But for the especial frankness of Mr. Dill the city is in debt to the confusion of the water works attorneys when Mr. Shlveley, elder, contradicted Mr. Shiveley, junior, and Mr. Howard Dill commenced to explain, t So far as we know this admission is the Irst one made by the water company that the policy of the company is to improve upon the small consumer. And this is especially interesting since it shows that this was intentional on the -part of the company and not one of the clerical mistakes to which so many of the things that have been called attention to have been assigned. Islah somewhere speaks of those who grind down the faces of the poor. But because he does, need not be the basis for this state of affairs. This franchise-contract we will not admit a perpetual monopoly by the water works is in the hands of the city. This happens to be a case where the number of citizens affected is of more weight than their wealth. If the city is miking this contract to protect the Pennsylvania Railroad which enjoys the lowest rate from The Richmond City Water Works then it is time for the proceedings to stop. But we do not do the city officials this injustice they are all of them the same sort of people as the rest of us and have no interest in giving the Pennsylvania very low rates. They have shown every reasonable care in their grip on this water works question to protect the citizens. There is only one excuse for a slightly higher proportionate rate on the small consumers. That is wastage. But the excuse is NOT the helplessness of the individual nor favoritism. It is no concern of the city . whether this water works company loses money or not. And the reason that it is no concern of the citizens is because twice within two years the company has tried to outwit and befool the people simply for its own profit and without any consideration of the public service that the company owes the town for the right to do business. The attitude of the company in trying to force the Maury report through without any specific defense for the valuation assigned And of basing the rates thereon And this with the avowed intention of placing the burden on the every day man And this has fortified any consideration that the people owe the company. For If the company had approached this fairly and without trying by every possible means to safeguard their avenues of profit by beating down the protection of the city and the defenseless citizen the same obligation would have rested with the citizens toward the water company. Yet it is not in this spirit that we advise the city officials backed by the citizens to demand a fairer distribution of burden. It is not as a club to force the company down. It is simply in justice to the men whose trustees the city officials are. And furthermore, we call the attention of the citizen to the fact that these rates are not the most the company may charge. THE WATER WORKS ASKS THE CITY TO GUARANTEE ITS EARNINGS AND IN CASE REPLACEMENTS, RENEWALS. OR "EMERGENCIES OR ACCIDENTS" SHALL OCCUR, THE CITY SHALL AT THE COMPANY'S DEMAND RAISE THE RATES. THIS IS THE, JOKER THAT MAKES ANY DISCUSSION OF THE RATES A FARCE. IT IS DEPENDENT ON THE MAURY REPORT. FOR IF THE IMAGINARY VALUATION OF THE PROPERTY IS ACCEPTED AND "THE RATES SHALL NOT BE ENOUGH TO PAY DIVIDENDS ON 'THIS INFLATION, THEN THE CITY IS FORCED TO RAISE THE RATES AND NO PROVISION IS MADE POR LOWERING THEM. THUS AGAIN THE WATER WORKS OBTAINS CONTROL OF THE RATE MAKING POWER EVEN AS IT DID IN THE FIRST CONTRACT WHEN IT OBTAINED THE RIGHT TO CHARGE THE SMALL CONSUMER $64.80 A YEAR FOR HIS WATER. FIRST: KNOCK OUT THE MAURY VALUATION AND SET AN EQUITABLE ONE. SECOND: CHANGE THIS JOKER SO THAT THE RATE MAKING POWER SHALL ALWAYS STAY WITH THE CITY IN ANY RATIO OR PROPORTION THAT IT MAY DESIRE. ' IN THIS WAY WE SHALL BE ABLE TO JUDGE OF THE SINCERITY OF MR. SHIVELEY'S WHOLE ARGUMENT FOR THE WATER WORKS THAT EVERYTHING COULD BE LEFT OUT OF THE CONTRACT TO SAFEGUARD THE CITIZEN "BECAUSE THE COURTS WILL PROTECT HIM." Surely the courts will be as fair to the water company as to the city.
Public Meetings
We wish that the people of Richmond knew the Interest that is being taken all over the state in the water works situation in Richmond. And also we wish to thank the papers of this state for the friendly comment that has been made. For a situation which on the face of it is distinctly local, we know of no recent case that has evoked the same general feeling. And the reason for this is very plain to us as it must be to the mayor and council. That in this fight they have called in the citizens for the discussion of this in public meetings. And the plain determination of the council and Dr. Zimmerman to go to the bottom of this thing in plain view of the public eye has been favorably commented on not only in Richmond, but in many places over the state. The first thing that might be supposed to be true of these meetings has been found absolutely false, that mer who have been elected to office would resent the citizens meeting with them. In practice more than one councilman has said that he never felt more pride In the trusteeship imposed upon him than when the citizens who have thronged the council applauded and appreciated their Intelligent questionings and helped them drive home the points that they have made. And the second thing that might be supposed is that the meetings could "not get anywhere." As a matter of fact no franchise has ever been so thoroughly considered as this has and no time has there lately been when there was such thorough accord between the public and their officials. The work that The Evening Item and the Morning News have done in giving full publicity In co-operation with this paper should be another token that there is a real public spirit here. That this exists all through the city, all along the side streets and Main street and in the city hall, is due unquestionably to the determination of the whole administration without exception, to air the whole proposed contract For everyone knows that when there has been a full discussion that the whole situation will clear up with the city in full accord to do the just thing all the way through. This policy of the administration has been vindicated enough by public sentiment to continue the meetings until the course of action seems plain and when the thing is thus settled, the administration will have nightly witnesses to the fact thet it has done the right thing all the way through.
HEATING PLANT OF COLLEGE IMPROVED When the students of Earlham College start in on their year's work next fall, they will be confronted by only a .few minor changes in the school. Since it is so short' a time since the debt was raised, the college authorities are not planning any ex
tensive changes in the school during the coming term. They have, however, decided to improve the heathy plant For this purpose they have just installed a new boiler, and are erectlac a new chimney. - " . Ha Was. v-'' Miss Do Muir Were yon ever hypnotised, air. Hector? Hector 'Yea, I'm married. niuatrated Bits.
WHAT OTHERS SAY
TRAINING FOR CITIZENSHIP. From the Baltimore Sun. The development of the departments of American history and political science by a number of universities and colleges, of which encouraging signs have been given recently, is a movement of more than passing importance. Before the rise of political science in the modern sense it was considered sufficient to have a classical or technical education as a foundation for the duties of life, without any particular equipment, for the responsibility of citizenship. When the general body of the people participated less, or not at all In the practical work of government than is the case today, the need for this specialized training was not greatly felt. It undoubtedly retarded the evolution of states, but a broad knowledge of the functions of government was not a pressing necessity for the average man. In those days of widely bestowed suffrage, a free press and signs of the accelerated development of political institutions, there must be a broader base on which to build the structure of citizenship. A knowledge of the principles of political science Is not within the reach of all; but those who possess it. it they are true to their opportunities, can form a leaven in every community in which they happen to be thrown. AEROPLANES AND WAR. From the New York Herald. With characteristic frankness and terseness Admiral Togo puts himself squarely on record as to the war value of aeroplanes. He concedes their importance in some instances during naval operations, mainly as scouts, but he does not believe, and here the body of naval opinion is with him, that any air machine or airship as yet devised can destroy or be even a menace to battleships. This is of particular interest at a moment when our Atlantic fleet is to carry out some preliminary tests in this direction and when the public mind is wandering so far afield. The admiral does not state his reasons for these opinions. It is evident, however, that they are based on the dangers of counter attack which aeroplanes must face from alert foes; on the impossibility of surprise attacks, owing to the clatter and clamor of their fight; on the uncertainty of aim due to the height they must seek to escape immediate destruction, and, finally, on the proved localization of damage which follows the detonation of high explosives. , MACHINES FOR THE CROPS. From the, New York Times. The "back to the land" cry labors under the disadvantage that the world never had so much to eat as when the complaint of deficiency of labor is loudest. The United States alone is almost in sight of harvests valued at ten billions of dollars, a fact which will prove once more that this is in truth a country where values as well as costs are reckoned in billions. The explanation of the demand for more labor at a time when existing labor supply is unprecedentedly productive is simple. There is no demand for an increase of all the year agricultural labor. The demand is for a supply merely of harvest hands, to work for a few weeks and then return to other occupations. The intensity of the demand is due to the fact that machinery enables farmers to plant and cultivate almost incredible quantities of produce, but housing and marketing :re operations not yet reduced to performance by machinery. WERE HAPPY DAYS. From the St. Louis Republic. It takes two months and a general election in Canada to force a bill to a vote, when Uncle Joe and his committee on rules used to do the trick in fifteen minutes, when they wanted to. Liberia. Liberia shares with Haiti the distinction of being the only place in the world where the negro rules not only himself, but also such white men as dwell there. Liberia's history has been one long record of Intertribal and civil ware, although its record In this respect it is only fair to say, is less sanguinary than that of Haiti In fact, so careful is the Llberian of bis skin when fighting is in progress that it has bxme a standing joke that a Liberian battlefield is the safest place on earth and that to become a soldier In Liberia is to embrace the least dangerous profession known to mankind. Pearson's Weekly. The Prettiest Feet. A Swiss professor named Redorta states that not one woman in a score has a perfect foot owing to the wearing of high heeled boots and pointed toe shoes. Russian. German, American. Austrian and Dutch women, he says, have broad feet while those of Englishwomen are too narrow to fulfill classical and healthy conditions. The women of the Latin races, excluding Frenchwomen, have the best formed and therefore the prettiest feet the professor says. "THIS DATE
AUGUST 10. 1506 A Portuguese expedition headed by Lorenzo Almeida discovered the island of Madagascar. .... i 1535 Cartier entered the St Lawrence on his second voyage of dis- . covery. ,- .. 1703 A ten years Indian war began in New England. 1730 Jonathan Belcher arrived in Boston to begin his duties as goveernor of Massachusetts. 1753 Edmund Randolph, first Attorney-General of the United States, born in Williamsburg, Va. Died in Clarke County, W. Va, Sept 13, 1S13.' . 1792 Massacre of 5,000 persons In connection with the attack on the Tuileries in Paris. 1821 -Missouri admitted to the Union. ' 1846 Smithsonian Institution at Washington founded. 1S61 Gen. Lyon, the Federal commander, killed in the battle of Wilson Creek, near Springfield. Mo. 1904 Waldick-Poasseau, French statesman, died. Born Dec 2, 184. 1910 Republicans of Texas nominated J.B. Terrell for governor.
ASTORIA STARTS ITS CELEBRATION Centennial of the Founding of Astor Trading Post in Oregon. (National News Association! ASTORIA, Ore. Aug. 10. In commemoration of the 100th anniversary of the arrival on the Pacific coast of the expedition sent from New York by John Jacob Astor, the United States Army and Navy, the State of Oregon and the city of Astoria joined today in the formal inauguration of what promises to be one of the biggest celebrations of its kind ever held in this part of the country. The celebration will continue an entire month. Soldiers and sailors, business men, school children, Indians, public officials and other representatives of all the states embraced in what was formerly known as the "Oregon country" will participate in fetes, pageants, demonstrations on land and water, historical parades, memorial exercises and monument unveilings all in'commemoration of the transformation within a centur of "an undiscovered country," peopled only by a few hundred roving Indians, into prosperous states with millions of white inhabitants, the building of railways, irrigation works, towns and cities ; the development of complex and highly differentiated industries, the conversion of vast areas of unproductive plains into gardens, orchards and grain fields; the creation of hundreds of millions of wealth. The various shows, and there is a different one scheduled for every day of the celebration, will be held in the open forest among the hills which lie back of Astoria. One of the features will be a reproduction of the old fort and settlement founded by the men of the original Astor expedition. Indians of the Northwest will take part in a historical pageant and in other festivities. One of the features of the celebration will be the holding of the big meet of the Pacific Coast Amateur Athletic association, which will take place August 25 and 26. A rowing regatta, will be another of the attractions. A convention of the Oregon Development league is expected to attract hundreds of visitors. A band tournament will bring together brass bands from all over the Northwest, in addition to an Indian band made up of members of the tribes which inhabit the reaches of the "Columbia River. August 28 will be known as Astor day, on which occasion statue of John Jacob Astor will be unveiled with appropriate exercises. The settlement of Astoria by the Astor expedition, which the celebration is to commemorate, was the first permanent settlement in the far Northwest and gave the United States its strongest claim to the Oregon country. Though the British took possession of the Astoria fort in the war of 1812 and renamed the place Fort George, the place was restored to the United States after the treaty of peace with American claims of settlement unimpaired. John Jacob Astor was the driving force in the exploration and settlement of the new country and the man who did more than any one else to save to the Union the territory now embraced in the States of Oregon, Washington and Idaho. Measured by the conditions of a century ago and those of today, the project of Aastor far surpasses those of any later day captain of trade, transportation or finance. He planned a real winning of the West, a peaceful conquest of a great region to which the nations title was doubtful, the establishment of a long chain of trading sations that would blaze the way for civilized man and open the door of opportunity for countless millions and beyond the West itself he reached out to give America .the trade of China and practically the control of the Pacific. A fine ship, the Tonquin, was equipped for the Astor expedition for the far Northwest, and on September 8, 1810 she sailed from New York. After many perilous adventurse in the hazardous voyage around Cape Horn and up the Pacific coast the ship arrived off the mouth of the Columbia river on March 22 1811. The weather was tempestous and eight days elapsed before an entrance was gained to the mouth of the river. At last, after much delay and trouble, the Tonquin got inside and on April 12 a site was selected on a small bay for the establishing of the station which was to be
the company's headquarters on the Pacific. A fortified post was built the Stars and Stripes were raised and the settle ment was named Astoria. Had the Americans made their settlement but a few months later, the British, who had several expeditions in the field, would have planted the first claims of IN HISTORY'
occupation in large part of the region of Oregon and Washington and probably would have retained it as their own.-
Heart to Heart . Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Copyrht. 190S. by Edwin A. Nye THE NAN ON THE JOB. The general manager of tbo road swung off the rear platform of his private car and walked back to the siding where a gang of section men were at work. "Hello, Mike." said the manager. He knew every section foreman on the line by his first name. -What's the matter here, Mike r Mike used forcible language In criticising the methods of the construction department He explained the difficulty and showed how somebody higher up was to blame. "I'll see about it Mike." When the manager got aboard his car he dictated some memoranda to his stenographer. In a few days an order was issued embodying Mike's Ideas of reform. It worked admirably. Said the manager to a friend. "If you want to get at the bottom of things, ask the man over the small Job." The man on the job knows. The most successful editor I ever knew had weekly sessions with his entire staff, wbich meetings he called "brain throbs." Every man was free to criticise or suggest The idea of the cub reporter was given as much attention as that of the telegraph editor or city editor. The editor utilized the brain throbs of the man on the Job. Said a great Chicago merchant: "1 can learn more from my clerks than from my department heads-. The clerks come in contact with the public. They know." It is so in politics. The shrewd political manager who wants to know the drift of public opinion pays scant attention to the editorial utterances of the big city newspapers. He wants to know what the "country editor." the editor of the newspaper in the small city or town or Tillage, Is saying. The country editor knows. The rule holds good in every department of life. The shop foreman who is too proud to court the advice of the worker, the farmer who scorns the suggestions of the "hired hand," the housewife who thinks she can learn nothing from ber domestic these people make a mistake. One may always learn something valuable from the man or woman on the Job. Besides The nearest approach that capital and labor may make to each other Is that condition where the employer trusts and freely consults bis employee and the employee freely consults and trusts his employer. Pays m.i a aty Home. A west siae matron proudly exhibited the "lock of her front door to the afternoon caller. It was an intricate looking affair, resembling a gum machine mo;e than it did a door latch. "You turn this," explained the woman, pointing to a tiny knob inside the door, "and you have fixed the boh so it can't be shot back with the key. To release the tumblers you've got to drop a coin in the slot outside. The only piece of money that will fit is a five dollar gold piece. The idea Is my own. A locksmith downtown worked out the mechanical part of it for me. Every night at 10:30 I adjust the coin attachment If my husband Is out after that bbur It costs him S5 to get in. He stays home evenings, as a rule." New York Sun. Palladium Want Ads Pay. PENNSYLVANIA 11 Lines Excursions Chicago $3 oo Indianapolis $1 40 Dayton 85c NEXT SUNDAY Ask Agent About Trains WANTED LIVE POULTRY Highest market price paid for live poultry. Schwegman's Meat Market jun 20-eod-tf CLARENCE HADLEY MEAT MARKET PHONE 2591 COR. 13TH & MAIN
MUSIC ! MUSIC ! MUSIC! I wish to announce that I will keep a good line of Strings for Violin and all other instruments. Also anything else In the Music Line. WALTER KUNGE 22 North 9th Street. Bowling Alley
ROSS' STRAW HAT CLEANER Makes a Soiled Hat Like New. So Simple to Use Any One Can Ctoaw Their Hat ONLY TEN CENTS. W. H. ROSS DRUG COMPANY, 804 Main Street. Phone 1217. Ross Liquid Corn Remedy, Ten Cents.
NEWS OF THE LABOR WORLD
In Switxerland the railway workers have an 82 per cent organization. " The corner stone of the Labor temple in Utica, N. Y., will soon be laid. Winnipeg (Manitoba) Trades and labor Council will move to have a municipal fair wage officer appointed. The amount that may be recovered for death by industrial accidents in Minnesota has been increased from $5,000 to $7,500. An organised effort will be made by the glass workers of he country to minimize the amount of machine made product The proposed strike of the street railway men at Des Moines, Iowa, has been approved by the Amalgamated Association of Street Railway Employes. The French workmen's pension law calls for a contribution of about $1.60 a year by each beneficiary, an equal sum by his employer, and the state adds a third. The federation of trade unions connected with the building industry in France has decided the bodies which form it shall no longer take part in any building operations connected with .prisons. At the fifty-seventh annual convention of the International Typographical Union, which will be held In San Francisco Aug 14 to 19. Texas delegates will make an effort - to secure the 1912 meeting for Houston. There are now affiliated with the American Federation of Labor 120 internatianol unions, SO state federations, 632 city central bodies, 431 local trade unions and 216 federal labor unions, making a total of 1,438 organizations. A recent convention of the Ohio Bricklayers, Masons and Plasterers' Association by unanimous vote recommended the establishment In some city yet to be selected, of a home for aged or disabled members of the organization. The San Francisco Labor Day committee has decided to offer prizes to pupils of the public schools for the best essays on labor and the significance of Labor Day; also a special prise to be awarded to the school of which a pupil obtains the first prize. The workers in the Amsterdam diamond industry have a compact organization. According to one of its rules, no one can learn the diamond trade without the consent of the organization, and only children of workers or of jewelers are eligible to become pupils. Nearly 200,000 new employes were added to the pay rolls of the railroad ' companies of the United States between June 30, 1909 and June 30, 1910, according to the annual report of the interstate commerce commission. The total on the last named date was 1,699,420. The state of Ohio has five free pub lie employment offices, one each being located at Cincinnati, Cleveland, Columbus, Dayton and Toledo, under the supervision of the Bureau of Labor Statistics. A report for the last quarter gives in detail the number of people assisted in procuring employment and the total reaches 8,731. Nyal's Beef, Iron and Wine will build up the body and give you a new vitality it supplies rich, .red blood, circulating freely and nourishing its continued use will result In permanent health. Quigley's Drug Stores. Goof that lasts fcyAtfc That is what is said about this resdy roofing by those who use it, because it is prscticslly indestructible. It makes any building immune agsinst every enemy that can attack a roof. J-M ASBESTOS ROOFING is a combination of the famous Asbestos (rock) fiber and the freat westherproofer, Trinidad Lake Asphslt. Fire, time or weather cannot affect it. It will stand for sny length of time fire tests that would destroy in a few minutes sny of the socalled fire resisting roofings. J-M Asbestos Roofing never requires painting, graveling or repairing. It ssves money sod worry from the day it is laid. ff rite or call for Smmplts of this Roofing and Booklet. Joaes Dnrdwarc Co. 1255
