Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 108, 11 March 1912 — Page 6
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TIIEIHCII3IONI PALLADIUM AXTJ SUN-TELEGRAM, MONO AY, IAHOH 11, 1912.
LOCAL TEAM LOSES THE CI1AWI1SH1P Fast Franklin Team Defeats R. H. S. in Semi-final State Contest.
Although disappointed over the de- ' feat In th second basketball contest . by Franklin at Indianapolis Saturday afternoon, thereby losing the right to compete In the state championship ilnals at Bloomlngton March 16, the Richmond high school team and supporters came back to this city knowing that Franklin was siren a "run for Its money." Richmond won the morning contest from Oaklandon and Franklin won from Clinton. The afternoon contest with Franklin was lost by the score of 17 to 13. The Franklin lads put up an exhibition of gameness and aggressive play ing and In each contest it looked as If they would be defeated. The red and white of Richmond students was to be seen in All sections of the Y. M. C. A. gymnasium and the yells of encour agement to the Sixth District champions urged them on to greater efforts. , The first half was slow, neither team being able to get together. However, Richmond had the better of the team work, this beng due to the fact that Jt bad the taller men. Caster opened the scoring by turning a foul of Ham Bier's Into a marker. Almost Immedl ately he tossed another foul. Two folds by Lanning and Canter being permitted to throw another four gave the Richmond lads seven before Franklin had secured a start. Pruitt started the scoring for Frank 11 n by turning Shopman's foul Into a marker. Another foul by him and a Held goal by Hammer ending the scor Ing for the period, the score standing 7 to 3. During this half Richmond bad Franklin on the defensive but the play Ing was loose on both sides. Hardly bad the second hslf opened until Pruitt secured a field goal. Caster came back, by caging the ball on pruttt's foul. Vandlveer, center for Franklin, shot another field goal. From then on the teams alternated in taking the lead with only four minutes left to play the score stood 12 to 12. The fact that the swift Franklinites bad aot succeded In piling up a big lead before this time is attributed to the wonderful defensive work of Shopman, captain of the local five. Shopman's playing kept many well-aimed shots from circling into the netted basket. A field and a foul goal by Pruitt gave Frankln a three-point lead and another field goal by him brought the core up to 17 to 13. In the morning contest Richmond walked away from Oaklandon, defeating the latter by score of 31 to 14. In this contest the Richmond coach sent In the "subs" with the idea of saving the first team as much as possible, but after the first half It was necessary to put In the regular team in order to torn seeming defeat Into 'victory. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Jesse W. Hall to Albert B. Carman, March 1. 1912, $3,000. Pt. .8. W. Sec. 9-14-1. Jesse W. Hall to Albert B. Carman, March 1, 1912. $500, Pt. S. W. Sec. 9-14-1. Nathaniel W. Trask to Gilbert T. Dunham. March 1. 1912, $1. lot 150, J. Smith add. Richmond. Dickinson Trust Co.. Tr. to Stella F. Reese, Feb. 23, 1912. $190, lot 98, Jenkins Add!, Richmond. 8. 8. Imp. Assoc'n to Mary T. R. Foulke. March 5. 1912. $300. lot 258, Beallvlew. Amenda E. Walts to Eden 8.- Martlndale. March 4. 1912. $1,750, Pt S. S. Sec. 2C-17-13. 8. 8. Imp. Assoc'n to W. D. Foulke, March 5. 1912. $300, lot 302. Beallvlew. Landorf D. Sheffer to Alva H. Mills, Feb. 17. 1912. $5,500. Pt. N. E. Sec. 26-18-13. Matilda H. Purdy to Tena Wise. July 28. 1912. $1150. lot 10. block 27. Xlagcratown. : HEAUNQ IN NINEVEH. . ttedieal Selene as It Existed In the Aneient City. The' patient work of the archaeoloCist enables people of today to form a cry' fair Idea of medical science as it alsted In Nineveh 650 years before the birth of Christ, says the New Tork tun. Of the 20,000 tablets taken from the library of Assurbanlpal, the great king of Assyria, who conquered Egypt and Bablyonla and established his subjects in the deserted cities of 8amarla, hundreds deal exclusively with medicine and contain numerous ' prescrtpIf a man has colic make him stand p and poor over him a decoction of kypericam and he will recover. "Or make him crouch down on his heels and pour cold r water over bis Faith healing seems to be Indicated to a prescription which runs: "if be is la a weak state, make him bend down,! saen raise aia tegs ana say. -aisy ytr set quit welL' Strike him also ontM head fourteen times with yonr thao&rf Many prescriptions ' deal -with taw rare of a disorder which was very common at Nineveh and which seems tm hare bean doe to overindulgence In food aad drink: "When a man la billon rsb aim with an onion and let feint, drink nothing: bat water and abstain from food altogether." Amomj the medicines need by the fhyalclaaa of Nineveh were sesame, olive oil. eaetor on. stoop of dates. honey aad aalt Fasting aad Jwere frequently ordered. ; v Basel
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II
SALLY SALT' AHO "J0HI1 ROT
Mrs. Wilson Woodrow and Emerson Hough Issue New Novels Through the Bobbs-Mcrrill Company, Treating of Opposite Types.
BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. Mrs. Wilson Woodrow, whose name must be invaluable for advertising purposes at this stage of the game, is not, strangely, a kinswoman of a certain presidential possibility. And this, oddly enough, too, since both are clever creators of fiction. Mrs. Woodrow is a writer who came into the magazine spot light a few years since with a series of amusing stories of rural life in the South and West, and that she .is a better short story writer than a novelist, since her epigrammatic style lends Itself more readily to fiction of the capsule variety. Is shown in her last novel, "Sally Salt," just issued through the BobbsMerrill Company. This is not saying, however, that "Sally Salt" is not an amusing and entertaining tale and that the heroine does not possess a certain fa bcI nation, more convincing from the printed page than on the cover where she is shown in impressionistic and transcendental array. "Sally Salt" is one of those heroines popular nowadays red-ha'.red goddesses with peach-tinted cheeks, unconventionally housed in a rambling, garden-set domicile, the while she does good to the oafs of the countryside and gets mixed up emotionally with fascinating gentlemen of the road. The wonder will alwayB remain to the mere reader whose skin is subject to the elements, how these Dianas range the open in all weathers and yet retain their opalescent tints. And still we like it in a book. It is life not as it is but as it ought to be. The story has a plot which if somewhat tenuous, is well worked out, but its charm lies in its characterizations, its raise en scene, its conversations and its humour. Incidentally its a brief for women farmers, since the heroine nucceBSfully manages two large farms while in volved in the Intricacies of a love affair. Here are some excerpts which illustrate the author's vivacity: "Now, for my part, I have no time to sit on stiles and wish some one would come along and love me." "Of course I like men," averred Sally stoutly. "They live sensible lives and get to know something. I enjoy having them about; but marriage is different. It's too intimate, and there hare very few people that can emerge from an intimacy with even a decent respect for each other. And then it's the dickens of a bore to be always trying to please some one. Do you think I would ever try to melt myself down and run myself over into another mold for the benefit of any man on earth? No, I'm going to live. I'm going to follow any crazy idea that comes into my head. I'm going to be free." "An eager strouer - - - - ne discerned forever the skull behind the mask, and bartered with the grizzly shade of disillusion." , "It takes a strong constitution to stand up under too much cheerfulness at the wrong time." John Rawn," by Emerson Hough. said to be a part of a "triology," through which the author is presenting certain phases of American life of which "54-40 or Fight," and "The Pur chase Price," are the others, is one of those stories of an American type, which the novelists of the day are giv en to exploiting. "John Rawn," is a representative of a class wnicn is mucn to tne iore at present the millionaire capitalist, crushing men like shells, riding down opposition, stealing, robbing, commit ting industrial murder, discarding the human foundation upon which he has constructed his successful life a ruth less egotist, sucking the blood of the public to infuse life into his financial veins. " Really representative of what is termed the "middle class" uneducat ed but ambitious and with a god-like egotism which sees In the universe himself dominant and all things point ing his way, attaining weath, without the concomitant of culture, he feels himself apart from his fellows, he looks down" on those from whom he sprung and to whom he is in no wise socially superior and regards himself as forming a part of what is falsely termed "aristocracy," a conspicuous element in this country which is as an omalous socially as it Is obnoxious in its pretensions and detrimental to the Ideals of the nation. Throwing his faded old wife into the offing, with a million dollar check to console her, he takes to himself his stenographer, young, clever, beautiful, ambitious and unscrupulous. That she should, later, fall in love with Rawn's son-in-law, whom he has incidentally robbed of valuable inventions upon which to build his fortune and who, in turn, falls in love with the second Mrs. John Rawn, Is the emotional nemesis which visits him at the time when he has lost his entire fortune. That his former wife should step in to the breach at this moment and hand him over the million dollar check without the batting of an eye-lash and that he should acqept it saying "thankyou goodbye!" at a time when his daughter had committed suicide ("because she had found out that her husband was the lover of the ex-stenographer, and his son-in-law had been shot down by a mob in the labor difficulties attendant upon-th mismanagement of his affairs, is a climax that nearly fails of the effect intended to be made. The book. In short, is an interesting exposition of certain social and Industrial phases of American life but it is not especially agreeable reading. In Its construction the machinery creaks and there Is an absence of that quality whose presence is the only justification for fictional being. march Magazines. The Century is running a scries of articles oA the Middle West, by a
member of the faculty of the Univer
sity of Wisconsin, which should Inter est serious readers in this section, that in this month's being termed "The Reassertlon of Democracy.' Another Interesting article is "The dot and dash alphabet" which reaffirms its invention by Samuel Morse. Collectors will be entertained with an account of "Samplers" profusely 11 lust rated in color, and In reproduc tions of Rembrandt in wood engraving by Cole and of a painting by John C. Johansen. "The training of Chinese children" Is one of the notable con tributions of the month and Locke continues his fascinating serial "Stel la Marls." There is a varied and large table of contents, this being so far the most interesting number issued during the new year. Wheq Hornung created "Raffles," he made himself famous and it is well he conjuredaup this fascinating villian be fore the hero of his present series running in Scribner's where "Raffles" was first exploited, for the former stories drag although the one appear ing in the March Scribner holds the attention mildly. "The Race for the South Pole" is especially "timely" at this moment, and "Early Steamboat Days." with its illustrations in color, Is one of the best articles for the month. "Samuel F. B. Morse, the Painter," should Interest all those who wish to be informed of the history of American art, the article being illustrated with reproductions of Morse's work, and in the "Field of Art," that of the armorer is exploited. Robert Grant and Henry Van Dyke continue their entertainine contributions and there is the usual list of good stories, with the serial by A. E. W. Mason. The piece de resistance, however, is "Wordsworth's Daffodils" in "The Point of View." Hampton's in its new form is at tractive and the March number is especially so with "Dreams and their Meanings," and "A Matter of Thumbs" showing how criminals are Identified in this way. Apropos of a short screed on dreaming the writer of this column wrote a week or so ago the author of this far more elaborate exposition of the subject, who happens to be Professor Joseph Jastrow, of the University of Wisconsin, refers to that common dream of which the writer rpoke in which the dreamer is partially unclothed. Five good short stories complete the issue. "The Craftsman," devoted to art and sociology," is fully and handsomely illustrated in its March number which has much of interest including "Old English Doorways," "The Return of the Birds," "A Progressive Exhibition of American Architecture," "Seeing Nature with a Painter's Eye." "Planting Large Spaces for Homelike Gardens," and a variety of other matter relative to house construction, conservation and philosophic observation. The American Magazine io not the least interesting of the March issues, the leading article, perhaps, being "The Man In the Cage Doe: the Punishment fit the Crime?" by Julian Leavitt, which treats of the ethics and psychology of the prison and the pris oner. "Interesting People," which in cludes illustrations of James Montgomery Flagg, Wallace and Will Irwin and Lady Gregory, is an article that attracts the attention, as does "The Literary Drama," "A new Science and its Findings," which treats of eugenics, "The Business of being a Woman," by Ida M. Tarbell, and another installment of La Follette's "Autobiography." There are other good articles and some clever stories in the number. Julia Marlowee treats of "Stage Work and the Stage Applicant." in the March "Good Housekeeping," this being the second of a series by noted American actresses, the first written by Mary Mannering. "Who Should Marry?" is a frank exposition of a problem much discussed in print and from the platform at this time, and there is much to interest tho mistress of the menage in the magazine's usual departments, with a continuation of the serial by Juliet Wllbor Tompkins. "New Rivers of the North " "Speed of Small Bullets," "Beals C. Wright, through English Eyes," "Insuring your Automobile," "High Living In Cowboy Land." "Angling Ways and By-Ways," "Sugar Trees and Honey Trees," "An Encyclopedia of Sport," are a few of the articles which make the March number of "Outins." attractive to all lovers of sport and the out-of-doors. "Railway Age Gazette," one of the oldest and most reliable of the business journals devoted to the consideration of all that pertains to the great industry and science of railroading, is issued weekly from New York and Chicago and is Invaluable to those interested In or connected with the service. "Effect of the Two-cent Fares on Passenger Traffic and Earnings," "Trespassers killed on Railways Who are They?" "Bascule Bridge over Harbor Channel at Copenhagen," and "Prevention of Industrial Accidents," are among the contents of the issue for March 8 th. A steamer service on the Rhone win probably be commenced in the late spring between Lyons and Avignon. If this can be accomplished, the, trip promises scenic beauties In every way equal to those now so much admired on the famous though somewhat hackneyed Rhine trip. It is expected by the promoters of the scheme that at least twenty thousand passengers win use tho service during tho navigation season."
PfilfrtSan West Ads Bay. 1
DOUBLES CAPACITY OF PLANT Chicago Manufacturer Claims Electric Drills and Hammer Do Better and Quicker Work. "The adoption of electrically operated hand drills and hammers has almost doubled the capacity of our plant," said E. A. Williams, manager of a large Chicago manufacturing concern. Mr. Williams 'then told of the many uses to which these machines
Hand Drill. were put, and how the work had been done better and cheaper. The hand drill shown In the Illustration is the one used by this concern. It is operated by a compact little motor, which is connected to the ordinary electric light socket. After the current has been turned on the speed may easily be regulated by turning a thumb screw at the side. This size of -drill Is the smallest one used in this shop, and they employ several larger and more powerful ones for larger work. "The operator may devote all his attention to the work he is doing," said Mr. Williams, "and does not have to use one hand and half an eye to the operating of the drill itself. His attention is all on his work." t The electric hammer shown in the lower picture, is likewise operated by a small motor. "Our work must be accurate." remarked Mr. Williams In speaking of this hammer, "and the least slip of a chisel is likely to send an expensive casting to the scrap heap. When a man has a heavy hammer Electric Hammer. In one hand and the chisel In the other, these slips are very liable to occur frequently. "As with the drill, the operator may devote his entire attention to the work as the blow of the hammer is entirely automatic.' Largest Telephone Exchange. The largest telephone exchange in existence is that at Hamburg, which is taking care of 40,000 lines at pres ent, but accommodations have been made for future extensions so that this exchange will be enabled to take care of twice as many lines. Moving Picture Audiences. It has been estimated that the moving picture audiences of the United States last year numbered more than two and a quarter million souls per day three times the audiences of all the regular theaters in America put together. " ELKTRHM One-third of Great Britain's telegraph operators are women. Nightly concerts are provided fof telephone subscribers in Australia. In this country the average Is about 87 telephones for each 1,000 inhabitants. The United States has issued nearly 60,000 patents for inventions along electrical lines. , Telephone service between England and Switzerland has been established over two routes. A new electric filter .for household use uses current only as water is drawn through it. An electric crane in a Scotch shipyard has handled loads of 187 tons to a height of 143 feet. Marconi's wireless station at Coltona, Italy, sends messages to this country, over a distance of 4,000 miles. A solution of ten per cent, borax and five, per cent, rosin Is driven into wood by electricity in France to preserve itOne of the newest musical Instruments, operated by electricity, reproduces the notes of 45 orchestra performers. A French wireless station has been installed in Morocco and communication established with the station on the Eiffel tower. An English inventor has copied an old idea In the history of telephony by designing a transmitter shaped like the human ear. China's new cotton mill is the only one in the country. It was built by the Japanese. The machinery Is operated by electricity. A tiny storage battery driven electric fan haa been perfected to be placed inside a top hat to keep Its wearer's bead eooL Where They R "A man, like a watch. Is known by his works," observed the epigram maker. "And by tho noon he keeps," added the wjfe. "And by the spring In him." said, the athlete. "And by his being sometimes fast." remarked the reformer. "And by tho way his hands go np," pot in tho pugilist. "And by his not always going; when we want him to." finished the girl who'd been robbed of her beauty sleep
INDICTED
Labor leaders who will answer to dynamite conspiracy indictments on Tuesday: . J Frank M. Ryan, paestdent of the International Association of Bridge nd Structural Ironworkers. ' v John T. Butler, of Buffalo, N. Y first -vice-president. Herbert S. Hockjn, of Detroit. Mich, second vice-president and acting secretary-treasurer. Richard H. Houlihan. Chicago, financial secretary. Ironworkers local union No. 1. C. E. Dowd. Rochester, N. Y former national organiser. International Machinists' Union. Henry W. Legleitner. Denver, former member Executive Board, of Pittsburgh; now president Denver Ironworkers Union No. 24. John H. Barry, St. Louis, formerly member Executive Board. M. J. Young, Boston, member of Ironworkers' Executive Board. William K. Benson. Detroit, president Detroit Federation of Labor. Eugene A. Clancey, San Francisco formerly member Ironworkers Executive Board, and already indicted in California. John J. MeCray, formerly member Iron Workers' Executive Board. Frank C. Webb, of New York, formerly member of the Executive Committee of the International Association of Bridge and Structural Ironworkers. Patrick F. Farrell, of New York, formerly member of the some committee. Daniel 3. Brophy, one time national delegate of Ironworkers from Brooklyn, N. Y. Michael J. Cunnane, Philadelphia, business agent, local union. James Cooney, Chicago, business agent, local union. William E. Redin, Milwaukee, Wis., business agent, local union. Paul J. Morm, St. Louis, business agent, local union. Peter J. Smith. Cleveland, business agent local union. William J. McCain, Kansas City, Mo., business agent, local union. Michael J. Hannon, Scranton, Pa., formerly business agent local union, now agent Scranton Central Labor Union. John R. Carroll, iron worker, Syracuse, N. Y. Edward E. Phillips, Syracuse. N Y., secretary-treasurer local union. Fred Sherman, Indianapolis, business agent, local union. Ernest C. W. Basey, Cincinnati, former business agent, Indianaoplis local union. .fames E. Ray, Peoria, III., president, local union. Edward Clark Cincinnati, formerly delegate. Daniel Buckley, Davenport, Iowa, business agent, Albert Brown, Kansas City, Mo., business agent. Edward Smytbe, Peoria. 111., business agent. Andrew J. Kavanaugh, Springfield, 111. Murray J. Pennell, Springfield, 111., financial secretary, local union. Herman G. Seiffert, Milwaukee, Wis. George Anderson, Cleveland, ironworker, known as "Nipper." William Schoupe, Chicago, ironworker. James Coughlin, Chicago, ironworker. Charles Wachtmeister, Detroit, business agent. Fred Mooney, ironworker, Duluth, Minn. Frank J. Murphy, Detroit, formerly business agent. Spurgeon P. Meadows, Indianapolis, business agent, district council International Brotherhood Carpenters and Joiners. t's Hiram Cline, Muncie, Ind. f P. C.' Cooley, New Orleans. V Charles N. Beum, Minneapolis, Minn.' . ? William Bernhardt, Cincinnati. Frank J. Higgins, Boston. Frank K. painter, Omaha, Neb., business agent, local ironworkers Union. J. W. Irvin, Peoria, 111., formerly official local ironworkers' union. Patrick Ryan, Chicago iron worker. Milton H. Davis, Philadelphia, formerly member of iron workers' Executive Board. J. E. Munsey, Salt Lake City, business agent local Ironworkers' Union (also indicted in California) true name given in indictment as "Jack Bright." Olaf I. Tvietmoe, San Francisco, secretary-treasurer State and local Building Trades Council, (also indicted in California.) NOTE The McNamara brothers and Ortie E. McManigal, who turned state's evidence against them in California, are also under indictment at Indianapolis, but will not be arraigned. ,.."
ARRANGE MEETING FOR CLUB MONDAY The committee which has charge of the meeting of the Commercial Club - next Monday evening at which R. L. McCabe, of Columbus, Ohio, will speak on "Banking Reforms," was in session' last evening and all arrangements for the meeting were completed. The committee also organized a sub-committee for the studying of banking questions. Mr. McCabe will talk upon the currency reform which is being advocated by the National Citizens' league and the club will determine after listening to his speech whether it will join this league. LAPPS AND WOLVES. The Deer Killing Brutes Get No Meroy From the Natives. The Swedish Lapps are said to live entirely with, by and upon their reindeer. A Lapp who owns a thousand deer is a rich man, but as taxes are assessed upon the number of deer, he is Inclined to underestimate his herd. The most dangerous enemy to the herd is the wolf, which can kill many deer in a night A band of wolves can make a rich Lapp poor. When the snow is deep and soft "and It Is announced that wolf tracks have been seen in the neighborhood of the deer, the swiftest runners on snowshoes prepare for.an exciting chase. The wolf may have a start of a mile or two, but the track it leaves in the deep, soft snow is so conspicuous that the hunters can follow it at their best speed. The wolf, though be may run swiftly, has but a slight chance of escaping his pursuers on their snowshoes. Each .hunter does his best to outrun the others, for the wolf belongs to the Lapp who strikes the first blow. As soon as the leading hunter is close enough to the wolf he gives it a heavy blow across the loins with his strong, spiked snowshoe staff. If there are other wolves to be pursued be kills it outright; if not he disables it and waits till all the hunters have arrived before giving the death stroke. A Danish ranchman who came to this country in tho steerage twentytwo years ago, has just entered on the superintendency of a nine-million-acre ranch in South America, at a salary of $10,000 a year. He will have charge of 400,000 hogs. When the man landed twenty-two years ago he had hardly money enough to go west.
LABOR LEADERS.
Vital statistics ascribe short lives to printers on the. average, but the recent report of the public printer states that there are employed at present in the government office at Washington 250 persons over sixty-five years of age, The saying that among tho government employes? "few die and none resign," seems the only explanation. Shellbark Ilickory lints The New Crop, Genuine 8hellbark Nuts, per Bushel, $2.50 MULFORD A SCHAEFER 603 Main Street and facts are stubborn things. You can't get around them. PILGRIM Furnace heats wonderfully with a small amount of fuel. 529 Main. Phone 1390. 714 to 720 So. 9th. Phone 1685 ATOMIZERS The ttfcd Its! Ucrfc We Have a Complete Line of DEVILBISS ATOMIZERS " Prices Guaranteed . For Both Toilet and Medicine 17. U Ross Drag Co. Phone 1217. 804 Main Street. Roes Rolling Massage Cream, 25c and 50c (DOHrlLriIISG vVe give special attention to the fitting of the Collars. This is one of the most important parte so that comfort and ease is assured the horse." v REPAIRING! Dees your hsrnees need itt We SHARPEN CLIPPER KNIVES on the latest improved POWER machine; all work guaranteed. CHICK , Carets Sicre, 509 Main Street,
LABOR CASE TODAY BEFORE FULL BENCH
WASH1NOTOX. D. C, March 11. Tna MhsmtAWMW I.uw Tin . .1 dent Samuel Gompers, Aloe President John Mitchell and Secretary Prank Morrison of the American Federation of Labor came up for hearing today before the full bencn of the Supreme Court of the District of Columbia. The case has been pending for several years before Justice Wright, and he has already imposed sentences of imprisonment upon the three men. Tho Supreme Court, however, found errors in his procedure, but gave the lower court the right to renew the proceedings. The controversy that originally brought the labor leaders into court arose out of a labor boycott of the Bucks Stove and Range company of St. Louis. Though this dispute has been settled, Justice Wright took the ground that the dignity of the Court's orders had been violated, and again cited the labor chiefs to appear and defend themselves. Lord Howard de Walden. the richest bachelor in England, if not in all Europe, is about to be married. He is in his thirty-second year. His vast property interests in London, which yield him an annual income of about 11,500.000, were inherited from his grandmother, the sister of the duke of Portland. Established CS Yeero Put Your Savings into a A Diamond has,qualltles as an investment that makes it the safest, surest, and soundest proposition that "one can put money into. It it is bought at the old reliable "Jewelry Honce of . Blcldncon" you are sure of a fine stone, at the lowest possible price. Every stone backed by a positive guarantee. Wo have a large stock of loose and mounted gems to select from. Let us demonstrate to you that to put your money into one of our "Quality" Diamonds is the best investment you can make. ' A TO WATCHES, DIAMONDS We Mount All Diamonds in Our Own Shop. o o GLASSES FOR OLD AND YOUNG That's my aim In life to all whose eyes need attention. In these days. Children, their 'Parents and Grandparents seldom escape EYESTRAIN which only an examination of tho eyes and correct glasses can overcome. Can I be of service to any of - your family? aBSBBSBBSBBSBSSSBBBSBBSBSBSBBBBSSBBSBBt mss c. rxsvErrzEft OPTOMETRIST PHONE 1099 KPt MAIN ST. MAKE NO MISTAKE, BUT USE For the blood, and kindred alls. Nothing better; try It. At all drag; stores. Gor.iETHtrco KZW
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