Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 305, 28 October 1912 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, MONDAY, OCTOBER 28, 1912.

JIM

WATSON

TOLD ABOUT CONVENTION Former Congressman Spoke Saturday Night at the Coliseum and a Large Crowd Heard Speech. (Continued from Fags One.) the Egyptians to get for the common people yachts and automobiles, pal,aces by the sea, purple and fine linen and retinues of servants. If everyone gets these who will act as the servants? "The twang on the heartstring of envy! That is what is affecting us. "When a Democrat gets it he thinks it Is political economy. When a Bull Mooser gets it he thinks it is an inspiration from heaven and commences to sing 'Onward Christian Soldiers. "Child labor. How beautifully Mr. Beveridge talks about it. And yet we have had a child labor law in Indiana for thirty years. All states have them but the cotton states of the south. There is not one case of child labor in Indiana and I defy Mr. Beveridge to produce one. We passed a child labor law in the District of Columbia, a model. We put it through while Mr. Beveridge was away making speeches or resting in his palace by the sea. "He talks of free school books. We have them. Any man who is too poor to buy can get them and clothing for bis children too. I am not in favor of buying school books for my neighbor who has four times as much money as I have. Are you? "Mr. Beveridge raves about the road tax. He wants it paid instead of worked out. And he would destroy the Republican party which has so honored him for a change on the road tax law. "I am in favor of woman's suffrage If they are sure they want to vote. But I am not in favor of the immoral woman in the city leading her forces to the polls while the old gray haired mother in the country remains by her fireside. If the women vote, then they must all vote. Everyone who can vote should exercise that privilege." Change of Heart. Referring to the opposition of Roosevelt to Taft, the speaker said that Roosevelt complimented Taft in the New York state convention two years ago. . "Roosevelt is making the race to satisfy personal ambition." Watson then said that at the Rushville district convention several years ago, E. H. Harris, of this city, brought a set of resolutions to the meeting which Harris said were the ones Beveridge wanted adopted. One of them was laudatory of Taft. Some of the millionaires who never made a dollar of their own, stick themselves up as monitors and proclaim against the bosses. Who made Ed Lee chairman of the state? Ed did. Who made Leeds district chairman? Lee did. And Leeds appointed the county chairmen of the Sixth district. The state from Ed down, and the Sixth district from Leeds, down are governed by their bosses. "They nominated Greenstreet for congress, but unfortunately he was not in the councils of Dudley Foulke. They say Foulke wanted the nomination. I do not know, but I do know that his paper attacked Greenstreet. And still this man Greenstreet who was not good for congressman is nominated for the state legislature by the same party. Referring to the assertion of the Progressive leader that they organized a new movement to clean the political house, Mr. Watson said: "What is the best way to clean house stand on the inside and use soap, or stand on the outside and hurl brickbats and bombs at the house?" Defends Protective Tariff. Defending the protective policy of the Republican party, he said: "Capital needs no protection; it protects itself. I never have lost a minute's sleep worrying about the protection of capital. Whoever heard of a million dollars walking 'over the hills to the poorhouse.' But the brawn of the country does need protection from the cheap labor of foreign countries. My Democratic brother, suppose we give you the reins of government tonight; could you give employment to a single new employe? Could you light another factory furnace, or add another penny to the hog? What could you do that has not been done to better present conditions?" "When things were cheap we did not have the money to buy them with. The farmers couldn't make a living and left their crops unharvested in the fields. The laborers walked the highways unemployed and could not earn enough to keep them from starvation. Clothing was cheap, yet many were unclad. Why the men to keep busy attended Republican meetings to change conditions! 'Tonight there is not a Coxey's army or a soup house under the flag. And yet we kick. These troubles of ours always come in prosperous times. It was so in 1892. All of us couldn't get the postoffice, some of us had run tor office and been defeated." Setting Her Right. - '"You are familiar, I presume, with Johnson's 'RasselasT" observed ttu Boston girl. "Ion mast hare got him mixed with Frank Gotch," said the St Louis young nan. "Johnson is a prizefighter." Then alienee, like a cataplasm, descended to ameliorate the Impact f the atmospheric concussion. Chicago Tribune.

THE FIENDISH

When You Should Be Taking Durance Vile Awaiting Who Never BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. One of the most infernal instruments of civilization is conceded to be the stove-pipe. Some American humourist has Immortalized it. Whether Artemus Warde, or not, the writer does not now recall. Only she remembers at one time to have heard a "reader" give an exceedingly funny dramatic performance built round the stove-pipe. However that may be it continues to act as an incubator for profanity. Oh, pshaw, says some one or other, there aren't any Btove-pipes any more. That's a thing of the past. Back in the stone age, maybe, they wrestled with 'em but not in this modern day. - It's furnaces and steam heat and all that, you know. All you need to do is to go to the stove stores and make an inquiry or two to disprove this. There are more stoves and attenddant pipes sold to the square inch than ever before. And it's a fact that the art of stovepipe manipulation is no farther advanced than it was in pioneer days. The early settlers, may, indeed, for all anybody knows, been far more skillful than the contemporary adepts. It is to be hoped they were. For certainly the experts nowadays who ride up to your house in wagons and enter your domicile bearing "elbows," and other portions of the stovepipe's anatomy, give no evidence of having received a college degree. Rather would you say they were the exponents of the correspondence schools. Their information, to make a bad joke, seems to have been acquired at long range. What a pother we all make about our menages and our possessions. More people are lying awake at nights worrying over what will become of their "things" than from having eaten not wisely but too much. The truth is we all have too many "things." They clutter up our houses, pack the attic, stuff the cellar and overflow into the storage houses. Once in a while some heroic soul will make a feint at cleaning out. But they generally end in despair. And wind up by throwing a mes3 of stuff into a trunk and sending it off to relatives in the country. For, when you really start out to separate the household sheep from the goats it is surprising how many sheep you have. You gaze regretfully at a green and red satin checked evening waist with a bertha of lavender chiffon which you have had wrapped up in tissue paper for the last ten years and think that, after all, you can use it in some way. It's a pity to send that to Eliza or give it to cousin Nathan's daughter because they never go to parties and wouldn't wear it if they did. Eliza is tall and bony and would not shine in decollete. Cousin Nathan's daughter, while having plenty of avoirdupois, is studying to be a missionary and would scorn a red and green evening waist. "Still you might let her have it for the natives," suggests Tom. "Its the kind of thing they wear, , you know. With that and a fig leaf or two they would be ready for anything." "Have you no shame!" exclaims Maria severely. "You women shouldn't be so squamish now that you're going to vote," grinned Tom. "Everything is legitimate subject for conversation. Its only the way you look at it. Now I repeat that a feminine aborigine with that waist, a door-mat, a turkey-wing and a few beads would look quite as well as you girls do in hobble skirts and perforated lingerie." "How dare you!" cried Maria. 'I never wore a hobble skirt in my like and if I did I regarded myself as superior to an aborigine. Besides I don't see what that's got to do with stovepipes." It is the truth, however, that you wind up by wrapping the red and green satin waist again in its tissue paper and depositing it in an upper drawer. You don't remember why you have it. Or where you got it. The only thing about which you are perfectly certain is that you have never worn it. And never will. And still you hate to part with it. Because the silk is good and the chiffon better than they make now. In this manner you repack your possessions in moth-balls and go to bed with a headache. Householders spend half their time mauling over their old things. They pull them out in the spring and hang them out the line to air. They pound and beat and dust and wash and iron and stretch on frames. And sit down and gaze blankly the while they gibber to themselves. "That's too good a coat to give away tt "Maybe I can get into that skirt myself" "Mary Ann may as well have those shoes " "There's no use giving away that flannel petticoat " "Why, I can turn that hat hindside before and it will look as good as new " "John may as well wear out that over-coat. We can't afford to give It away " "While that skillet has the handle ofT still it might do to put in the oven t And so it goes. Finally, though, you discover a choice assortment of old stove-pipes in the wood-shed and when the men come to put up the base-burner you haul 'em out. You see no reason for buying a new pipe when these are perfectly good.

STOVE-PIPE

the Air You Remain in the Stove-pipe Man Comes. To be sure they may be a bit rusty But the stove men can polish them up and screw them together and, in this way, you will save at least thirtyfive cents. When the stove men demur and say that they may not fit you assume a lofty attitude and say that so long as this is your stove and your pipes Oh, to be sure, of course, of course. Andy go out to the wagon and bring in the shears. Andy returns with the shears or whatever they are and the two begin an exhibition of acrobatics that could not be exceeded at the vaudeville. In the meantime a cartful or two of debris has fallen out of the stove-hole on your freshly laundered carpet. Also on one of the men's heads. He dodges and says a word or two. You declare that the man who took down the pipe told you he had cleaned out the chimney. Well he was a blankety liar says the stove-pipe man. You look your haughty and disgusted disapproval. In the meantime the hours are slipping away. Beautiful golden October hours when you were to have walked abroad with Ellen and steeped yourself in the dazzling landscape. You comment on the inefficient stove-pipe men. You say you could do better yourself. Just then Tom happens in and offers to help. You say you know he can't do a thing. That's always the way, he replies. Never will let me help when I am perfectly willing and able. Never think about saving money. Always wanting to hire something that could be done by a member of the family. With which Tom divests himself of his coat and collar and enters the arena. "Stand back!" he cries, rolling up his sleeves, "and let an expert In." The stove-pipe men grinningly obey. The while they gaze sardonically at the Apache dance Tom now executes with the various bits of pipe heretofore marooned in the wood-shed. Dishevelled, sooty, perspiring, grimy and in a towering rage, Tom finally admits his defeat. With which the stove-pipe men say they will have to go back to the store and get some different pipe. "These here haint within ten miles of that hole," they say. In one hour and forty-nine minntes by the clock they return with a choice assortment of stove-pipe remnants and proceed to work out the puzzle. By six o'clock they retire, saying they will come again in the morning with an entire new pipe. In the meantime the golden afternoon has slipped into the discard. Ellen is offended. And your bill is not pared down. "I don't know what you wanted to put the stove up for anyway this kind of weather," growls Tom. "No use wasting the coal." Since Tom had sent the stove-pipe men down and told you to stay at home 'til they got there, you are rendered speechless. "Why didn't you tell him you wouldn't stay at home?" asked the unattached one. "Why I never thought of that," said the household slave. BOWLING NOTES The Keystones and Lichtenfel's Sox are scheduled to play at the City alleys tonight. Roy Miller, Walter Steinkamp and Fred Mayer are all tied for the $3.50 prize of last week and will bowl it off this week. The following are the individual averages of the players in the bowling league and the team standing: Games Pet. King 6 187 Ed Lichtenfels 6 173 Dr. Harold 6 169 Ray Lichtenfels 6 168 J. Martin 3 168 B. Martin 5 166 Broderick 6 164 Hadley 6 161 Fred Mayer 6 161 Zeyen 6 161 Hunt 6 160 Rockhill 6 158 Karl Meyers 6 157 Schepman 6 157 Green 6 157 Porter 6 155 Runge 6 154 Foster 6 153 Lahrman 6 153 F. Miller 6 153 Youngflesh 6 152 Wiggins 6 151 Mashmeyer 3 151 Jeffries 3 150 Beck 6 149 Eikenberry 6 149 Hodge 6 149 Steinkamp 6 148 Dr. Bond 3 148 Denny 6 145 Helmlck 6 144 Hosier 6 144 Kirk 3 140 Dr. Marklej. 3 139 Ward 6 136 Parry 4 135 Sprouse - 6 134 TEAM STANDING. W. Keystones 5 Giants 5 Reliance Five 4 Starr Piano 3 Lichtenfels Sox ........ 3 Travelers 2 Bonesetters 1 Slims 1 L. 1 1 2 3 3 4 5 5 Pet. .833 .833 .667 .600 .500 .333 .167 J67 Nettle Stings. Pain caused by the stinjr of nettles Is due psrtly to formic acid and partly to a chemical resembling snake poison.

ALLIES DRAW NET CLOSELY ABOUT TURKS

Ottoman Forces Slowly, but! Surely Being Encircled byArmies of the United Balkan States. (Continued from Page One.) railway which lies between Salonika and Uskub. The Greeks have the shorter distance but they must cross a mountain range through a narrow defile which will make their progress slow. The general plan of operations in Western Turkey includes an attack upon Monastir after the fall of Scutari. This city, it is believed, will fall prey to an allied army of Montenegrins, Servians and Christian tribesmen. An Important Move. The march upon Salonika is the most important move in the western campaign. It is believed here that both Salonika and Adrianople are doomed and that with their fall the war will end. Dispatches from the front state that the Greek army is meeting with but slight resistance. It is keeping close to the Gulf of Salonika and the fertile farming country, through which it is passing provides the soldiers with plenty of provisions. At Salonika the first naval engagement of the war will be fought should the Greek government order its fleet there to co-operate with the land forces in a general attack. The Turks are planting mines in Salonika harbor and strengthening the harbor fortresses to guard against an attack from the water side. A Turkish flotilla has also been or dered there at full speed from Chankf. Kalossi, a port at the western end of the Dardanelles. FOOTBALL RESULTS EAST. At Philadelphia Lafayette, 7; Pennsylvania, 3. At Swarthmore, Pa. Swarthmore, 40; Johns Hopkins, 6. At South Bethlehem, Pa. Lehigh, 12; Ursinus, 0. At Washington, D. C. Carlisle. 34; Georgetown, 20. At Ithaca, N. Y. Cornell, 14; Bucknell, 0. At Annapolis Navy, 13; Pittsburg 6. At Westpoint, N. Y. Army, IS; Cogate, 7. At Cambridge, Mass. Harvard, 30; i Brown, 10. At New Haven Yale, 13; Washington and Jefferson, 3. At Princeton, N. J. Princeton, 22; Dartmouth, 7. At Syracuse Michigan, 7; Syracuse 18. At New York New York University, 6; Williams, 16. At Amherst, Mass. Amherst, 15; Trinity, 0. WEST. At Cleveland, O. Western Reserve, 0; Oberlin, 28. At Delaware, O. Ohio Wesleyan, 6; Case, 19. At Minneapolis, Minn. Minnesota, 56; Iowa, 7. At Columbus, O. Ohio State, 45; Cincinnati. 7. St. Louis, 35; Miami, 0. Marquette University, 0; Lawrence, 12. Drake, 28; Simpson, 0. Leander Clark, 47; Coe, 6. Nebraska, 41; Adrian, 0. At Lincoln, Neb. Nebraska, 41; Adrian, O. At Berkeley, Cal. (Rugby) Australians, 16; University of California, 0. SOUTH. At Nashville, Tenn. Vanderbilt, 24; Mississippi, 0. At Columbus, Ga. Georgia, 12; Alabama, 9. At Chattanooga, Tenn. Sewanee, 33; Tennessee, 6. INDIANA. At Chicago Chicago, 7; Purdue, 0. At Lansing, Mich. Michigan Agricultural College, 58; DePauw, 0. At Notre Dame, Ind. Notre Dame, j 41; Wabash, 6. At Indianapolis Butler, 13; Earlt ham, 0. At Hanover, Ind. Franklin 28; Han- ; over 3. j At Bloomington. Ind. Northwestera, 20; Indiana, 7. At Charleston, 111. Eastern Illinois Normal, 36; Rose Polytechnic, 14. CAN YOU IMAGINE Anything More Pleasant Than a Cup of HOT CHOCOLATE On a raw, CtfT. blustery day. It's fine, bat while you're getting, get THE BEST at the Greek Candy Store ! PIANO TUNING D. E. ROBERTS 15 Tears Practical Experience. Formerly with the Steinway House at Indianapolis. PHONE 3684 .

Flying Machines Will be Given ihe First Real Test in the Balkan War

The present war between Turkey j seen to what extent field telephones. ; male compiaInts such as inflammand the Balkan states is likely to be j telegraphs, wireless, aeroplanes, mo- tion ulceration, displacements, tumnotable as the first war in history to j torcycles and other modern appliance ; ors irregularities, periodic pains and make important use of aviation. Both j of war can make team work possible, j backache, by Lydia E. Ptnkham's Vegthe aeroplane and the dirigible bal- j If the allies possessed them and the J etat,le Compound, are on file in the -loon were succesfully employed in ! Turks not. they might be able to j Pinknam laboratories at Lynn. Mass.. the Italian campaign in Tripoli which ; strike a crushing blow. But suppose ! Dut nJ letter , ever published with-

nas just ciosea. dui mey were emoum siues equaiij equippeu. u is a

pjoj ea on oniy one siae ma mey am , mvc- nucsuuu ueiun yiunot materially affect the result. I ' ances would strengthen the allies by work of the Italian commander, and improving co-operation so much as no doubt saved some lives which a ' they would strengthen the Turks by reconnoissance would have cost, but ; enabling them to take advantage of the European invaders enjoyed such ' his interior position for rapid and cona superiority in force, discipline and j venient attack on points left exposed, war material that they could perfectly ! Not Modern, well have dispensed with this most I lf side8 were fullv .qUipp.d. modern adjunct of warfare. The case like France, Germany and Italy, the is quite different in the Balkans. . campaign wou,d be of a wholly new where the aeroplane is more import- sort unorpcentpdlv ranid. direct and

am ana more amicuit 10 use Decause of the physical conditions. In Tripoli and Cirenaica the conditions were ideal and greatly helped the Italian aviators to make a fine recora. une omcer was wounded ty a bullet, but returned successfully. One man was drowned while crossing a bay if he had been using a hydro he would have escaped unharmed, Another was compelled to descend prematurely and was captured by the Arabs of the deserts. These were the only serious casualties of the air scouts during a war that lasted a A 1 A. 1 . trifle over a y-ar. It is a record of which Italy nr j justly be proud, but it was made xssible by a favorable climate and terrain. The winds were usually steady and the ground along the coast is reasonably level and in great part flat. The aviators were able to find an auspicious moment and to cover a great deal of country satisfactorily in a brief time, a wide area being clearly exposed to their view. The campaign being one of careful prearranged attack on definite points, a small aerial force sufficed, and since the Turks employed no aeroplanes the excitement of competition was lacking and the flights hardly differed from those made in an ordinary aviation meet. Adverse Conditions. All these conditions are reversed in

the war between Turkey and the Bal- ceeded in destroying the other squadkan states. Operation will be more j r0n of scouts would enjoy a marked difficult because not carried on from t advantage ; it would be putting out the a secure base with hangars and re-1 eye of the enemy. But with so few pair shops guarded by warships. Both ' aeroplanes on either side the chances sides will have to work from the field; 'of such a colllssion are remote. Aviaand the difficulty of keeping the ma- j tors on both sides will be more enchines in perfect working order will i grossed in finding a favorable time be greatly increased. The ground, too for a rare scouting expedition than in will be much less favorable. The ; Btriving to destroy the enemy's air greater part of the peninsula is moun- j fleet. Of course a fortuitous engagetainous, many of the peaks being of J ment between two rival aircraft is Alpine height. A characteristic of i not impossible, but whichever side is the region is the great number of j at the moment less able to risk the little basin-like valleys, and in such iOBs of an aeroplane will try to shun formations "airholes" are a source of j the engagement. In this connection terror to aviators. The mountain de-1 it may be observed that while for files the war area includes Ther- military uses stability has been rated mopylae are favorable to ambus- J above speed, in the case of actual cades, surprises and attacks through l aerial fighting, speed wiuld be a very roundabout passes. To guard against j important element. A weaker force such dangers aerial scouting will be equipped with monoplanes capable of invaluable, but it will be prosecuted ioo men or more miles an hour would under great difficulties, and among ! be able to keep the field with perfect the mountains it will be much easier j ease against an overwhelming force for a hostile force to hide than on ; capable of but a mile a minute. But the sandy plains of Lybia. And at hn the Balkans we are likely to see the same time the risk of accident nothing so sensational; the great will be ' much greater among the I Question will be which side will be

mountains. But on the other hand, while for the Italians aviation was a pleasant scientific experiment, to the armies in the Balkans it may be a matter of life and death. The issue of the war will depend very largely upon the manipulation of forces, and strategy will be very difficult both because of the paucity of communications and because so many factors are involved. Concerted action by the allies is proverbially difficult; it remains to be

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; deadly. Instead of fumbling and i searching for the enemy, the two sides j would qulellv come to in fuH force and the war wouId be waged nand to hand Uke the battle8 of the olden tinie8 wnen the general had the who,e field under nlg eye Xothing , ke tQi8 wUl happen. The Turks nave . half a doren or go machine8 acquired j but not U8ed during the Italian war j and other8 nave been ordered but not ! delivered. The Bulgarians are about j equaUy weU supplied. Such an aerial j , .hrtlIv ,nal,M.,ata tnr vr. I J " ing so vast a field of operations. How ever well the machines work they will I reveal the situation only in occasional glimpses that may prove valuable or uaole88. u ,8 llkeiyt therefore, to be a campaign of uncertainties, illuminated by flashes which may at times alter decisively the course of events. Cavalry will remain the chief resource for discovering the enemy's strength and position, and in cavalry the Turks have a considerable superiority. How far the aerial services can effect this is one of the unknown factors of the war. It is possible, but not likely, that the war in the Balkans will involve the first war in the air. If each side possessed a considerable flotilla, a battle would be likely to begin with a deadly combat between the aviators themselves, and whichever side sue able now and then to make a modest flight when it is needed. But for all that the part played by the aeroplanes may prove highly important. Ths Msdical Studsnts. Pendleton What are the two greatest wishes of a medical student? Kerfer Give It np. What are they? Pendleton To put "Dr." before his own name and "Dr." after the namsa of other people. it will last ! is literally a sheet of pliable of stone. - proof, rot-proof and acidlayers of Asbestos Felt securely alternate layers of pure Trinidad perishable material m J-M Asbestos painting or other protection, this the wear and tear for nearly a quarter good condition today. . i summer ana coia in winter, cover them with J-M Asbestos Roofing. WriU ur call tUay fr mltu J-M ' hrnm rfJ try ' MmstrmUd inilti. Jones Hdw. Co. 1M2

Thousands of Grateful Letters

! from women In all parts of the United States and Canada who have been re-1 ilieved from almost every form of fe-' out wriUen rejUCSt or consent of the writer. Every suffering woman owes it to herself to give Lydia E. Pinkhan'a Vegetable Compound a trial. (Advertisement) CALENDAR OFSPORTS MondayAnnual meeting of the Central . at Ft. i lxague of Baseball Clubs Wayne. Ind. Opening of the season of the Na tional ThreeCushion Billiard League. Annual trials of the Southern Ohio Field Trial Association at Hammers-. vilie. O. Annual field trials of the Empire Beagle Club at Schenectady. N. Y. Annual field trials of the fTestern Beagle Club at Hass Iake. Ind. "Knockout" Brown vs. Howard Mor row, iu rounds, at Syracuse. N. Y. Patsy Brannigan vs. Monte At tell, 10 rounds, at Youngstown. O. Joe Bayley vs. Pal Brown, 1 rounds at Caleary, Alta. Young Savior vs. Harry Trendall, 10 rounds, at St. Louis. TuesdayTony Caponi vs. Ray Marshall. 15 rounds, at St. Joseph, Mo. WednesdayOpening of the fall meeting of ths Maryland Jockey Club at Pimllco. Johnny Kilbane vs. Tommy Dugan, 6 rounds, at Johnstown, Pa. SaturdayFootball Harvard vs. Princeton, at . Can-' bridge. Yale vs. Colgate at New Haven. Dartmouth vs. Amherst at Hanover, N. H. Pennsylvania vs. Penn Stats, at Philadelphia. Cornell vs. Williams, at Ithaca. Brown vs. Vermont, at Providence. Army vs. Holy Cross, at West Point. Navy vs. Western Reserve, at Annapolis. Carlisle Indians vs. Lehigh, at South Bethlehem. Chicago vs. Wisconsin, at Madison. Illinois vs. Minnesota, at Minneapolis. Indiana vs. Earlham, at Bloomington. Missouri vs. Nebraska, at Columbia. Ohio State vs. Case, at Cleveland. Northwestern vs. Purdue, at Evanston. Notre Dame vs. Pittsburg, at Pittsburg. Kansas vs. Oklahoma, at Lawrence. Vanderbilt vs. Virginia, at Nashville. Georgia vs. Sewanee, at Athens. Ga. Alabama vs. Tulane, at New Orleans. Johns Hopkins vs. Stevens Institnto at Baltimore. West Virginia vs. Allegheny, at Morgantown. KPYETOK INVISIBLE HI-FOCAL FITTING KRYTTOK LENSES has been our specialty for many years. We ask you the next time you are up town shopping to just notice the different business men that are apparently doing all their work with one power lense and if you ask them you will find out that they are wearing Kryptok Lenses fitted at 810 Main Street By F. H. Edmunds, Optometrist.

nANER'S JEWELRY STORE