Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 45, 2 January 1913 — Page 3

i . $ ! .:Vi rxE RICHMOND PALIADIUM AXI SUX TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, JANUARY 2, 1913. PAGE THREE.

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WAS JOYFUL REUNION Brothers Meet After Interval of 42 Years.

(Palladium Special) SOUTH BEND, Ind., January 2. -aged brothers met here yesterIjr mJterviaterval of forty-two yean, end talked full hour during ; Tfck: tin the alder of the two did ! not "TBeaIt hM OWT kin. David G. J Ullery, seventy- yars old, returned 'to this city from the west after an absence of nearly half a century, and "was taken to the house of his brother, Jacob Ullery, aged eighty-two years, at 123 East Paris street, but the elder 'of the two did not recognize his brother until told of the relationship by a nephew. Both men greatly resemble each other and are exceptionally active and well preserved. BEST COUGH MEDICINE FOR CHILDREN. "1 am very glad to say a few words In praise of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy" writes Mrs. Lida Dewey, Milwaukee, Wis. "I have used it for years both for my children and myself and it never fails to relieve and cure a tough or cold. No family with children should be without it as it gives almost immediate relief in cases of croup." Chamberlain's Cough Jteinedy is pleasant and safe to take, which is of great importance when a medicine must be given to young children. For sale by all dealers. ( Advertisement) Amusements At the Gennett Tonight "The Divorce Question.'" Jan. 4. "Uncle Tom's Cabin." Jan. 7 "Bought and Paid For." At the Murray. Vaudeville Matinee and Night. The Murray. ( Gertrude and Elizabeth Kolp and Peter Lichtenfels, together with four tether unusually strong acts were successful in drawing capacity business at the Murray both afternoon and night and the extraordinaryly large crowds were handled in a manner that, teflects much credit upon the management. Perhaps no better indorsement as to the splendid quality of the offering could be asked for than the immense crowds that are attending at very performance. The bill will continue for the balance of the week. "The Divorce Question." Are you married? Have little ones entered the home? Children who came into the world involuntarily who need the tender care of those responsible for their creation? Under these conditions should a divorce ever be considered? Assuming for the sake of argument that at times the matrimonial yoke is oppressive that happiness is a remote af'fair between you and the partner of your choice does not the imperative duty to the child preclude the possibility of even a thought of separation, a separation that is possibly desired to attain selfish personal ends.? f Should not the motto be your children first, last, always? They are in no wise to blame why make them euffer why wreck their little lives through what you deem to call an unsatisfactory martial relation.? "Bought and Paid For." "Bought and Paid For," the biggest tof our time, says William Brady, its ! producer, and which will be the attraction at the Gennett next Tuesday, carries my personal guarantee. It is the same in every particular as drew packed houses for two years at my playhouse in New York. If you find anything to criticise any slurring or inattention by the players, or any point about the stage equipment that does not justify the highest claims of the management I shall esteem it a very great favor to have you write me in detail at my office in the Playhouse, New York. It has been asserted in some quarters that lack of interest in amusements in all but the few largest cit ies has been caused by short sighted I managers who sent inferior companies and shabby scenery to these cenIters. I am determined that my name, When attached to an attraction, shall Jbe a full assurance of the high value pt that attraction, and I bespeak bour assistance to that end. How to Make Better Cough Syrup than n n i ou ian Buy q I A Family Supply, Sarins 92 and Fully Guaranteed.

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A full pint of cough syrupas much s you could buy for $2.50 can easily te made at home. You will find nothing that takes hold of an obstinate cougn , Jnore quickly, usually ending it inside of fci?1isWxcelleiit, too, for croup, tsrJTX' 8,'J"Ws lungs, asthma, orw4eaa and other .throat troubles. . rr tftt At JTrainulated sugar with ' " V -i w water, and stir for 2 mi7iutes.fc,S& eiiaves of Pincx (fiftv routs' worth) in a pfs bottle, then add the Sugar gyrup. It keeps perfectly. Sake a teaspoonful every one, two or three hours. This is just laxative enough to heln eure a cough. Also stimulates the appetite, which is usually upset by a cough. The taste is pleasant. The effect of pine antl sugar svrup on the inflamed mciflbtanes is well' known. Tinox is the most valuable concentrated compound of Norway white pine extract, rich in guaiacol and all the natural pealing pino elements. Other preparations will not work in this formula. The Pinex and Sugar Syrup recipp is flow used by thousands of housewives throughout the United States and Can- . fcda. The plan has been imitated, but the old successful formula has never fceen equaled. A guaranty of absolute satisfaction, or Inoney promptly refunded, goes with this Recipe. Your druggist has Pinex, or will fet it for yon. If not. send to The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind.

A SURE, QUICK COLD CURE ACTS GENTLY

Pape's Cold Compound Cures Colds and Grippe in a Few Hours. The most severe cold will be broken and all grippe misery ended after taking a dose of Pape's Cold Compound every two hours until three consecutive doses are taken. You will distinctly feel all the disagreeable symptoms leaving after the very first dose. The most miserable headache, dullness, head and nose stuffed up, feverishness, sneezing, running of the nose, sore throat, mucous catarhal discharges, soreness, stiffness, rheumatism pains and other distress vanishes Take this wonderful Compound as directed, with the knowledge that there is nothing else in the world which will cure your cold or end Grippe misery as promptly and without any other assistance or bad aftereffects as a 25-c package of Pape's Cold Compound, which any druggist can supply contains no quinine belongs in every home accept no substitute. Tastes nice acts gently. Advertisement Any proper complaint you may make will receive prompt and respectful attention. The Murrette. When Mr. O. G. Murray built the Murrette theater he felt convinced that it would be too large for the present, but within a few years the business would grow so that the extra space would be required. Evidently he underestimated the number of "movie" patrons that Richmond would have within less than a year as the large Murrette proved entirely too small to accommodate its patrons yesterday. The special New Year's program was an excellent one. For today the management has arranged for a two reel western feature, entitled "The Burning Brand." This, together with a new comedy, will make on of the best programmes of the week. FALLING COCOANUTS. Dew Makes Most of Them Drop From tha Trees at Night. "In the tropics when the cocoanut Is wanted for planting," said an importer of the fruit, "the nuts are picked up when they fall from the tree where they have hung for about fourteen months in ripening. It is a fact not generally known that a majority of the nuts drop at night, which probably accounts for the small loss of life by cocoanuts falling upon the heads of the natives. "The action of the heavy dew at night loosens the seal with which nature has provided the nut and allows it to fall. The nuts wanted for planting are either gathered into heaps or placed under sheds, where they are allowed to sprout before planting iu order that good, healthy nuts may be selected, thus avoiding the possibility of planting 'blind' nuts that will not sprout. In which case much time would be lost in starting the cocoanut walks, as the orchards are called. When boles are dug, about three feet deep and twenty feet apart, the nut is carefully placed therein and covered with about a foot of soil. The hole is filled as the sprout grows until the latter reaches the surface, then it is left to itself, requiring no further attention. Should the place where the cocoanut is planted be any greau distance from the seashore a quantity of salt is placed, in the hole. The plant will grow in luxuriance, however, but a short distance from the shore, nearness to salt water being absolutely essential to its welfare." Washington Herald. MAKING STEAM WORK. Unfortunate Inventors Who Antedated James Watt. James Watt took out a patent on his steam engine in 1769, but as far back as 1543 there was a captain in Spain who constructed a vessel of 20O tons and propelled it at Barcelona in the presence of the Emperor Charles V. and his court by an engine, the construction of which he kept a secret. But an old document says that In it was a monster caldron of water and that there were two movable wheels on the outside of the vessel. The emperor was satisfied with its operation, but the treasurer of the kingdom objected to it, and so no encouragement was given to the enterprise. The poor Inventor, whose name was Blasco de Guerere, wearied and disgusted at the want of patronage, took the engine out of the vessel, and the secret of the machine was buried in his grave. The incident was almost duplicated In France a century later. The famous Marian de l'Orme, a celebrated Frenchwoman, who lived to be 134 years oid, told in-a letter to an admirer, dated 1641. of a man confined in a madhovse of Paris for urging that anything could be done by the force of steam. The man's name was Solomon de Costs, a native of Normandy, and it was because he had persistently followed Cardinal Richelieu, imploring him to take an interest in his invention, that he was put behind bars. Kansas City Star. Browning a Great Talker. If IVord Houghton talked more than most people he certainly was eclipsed by Mr. Browning, who spoke louder and with greater persistency than any one I have ever come across in my life. Although I had known him as a girl, we did not renew our acquaintance until after my marriage, when I saw a great deal of him, as he constantly came to our house. He dined with us often and nsed to come and see me generally every Sunday afternoon. He wat very agreeable and kind, and, although i was never one of his devoted followers and often told him I had nerer been able to read a line of his poetry, be still continued his friendship with me. I think most people feared ralher than loved him certainly men diii. but women adore poets, and they worshiped Mr. Browning. From Lady St, Heller's "Memories."

Better Money in Cow peas for Farmers Than Any Other Crop

BY I. L. TOTTEN. "What do I think of cowpeas? why, its the greatest crop a farmer can raise." This was the answer to the question I asked a farmer who has raised cowpeas for the past ten years. His friends say that if there is anything in the theory of the transmigration' of the soul he will surely be a cowpea, and a hardy plant at that, when he switches to the other life. "I can make more money raising cowpeas, take it one year with another, than I can raising any other kind of a crop," said he. "Wheat does not compare with it at all." Replying to my question as to the yield per acre, and the price it usually bring3, he said that it yielded from fifteen to thirty-five bushels per acre, depending on the conditions, and brought from $1.25 to $1.45 per bushel. His crop rotation is corn, oats and cowpeas. "Come with me," said he, "if you want to see what cowpeas will do as a fertilizer." I followed him to the corn field and he show-ed me where he had had cowpeas and where there had been none in the same field. It could be seen to the row where the cowpeas had been, because the corn crop was nearly a third larger on that part of the field. "I prefer cowpeas to clover as a pasture for hogs," he exclaimed. "I can fatten a bunch of hogs quicker while they are on the cowpeas than I can in any other way. He says that five acres of cowpeas will fatten two hundred head of hogs. If that is a fact, although it does not look possible, surely it is a wonderful crop and a highly remunerative one. "Last year, because of the heavy rains just at the time I wanted to harvest the cowpeas, I had to let them go without harvesting them. I then turned my hogs in the field and you should have seen them grow. I was not ready at that time to begin fattening them and when they had cleaned up the field I began feeding corn but they did not do as well on the corn as they had been, doing on the cowpeas." Big Difference. Heclaims that he can see p. big difference in the crop that follows the cowpeas even though the cowpeas have been cut off for hay and the seed and not plowed under for the fertilising elements which they add to the soil. "I can grow cowpeas on soil that is too thin to raise clover and it will withstand the extreme weather conditions better than clover," he contin-. ued, "because it does not freeze out and it does not burn out. "It is practically impossible to grow clover on thin sandy soil, but cowpeas seem to thrive there and each succeeding crop yields better." He often pastures his milch cows on the cowpea meadows, and when they are feeding on this crop they produce more milk than when they are fed ensilage. As an all around crop, he claims that it beats any other crop that is raised on the farm. Cattle, horses, hogs and poultry all do well on it. Cowpea meal contains twenty per cent proetin. "The cowpea meal is certainly fine for hogs, and it certainly i3 great for a part of the mash for poultry." "What do you do for hay," I asked. "You don't grow timothy." "Do for hay," was the reply, "why there isn't any better hay on earth than cowpea hay. "I can keep my horses in better shape on cowpea hay than you can on timothy, and I will not have to uee as much of it either as you will of the timothy. It must be fed sparingly." "Is it made the same as any other hay?" was. my next question. "Yes, it is usually cut with the mowing machine and cured. Then it is run through the huller. "When it is placed in the mow I put in a layer about twelve inches deep and then sprinkle salt over it, then another layer a foot deep and more salt. This is done until all the hay is in the mow." About Seed. I asked him if he had any difficulty in disposing of the seed, and he said that there was a big demand at all times for it. The local buyer was always eager to get more than was produced, because he had standing orders for more car loads than he was able to fill. An old negro woman told the feed store man that down in the south they used the cowpea meal for making bread, and she said that they considered it a treat to get it. This cowpea enthusiast may be biased on the subject and over estimate the value of this crop; yet what I have seen of the cowpea crop I must say that it is a very profitable one to grow. EVEN IF YOU HAD A K AS LONG A8 THI8 FELLOW AND HAD SORE THROAT TONSIUN! WOULD QUICKLY CURE IT. A Bttca. safe, auilug. aeiUsc aansevae etw tor Sara Threat. brteOy aascribea TOaMMUNt. Aaamil bottiaotTnaattln lasts liaaaue anawHiy ceaee tanHmk TDMiapig cane Sar atooOi and n ii I in mil ann riilMf TMiaifasris ; gSc sasoe. BaspftaMtan si 00. H BimliU. j

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I know of badly run down farms that have been gradually brought back to a good producing stage by sowing cowpeas on the field and then plowing the crop under. When the cowpeas are sowed for fertilizing they are usually sowed broadcast or put in with a regular grain drill with a special attachment. When they are raised for the seed and hay they are drilled with the regular corn planter so that the rows may be cultivated. It requires about thirty pounds of seed to sow an acre when planted in rows, and about sixty when broadcasted. The farmer's bulletin No. 222 has the following t say regarding cowpea hay: "Well cured cowpea hay is a most valuable dry forage, ranking much above the common grass hays in feeding value and being at least equal in this respect to good clover and alfalfa hay. With the area of wild grasses decreasing from year to year in certain localities, and the tame grasses in many places failing to produce adequate yields, a heavy yielding crop with a short period of growth, like some varieties of cowpeas, becomes an important source of hay. The principal reason why the production of cowpea hay is not commensurate with its high value is the difficulty in curing the large succulent vines." W. R. Perkins, of the Mississippi station says regarding the methods of curing cowpea hay: "The cutting is done when the crop is fully mature, which is about the time the pods begin to ripen and the foliage begins to change color. "If the weather is good, as is usually the case when a crop is ready, August or September generally, the vines are raked up the same or the following day and put into cocks of the size that two men can handle with a fork when cured. They are left in the cocks for four or five days, being turned over once or twice during the time. "If the weather is damp or rainy the hay is not raked at all till cured, when it is carried directly to the place where it is to be stored. If it continues to rain for several days after cutting, do not touch the hay till ready to put up and then be sure that it is dry. "The crop may sometimes be lost in a protraered wet spell but can generally be saved in such condition as to make very good forage."

MEDICINE ECONOMY. A pleasurable physic, tonic and blood purifier combined in one sweet little pill makes an economical treatment for constipation, biliousness, stomach, liver and bowel trouble. Obtain a 10c of 25c pkg. of Blackburn's Casca-Royal-Pills of any good druggist. ( Advertisement) Potato Scones. To bake potato scones sift a cupful iind a half of flour with a half tenspoonful of salt and two teaspoonfu's of baking powder and rub In thrte tablespoonf uls of shortening. Add one cupful of light, freshly mashed potatoes, add one well beaten egg and enough milk to make a soft dough. Roll out half an Inch thick, cut and bake on a hot griddle or in a hot oven. Serve very hot, with plenty of batter. Suburbanite. A Wise Guy. "Gustav's letters to me are exceedingly dull and commonplace," said one fair girl. "Don't yon know why?" responded the other. "No." "Gustav once served on the jury In a breach of promise case." Washington Star. Knees Became Stiff Five Years of Severe Rheumatism The cure of Henry J. Goldstein, 14 Barton Street, Boston, Mass.. ts another victory by Hood's Sarsaparilla. This great medicine has succeeded in many cases where others have utterly failed. Mr. Goldstein says: "I suffered from rheumatism rive years, it kept me from business and caused excruciating pain. My knees would become as ..stiff as steel. I tried many medicines without relief, then took Hood's Sarsaparilla, soon felt much better, and now consider myself entirely cured. I recommend Hood's." Get it today in usual liquid form or chocolated tablets called Sarsatabs. CAFE 12 Free Fried Oysters Saturday afternoon and evening, any style at any time. Oyster Sandwich, 5c. Chile Con Carne, 10c. 512 MAIN STREET PIANO TUNING D. E. ROBERTS 13 Years Practical Experience. Formerly with the Steinway House at Indianapolis. PHONE 3684 Money to Loan Use our money to pay your little outstanding debts. We will give you plenty of time to pay it back, from one month to one year. We make loans from $10 up on household goods, pianos, etc., and all business strictly confidential. Mail or phone applications receive prompt attention. THE STATE INVESTMENT & LOAN CO. 40 Colonial Bldg. Phone 2560. Richmond. Indiana

FINE FOR FRECKLES, TOO.

Very Popular. Opera Cream is Very largely used by ladies who are troubled with freckles, pimples, blotches, etc It does .not remove or irritate the skin, but first hides these blemishes, and gradually removes them completely. After using Opera Cream regularly for a few months you will be agreeably surprised at the softness and clearness of your complexion. It never roughens the 6kin. OPERA CREAM A Liquid Beautifter. When property applied with a sponge, will never show, and imparts to the 6kin a velvety lovliness that is impossible to get from the use of any similar preparation. Just try it once. For sale by all druggists, or by mail direct from manufacturers on receipt of price, 25c. Manufactured by Dayton Drug Co., Dayton. Ohio. (Advertisement) USE OF WHO OR WHOM. Where Grammar Bunks Up Against Idiom and Gets a Jolt The employment of the nominative "who" for the accusative In certain forms of Interrogation has become so imbedded In common usage that resort, even now, to the strictly orthodox practice frequently requires, on the part of educated men, positive effort or prolonged training. It somehow does not seem natural. In the past assuredly this nominative form, where precise grammar would require the accusative, turns up with almost Invariable regularity in works which set out to represent colloquial speech. "Who is It from?" says the mother In Jane Austen's "Pride aud Prejudice," to her daughter, who has just received a letter. "Who Is it like?" ays the heroine of "Jane Eyre" to St. John Rivers as she shows him the picture of Rosamund Oliver. Such examples could be multiplied by hundreds. There are cases, indeed, when the use of "whom" would strike upon the ears of most of us as painfully pedantic. "Who the devil is he talking to?" says Sir Lucius O'Trigger in Sheridan's "Rivals," as he notices Captain Absolute soliloquizing. To tolerate "whom" in place of "who" in such a sentence as the last would require the speaker to be so thoroughly steeped in grammar that the sense of traditional usage, which has been hardening into idiom, has at last been completely overcome. That height of linguistic virtue few of us there are who attain. Thomas R. Lounsbury in Harper's Magazine. Ingratitude Is monstrous, and for the multitude to be ungrateful were to make a monster of the multitude. Hhnkespeare. MOTHER CRAY'S SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, A CerUinRalfef tocFeverUaaeaa, Constipation, Headache, Ktoniark Troavloa, Trcthlna; Iiordarn. and Dulrat . Worm a. TboyBrrak an t'olda Don't accept Sample mailed KKEK. Address, ny substitute. A. S. OLMSTED. Lo Roy. N.Y. en

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Tuesday. Thursday and Saturday Morning. Afternoon and Evening

(Co & o. t Change of Schedule Effective Sunday, Nov. 24, 1912 east-bound-no. s Limited for Cinti., Southern and Eastern points, Lt. 4:53 A. M. No. 6 Limited for Cinti., Norfolk, Washington, N. Y., Lv. 4:13 P. M. No. 2 (Cinti. Local) for all local points, Lt. S:6 A. M. WEST-BOUND No. 1 Limited for Muncie, Marlon, Peru, Chicago, Lt. 12:20 noon. No. 3 Limited for Muncie. Marion. Pern, Chicago, Lv. 12:48 midnight No. 7 (Peru LoccJ) for all local points. Lv. 7:20 P. M. All Limited Trains will arrive and depart from Central Union Station. Cincinnati. Local trains use Fourth Avenue station. Pullman sleeping cars on Limited trains. All trains Dally.

C. A. BLAIR,

HOME TELEPHONE 2062.

GENNETT

THEATRE TUESDAY

WILLIAM A. BRADY, Ltd., Presents

THE GREATEST PLAY OF THE DAY

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Prices 25c to $1.50. Gallery, 25c. Seats ready Saturday, 10 a. m., Murray Theater.

HEARINGS ON POOL

(National News Association) WASHINGTON, D. C. Jan. 2 The j House Committee on Merchant Marine and Fisheries today began hearings in the so-called North Atlantic j shipping pool. The purpose of the inj vestigation is to determine if the ! commerce between the United States and the South American countries is controlled by a steamship trust. CAMELS. OF THE ARABS. Various Ways the Desert Nomads Use the Animals' Milk. Nearly 00.000 camels are ased In the vilayet of Bagdad as beasts of burden, and with donkeys they form the only means of carrying goods to Inland points. For a common burden camel $30 is a fair price, though the trotters, or swift messenger camels, are worth more. A young camel can sometimes be had about Bagdad for as little as $3 or $4. Besides Its use for riding and carrying purposes, the Mesopotamlan Arabs depend on the camel for milk. Shoes ore made from Its tough, calloused hide, and In times of famine its brittle, strong tasting flesh Is eaten. Condensed milk, made by boiling fresh camel milk until evaporation leaves only a hard, chalky substance, is prized among the desert nomads. By nibbing this substance between the bands It reduces to powder, and when mixed with warm water it makes a refreshing drink, highly esteemed among the desert folk. "Mereesy. as It is called, will keep In good condition for two years. When made from buttermilk it tastes sour and is prized among Arabs who have eaten much of sweet dates. Fresh, warm camel milk is also the food of many valuable horses owned by desert sheiks. Camel calves are weaned in their Seventh or twelfth mopth. When a ramel caravan is on the march the rery young camels are often tied upon the backs of the mother animal, since they cannot endure the fatigue of a long march. Valuable dogs and Arab flesert bounds, called "slujreys." also ride in the same way. Chicago Rec-jrd-IIerald. CHICHESTER S PILLS Laalaat Aah yxr OncarlaakV i Ll-.lia-t(-ra IMaaaa I'llla la Rea and Oal4 axeaiiicN bcica. total with Slaa Rlbboaw I aka ior. Uar ar raaia Uraaaiat. Ak fo IIM ITKS-TrJl S UlAalO.NB HRANO PILLS, for tt yea. kaawa as Best. Safest. Alwayi RelUMe SOLD PY DRIGGISTS EVERYWHERE GENNETT THEATRE MATINEE AND NIGHT Saturday, Jan. 4. STETSON'S Original Big Double UNCLE TOM'S CABIN Watch for the Big Parade It Beats a Circus Bargain Prices Matinee, 10 and 2oc; Night. 10, 20, 30, 50c. Seats ready Thursday. Skattfimiji City Ticket Agent. JAN. 7 BY GEORGE BROADHURST

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$50,060 Given Away To Nervous Men and Women It is not a Qaeation wbethcr jroa caa afford or cast .fiord to pay for a BMftb-sivtnK tooc Tbe question - do you ad a tonic? Ar yoa loams w:fit? Are you carvoaa and fad at tiroea that yoa siiapiy cant keep up any kacr and moat break ooin? Art yoa famine tw&iad in your work? Does yoar brain bacocn f acvd and dull IVt yoa sleep poorly? Have yoa Irat yoar appetite? Have yoa that rnnnlowa. tiredoat. don't-care teelms? Simply say tae word and we will include you arooDC the l.fW men and women wno wUl be beseniad by oar tS).(VO donation. Hat you matt act at once. To tba hrst 10O.AV men and women do win write na savm that they teel the need of a tonic wnrH will give them added strength aid ritaiiry w will giye abaotnteiy free, a 50-oent bos of our workl-renowned Mmktimm 7eaie Taalaea. Most ukeiy yon bare beard of then strengthJiving properties. If yea ba-e not. ask vonr ru wt and he will TeU you of the araat number t tablets he sells each year, and also that our cecerou otter to distribute SS).000 ascf thoae who need a bealth-aritnac tonic is bnnande and unoere. Bear in mind there no straa to thia offer, no puasle to Mre. no purchaae to make. You need not invest one cent, anr.plv seatd thta coupon todav. We arce yoa to act at oaoa.

Afafte-Afaa Jmic are acid at al urojr Storwa. juc a boa oa a aaarsasee aieaer i rersnae. CUT OUT THIS COUPON MAKn1 T.JI rTCCk, rtef. l TAWi rTCCk, Ttaoa. tt MaaeMaa tUdcCaaoaaw. M. I San- aew ve Makr-Ttlaa TaMete taafoee aa tah to -receive, free, a futl'aeaAr son. J l)treaist a Xia - i My Xa. J address J Thttlethwaite's Drug Stores. 8th and X. E; Sth and S. E; and 6th and Main. Foresight. "Too moat beliere la tartar for ralnj day, Blinkar "F.r h. I do. Bat why!" -Nothing, only that's tho second m brella of mine you've borrowed.' Woman's Home Companion. JRHEUM ATLSM ' Aay tune, sua I. rear, suoaay. t.aawaaie. StaaaacM 4. raw WMSMt ara y Pawn a ara Sara Hinlr Cam vary 2 73 at OrMi&nl arhynBSU. toM'sl tCCs. CefMSJissit, OMw TRY COOPER'S BLEND COFFEE For Sals a Cooper's Grocery. 4 r.lURR ETTE Today A Big Special Western Feature. The Burning Brand 2 REELS 2 and A GREAT COMEDY. Get in Early. ftl U R R A Y TODAY The Season's Greatest Bill Gertie & Elizabeth Kolp and i Peter Lichtenfels 4 OTHER BIG ACTS 4 Everybody Going. PHONE FOR SEATS, EARLY. ! We Have ! ! FMeul j more maaii Prescriptions Let Us Fill Yours X iW.V.Boss e ftrag Co. t 4 4 4 i ne nacc tor wuauiy 4, Phone 1217. 804 Main St. Use Ross Peroxide Greasele

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