Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 107, 16 March 1914 — Page 9
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, JEFF MAY BE SHORT IN STATURE, BUT HE'S LONG ON STYLE
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Wet and Dry Communications
Editor's Note This space is reserved for communications on the local option election. All letters must bear the name and address of the writers. Contributions will appear in the order received. THE HANDWRITING ON THE WALL That the liauor dealers of America are truly panic stricken at the devel- ! opment of temperance sentiment can not. be more clearly illustrated than by a survey of one of their own utterances. An editorial in the National 1iquor Dealers' Journal shows clearly that the liquor business is preparing to attend its own funeral. It is an extraordinary confession of fact and fear. "To us," says the writer of the editorial, "there is the handwriting on the wall, and its interpretation spells doom." This is the quotation in part as it appears in the current issue of the Outlook: "The prohibition fight henceforth will he nation-wide, and contemplates writing into the national constitution, a prohibition of the manufacture and sale of all alcoholic beverages. To accomplish this result will require the ratification of thirty-six out of fortyeight states of the Union. Of these nine are already in line through stan prohibition Maine, Kansas, North Dakota, Oklahoma, Mississippi, Georgia, Tennessee. North Carolina, and West Virginia. The last five have been added within a period of six years. In addition to these there are eighteen states in wliieh a major part of the people live in territory made dry by local option, and in which we may be sQonj-ori prohibition sentiment predominates. "The most influential argument against prohibition is that it is not effective, 'that prohibition doesn't pro-I hibit.' This is not basic or moral; the fact of failure to enforce is no argument against even the expediency, much less against the moral issue involved. Ultimately all questions must he settled by moral standards; only in this way can mankind be saved from self-effacement. The liquor traffic can not save itself by declaring that the government is incapable of coping with the problem it presents, when the oeonlp decide that it must go, it will be banished. ' For this the liquor business is to blame; it seems incapable of learning any lesson of advancement or any motive but profit. To perpetuate itself it. has formed alliances with the slums that repel all conscientious and natri- ! otic citizens, it deliberately aids the most corrupt political powers, and backs with all its resources the most unworthy men, the most corrupt and recreant nfficials. It does not aid- the purification of municipal, state or na- ! tionai administration. Why? Because t "i ask immunity for its own lawlessness. ' i m: case of the liquor traffic is called tor adjudication by the American people, and must be ready for trial. Other cases may be called later, but the one before the court ran not lie postponed. There are billions of property involved, but when the people decide that THE TRUTH is being told about the alcoholic liquor trade the money value will not count, for conscience aroused puts the value of h man above all other things." This is not a criticism by the AntiSaloon League, but a tearful confession by the national liquor dealers in their own Journal. Will Mr. Gordon pleape tell the people of Richmond whether this "is God's truth, every word of it," "which can not be controverted or denied." or is it just a collection of "nice sentences," in short, only a classic?" The liquor dealers in their Journal confess that progress will inevitably overwhelm tlieni. It is, therefore, up. to the people of the Panic-Proof City lo be in the van of progress, het us not forget the last sentence of the quotation: "Conscience aroused put. the value of a man above all other things." FRANCIS C. ANSCOMB. THE CASE OF BEER. Editor The Palladium -One might, imagine, to read certain communications to the daily press that the question before Richmond at the present time was, "Will you have beer or whisky, Ma'am?" It will not read so on the ballot on the 24th. Miss Richmond turns her glass down, as selfrespecting ladies have learned to do. and says, "Neither, thank you." The notion that Richmond MUST take licensed beer or illicit whisky is a natural one in the literature issued under brewery auspices, but if prohibition means such a vast increase in the sales of whisky, why did the distillers meet in Louisville a few months ago j and subscribe $50,000,000 just to prevent the states from getting a chance t vote on the question of national pro- . hibitlon. Now as to the virtues of beer. The i writer of the brewers' plea is as out ! of date in his assumptions about the ! benefits of beer as on some other matlers. A man might as well try farming without knowing about soil analysis, or lecture on electricity withou knowing about, tungsten, as to write about liquor in ignorance of the latest experiments with beer.
The world has learned to have respect for experts since the professors in agricultural colleges have taught the farmers how to make money by doing what they say. Germany has become one of the greatest industrial nations of the world, because her manufacturers and farmers have listened
to the results of experiments in her universities. A few years agt some of these experts began testing the ef fects of moderate drinking upon the efficiency of workmen. Prof. Aschaffenburg showed that typesetters, taking a "gentlemanly" drink every other day. lost on an average nine per cent of his working ability on the "wet" days. Dr. Kraepelin of the University of Munich, tried a number of experiments with similar results. For example, "a number of accountants of all grades were selected and their average ability to add one column figures was estimated for one week. They were then given daily, in divided doses, the equivalent of three and onehalf cups of claret. A marked and progressive diminuation of their output was noticed, beginning with 3.1 per cent the first day. After two weeks of this steady moderate alcoholic allowance (he percentage increased to 15.3 per cent." The kaiser learned of these and other experiments and got interested. He wants the most efficient army and navy in the world. He wondered what effect beer might be having. The army officers tried it in the target practice. "The results were amazing. Out of thirty shots fired, men averaged twenty-three hits on abstinent days, and three hits on alsohol days, and the amount taken was lees than that contained in a quart of 4 per cent beer!" This and similar tests so impressed the German emperor that he became a total abstainer, and in a speech in 1910. he asked the navy to give up beer, "in the battles of the future, men will need," he said, "strong nerves, cool heads. The nation that drings the least alcohol will be the winner, and that, gentlemen, should be you." German manufacturers at once began efforts to get their men to quit drinking beer. These facts are taken from the Survey, February 28, 1914; from the Literary Digest, January 10, 1914. and from Horsley, "Alcohol and the Human Body," (1911) pp. 72-73. (.'an Richmond industries afford to be less efficient than German indus tries, or Richmond workmen need clear heads less than the German soldiers and sailors? ELBERT RUSSELL. Editor Palladium: After returning to this citv from a two weeks' trip and reading the mass of sophistry addressed to the citizens of Richmond by the liquor interests, I feel constrained to resent this insult to our inteligence. The burden of the four advertisements to date is the bland assertion that if the liquor interests are not ollowed to sell their product In Richmond legally, they will find means to sell it illegally, just the same, or worse, and that hence Richmond should cheerfully submit to the lesser of the two alternative evils. This argument constitutes the last despairing stand of the liquor interests. They have been forced slowly but steadily from every legitimate ground of argument. No longer do the defenders of the saloon even attempt to justify the retention of the saloon upon the ground that it is, in the last analysis, of profit to the community. No longer do they proclaim its inalienable right to exist. No longer do they urge that it meets any legitimate need of man in his effort to properly order his life. Even the great mass of argument from the opposition they are not even attempting to meet fairly and squarely on the issues at stake. They have been driven to the last, ditch, out of which comes, as a reason for our mercy, the despairing cry, sounding to many like a whimpering threat, that if liquor can not he sold legally, it will be sold illegally. Such prostitution of even elemental logic should read them out of court in any public forum. Let. us analyse the anomalous position in which such an argument places a liquor advocate. His consuming passion is ostensibly to save Richmond from the blighting curse of the "blind tiger". What, I would ask, constitutes the essential curse of a "blind tiger"? It is the fact that it sells beer and whiskey especially whiskey, we hear from the brewery agent, (a whiskey agent would probably decry the evils of beer). That is the fundamental and essential objection to the "blind tiger is that it sells alcoholic drink the identical objection laid against the licensed saloon. The statement of Mr. Gordon that the "blind tiger" sells more whiskey than beer is a mere cowardly clouding of the issue, in the light of the enormous sale of whiskey by the saloon. If Mr. Gordon is really sincere in saving our citizen ship from the evils of whiskey, he , would lend his zeal to preventing the snle of whiskey in the licensed traf- , fie. j The real issue, however, is this: j If it is harmful to a community, as
the liquor people strangely admi. for alcoholic liquor to be sold in a "blind tiger,,' it is just as harmful for it to be sold in a saloon. It is the same stuff, in either case. Thus, there can be no evasion of the logic that it is the duty of a community to rid itself of both. At this point in the discussion we hear the astounding declaration from the liquor interests that the people in their soverign power can not get rid of both. We hear the statement that this traffic intends to fasten Itself upon a community, legally if possible, illegally if necessary. Any saloon advocate by this assertion classes himself confessedly among prospective law breakers. Neither the saloon keepers of Richmond nor their advocate may intend to operate "blind tigers" (although statistics show that most "blind tiger" operators in dry territory are former saloon keepers, and Mr. Gordon has given Interesting information about the unlawful tendencies of one of our own model hotel and saloon proprietors). Yet who, I would ask, will be in control of the "blind tiger"? It is self evident that it is a product of the same liquor propoganda of which the licensed saloon is a part. It may be an illegitimate whelp, but nevertheless it is fostered by the same organized traffic that fosters the Richmond saloon. If the liquor interests were sincere in their strange position they would kill the "blind tiger" by cutting off its consignments of liquor. Thus the argument from a liquor source that Richmond must retain the saloon legally only on the ground that otherwise it will be forced upon us II-
Inallv rn3M tn h an araumcnt. and becomes an ugly threat that should , make dry votes in every red-blooded, law-abiding home. It is a sneer upon our citizenship to claim that the same ,hlh nrnhihit. th traffic, cannot also enforce its demands. p.rontmpr hnwovor tv.nt nwlntr to the prediction of our liquor friends ! bv their own confession, to break the i'r tho win ho HiinH iiopr. int
ithe same as their are murderers andjf untimely death, believed by his ! burglars. The assertion that the i dcto'L and ,n,f fiends to have been j youth of the town will more readily j h feet of beer- 1 don 1 thlnk ne i acquire the habit of drink in such,lirank whiskey. jplaces is palpably absurd. According! Here is another case. We attended j to Mr. Gordon's argument the "aver-1 an old-fashioned German wedding age bov. raised in a family that j where the beer flowed moderately ( ?).
teaches It is wrong to drink x x x I and to shun the saloon as a mad dog", i will very naturally go down an alley, up a pair of stairs, and feeling like a I law-breaker, enter the doors of this illigetimate offspring of the thing he shuns when it possesses the respectajbility of legal sanction. Such distorted human nature is now existent in the "average boy." In conclusion I desire to give, as a citizen of Richmond,, my observations concerning the consumption of liquor in the three prohibition states of Kansas, North Carolina and Maine, merely to add another small item of evidence to the crushing total. In the first two states I heard frequent complaints from travelling men and others in hotels and on trains that they could not find a drink anywhere. I was a resident, in Maine in 1912 during the loosest enforcement of the law in its history, under Governor Plaisted. Rut even though blind tig ers were allowed to run openly, they j did but little business as compared to that of a saloon. Having a deep interest in the problem of law enforcement, I visited four or five easily ascertainable bar-rooms near Monument Square in Portland at the hour when such business is naturally at its height. In one there were no patrons, and in i each of the others only about half a half dozen men. According to the advertisement these places should have been filled with young men and women learning to drink, but the majority were seemingly sailors from tramp vessels or lumbermen from the woods. The truth is the fact that the residents of Portland have gradually lost, the habit of drinking, and the consumption is largely with the large floating population. Now for fear that some brain, fevered by alcohol or charmed by the glint of liquor gold, should misconstrue this into an argument that prohibition cannot prohibit, I will further say that with the advent of Gov. Haines, the law has been enforced. Through the impeachment of several sheriffs and a series of wholesale arrests, Maine is becoming dry in fact. In a signed statement Gov. Haines say.t that the commitments for intoxication have been during the past year half the number during non-enforcement, Thus in Richmond, if a majority of our citizens declare that this traffic shall go, that same majority can see that it does go, despite the threats of the liquor advocates that it will stay in any case. Respectfully, VINCENT D. NICHOLSON. 229 College avenue. March 13. 1914. Answer to Bennett Gordon's reference to moderate use of beer in respectable homes. It is a fact you cannot deny that some very goodcitizens are moderate users of beer. I will cite a few instances that have come under my observation while living in a German community less than .".5 miles of Richmond, twenty-five years ago: also wish to state I still count some ot my best friends among these people. That portion of my life between the age of
fourteen and twenty-two years was spent with these people, I therefore feel that I am confident to give these incidents, the truth of which I can substantiate, and will, if challenged by any responsible person, give the name, place and time of all this, with the understanding the names be not made public for obvious reasons. First, I have often visited in these homes, have seen them take their beer, from the oldest to the babe in its mother's arms. Second, two brothers out of one of the wealthiest and most influential families went to town, started a grocery with a lunch counter on the side where their friends could get their lunch of rye bread and cheese, with pretzelB and beer. The lunch counter prospered, in a short time they enlarged their business by adding a saloon in connection with the grocery. The brothers both drank moderately and it soon began to tell on them. The oldest, father of a large family, was stricken with typhoid fever. His doctor said there was no hopes, as his system was so full of alcohol, yet a few days later the minister, at his funeral, eulogized him for the Godly, upright life he had led. The other brother continued the business. There must have been more profit in the saloon than the grocery, as he sold the grocery stock and fitted up the finest saloon in the city. He still drank until his friends said he was "daffy, dippy, etc." He prospered for awhile but. because of his own bad habits, it did not last, and when I last heard of him after his poor wife's death (she was anything but a happy
wife) he w as almost a physical wreck anfl, working by the day. The same minister before mentioned drank more beer than anv one of them (I have heard men say). T have seen him many umes arinK several glasses oi beer in one evening at parties or so- . al functions among his parishioners. ,e ,dJd f,or M". but. finally his health failed and his doctor told him thRt drink was killing him. He died A man, the father of two baby boys, passed the pitcher faithfully. His legs tangled shamefully, but this is a brighter picture. As the years went by three more boys came to bless this father's home. As they grew older, the father, who had used beer all his life, (had been weaned on beer), as soon as he saw the consequences of ft on other boys, stopped the use of it years ago. and when his county voted to put it out. he and his boys took their carriages to town and worked for the drys. Other Germans did the same, and the greatest surprise of the election was the great number of dry votes cast in the German community. One more item. A boy, not German, learned to drink beer in those homes where beer was moderately used, and his poor family are suffering for it to this day. Yours trulv for the bov and home. MRS. H. LANDIS. Kural Route 4. Richmond. NEW FEET WHEN YOURS ARE TIRED The Wonderful Foot-Joy, Speedway, Will Make Your Weary Soles Feel Fresh and Fine! Put gladness into your feet alter the day's hard work- by rubbing them a little with Speedway! Just, forget your feet, in fact, by removing all the pain soothing out all the aches with Speedway. Wonderful! That is what all Speedway users say of this real "road to quick relief." It's as sure as fate, and as gentle as toilet water. Like magic. Speedway takes away the burning, smarting and throbbing almost instantly. Your feet are left cooled and refreshed, the aching gone, and you feel like a new person. Try Speedway this very day! Buy a bottle the first minute you get. a chance and lose no time in proving to your complete satisfaction that it is the one sure relief tor sintering i feet. Fenway cannot stain me stun or, I thGf dainliest fabric. It cannot burn j or blister. On the contrary, it soothes; Hnd delights the moment it is applied. Rub thoroughly, full strength.! on your weary reet. or on any sun joint, sprain or swelling. The druggists join the makers of Speedway in absolutely guaranteeing it to do all that is claimed for it. It will give you relief and comfort, or you get your money back. Buy a bottle today and know real foot comfort begining to night. ( Advertisement) Typewriter Stands and Desks From $4.00 up. B ARTEL & UOHE, 921 Main.
MONDAY, MARCH 16, 1914 :-:
PALLADIUM WANT ADS Talk to the Town Through THE PALLADIUM Telephone Number 2566. I Cent a Word 7 Days for the Price of 5. WANT AD LETTER LIST C. P 1J. I. N 2 WANTED WANTED To trade a big work horse for a goed . driving pony. James A. Ruby, one mile south of Boston. 16-1 1 WANTED Five salesmen. International Industrial Insurance Co., 401 Second National Bank Building. 16-7t WANTED Have new two-passenger car. Wish to engage with some person or firm, that can use this car with my services. Well acquainted in this city and surrounding country. First class references. Address "J. D." care Palladium. 16-2t WANTED Second cook at Gem res taurant. 16-;!t WANTED Middle aged single man as farm hand. Call C102 C. 16-3t WANTED Salesmen of ability and j neat appearance to call on all mer-1 chants in their territory; elegant! sideline: convenient to carry; good commissions: . prompt remittance.! Belmont Mfg. Co., Cincinnati, O. J 14-lt MAKE (WOD INCOME selling Fron Fence in your locality. Liberal com-; missions. No capital required. If you are ambitious and willing to i hustle, write Dept. Y, Bos 724. Cincinnati. O. 1 4-lt WAN t'EI-Rough dry washings to do. : Call !M Ft. Wayne Ave. 14 2t WANTED Final assemblers, testers and motor repair men. Apply at Connersville Wheel Co.. Connersville. 14 at WANTEIV Grocery" clerk an all all round man to take orders, deliver 1 and help in store. Reference. Phone ; M670 or call 2115. N. bZ. street. 1 2-thur-sat-mon-;:t WANTED Single man to work on dairv farm, L. E. Raper. Phone 1411". ll-5t WANTED To buy a small firepToo? safe. Call phone 2000, or address Richmond Lake and Park Co. 10-7 W A N T E D P la ce'on-f a i r m" b y "experienced man and wife. Box 1 R. R. i No. 4. 1()"7l WANTED MetT and boys tosee oii? new Hearsey bicycles and tires. Cash or payments. Repairing of all kinds called for and delivered free. Wesley Brown and Son, N. West Second and Williams. Phone :iOs. WANTED Washw oman at 0S Pearl street. 12-tf ANY INTELLIGENT'PERSON MAY earn steady income corresponding for newspapers. Experience unnecessary. Address Press Correspondence Bureau. Washington. I). C. (6-7 fl-19-11-12-13-1 1-16) SEE CLYDE RENK for wall paper and hanging. 101J) S. C street. Phone 1951. 12-4t WANTED To rent a house ,". or f rooms in West Richmond. with small garden. Address "House." care Palladium. 13-7t WANTED "Two single men to liork on farm. Phone 4105. 13-tf NTEIr.00men at 1 73Ft7 Wayne Avenue. Get shave 10c and hair cut 20c. DRV CLEANING and Pressing. 17:'. Ft. Wayne Ave. Suits Pressed. 40c. F WANT TO Bl'Y 1 00 second hand watches; diamonds, old gold and silver jewelry. Open Tuesday and Saturday evenings. J. M. Lacey, North 8th street. WANTED Housekeeper; no washing. Address J. I. N, care Palladium. 9-7t WANTED To lease 6 or 7 FoorrTlrioderu house. Phone 2319. 9-tf WANTEICisterniTtoTleanria'wnsTo roll. .1. M. Johnston. Phone 149S. 12-7t EX PERIENCE U N N ECESS AR YThus flers can make big money introducing our high grade household specialty. Sells in ev ery home. St nd for free particulars. Turlses Supply Co., P. O. Box 817. Little Rock, Ark. 2-14t
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FOR RENT For Your Mortgage Exemptions See SHIDELKR 913 Main Phone 1814 City Property of every description. Prices very attractive. Porterfield and Campbell 8 and 9 Kelly Block Get Your Auto License at SHIDELER S 913 Main Phone 1814 FOR RENT Nine room house, large barn, two acres of land, corner school and Harris St. 210 linden Ave. Fairview. 16-7t fm REXThriTrSom flat" $ lOT one five room house, will rent, to colored people. $10.00. O. B. Fulgham. over 710 Main. Phone 2233. 16-2t FOR RENT New 6 room house. 211 North West Third street. Call Knode's Music Store. 16-It FOR- RENT Barn 321 South 9th". Phone 2781. Call after 5:30 in evening. 16-2t FOR RENT A modern 5 room f 1 a t with heat. Inquire Porterfield Real Estate Office. 16-tf FOR RENT Modern house, slncle and double, modern. North 18th and : A streets. Just completed. Phone : 3234 or 1323. 16-tf FOlOvENT elroom house! Call at t 225 North 11th St. L. M. Jones. 1 12 7t FOR RENT Five room modern house 33 S. 17th. Phone 1705. 10-7t j FOR RENT Modern 5 room apart-. ment in the Holland. Inquire Jonas ' Gaar. 1426 Main St. 2-tf FOR RENT SiTlra61nTandbath, 200 Richmond avenue. Phone 3078. 28tf FOR RENT Store room 25x40, cof-1 ner 4th and N. D. Phone 1889 or ; 1473. 9-7t ! FOR RENT Furnished rooms, heat and bath. 66 S. 12th. mar9tf FO R RENT I )own sta irlTfront room. 2S N. 3rd. 13-3t FOR SALE FOR SALE Hedge corner Walter Beeson. Webster. posts. 16 7t FOR SALE Clover haw Phone 5143-C 16-7t FOR SALE Calumet brand pure bone fertilizer. Prices low compared! with analysis. Call Samuel Glunt. R. It. No. x. Phone 5127 A. 16-7t FOR- SALE -Small safe. Stta and Main. J. M. lacey. 16-7t FOR SALE Pure Buff Rock eggs, ',0c per 1.. ('. S. Nolder. R. .". Phone; :i;icr ifi-4t' FOR SALE Baled rice straw. Phon 5127 A- 14 7t FOR SALE Protect ograpn. good as : new, one-half original price. Pal- j I Indium office. lS-tf HAIR GOODE of every description made from your combings. Wigs and toupees repaired Mary E. Morse. 403 N. 11th. Phone 4018. mar7-lmo FOR SALE Gas range nearly new. 330 Lincoln. 5-tf ' PU BTICT SALE" j i i 'I will sell at public auction on March! IS a complete line of farming implements, all live stock and other articles too numerous to mention, at my resi- '. dence. 1 : mile east of Centerville. and ' mile south of Stop 140. j ! I ROY E. CREAGER i 'Thomas Conni f. Auctioneer. FOR SALE Egg3 for hatching. Buff and White Leghorn. c. Zwissler, R. R. 2. phone 1840. 10-7 FOR SALE New storm buggv. cheap. Richmond Mfg. Co., W. 3d and Chestnut. 10 5t For Sale LIVE STOCK INSURANCE Insures horses, mules or cattle death from any cause. 30 day insurance for brood mares. Standard Live Stock Insurance Co. O. N. Garriott Kelly Block Phone 1303 Sth and Main FORTS A LE 24 extra goodbrown leghorn hens. Lloyd Ruble, Richmond, Ind., R. R. No. 7. l3-7t FOR- sXLEt'hickens. 1212 N. A street. 13-7t FOR SALE lVfe dozen lawing hens, two Buckeye incubatora. Phone 379. 13-3t FOR SALti four good work horses. phaeton, surrey, runnbout. one-horse i w agon, harness. 1127 Main st. 5-10 ! FOR SALE MowbfhaPhone51 43 i D. 12-4t
PAGE NIND "BUD" FISHER
FOR SALE REAL ESTATE FOR SALE 1" ROOM HOUSE with new furnace and bath, large corner lot on N. 12th. Was offered $S.500 for it som time ago. but would not acept. But 6,u0'i buys it today and good terms. S ROOM HOUSE with hot water heat and bath in 1st square on South loth street. Everything in 1st dM condition. S4.7uO. ALMOST NEW HOUSE in East Eud. with furnace and bath. Was J2.-. 900, but will now sell for $2,000. block from Main street. GOOD f. ROOM HOUSE with lot II foot frontaee on North ISth street, 1? 200 i i 14 ROOM DOUBLE HOUSE on South West 3rd St.. renting for $30 month. A 10 per c n investment at $3.f.0. Excursion to Fellsmere tomorrow at 3:50 p. m. FUNK ND MILLER Second National Bank Bldg. Phone 2765 Farms and Citv rropci ty For Sale BuiMir? lots srd residences In all parts or the city. We write all kinds cf insurance, rent prop;rtie3. loan money and make Furety bonds. X'M. BRADBURY & SON Rooms 1 and 3. Westcstt Block FOR PALE An ideal" 'horae strictly modern. Immediate possesion. Phone 1 j . i . FDR SALE A Phone :;2:',4. good modern home. FOR SALE Th- bigcest bargain ever offered in a good home. Phone 4347. FOR SALE 7 room house with furn ace. Phone 4447. FOR SALE Bungalow; thrte other properties, lots, gas range. Phone 324S. inar6tf SEE MOOnn & OGBORN for ml kinds of Insurance. Bonds and Loans. Heal Estate ard R'Dtale. Room 16. I. O. O. F. Bldg Pl'BLIC SALE On Jont. While's farm. 1 li miles south of Arba. i miles N. E. Fountain City. Thursday. March 19. 10 o'clock: 4 horses. 4t cattle, hogs, farming implements, etc. Burt Carroll and Hiatt. 16-2t BUSINESS CLASSIFIED A M ROBERTS REAL ESTATE City r.nd farm properties. Liberty ave K No 1 Phoce 4171 Office Keys' Harrrs Store. fSIS Main t LARGEST MOVING VANS B. F. Morris' Moving Vans 202 S. Srh St. Phone 1627. .M. F. Haner, Mgr. We repair everything. Frame pictures, retire baby cabs. A full lines of electric and gas lamps. Work called for and delivered. BROWN & DARNELU 1020 MAIN. Zuttermeister's Moving Vans LARGEST IN CITV ?. South 6th. Phone 1319 wCaTrIch LIVERY AND FEED Wo buy and sell horses. Arrange with us for your sales, as we hare the buvers. DON'T FORGET THE PLJiCE 124 N 6th St. Phone 1M H. H.JONES Auctioneer and Horse Dealer Phone office 1439; Residence 2570. ShuHev's Large Moving Vans !? to 14 North th street. Phone 1S3C LOST IXST Eye glasses. large round lenses, gun metal rims. Reward will be paid. Telephone 1430 or call 39 North 10th street. 16-lt Bring to Palladium Office Good for 10 Votes 110 Good for 10 Votes Only good when exchanged at Palladium office for Pony coupon.
