Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 278, 5 September 1919 — Page 8
PAGE EIGHT
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, FRIDAY, SEPT. 5, 1919.
Challenge Issued to Clitic President; $eak&
Mr. Governor, tvttaw vMUow So great a company a thU t,nwu me to make a iHech iUuh.Wr wd applause) and yt wt n you In all ertoun tut ob!n! that I have not route her to ntke a speech in the ordinary ene of the term. I have rather m upon a very sober errand. Indeed, I have come to report to you upon the work which the representative of the United States attempted to do at the conference of peace on the other side of the sea. because I realize, my fellow citizens, that my colleagues and I. In the task we attempted over there, were your servants. We went there upon a distinct errand, which It was our duty to perform in the spirit which you had displayed in the prosecution of the war and In conceiving the purposes and objects of that war. I was in the city of Columbus this forenoon, where I was endeavoring to explain to a body of our fellow citizens there Just what It was that the treaty of peace contains, for I must frankly admit that in most of the speeches that I have heard In debate upon the treaty of peace, it would be Impossible to form a definite conception of what that instrument means. I want to recall to you, for the purposes of this evening, the circumstances of the war, and the purposes for which our men spent their lives on the other side of the sea. You will remember that a prince of the House of Austria was slain In one of the cities of Servia. Servia was one of the small kingdoms of Europe. She had no strength which any of the great powers needed to fear. As we see the war now, Germany and those who conspired with her made a pretext of the assassination in order to make unsconscionable demands of the weak and helpless Servia, not with a view of bringing about an acquiescence in these demands, but with a view to bringing about a conflict in which their purpose, quite separate from the purposes connected with these demands, could be achieved. Germany Declined Conference. Just as soon as these demands were made other nations of Europe sent telegraphic messages to their representatives at Vienna and Berlin, urging them to ask the governments of Vienna and Berlin to enter into discussions of these matters. (Interruption on account of noise and confusion.) I was recalling, my fellow citizens, the circumstances which began the terrible conflict that has just been concluded. So boc? as the unconscionable demands of Austria were made on Servia the other governments of Europe sent telegraphic messages to Berlin and Vienna, asking that the matter be brought into a conference, and the significant circumstance of the beginning of this war is that the Austrian and German governments did not dare to discuss the demands on Servia, or the purpose which they had in view. It is universally admitted on tha other side of the water that if they had ever gone into international con ference on the Austrian demands, the war never would have been begun. There was an Insistent demand from London, for example, by the British Foreign Minister that the cabinets of Europe should be allowed time to confer with the governments at Vienna and Berlin. The governments at Vienna and Berlin did not dare to admit time for discussion. What League Critics Miss. I am recalling these circumstances, my fellow citizens, because 1 want to point out to you what apparently has escaped the attention of some of the critics of the league of nations that the heart of the league of nations covenant does not lie in any of the portions which have been discussed In public debate. The great bulk of the provisions of that covenant contained these engagements and promises on the part of the states which undertook to become members of it; that in no circumstances will they go to war without first having either submitted the question to arbitration in which case they agree to abide by the result; or, having submitted the question to discussion by the council of the league of nations, in which case they will allow six months for the discussion, and engage not to go to war until three months after the council has announced its opinion upon the subject under dispute. So that the heart of the covenant of the league is that the nations solemnly covenant not to go to war for nine months after a controversy becomes acute. If there had been nine days of discussion Germany would not have gone to war. If there had been nine days within which to bring to bear the opinion of the world, the judgment of mankind upon the purposes of those governments, they never would have dared to execute those purposes. So that what it is important for us to remember is that when we sent those boys in khaki across the sea, we promised them, we promised the world. that we would not conclude this con flict with a mere treaty of peace. We entered into solemn engagements with all the nations with whom we asso ciated ourselves that we would bring about such a kind of settlement, and such a concert of the purpose of na tions that wars like this could not again occur. Why We Went to War If this war has to be fought over !i OnHnnrxRakino brings out from wheat and barley that distinct rich flavor one finds only in the pure. health-building food (kpeNuts
of League by to Indianapolis Audience
fittin. then all our ideals and pur)Hav have been disappointed, for we did not go into this war merely to beat Uermany. We went Into this war to beat all puropsea such as Germany entertained. (Applause). And you will remember bow the conscience of mankind was shocked by what Germany did. not merely by the circumstance to which I have already adverted, that unconscionable demands were made upon a little nation, which could not resist but that immediately upon the beginning of the war solemn engage ments of treaty were cast on one side, J and the chief representative of the Imperial government of Germany said that when national purposes were under discussion treaties were 'mere scraps of paper.' And immediately upon that declaration the German armies Invaded the territories of Belgium, which they had engaged should be inviolate invaded those territories with the halw avowed purpose that Belgium was necessary to be permanently retained by Germany in order that she should have a proper frontage on the sea and a proper advantage In her contest with other nations of the world. So that that act, which was characteristic of the beginning of the war, was a violation of the territorial integrity of the kingdom of Belgium. We are presently, our fellow countrymen, to have the very great pleasure of welcoming on this side of the sea the Queen and King of the Belgians Applause). And I, for one, am perfectly sure that we are going to make it clear to them that we have not forgotten the violation of Belgium, that we have not forgotten the into lerable wrongs which were put upon that suffering people. I have seen their devastated country. Where it was not actually laid in ruins, every factory was gutted of its contents; all the machinery by which it would be possible for men to go to work again was taken away, and those parts of the machinery that they could not take away were destroped by experts who knew how to destroy them. Purpose to Crush Belgium. Belgium was a very successful competitor of Germany in some lines of manufacture, and the German armies were sent there to see to it tnat that competition was put a stop to. Their purpose was to crush the independent action of that little kingdom not merely to use it as a gateway through which to attack France. And when they pot into France they not only fought the armies of France, but they put the coal mines of France out of commission, so that it would be a decade or more before France can support herself with coal from her accustomed sources. You have heard a great deal about Article Ten of the Covenant of the League of Nations. Article Ten speaks with the conscience of the world. (Applause. Article Ten is the article which goes to the heart of the whole bad business (applause), for that article says that the members of this League and that is intended to be all the great nations of the world engage to restrict and to preserve against all external aggression, the territorial integrity and political independence of the nations concerned. That promise is necessary in order to prevent this sort of war recurring, and we are absolutely discredited If we fought this war and then neglect the essential safeguard against it. (Applause). You have heard it said, my fellow citizens, that we are robbed of some degree of our sovereign, independent choice, by articles of that sort. Every man who makes a choice to respect the rights of his neighbors, deprives himself of absolute sovereignty, but he does it by promising never to do wrong, and I can not, for one, see anything that robs me of any inherent right that I ought to retain, when I promise that I will do right. (Applause). What Article Ten Does. We engage, in the first sentence of Article Ten, to respect and preserve from external aggression the territorial integrity and the existing political independence, not only -of the other member states, but of all states. And if any member of the League of Nations disregards that promise, then what happens? The council of the league advises what should be done, to enforce the respect for the covenant, on the part of the nation attempting to violate it. And there is no compulsion Upon us to take that advice except the compulsion of our good conscience and judgment. So that it ii perfectly evident that if, in the judgment of the people of the United States, the council adjudged wrong, and that this was not an occasion for the use of force, there would be no necessity on the part of the congress of the United States to vote to use force. But there could be no advice of the council on any such subject without a unanimous vote, and our own. And if we accepted the advice we would be accepting our own advice. For I need not tell you that the representatives of the government of the United States would not vote without instructions from their government at home, and that what we united in advising, we would be certain that our people would desire to do. There is in that covenant not one note of surrender of the independent judgment of tho United States, but an expression of it, because that independent judgment would have to join with the judgment of the rest. Economic Pressure. But when is that judgment going to be expressed my fellow citizens? Only after it is evident that every other resource has failed. And I want to call your attention to the central machinery of the league of nations. If any member of that league, or any nation not a member, refuses to submit the question at issue either to arbitration, or to discussion by the council, there ensues, automatically, by the engagements of this covenant, an absolute economic boycott. There will be no trade with that nation by any member of the league. There will be no interchange of communication by post or telegraph. There will be no travel to or from that nation. Its borders will be closed. No citizen of any other state willbe allowed to enter it, and no one of its citzens will be allowed to leave it. It will be hermetically sealed by the united action of the most powerful nations in the world, and if this economic boycott bears with unequal weight, the members of the league agree to support one another, and to relieve one another in any exceptional disadvantages that
may arise out of It. And I -want you to realize that his war was won not only by the armies of the world, but It was won by economlo means as well. Without the economic means the war would have been much longer continued. What happened was that Germany was shut off from the economic resources of the rest of the globe and she could not stand It and a nation that la boycotted It a nation that is in sight of surrender. Apply this economic, peaceful, silent deadly remedy, and there will be no need for force. Boycott a "Terrible Remedy." It ia a terrible remedy. It does not cost a life outside the nation boycotted, but it brings a pressure upon that nation, which, in my Judgment, no modern nation could resist. I daresay that some of these ideas are now to you, because while it is true, as I said this forenoon in Columbus, that apparently nobody has taken the pains to say what Is in this treaty, very few have taken the pains to say what is in the covenant of the league of nations. They have discussed three chiefly three out of twenty-six articles, and the other articles contain this heart of the matter, that instead of war there shall be arbitration; instead of war there shall be discussion; Instead of war there shall be the closure of Intercourse; that instead of war there shall be the erreslstible pressure of the opinion of all mankind. If I had done wrong I would a great deal rather a man would shoot me than to stand me up for the judgment of my fellow men. I would a great deal rather see the muzzle of a gun than to look In their eyes. I would a great deal rather be put out of the world than live in a world boycotted and deserted. The most terrible thing is outlawery. The most formidable thing is to be absolutely isolated. And
that is the kernel of this engagement. War is on the outskirts; war is a re mote and secondary threat; war is the last resort. Nobody in his senses claims that he covenant of the league of nations is certain to stop war. But I confidently assert that it makes war violently Improbable (Applause) and that even if we canot guarantee that it will stop war, we are bound, in conscience, to do our utmost in order to avoid and prevent it. League and Treaty Inseparable. I was pointing out, my fellow citizens, this forenoon, that this covenant is part of the great document. I wish I had brought a copy of it along with me, just to show you its bulk. It Is an enormous volume. And almost all the things you hear talked about in that treaty are not the essential things. This is the first treaty in the history of civilization, in which great powers have associated themselves together in order to protect the weak. (Applause.) I need not tell you that I speak with knowledge In this matter knowledge of the purpose of the men with whom the men representing America were associated at the peace table. Everyone I consulted with came there with the same idea, that wars had arisen in the past because the strong had taken advantage of the weak, and that the only way to stop war was to band ourselves together to protect the weak; that this war was an example which gave us the finger pointing to the way of escape; that as Austria and Germany had tried to put upon Servia, so we must see to it that Servia and the Slavic nations peoples associated with her, and the peoples of Roumania, and those of Bohemia, and the peoples of Hungary, and of Austria, for fhat matter should feel assured in the future that the strength of the great powers was behind their liberty and their independence, and was not intended to be used, and never should be used for aggression against them. (Applause.) And so, when you read the covenant, read the treaty with it. Cites Example of Poland. I have no doubt that in this audi ence there are many men who come from that ancient stock of Poland, for example, men in whose blood there is the warmth of old affections connected with that betrayed and ruined country; men whose memories run back to insufferable wrongs endured by those living in that country; and I call them to witness that Poland never could have won unity and inde pendence by herself. Those gentlemen sitting at Paris presented Poland with a unity she could not have won. and an independence which she can not defend, unless the world guaran
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tees it to her. There Is one of the
most noble chapters in the history of the world that this war was concluded in order to remedy the wrong which had beaten so deeply into the experience of the weaker peoples of that great continent. The object of the war was to see to it that there was no more of that sort of wrong done. Now, when you have that picture in your minds - that this treaty was meant to protect those who could not protect themselves turn the picture and look at it this way: Those very weak nations are situated throughout the very tract of country between Germany and Persia, which Germany had Intended to conquer and dominate, and if the nations of the world do not maintain their concert to sustain the independence and freedom of these peoples Germany will yet have her will upon them, and we shall witness the very interesting spectacle of having spent millions upon millions of American treasure and, what is much more precious, hundreds of thousands of American lives to do a futile thing, to do a thing which we will then leave to be undone at the leisure of those who are masters of intrigue, at the leisure of those who are masters in combining wrong influences to overcome right influences; those who are masters of the very things we hate, and mean always, to tight. U. S. Would Fight Again For, my fellow citizens. If Germany should ever attempt that again, whether we are In the League of Nations, or not, we will Join to prevent It... (Applause). We do not stand off and see murder done; we do not profess to be the champions of liberty, and then consent to see liberty destroyed. We are not the friends and advocates of free government and yet willing to stand by and see free government die before our eyes; for, if the power such as Germany was but, thank God, no longer is were to do this thing upon the fields, of Europe, then America would have to look to It that she did not do it also upon the fields of the Western Hemisphere, and we should at last, be face to face with a power which, at the outset, we could have crushed, and which now it is within our choice to keep within the harness of civilization, (Applause). I am arguing this thing with you, my fellow citizens, as If I had any doubt of what the verdict of the American people would be. I haven't the slightest doubt. (Applause). I just wanted to have the pleasure of pointing out to you how absolutely ignorant of the treaty and of the covenant some of the men are who have been opposing it. (Applause). If they do read the English language they do not understand the English language as I understand it.(Applause). If they have really read this treaty and this covenant they only amaze me by their inability to understand what is plainly expressed. So that my errand upon this journey is not to argue these maters, but to recall you to the real issues which are involved. And one of the things that I have most at heart in this report to my fellow citizens is that they should forget what party I belong to, and what party they belong to. (Applause). I am making this journey as a democrat, but I am spelling It with a little "d," and I don't want anybody to remember sofar as this errand is concerned, that it is ever spelled with a big "D." Country Before Party I am making this Journey as an American, and as a champion of the rights which America believes in (applause) and I need not tell you that as compared with the Importance of America, the importance of the Democratic party and the importance of the Republican party and the importance of every other party is absolutely negligible. (Applause). Parties, my fellow citizens are intended to embody in action different policies of government. They are not, when properly used, intended to traverse the principles which underlie government; and the principles which underlie the government of the United States have been familiar to us ever since we were children. You have been bred, I have no doubt, as I have been bred, in the Revolutionary school of American thought, which takes its inspiration from the days of the American Revolution. There were only 30,000,000 of us, then, but we were ready to stand out against the world for liberty. There are more than 100,000.000 of us now and we are ready to insist that everywhere men shall be champion of liberty. (Applause). BY
I want you to notice another Interesting point that has never been dilated upon in connection with the league of nations. I am now treading upon delicate ground and I must express myself with caution. (Applause and laughter). There were a good many delegations that visited Paris wanting to be heard by the peace conference who had real causes to present, which ought to be presented to the view of the world. But we had to point out to them that they did not happen, unfortunately to come within the area of settlement; that their questions were not questions which were necessarily drawn into the things that we were deciding. We were sitting there with the piece of the Austria-Hungarian Empire in our hands. It had fallen apart; it never was naturally cohesive. We were sitting there with various dispersed assets of the German Empire in our hands and with regard to every one of them we had to determine what we were going to do. But we did not have our own dispersed assets In our hands. We did not have the assets of the nations which constituted the body of the nations associated against Germany, to dispose of; and, therefore, we had often, with whatever regret, to turn , away from questions that ought to some day, be discussed and settled, and upon which the opinion of the world ought to be brought to bear. Article Eleven. "I, therefore, want to call your attention, if you will turn it up, when you go home, to article eleven, following article ten, of the covenant of the league of nations. "That article eleven, let me say, is the favorite article in the treaty, so far as I am concerned. It says that every matter which is likely to affect the peace of the world is everybody's business and that it shall be the friendly right of any nation to call attention in the league, to anything that is likely to affect the peace of the world, or the good understanding between nations, upon which the peace of the world depends, whether that
matter immediately concerns the na tion drawing attention to it, or not. In other words, at present we have to mind our own business. Under the covenant of the league of nations we can mind other peoples' business, and anything that affects the peace of the world, whether we are parties to it, or not, can by our delegates be brought to the attention of mankind. "There Is not an oppressed people in the world which can not, henceforth get a hearing at that forum. And you know, my fellow citizens, what a hearing will mean if the cause of those people is Just. The one thing which those who have reason to dread, have most reason to dread. Is publicity and discussion; because if you are challenged to give a reason why you are j doing a wrong thing, it has to be an exceedingly odd reason, and if you give a bad reason you confess judgment and the opinion of mankind goes against you. "There is another thing in this covenant, which was one of a number of difficulties that we encountered at Paris, I need not tell you that at every turn in these discussions we came across some secret treaty, some understanding that had never been made public before; some understanding that embarrassed the whole settlement, i Explains Shantung. "I think it will not be Improper for me to refer to one of these matters. When we came to the settlement of the Shantung question, with regard to China, we found that Great Britain and France were under specific treaty obligations to Japan that she should got exactly what she got in the treaty with Germany; and the most that we could do I mean that the United States could do was to urge upon the representatives of Japan the very fatal policy that was involved in such a settlement, and obtain the promise, which she gave, that she would not take advantage of those portions of the treaty, but would return, without qualification, the sovereignty which Germany had enjoyed in Shantung province, to the republic of China. We have had repeated assurances since them, that Japan intends to fulfil those promises in absolute good faith. But my present point is that WHAT A WOMAN TOLD US YESTERDAY She was telling us whyshe went out of her way to buy her groceries from us. "One reason," she said, "is because I'm always so sure of getting things that are good. Besides you people seem to do everything you can to make my shopping easy." Not all our customers tell us that, but we feel certain that these are the big reasons we have so many patrons and why we've had them so long. We do try to make buying groceries easy and pleasant and we do try to have the best of everything in the grocery line. One of the best things we have and recommend is RYZON Baking Powder. We recommend It because we know It will give our customers perfect results. It's pure and clean, it's always uniform in quality, it's efficient and it's economical. Priced fairly at 40 cents a pound. JOHN M. EGGEMEYER & SONS Bee Hive 1017 & 1019 Main
there stood at the yery gate of that settlement, a secret treaty between Japan and two of the great powers engaged in this war on our side. We could not ask them to disregard these promises. The war had been fought, in part, because of the refusal to observe the fidelity which is involved in a promise, in a failure to regard the sacredness of treaties. And this covenant of the League of Nations provides that no secret treaty shall have any validity. "When you look at the covenant of the League of Nations thus. In the large, you wonder why it is not obvious to everybody, as it is to those who study it with disinterested thought, that this is the central and essential covenant of the whole peace. "You would think, to hear some men discuss the covenant, that it is an arrangement for sending men abroad again just as soon as possible. It is the only conceivable arrangement which will prevent our sending our men abroad again, very soon. And, if I may use a very common expression, I would say, if it is not to be this arrangement, what arrangement do you suggest to secure the peace of the world. It is a case of 'put up or shut up. "Opposition is not going to save the world; negotiations are not going to construct the policies of mankind. A great plan is the only thing that can defeat a great plan. The only triumphant ideas in the world are the
ideas that are organized for battle. The only thing that equals an organized program is a better program. "If this is not the way to secure peace, I beg that the way may be pointed out. If we must reject this way, then I beg that before I am sent to ask Germany to make a new kind of peace with us, I should be given specific instuructions as to what kind of peace it is to be. "If the gentlemen who don't like what was done in Paris, think that they can do something better, I beg that they will hold their convention soon, and do it now. They cannot, In conscience or good faith. deDrive us I of this great work of peace without submitting some other that is better. "And so, my fellow citizens, I look forward with profound gratification, to the time which I believe now, will not be much Jonger delayed, when the American people can say to their fellows in all parts of the world: 'We are the friends of liberty; we have joined with the rest of mankind in securing the guarantees of liberty. We stand here with you, the eternal champions of what is right, and may God keep us in the covenant that we have formed.' " Rounds Wins From Davis n Diamond Medal Contest NEW PARIS, Ohio, Sept. 5. After dropping two games in the diamond medal contest, which is being held at the Inter-State Tournament her, to Dr. C. W. Davis, A. W. Rounds came back and won the third match, Thursday evening, 32 to 17. The winner of the medal must win four out of a - possible seven games. Following are Thursday's results: First Division Hawley 32, Kramer 0; B. Wissler 32, W. Wissler 6; Pence 32, B. Wissler 15; Kramer 32, Pence 16; Wagner 32, Hawley 18; Hawley 26, Wissler 23; Porter 32, Pence 14. Second Division Ehler 21, Wisman 12; Shepherd 25, Winkleman 17; Ehler 29, Winkleman 19; Shepherd 23, Wisman 16. Third Division Jeanes 25, M. O. Reeves 21. RECORD OF MALE SEX IS EQUALLED i Mrs. Schmuck Boasts of Man's Appetite, Since Taking Trutona. EVANSVILLE, Ind.. Sept. 5 Lik numerous other local people, Mrs. M. B. Schmuck, well "known Evansville woman of 715 Upper Fourth street, has found long needed relief from after efTects of the "flu" through use of Trutona. Mrs. Schmuck made the following frank statement on April 1: "I had had the 'flu' and I was told that my troubles were all caused as a result of that ailment. My stomach was out of shape: I had no appetite and I simply couldn't slee at night. Gas often formed in my stomach and 1 1 would suffer the most severe pains. "I can eat as much as a man, since taking Trutona. And oh, how well I sleep now. The food I eat agrees with me, too, for I don't experience the gas formations and pains after meals now. I have been relieved of the nervousness I formerly suffered. I feel so much better that I can conscientiously recommend Trutona to those suffering as I did." Thousands of persons who were victims of influenza and for weeks and months thereafter were unable to regain their strength have found in Trutona, the perfect tonic, a medicine that gave the results desired. By cleansing the sytem, creating an appetite and producing sound, restful sleep Trutona has caused countless persons to regain their lost strength in a surprising short time. Be prepared for this winter's ailments. Get a bottle of Trutona today. Trutona, the perfect tonic, is now being introduced and explained In Richmond at Thistlethwaite's Drug Stores. Adv.
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BENDER COMPANY FILES ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION)
Articles of Incorporation were filed! with the secretary of state Thursday for the Bender Ice Cream company, of Richmond, with a capital stock listed at $100,000. The directors named are: Joseph E. Bender, Charles W. Jordan and Harry J. Janes. W. STILLWAUGH WAS JUST ABOUT "ALL IN" HE SAYS For Four Years He Was Unable to Find Anything to Help Him Tanlac Restores Him to Health. "Ever since my health failed about four years ago, I have been trying to find a medicine or treatment that would give me some relief, but mr efions railed until I commenced Tanlac," said W. H. Stillwaugh. a well known meat cutter who lives at 403 East Washington street. Indianapolis, while talking to a Tanlao representative the other day. "When I commenced taking Tanlac". continued Mr. Stillwaugh. "I was so weak and run-down I could hardly work. If I had to pick up a small pail of lard I would just have to get right down on my knees to get it off tho floor. I had suffered so much from stomach trouble and rheumatism that I was Just about all in. After1 every meal, I would be bloated up with gas and would be perfectly miserable for hours. My kidnevs were cut of order all the time, too, and my back finally got so sore and still E could hardly bend over to put my shoes on. My knees would often be so swollen from rheumatism I could hardly stand on my feet, and the patai was terrible and after finishing my days work, I was hardly able to get, home. This rheumatism finally got uj into my shoulder blades, and this, would make it hard for me to do my work. "One day I was sitting In a restaur. ant and John Osborne walked up to me and commenced talking about the good Tanlac had done him. In fact, he was looking so well that I hardly recognized him at first and he told me that Tanlac was responsible for the good health he was enjoying, and advised me to take it. Well, I have known John Osborne for a long time, and I knew that he was a dependable man. so I lost no time In getting a bottle of Tanlac. The very rst bottle made a big change in my condition, and from that time on I just kept on improving until I am now as well and strong as I ever was in my life. I can throw a quarter of beef around now with ease and can go to work at 5 A. M., and work until 11 at night and feel like a fighting cock when the days work is done. I never have a sign of stomach trouble and the iheumatism is gone completely. The rains have left my back, too, and my kidneys seem to be in perfect condition. Tanlac did all this for me. and that Is why I tell everybody I meet that it is the best medicine on earth " Tanlac is sold in Richmond by Clem Thifttlth"w-Jlit' In C- rwn fnrV fri-- C D. Corine; in Cambridge City by Mr. Dean House; in Pershing by Sourbeer pnd Rodenberg; in Centerville by Centerville Pharmacy, and In Milton by W. L. Parkins. Adv. Walters 9 Marvelous C 1 e a nser Removes Ink, Fruit and Grass stains. For sale at Conkey't Drug Store or at your grocers. D. W. Walters. Mfg. 107 So. r;inth Street. DR. F. E. HAGIE Physician and Surgeon Announces opening of office in Corn, stock building. 1016 Main Street. Res. Phone 2S35. Office 14S1 You Pay Only for the MILES you obtain from Our Tire Vulcanizing This means not only our work, but the balance of tha tire. This applies to both Fabric and Cord Tires alike. AH our vulcanizing is guaranteed penny for penny and mile for mile. We make vulcanizing a safe investment for you, either tire or tube. Wm. F. Lee No. 8 So. Seventh St., Richmond (First Door South From Irvin Reed Hardware Store)
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