Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 136, 19 April 1921 — Page 6

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM

AND SUN-TELEGRAM

Published ' Every Evening Except Sunday by J, Palladium Printing Cc - Palladium Building. North Ninth and Sailor Streets. f "Entered, at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as r Second-Class Mail Matter. NGMBGR OF THE ASSOCIATED PRKS9 The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not etherwle credited in this paper, and also the local news published herein. All -rights of republication of spe

cial dispatches herein are also reserved.

Progress in Sunday School Work Trie religious education of the child devolves upon the Sunday school in most of the Protestant denominations. Parents, either because they do not.r appreciate the importance of religious instruction or lack the ability to impart it, have substituted the Sunday school as the medium through wiich their children are to learn the fundamentals of Christian life. The duty "of educating the child in the Christian . doctrines and of acquainting it with the truths of the Bible , is one which the Sunday school has accepted with a full realization of the serious task that has been imposed upon it. The Sunday school represents the educational activity of the church. Here it is where spiritual values are impressed upon the child and part of the foundation laid for the moral structure of the coming generation. Recognizing the supreme importance of its duty to the children entrusted to it, the Sunday school organization constantly is seeking to increase the ability of its teachers and to make more efficient its entire system of training the child in the Christian life. Dr. M. A. Honline is delivering a series of lectures here this week under auspices of the City Sunday School association. Teachers and pupils will derive a new viewpoint on the importance of the Sunday school from the lectures, as well as a new inspiration for study and reflection. .In his opening addresses, which were designed to lay the foundation for his series, Dr. ; Honline rightly said that the child has' rights yvhioh have been ordained from the beginning of tha world. Mankind is beginning to realize more and more that if it had not been for the spiritual elements inculcated in the hearts of boys and girls by f,heir parents and teachers, the world today would be morally bankrupt. Most of the perplexing problems of adult life can be traced to neglected religious training in youth. ! The" development of the physical, intellectual and social elements in the rearing of a child are futile if 'the religious element is ignored or neglected. A child grows strong by exercise ; its intellectual &nd social capacities are increased by nurture; and its moral fibre is strengthened by religious training. No child will be able to judge between good and bad if it has not been taught

Good Evening By Rey K. Moulton The gentleman who said Shelley's t poems are intoxicating has probably r found a new method of evading the Volstead law. . Wonder some blue law advocate doesn't advocate thejjrohibition of all T roetry containing more than one-half " , of one per cent intoxicants. i Colonel Harvey is said to be of pure ': Scotch extraction, which we hasten to I ; add. has nothing to do with the Vol- ; stead act; CONFESSIONS OF A CYNIC I am a very wise bird indeed, but the day does not pass in which I do not meet up with somebody who is f wiser than I. I am not superstitious and am very sorry for people who are weak-minded enough to believe in signs, but I never . walk under a ladder, I never spill the t. salt without throwing Some of it over my left shoulder and-1 never make any ; t affirmative statement whatever with-j I out knocking on wood. : I always' get indigestion when I oat. luusuiuuujs, auu lur uiiti rca&un. pruu- ; ably, I eat them about three times a t,'' week. I nevfcr go to bachelor dinners or ; other ante-mortems. j I am free to admit that a cold summer has no terrors for me. I am very fond of any man who does j not advise me regarding my personal -f habits; In which feeling I differ from ; .- nobody in particular. I believe that if every person told ;-the exact truth-about everything very few person would have any friends, j POSITIVELY POISONOUS By reading the newspapers I gather ; that in order for a woman to murder 1 some one a silk kimono must figure in the case. Same applies to divorce m co-respondents. .' Wouldn't it be awful if they stopped

ins manuiaciure oi siik lingerie: Robert Robinson. ( Einstein has explained two phases , . of his famous theory, but personally : w don't understand him yet. U , EGO. ... There's a tenor livs above me, Conceited as can be;

- His only song 2 The whole day long V Is mi mi mi mi mi. R. M. T. - . Headline says Europe will -accept javy league Harding offers. Whv not

give them one of. our bush leagues? iVe have plenty, r 1 Great Britain's drink bill increased - ; S400.000.000 last year in spite of the "fact that the "pubs" were given only 5 fhort hours which only goes to show . that sincere and intensive swiggers i;canlo a good deal when they really Sri set their minds on it.

Dinner Stories

. "Some people say . that the Irish people t are cruel to animals," says t Dorothea, Conyers in her Irish Sport- '.' Jnins Reminiscences. "If they are, it is T Without thought that dumb beasts feel

A pnf'i mei a man guing inio tvn-

. -, keony He was beating a thin donkey T' cruelly: .'."Shame, Martin Casey!" he t AEaJdrbeating theioor beast like that

THE

Two Minutes By HERMAN

CARDINAL GIBBONS' MESSAGE They are still talking about him, writing about him, preaching about him and memorializing him beloved Cardinal Gibbons, formerly "punctual grocer's boy"; and, latterly, foremost prelate in the land. Throughout his entire career Cardinal Gibbons bore out the doctrine that the liabilities which nature imposes upon men frequently become their greatest assets; for, paradoxical as it may seem, many men have succeeded because of physical and mental impairments rather than in spite of them the weaknesses they were bent upon eliminating turned out to be blessings in disguise "I owe my longevity to the misfortune of a poor digestion," the cardinal was fond of saying. When he was a mere boy Cardinal Gibbons' family came over from Ireland. He immediately began working before and after school hours so he could acquire a formal education. As a student he was so frail and so frequently 111 it was doubted whether he would survive the end of the course. Later his physical condition was aggravated by stomach trouble so serious at times that it prostrated him. This very lack of strength lighted in him a burning desire to be hale afld strong, to rid himself of his bodily ailments, to become well. He mapped out for himself a rigid program to which he adhered all his life a program of conservation and upbuilding, comprising "regular, wellplanned outdoor exercise, moderate eating and, plenty of sleej. So, in the course of time, he became an expert cricketer, and he outlived practically all of his classmates, many of whom in their youth had been powerful athletes, but looked upon their physical resources as an inexhaustible reservoir which they could drain without reserve. Despite his more than" four score years Cardinal Gibbons was young. He remained young to his very last breath. He was always forward-gazing. "Never look back," he said in an interview just before he died. "Lot's wife looked back, you remember, and she was destroyed. Looking back is destruction always the beginning of the end." Asked for a message for young men, he said: "Young people come to me from every part of the United States. They tell me their hopes, their ambitions, their plans. And do you know what I say to them? I say, 'Young man, work! Without work, no amount of talent, no amount of influence, will carry you very far in this world. The higher men climb the longer is their working day. To keep at the top is harder almost than to get there. There are no office hours for those who would lead. "'And expect great things. Believe in yourself. Expect great things of yourself. Great opportunities are ahead, greater tha:. any that have come before; but only those who have courage and vision will profit when they come. Of all the elements that are important for success, the most important is faith. Those who throw up their hands in discouragement when the first snow falls fail to profit when the sunshine of spring returns. In God's great machinery for building men, the trials of winter are as necessary as the warmth and comfort of summer. No great things come to any man unless he has courage, even in dark days, to expect great things. Young man, expect great things of yourself.'

animal which carried our Lord into Jerusalem?" Martin poised his stick, his face unmoved. Then, "Indeed, your reverence," he said whack! came the stick if He had to be above on this wan He'd never have got there." A traveler in Ireland stopped for a drink of milk at a white cottage with a thatched roof, and, as he sipped his refreshment he noted, on a centertable under a glass dome, a brick with a fadad rose upon the top of it "Why do you cherish in this way," the traveler said to his host, "that common brick and the dead rose?" "Sure, sir," was the reply, "there's certain memories uttachin' to them. Do you see this big dent In my head?" "But the rose?" "The rose," said the host, "is off the grace of the man that threw the brick." "Is there a show in town that is not too one. I mean, fit for an innoeent young girl to see?" "There may be, but If there is, I don't know how you're going to per suade "an innocent young girl to go andi

RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND

to do so. The fine fruits of Christian life usually do not manifest themselves in adult life if the child's heart has not been touched by the fundamentals of rectitude and probity. - The Sunday schcool is equipped to teach the realities of the Christian faith. At no time perhaps in the history of the church has it possessed an agenccy so admirably fitted for the task of religious training as is found in the modern Sunday school. And its efficiency is being increased both with respect to the spiritual importance of its work and the methods employed to awaken and confirm the Christian faith. But the modern Sunday school does not confine its work solely to the children. As an educational medium it has a great mission to perform among the adults also. The old notion of the "Sunday school being a children's church has been supplanted with the theory of the necessity of an adult increasing his knowledge of the Christian faith. ' , The Sunday school as an educational force has a message for the adult Christian. The thousands of adults who are enrolled in the Richmond Sunday schools testify to the eagerness with which they are seeking increased Christian enlightenment and spiritual power. The conclusion of the series of lectures by Dr. Honline. will leave the Sunday schools much richer in spiritual possessions than they were before he came.

The Charm of Walking The environs of Richmond invite to a contemplation of a nature and to a cultivation of what John Burroughs described as "the art of walking." We have a profusion of beautiful scenery to rest the mind and to inspire the heart. Long walks in the surrounding country would have a beneficial effect upon all of us. "I think it would tend to soften the national manners, to teach us the meaning of leisure, to acquaint us with the charms of the open air, to strengthen and foster the tie between the race and land," commented Mr. Burroughs in one of his talks. "No one else looks out upon the world so kindly and charitably as the pedestrian; no one else gives and takes so much from the country as he passes through. Next to the laborer in the fields, the walker holds the closest relation to the soil; and he holds a closer and more vital relation to nature because he is freer and his mind more at leisure. Man takes root at his feet, and at best he is no more than a potted plant in his house or carriage until he has established communication with the soil by the loving and magnetic touch of his soles to it. Then the tie of association is born; then spring those invisible fibers and rootlets through which character comes to smack of the soil and which make a man kindred to the spot of earth he inhabits."

of Optimism J. STICH I CENTENARIAN NEAR DEATH. TERRB HAUTE, Ind., April 19. Mrs. Abigail Tharpe, of Carlisle, Ind., who celebrated her 100th birthday anniversary Saturday, suffered a stroke of paralysis yesterday and lies near death. It is thought the excitement attending the . anniversary brought about the stroke. Said Can't Be Done "My experience with doctors and medicines caused me to lose faith in both, and when a friend told me that Mayr's Wonderful Remedy would cure my stomach trouble, I told him 'it can't be done.' However, he finally persuaded me to try it, and to my surprise it did. All signs of acute indigestion and gas having disappeared." It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflammation which causes practically all the stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, including appendicitis. One dose will convince or money refunded. Clem Thistlethwaite's seven drug stores, A. G. Luken & Co., and durg-

SUN - TELEGRAM, RICHMOND,

Answers to Questions Interested: Please tell me something about the Chinese flag, what it is like, when it was adopted .and if there is any particular meaning of It s a symbol. The Chinese flag Is fivecolored, or, as it is called, "rainbowed." It was adopted as the standard of the Republic of China in 1912. Under the old Manchu dynasty the yellow dragon was the national flag of the Chinese Empire. ' The yellow ground represented the imperial color, and the dragon represented the personality of the Emperor. On Oct. 11, 1911, the revolutionists at Wuchang raised as their standard a" flag of blua ground and white center, signifying white sun in blue sky. A flag with five horizontal stripes of five different colors was, however, used by the provisional government, which was pet up at Nanking on Jan. 1, 1912. WTien the north and south were united on February 12, at the abdication of the Manehd dynasty the rainbow, or fivecolored flag, became the national standard of the new republic, representing tho unity or the five great races which live vvRhin its territory. The five colors are red, yellow, blue, while and black, representing respectively the Chinese (Hanren), the Manchus. the Mongols, the Mohammedans, Tibetans, and proclaiming to the world not only the unity, but also ithe equality of the five great races ttrougnt under the republican regime. The five stripes of different colors are also interpreted to mean the five fundamentals of Confucius, namely, benevolence, righteousness, courtesy, wisdom and faith. Old Readei" Sometime ago I heard two poems recited; one was called "Roses", and the titl of the other was "The House With Nobody In It." Can you help me find these poems? There are several poems with the title "Roses." "The House With Nobody Tn It" was written by Joyce KrTmer and you can find it in his collected poems, published by the '"Jeorge H. ; Doran Company, New York. Rearirra may obtain annwer to questions by writing; The Palladium Questions and Ainrn deportment. All qnrntlona ahnuld be written plainly and briefly. Answer will be piven briefly. Rippling Rhymes By WALT MASON v THE OTHER SIDE. They say that Jinxon beats his wife, when he needs exercise; and if his home is full of strife, the fault with Jinxon lies. This morning sundry neighbors came to niy ancestral caves, and said. "It is a beastly shame the way that guy behaves. Remonstrance is of no avail, though protests have been strong, and so we'll ride him on a rail, if you will go along." I said. t"If Jinxon is at fault he on a rail should ride;-you've heard one tale now call a halt and hear the other side. If I should gayly trot along, and thus your course indorse, and then find out we all were wrong, I'd perish of remorse. Perhaps he could a tale relate that would afflict our souls, of bread that haf a grindstone's weight, cr burned and bricklike rolls. Perhaps the crockery i? flung by one he fain would pet; perhaps a tireless nagging tongue his reason has upset. His wife was married once before, by gossips it. is said; perchance she proves a frightful bore by bragfring of the dead. It. may be she is prone to rske his pockets for the mon: it may be that Fhe fries a steak, when broiling should be done. Oh, prithee, neighbors, have a care that justice fhall prevail, before you take him from his chair, and seat him on a rail!" Correct English Don't Say: T rpfiHzPd what a mistake I had made AFTERWARDS. He sDeaks English NOT ONLY, but j German. French and Italian. I regarded him EITHER as a rascal or a fool. The orator BOTH spoke loudly and distinctly. She repls novels a1-- soon as thev are published WITH GREAT RELISH. Sav: T realised AFTERWARDS what a mistake I had made. He speaks NOT ONLY English, but German. French and Italian. I regarded him as EITHER a rascal or a fool. The orator spoke BOTH loudly and distinctly. - She reads novels WITH GREAT INTEREST as soon as they are published. Masonic Calendar V t TT'ERDAV. Anril If Fiohmond IvOdT". No. 19t F. & 4. M. called metinc work in Master Maon degree, beWEDNESDAY. Anril 2V Webb Lodfp. No. 24, F. & A. M. Stated meptfns:. . . FRIDAY. April 22. King Solomon's Chaptpr. No. 4. R. A. M. Called convocation work in the Past and Most ETOPllpnt Maptrs TVrrpps. Reduce Those Dangerous Swollen Veins Physicians are prescribing and hospitals are using a new and harmless, yet very powerful germicide that not only causes enlarged or varicose veins and bunches to become normal, but also reduces goiter, enlarged glands

and went Ask any first-class druggist for an original two-ounce bottle of Moone's Emerald Old (full strength) and refuse to -accept anything in its place. It is such a highly concentrated preparation that two ounces lasts a long time and furthermore if this wonderful discovery does not produce the reeults anticipated, you can have the price refunded. It is not wise for anyone to allow swollen veins to keep enlarging. Often they burst and cause weeks of pain, suffering and loss of employ; ment. Start the Emerald Oil treatment as directions advise and im provement will begin at once. Generous sample on receipt of 15 cents, silver or stamps. International Laboratories, Rochester. New York. Your druggist or A. G. Luken & Co. and Dafler Drug Co. can supply, you. Advertisement. ;

IND., TUESDAY, APRIL 19, 1921.

TODAY'S TALK , By George Matthew Adams,. Autrfbr of "You Can," "Take It,- "Up" - SPRING I like Spring. ' For to me beginnings are always fascinating. To watch little buds waking up and then to Bee them poke their tiny heads out into a world that they have never seen before, leads me and somehow inspires me into better ways for then it is that I feel very much akin to the eternal spirit of growth. There is such a freshness to Spring. Just as there is to a new baby, with Its soft skin and wondering eyes. No wonder so many poets have so often spoken of "an eternal Spring." Planting time, pruning time, fragrant time, singing time, love time that's Spring. With what mystery and wonder do things unfold as the sap starts its way upward and the green leaves sprout and spread! And before one knows it. there are lilacs, apple blossoms, tulips, violets, pansles, dandelions, buttercups, and all the multitudes of flower families which went to sleep in the Fall. And what has age to say as it pauses to watch the small boy at his marbles, or as he swings his nice new baseball bat? Does it not 6mile and tuck into its ripening heart just a few more full blood beats that they may whisper back that age and youth are only a little way separated at the most? Oh, Spring is the time of dreams! Let us, then, not take it idly as it come? and goes, but wrap its fervor about us, listen to its music, and enter into all its play. For Spring is here right now the Spring of fresh rains, warming waters, happy birds, busy animals and working men the Spring that promises Summer and overflowing harvests! Is not Spring a time for hope and courage?

The Adventure of the Dying Detective By SIR ARTHUR CONAN DOYLE Copyright, 1921, by Harper & Bros. Published by special arrangement with The McClure Newspaper Syndicate. -

Part Two I was bitterly hurt. "Such a remark is unworthy of you, Holmes. It'shows me very clearly the state of your own nerves. But if you have no confidence in me, I would not intrude my services. Iyet me bring Sir Jasper Meek or Penrose Fisher, or any of the best men in London. But some one you must have, and that is final. If you think that I am going to stand here and see you die without either helping you myself or bringing anyone else to help you, then you have mistaken your man." "You mean well, Watson," said the tick man, with something between a sob and a groan. "Shall I demonstrate your own ignorance? What do you know, pray, of Tapanuli fever? What do you know of the black Rormosa corruption. "I have never heard of either." "There are many problems of disease, many strange pathological possibilities in the East, Watson." He paused after each sentence to collect his failing strength. "I have learned so much during some recent researches which have a medico criminal aspect. It was in the course of them that 1 cantracted this complaint. You can do nothing." "Possibly not ! But I happen to know that Dr. Ainstree. the greatest living authority upon tropical disease, is now In London. All remonstrance is useless. Holmes. I am going this instant' to fetch him." 1 turned resolutely to the 3oor. Never have I had such a shock! In an instant with a tigar spring the dying man had intercepted me." I heard the sharp snap of a twisted key. The next moment he had staggered hack to his bed. exhausted and panting niter his one tremendous outflame of energy. "You wan't take the key from me by force, Watson. I've got you, my friend. Here you are and here you will stay until I will otherwise. But I'll humor you." (All this in little gaps with terrible struggles for breath between.) "You've only ray own good at heart Of course I know that very well. You fhall have your way, but give me time to get my strength. Not now, Watson not now. It's four o'clock. At six you can go." "This is insanity. Holmes." "Only two hours, Watson. I promise you will go at six. Are you content to wait?" "I seem to have no choice." "None in the world, Watson. Thank you, I need no help in arranging the clothes. You will please keep your distance. Now, Watson, there is one other condition that I would make. You will seek help not from the men you mention but from the one that I choose." "By all means." "The first three sensible words that you have uttered since you entered this room, Watson. You will find some books over there. I am somewhat exhausted; I wonder how a battery feels when it pours electricity into a non

doctors saij; take some eVery day

for that tired, sluggish feeling. Splendid for convalescents. For Sate by QUIGLEY'S DRUG STORE 727 Main St, Richmond, Ind.

DITTER

A HEALTHFUL TONIC

Henry J. Pohlmeyer, Harry C. Downing, Ora E. Stegall, Wm. A. Welter P0HLMEYER, DOWNING, STEGALL and COMPANY

FUNERAL LIMOUSINE 15 N. 10th St.

conductor. At six, Watson, we resume our conversation." But it was destine1 to be resumed long before that hour and under circumstances which gave me a shock hardly second to that caused by his spring to the door. I had stood for some minutes looking at the silent figure in the bed. His face was almost covered by the clothes and he appear-c-d to be asleep. Then, una.ble to settle down to reading, I walked slowly around the room, examining the pictures of celebrated criminals with which every wall was adorned. Finally, in my aimless perambulation I came to the mantelpiece. A litter of piper, tobacco pouches, syringes, penknives, revolver cartridges, and other debris was scattered over it. In the midst of these was a small black and white ivory box with a sliding lid. It was a neat little thing, and I had stretched out my hand to examine it more closely, when It was a dreadful cry that he gave a yell which might have been heard down the street My skin went cold and ray hair bristled. My skin went cold and my hair bristled at that horrible scream. As I turned 1 caught a glimpse c-f a convulsed face and frantic eyes. I stood paralyzed with the little box in my hand. "Put it down! Down, this instant. Watson, this instant. I say!" His head sank back upon the pollow and he gave a deep sigh of relief as I replaced the box upon the mantelpiece. "I hate to have my things touched, Watson. You know that I hate it You fidget me beyond endurance. You a doctor you are enough to drive a patient Into an asylum. Sit down, man, and let me have my rest!" The incident left a most unpleasant impression upon my mind. The violent -and causeless excitement followed by this brutality of speech, so far removed from his usual suavity, showed me how deep was the disorganization of his mind. Of all ruins that of a noble mind is the most deplorable. I sat in silent dejection until the stipulated time had passed. He seemed to have been watching the clock, as well as I, for it was hardly six before he began to talk with the same feverish animation as before, "Now, Watson," said he. "have you any change in your pocket?" "Yes." "Any silver?" "A good deal." "How many half crowns?" "I have five." "Ah, too few! Too few! How very

PRAISES THEM TO HIS FRIENDS Backache is a symptom of weak or or disordered kidneys. Stiff and painful joints, rheumatic aches, sore muscles, pufflness under the eyes are others. These symptoms indicate that the kidneys and bladder need help to do the work of filtering: and easting: out from the system poisons and waste products that cause trouble. Ben Itichardson. Winffrove. W. Va.. writes: "I will praise Foley Kidney Pills because they have helped me." A. G. Luken & Co., 626-628 Main St. Advertisement. 600D HEALTH IN CVCRY tome WINE DIRECTORS AMBULANCE Phone 1335

ijLj

unfortunate. Watson! However, su as they are you can put them, in youi watch pocket And all the rest of youl J money In your left trouser pocket Thank you. It will balance you so much better like that ; This was raving Insanity. He shuddered and again made a sound betweeu a cough and a sob. "You will now light the gas, Watson, but you will b very careful that not for one instant shall It be more than half on. I Implore you to be careful, Watson. Thank you that is excellent No, you need not draw the blind. Now you will have the kindness to place tome letters and papers upon this table within my reach. Thank you. Now some of that litter from the mantelpiece. Excellent Wateonl There is a fcugar tongs there. Kindly raise that rmall ivory box with its assistance. Place it here among the papers. Good! You can now go and fetch Mr. Culverton Smith of 13 Lover Burke Street-

Tomorrow The Adventure of the Dying Detective, continued. Headaches from Slight Colds GROVE'S Laxative BROMO QUIMXt Tablets relieve Headache by curing the cold. A tonic laxative and germ destroyer. The genuine bears the signature of E. W. Grove. (Be sure yot get BROMO.) 30c Advertisement. RED P MPLES ALL OVERFACE Also Blackheads Itching and BurningTerriblc.Cuticura HeaJs. "I had pimples and blackheads over my face which caused disfigurement. The pimples were Urge, red. and hard, and were scattered sil over my face. The itching end Darning were terrible and I scratched and vntated the p imples .and I couldnot s leep . " The trouble lasted two weeks before I used Cutknrs Soap and Ointment. I found relief and in five weeks I was healed, when r tiH three cakes of Cuticora Soap and nra ooxca oi v-aticura ointment." (Signed) Miss Margaret E. Miketich, 38 Sixth St., Cahunct, Mich. CutlCUTa Soao. Ointment mnA T.1 cum are all you need for all toilet uses. Batbe with Soap, soothe with Ointment, dust with Talcum. ra. aopttc OiaOMntSaadfac TaJcnaSc. afKara 5m shavaa withwrt ang. COLE and OAKLAND j Motor Cars 1 MANLOVE & WILSON I Phone 1840 21-23 S. 7th St J I Suits Cleaned and Pressed f $1.50 PEERLESS CLEANING CO. . 318 Main Street Goodrich Quality Tires at KeasonaDie Prices RODEFELD GARAGE West End Main St Bridge Phone 3077 J FURNITURE OF QUALITY I FERD GROTHAUS I 7 614-616 Main St. 1 The FAULTLESS CLEANING Co. Merchant Tailors Cleaning and Pressing Garments Called for and Delivered NEWSOM eV STAFFORD 203 Union Nat'l. Bank Bldg. 8th and Main Phone 2718 Now Is The Time To Buy POCAHONTAS COAL HACKMAN-KLEHFOTH & CO. North Tenth and F Streets Also South G between 6th and 7th Phones 2015 2016 We Offer Big Values in Rebuilt Cars Chenoweth Auto Co. 1107 Main St Phone 1925 ! f DR. R. H. CARNES DENTIST Phone 2665 i Rooms 15-16 Comstock Bull dine I 1016 Main Street I Open Sundays and Evenings b; t appointment. LUMBER and COAL MATHER BROS. Co. Good Vault Door for Sale B ARTEL & ROHE 921 Main

np r T v Ts washing : Stanley Plumbing & Electric Co. ; : 910 Main St. Phone 1286 !

SAFETY FOR SAVINGS PLUS 4l2 Interest ' DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY "The Home For Savinea"

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. uon i jovl Know lvwas we gooo, Kina see it.