Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 140, 23 April 1921 — Page 4

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H Society j

Th Ladles' Aid of the Science i church of Spiritualists met Friday in the Red Men's hall with 60 persons in attendance. The devotlonals were . followed by a short business session, after which literary work was given

r? by Mrs. Ica Inderstrodt, Mrs. George J r Osborn and Mrs. Maude" Beemer. The remaining ' time was givenr over to .

messages given by Mrs. Laura Osner, and Mrs. M. C. B. Austen. The aid. which has been organized less than, a , year, has a membership oi su ana u is said Interest is increasing in it rapidly. Meetings are held, every two weeks in the Red Men's hall. Every one is cordially Invited to attend.

f William P. Denton, Camp 2$, Sons ' of A'eterans, will hold their regular 5 meeting at their headquarters In the I court house Monday evening, April S?"' 9S There will h a muster of C&ndi-

dates and election of delegates to the !

r. 35th annual, encampment of the Indies? ana division. Sons of Veterans, which ' will be held at Newcastle May 10to

12. All officers and members of the camp are requested to be present at the meeting. The Trifolium society will be entertained Monday evening by Rev. and Mrs. Prank A. Dressel at their home on South Eleventh street. G.I H. Hoelscher will read a paper en titled "The Trial of Christ" and cur-

5 rent events will be given by Mrs. Lee .3 B. Nusbaum. Following the program committee, composed of the following members, will have charge of the party: Mrs. J. V. Burton, Mrs. W. H. 4 Romey. Ernest Renk, Miss Ella Min- . ter and Mrs.-Oliver P. Nusbaum. f? The Criterion club will be entertained bv Mrs. Bruce O. Cline at her home, 1S4 South Fifth street. Tuesv day afternoon. Responses will be on 4 women of note, congress, and first aid to housewives. Selected readings will be given. . Ben-Hurs and their friends will be i" entertained. at a dance in the club's room Saturday evening. Miller's orP chestra will play.. Seullv's orchestra will play for the

dance to be given at New Paris Sat-

urday evening. Knights of Columbus will be hosts ' for a dance to be given at the I. O. O. J? F. hall Tuesday evening, April 26. f . The Evan 3. Smith orchestra will play ,:; for the affair. Eastern Star members and their families will be entertained at a v- dance Saturday evening. May 20, at the Masonic club. The Merry Maids' class of Grace M. E. church will be entertained at a box social and old-fashioned spelling bee at the church Monday evenr ing, to which everyone is invited. ' Charles Knierim was entertained at rv a surprise party at the home of his ' parents, Mr. and Mrs. Casper Knierim, . Thursday evening. Games and music furnished the evening's entertainment ' ; after which refreshments were served. Those present were: Mr. and Mrs. Casper Knierim, Mr. and Mrs. John Knierim, Mr, and Mrs. Thomas Phil--f' lips, Mr. and Mrs. Holdman. Miss - Pauline Bright, Miss Halsie ThornV burg, Miss Vera Brown, Miss Dona Broun, Roy Walterman. Frank Firth, Al L,eavell, Herbert Ashenfelter, Wilbur Smith, and Charles Knierim. Miss Edith Oelklaus was hostess to i!ip N. X. C. club Thursday evening at. ;t her home on South Eighth street. After a snort business session the evening was spent informally. At a late hour a dainty luncheon was served -A to the following persons: Miss Marcaret Schuman. Miss Helen Cook, Mis

Marjorie Edwards. Miss Corinne , Schneider, MisS Edith Yvickemeyer. 5 Miss Alma Wickemeyer, Miss Rhea Porter, Miss Freda Lohman, Miss Mar- ' cuerite Kessler, Miss Bernadine V; Hoppe. Miss Marie Heironimus, and r Miss Edith Oelklaus. The next meeting will be on May 5 at the home of V Mrs.- Harry Holzapfel with Miss Margaret Schunian as hostess. The Three-B Sewing circle will be ? entertained Wednesday by Mrs. ,i George Kemper at her home on South v' Sixteenth street ..-i All members of the Ladies' auxiliary ', of Sons of Veterans of the William P. Benton, camp are asked to meet at Eighth and Main streets Sunday at 3 o'clock to go in a body to the home of .S Mrs. Lee Turner. 21S North Seventeenth street.

- Miss Mary Williams will be hostess to the Delta Theta Tau sorority at her -ii home on South Twenty-Third street Mondav evening. Four new members v , will be" initiated. All members are res' ouested to be present at 7:30 o'clock promptly and to bring initiation tilings. A playlst will be presented by the Ben Hurs in their club room Monday i evening. April 2o. A social time and refreshments will follow the entertaint i ment. Every one is invited. A small ' 4: admission will be charged. Miss S. Ethel Clark, of the Social Service bureau, will speak before the : West Richmond W. C. T. U., in the Community house at 2:30 o'clock Monday afternoon. Members of other unions in the city and county are " - cordially invited to attend. Anyone inS' terested is welcome. Mrs. W. D. Williams will be hostess ' to the Dorcas society when it meets Monday afternoon at her home on V South Fifteenth street. The Degree of Honor will entertain with a novelty dance Tuesday evening y in the Red Men's hall, following the regular meeting. .C The Knights of Columbus have isr sued invitations for a dance to be given in their club rooms Tuesday evening : for which the Evan J. Smith orchestra will furnish the muic. .5 The Lawton club will be entertained by Mrs. Harvey Petrey of North Twentieth street Wednesday afternoon. Sigma Kappas will be entertained at a card party by Miss Cora loweyer at her home on Soyth Seventh street next Wednesday evening. ,. Important social functions for next 'v v week include the dance for Mason's, r hich will be given in the Masonic 4 club rooms Thursday evening. Harry

Frankel and the Evan Smith orches1 111 4t.A M

.,- , fit ira, WUU Will IUIUI9U Ui3 UiUOlV- 1UI tf ?'i' iUie occasion. ; will be one of the

r . features. of the evening. Ellis Knight, Percy : Smith and Clarence Mayhew f comprise the committee. " :"jSSt y .The Quaker City clnb.will .be enter. 'Vtained by Mrs., Rosella , Reese at: her 0 nome. 125 South West Ninth street.

? " f 4$ Friday afternon.

KH TS ioHy Twelve club will-be tnterl ' -taiteedMfs.' MJlroy" Balrd at her

BRIDE IN BRILLIANT CAPITAL WEDDING

I "it! J

Mrs. Robert R. Dickey, Jr. Mrs. Robert R. Dickey, Jr, Is one of Washington's newest brides. She was Miss Leila Gordon, daughter of Mrs. George Barnett. wife of the major general. Miss Gordon married Robert J. Dickey of Dayton. a former officer is the marine corps. Lome on the New Paris pike Friday afternoon. ' "A Kentucky Belle," a comedy in three acts, by P. B. Chambers, will be presented at the Second Presbyterian church, under the auspices of the Ladies' aid of the church, by the Sunday school of the United Brethren church of EHdorado, O.. Tuesday evening. May 3, at 8 o'clock. Chocolate bars will be sold by the Aid society of the Second Presbyterian church in the vestibule before and after the performance. Everyone Is Invited. The Woman's club will give its annual election at the Arlington hotel at 12:30 o'clock next Friday afternon. Tickets for the luncheon are on sale at the Westcott pharmacy. Luncheon will be 75 cents a plate. Club members are asked to make their reservations as soon as possible. , Despite inclement weather 30 persons gathered at the Joseph Moore school for the community entertainment Friday evening given by the Parent-Teachers' association, Mr. and Mrs. Beery, who have been taking a course under the direction of the community service workers here, conducted the games and entertainment for the evening. The next regular meeting of the association will be held next Thursday afternoon at 3:30 o'clock, it is announced. Guest day will be observed Each member is asked to bring a guest. Members of the younger sl attended tine assembly dance given by Mr. and Mrs. Bert Kolp in the I. O. O. F. hall EVirla.T.- pvenintr. The KolD-Sinith orchestra played the oider of dances.' Those present included: Mr. and Mrs. Clem Roberts, Miss Rhea Crandall, Miss Mildred Whitely. Miss Opal; Davis, Miss Dorothy Rees, Miss Clara Myrick, Miss Almyra Stauber, Miss Margaret Sweeney, Miss Rhea Pjie, Miss Vivian Spauldtng, Miss Erma Williams, Miss Grace Eggemeyer, Mi Helen Yeager, Miss Dorothy Renk, Miss Miriam Little, Miss Wilma Sudhoof, Miss Martha Jones, Miss Marie OBrien, Miss Marathabel Shriner. Miss Marguerite Cox. Miss Mildred Stevens, Miss Greta Sisk, Miss Ciara Daub, Miss Helen Snodgrass, Miss Jane Carpenter, Miss Cornela Borden, Miss Rosamond Border, Miss Maude Reber. Miss Vera Shepman, Miss EllenMcCarthy, Miss Eonita Monarch, Miss Anna Dallas, Miss Kathryn Binkley. Miss Esther Reid,, Messers. Keifer Calkins, Roland Loehr. Park Kirk, Conrad Otterfelt. Clarence Taylor, John Weber, Walter Smith, Claude Anderson, Andrew Spaulding, E. Merryman, Albert Benn, Arthur Johanning. Kenneth Whitnack, Howard Saeckman, Robert Reid. Edmund Sudhoff, Ronald Cox, Pete Llchtenfels. William Hale, James Rees. Luther Lemon, Glen Welst, Harold Sinex, Robert Graham, Donald Bell, Fred Romey, Oscar Morton. Willard Morgan, Richard Mansfield, Forest Gartside, Gene Messick. Thornton Brehm, Harry Thomas and Clem Meyers. Mrs. G. S. Pfafflin has returned from Louisville, Ky., where she visited her two sisters: Mr. and Mrs. Ed Miller and Mrs. George Sang, of Fourth avenue. Albert Feeger, of Indianapolis, Is in ihe city the week-end guest of Dr. Herbert Thompson. Mr. and Mrs. Ralph Winslow. of North Thirteenth street, will spend the week-end in southern Indiana. Mr. and Mrs. Robert M. Kepler, of 100 Lincoln street, are the parents of a baby girl, Betty Jane Frances. CURTAIN (Continued from Page One) wegian explorer, while Nansen was on a trip through Russia. He gave Nansen a list of Americans who were being held as captives in Moscow. When Nansen returned to Sweden he interester himself in the imprisoned Americans in Moscow. Carlson adds: "Then I found out that a cablegram had been received by the Commissar of Foreign Affairs from Nansen. In this cablegram Nansen stated that the American government gives full permission to all Russians of communist sympathies to leave the United States, who wish to do so. That consequently from 500 to 600 Russians are monthly leaving thej United States. He also gave: list of American citizens and soldiers sup

liiK RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND

WINCHESTER RACES INCLUDE GAR BUILT BY FAMOUS RACER WINCHESTER, Ind., April 23. The race track at Funk's Lake is being regraded and oiled and the new grand stand is being pushed to completion as fast as weather permits. Many improvements are being made. The first race will be run May 30, and many new cars will be seen in the lineup among which will be the "Rajah" Special now being built In Indianapolis by Arthur Chevrolet, a brother of Gaston Chevrolet, who won the last 500 mile race at Indianapolis and was killed in tne Los Angeles j races in January. Novelty Works Enlarges The Stormes Novelty Works with the Chamber of Commerce of Winchester, has secured an option on the A. R. Abshire plot of ground on South j West street extending in the rear to Wall street, consisting of more than I two acres, on which the Novelty j Works will be placed. This is now a ! corporation of $10,000 which will be! increased to $25,000. The plans and j specifications for the buildings as now j prepared are 40x30 two stories fori the main building with an L on tjne south side, 30x90, In which will be ib-j cated the office with necessary con-1 veniences. The engine room will be ! 25x35 and strictly fire proof. This in-! I stitution will give employment to about 25 people in the start and added to as necessity requires. This institution notwithstanding the depressed hu.insa rnnrllHnn at the nresonl timo 1 is doing a good business. Patterson Divorce Suit. Suit for divorce has been filed in the circuit court by Winifred Draher Patterson vs. Grant Patterson. They were married February 7. 1920 and separated November 9. 1920. Cruel and inhuman treatment is the charge., j The plaintiff asks the custody of the baby girl. I Real Estate Transfers 1 Ralph L. Ortlip to Ernie V. Ar-f baugh,, lot 14, Fisher addition, Union City, W. D. $3,000. Clarence N. Curtis to Admiral B. I Wall, 12 acres, Franklin township,! W. D., $1,800. i John C. Armstrong to Jesse M. Armstrong, lot 4, block 1, Ridgeville, W. D., $3,500. Jesse M. Armstrong to John C. Armstrong, 21-3 acres, Franklin township, W. D., $3,500. Friends' Church Home Coming A home coming will be held in the Friends' church, May 15. Various committees are at work now in an effort to make the affair a great success. posed to be in Russia concerning whom the United States government requests to be Informed, and he asked the Soviet government to permit all United States citizens to leave Russia." Sets Forth Reasons. Carlson then sets forth the reasons assigned by the Commissar of Foreign Affairs for refusing to repatriate the American prisoners held at Moscow, as follows: Negotiations between the United States government and the Soviet government must not be conducted through Nansen or any other private individual, but by the state department directly with the commissariat of foreign affairs, or through the Soviet representative at Copenhagen. That persons in whom the Soviet government is interested are confined in prisons in the United States, and that those Russians who Nansen says are leaving the United States are only persons who have been expelled from the United States. That the documents of those Russians who leave the United States are not previously approv ed by representatives of such countries through which they travel, which leads to their detention in such countries. Implore Steps "In placing these facta- before the United States government we emphatically Implore it to take the necessary steps to rescue its citizens from Russia," Carlson writes. He says that most of the Americans held in Moscow are old men. women and children, and he asserts that the American passport does not seem to afford the same protection and consideration as, for instance, British or Swedish passports. He adds: "Another cause of great disappointment was the fact that the American government was the only one which did not send its citizens in Russia last year American canned goods and other supplies through the Danish Red 'Cross. We have gone through many hardships with a scarcity of food and fuel, and even water, the water pipes being frozen. Even in the summer the water pressure does not carry to the second floor. Most houses now have a tap in the yard, where people stand in line to get pails of water. In the winter everyone hunts high and low for a slick of firewood and burns up the dispensable part of the furniture. If we have to stay here throughout the winter many of us are likely to succumb, if left without help from the outside. Want Food. "If the American government is not able to rescue us from here before the spring we would at least be thankful to receive some food products, such as flour, bacon and beans, which could easily be sent through the representatives of the Danish Red Cross, Moscow, or through the Esthonian Red Cross, addressed to the representative of the American colony, Moscow, Harold Carlson, Archangelsky per 8, Apt No. 9." Carlson then concludes his appeal: "Let me add that if any of us succumb during the winter in Moscow we die true to the United . States of America. You may be sure none of us has any communist sympathies. The best cure of communism is being right in the thick of it,"

SUN - TELEGRAM, RICHMOND,

PRETTY GIRL FORSAKES MOVIE ACTING FOR APRON MAKING AND EARNS FORTUNE

stef I (meet m, v , I k kX? vVV-i ill . - - s sf-ivjf 2, .5-," " V. sJk ' trzAf

Miss June Rand, known as "Sassy Jane, and some of her creations. When Miss June Rand left finishing' school in Missouri and went to Los Angeles to have a try at the motion picture game she found that "extra" work, which was all she could get to do, was not enough to support her. She counted her capital one day and found that she had less than five dollars on hand. While pondering what to do next she made herself a little apron to wear about the house for work. A neighbor admired it and wished for one. Miss Rand sold the one she had made. Then she made two or three others for friends and acquaintances. To. day she has a million-dollar business, is president of her own 'company, and supplies the country with the most flattering little aprons imaginable. Taking less than five dollars as her capital, three years of work, and a lot of personality, this pretty young woman hss made "Sassy Jape," as she calls herself, and her goods known the country over.

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 SIX. "All is in order and this is your man," said Holmes. The officer gave the usual cautions: "I arrest you on the charge of the murder of one Victor Savage," h3 concluded. "And you might add of the attempted murder of one Sherlock Holmes."' remarked my friend with a chuckle. "To save an invalid trouble, Inspector, Mr. Culverton Smith was good enough to give our signal by turning up the gas. By the way. the prisoner has n small box in the right-hand pocket of his coat which it would be as well to remove. Thank you! I would handle it gingerly if I were you. Put it down here. It may play its part in the trial." There was a sudden rush and as cuffle. followed by the clash of iron and a cry of pain. "You'll only sot yourself hurl," said the inspector.' "Stand still, will you?' There was the click of the closing! handcuffs. 1 "A nice trap!" cried the high, snaring voice. "It will bring you into th? j dock,( Holmes, not me. He asked mt to come here to cure him. I was sorry j for him and I came, that I have said I anything which he may invent which will corroborate his insane suspicions. You can lie as you like, Holmes. My word is always as good as yours." j "Good heavens!" cried Holmes. "I j had totallv- forgotten him. My dear, Watson. I owe you a thousand apolo- j gies. To think that I should have over- j looked you! I need not introduce you 1 to Mr. Culvertson Smith, since I understand that you met. somewhat earlier in the evening. Have you the cah below? I will follow you when I am dressed, for I may be of some use at the station." "I never needed it more." said t Holmes, as he refreshed himself with a glass of claret and some biscuits in the interval of his toilet. "However, as you know, my habits are irregular and such a feat means less to me than to most men. It was very essential that I should impress Mrs. Hudson with the reality of my condi tion, since she was to convey it to you, and you in turn to him. You won't be ; offended, Watson. You will realize; that among many talents dissimulation ! finds no place, and that if you had ' shared my secret you would never have been able to impress Smith with J the urgent necessity of his presence, j which was the vital point of the whole i scheme. Knowins his vindictive na-j ture. I was perfectly certain that he i would come to look upon his handi work." "But your appearance, Holmes your ghastly face?" "Three days of absolute fast does not improve one's beauty, Watson. ( For the rest there is nothing which a sponge may not cure. With vaseline . upon ones forehead, belladonna in ' cne's eyes, rouge over the cheekbones, ' mHtmimmiiMiimmitmiNrilmwnawimmtiimmnmiifmMiiimM I The Victrola banishes lonesome-1 nessl Summon at any time the world's greatest singers to enter-1 tain you. !f W. B. FULGHUM I ; 10C0 Main 1 Phone 2275 i dsNtHuuiiimiHiwiMHWiiHiinmfHiiininitHmiiimiii:iMiiiHtiHtiniiHii!Miii?

IND., SATURDAY, APRIL 23, 1921.

and crust of bees-wax round one's lips, a very satisfying effect can be produced. Malingering is a subject upon which I have sometimes thought of writing a monograph. A little occasional talk about half crowns, oysters, or any other extraneous subject produces a pleasing effect of delirium." "But why would you not let me near you. since there was in truth no infection?" "Can you ask, my dear Watson? Do you imagine that I have no respect for your medical talents? Could I fancy Have your CARPETS and RUGS cleaned by the Hamilton Beach Carpet Washer Co. Also expert upholstering. Phone 6057. L. W. TANGEMAN, Mgr. One Minute Essays on Health by G. C. Wilcoxen, D. C. From a Drug Clerk to Manager of a Chain Ralph B. Wattle, president of the National Drug Stores Corporation, is 36. At 23 he was auditor of an organization doing $25,000,000 worth of business a year. He started as a drug clerk, owning nothing but ambition and health. Chiropractic spinal adjustments release the pent up health force of pinched nerves. Spinal nerves are pinched and cause disease when the nerve openings between spinal joints are narrowed by spinal joints becoming disordered. Keep your spine in alignment and health is the normal result. Chiropractic spinal adjustments remove the cause of diseases of the . head, eyes, ears, nose, throat, lungs, heart, stomach, liver, kidneys and lower organs of the body. ACT NOW Also Sulphur and Vapor Baths for Ladies and Gentlemen 'In Business for Your Health" Chiropractors G. C. WILCOXEN, O. C. C. H. GROCE, D. C, Asst. EMMA E. LAMSON, Nurse Phone 1603; Residence Phone 1810. Richmond. 35 S. 11th St. Hours: 1 to 4; 6 to 7 p. m. and by appointment.

that your astute Judgment would pass a dying man who, however deak, bad no rise of pulse or temperature? At four yards I could deceive you. If I failed to do so who would bring toy Smith within my grasp? No, Watson, I would not touch that box. "Ton can just see it if you look at it sideways

! where the sharp spring like a viper's tooth emerges as you open it I dare ray it was by some such device that poor Savage, who stood between tfcl monster and a reversion, was done to death. My correspondence, however, is, as you know, a varied one and I am somewhat upon my guard against any packages which reach me. It was clear to me, however, that by pretending that he had really succeeded in his design I might surprise a confession. That pretense I have carried out with the thoroughness of the true artist. Thank you, Watson, you mutt help me on with my coaL When we have finished at the police station, I think that something nutritious at Simpson's would not be out of place. Monday The Adventure of the Norwood Builder. HARDING HAS (Continued from Pace One) ordinary demonstration of his leadership by in&isting that he shall have a representative appointed by him working with the congressional committee which as a matter of form must do the work. The re-organization of the government will be dominated by President Harding and the cabinet. The other two fields in which he work of the present session will lie are tariff tad taxation. The work in these fields is all ahead of us and will begin during the coining week. What has been done so far around the emer- j gency anff hill is in the nature of j clearing the ground. , The emergency tariff bill is merely to cover the period during which a permanent tariff is to be made. (Copyright 1321 by the New York Evening Post, Ind.) 500,000 SCOUTS RESPOND NEW YORK. April 23. Aid of 500,000 Boy Scouts during Forest Protection week, proclaimed by President Harding for May 22 to 28, has been' pledged governors and foresters, iti was announced today at headquarters j of the Boy Scouts of America, Every t scout will be urged to plant a tree 1 e i 1 during the week, to guard against for est fires and fight them when they occur.

A Free Sunday for Mother Something she ha longed for. Church, a tasty, well-cooked dinner, in perfect comfort and quiet, then a walk or a ride. Thipk it Over Tonight Special Sunday Dinner 12:00 noon to 8:30 p.' m. $125 The French Delicatessen

Opposite Postoffice

33 North 9th St.

Every Day Is Children's Day-

Have a portrait made of your kiddies in their white holiday frocks and curls. Their charms can be made permanent in a good portrait.

'Be Photographed This Tear on Your Birthday"

MR. AUTO OWNER Before Yon Boy Why Not Investigate the Super Crown Battery There's a Reason For Further Particulars See WATSON & MOORE

The Cut-Rate 1029 Main St. "FRONT RANK" ROLAND Phone 1611

HARDING TO ATTEND , BAPTIST CEREMONY

i By AK(fl.td Prems) WASHINGTON. April 23. President Harding late today will put aside matters of state to turn up the first spade of earth In the ground breaking ceremonies for the National Baptist memorial to Roger Williams and religiousliberty. Prominent Baptist from throughout the country are here for the occasion. The campaign for the erection of the memorial wis started four years ago by the Joint action of the Northern and Southern Baptists, numbering more than seven millian. and is ex pected to cost about $500,000. The J site, a part of which is occupied by immanuei u&urch. wa3 dedicated a year ago when the Southern Baptist convention wa in session here. The tuUding will be of colonial classic type and in front will be located a statue of Roger Williams, founder of the system of a free church and pioneer proponent of religious liberty. Called by Death GREENVILLE, O.. Anril 23 William Wayne Bowen. 19, a popular member of the younger set of thi city, passed away at the home of hi parents, Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Bowen. 641 Sweitzer street, this city. Thursdav noon He is survived by his parents. tw brothers and one sister, and a larg" circle of friends. Funeral service? were held Saturday afternon at ' o'clock, iit the residence, with Re. C. W. Hoeffer in charge. Interment at the Greenville cemetery. EATON. O., April 23. Funeral services for Mrs. Tehpsey Ann ShowaRer, 78, who died Thursday at her homo here, were conducted Saturday afternoon in the Christian church, by th Rev. Hiley Baker, followed by burial In Mound Hill cemetry. Two sons and one daughter survive her. Always Good Always the Same f X Golden Cream Bread I Made by 1 s RICHMOND BAKING COMPANY Next to Weisbrod's PHOTOS 7Z.Z haih ST Rjomorta ma Battery Shop Phone 101 1

Heating Service When you install a FRONT RANK FDR- , NACE in your home, you have something more than a device to burn coal ; you have a real Heating Service that will operate Indefinitely. The Heating Service that a FRONT RANK provides is such that the owners take great delight Jn telling their friends about their possession.

& BEACH 1136 Main St.