Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 170, 28 May 1921 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND

THETUCHMOND PALLADIUM " - , AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every Evening Except Sunday by r ; Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Poet Office at Richmond. Indiana, as Second-Class Mail Matter. - "" MEMBER OF THIS ASSOCIATED PRESS The -Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatcher herein are also, reserved. Studying Home Rule The 'ward meetings which the proponents of home rule have begun to conduct will give the voters opportunity to study the merits of the proposed system, of municipal administration. Some persons have a vague idea of the new

system, which is responsible , for some of the erroneous notions that are current. By attend

ing the ward and cottage meetings, voters will learn how the new system operates and what it proposes' to do. Knowledge of the operation of the city man

ager form of government will convince the voter

of the merit of the system. No one believes that the city manager system will remove all evils and destroy all inefficiency, but its beneficent results in almost all the cities where it is in operation are a strong recommendation for its adoption. In these cities it has corrected evils, provided a business-like administration of affairs, reduced taxes, centralized and fixed responsibility, and increased the activities of the municipal government without increasing the tax rate. Few of the more than 200 cities which have adopted the system have indicated a willingness to abolish it for the old system. They are satisfied with the results which it is producing. They are willing to be governed by its provisions.

Memorial Day On next Monday the nation pays tribute to the men who offered their lives that the nation might live. The decrepit veteran of the Civil war will join hands with the men who fought

against Spain and those who participated in the World war and all will give homage to those who have passed into the invisible army. Wayne county and the adjacent political units of Indiana and Ohio are no exceptions to the universal manifestation of tender respect and loving memory which will be shown to the men of Lexington, of Gettysburg, of Santiago, of Chateau-Thierry and the Argonne. Never, perhaps, in the history of the country has Memorial Day evoked the feeling of reverence and gratitude to be noted everywhere this year., In thousands of hamlets and crowded cities, from seaboard to seaboard, the nation will bow its head in memory of the men who died on the field of battle. From countless hearts prayers will rise like sacrificial incense to the great white throne and lips vainly plead for power to express adequately

the love and admiration of a nation for its departed heroes. It is fit and proper that the nation turn from mundane affairs on this day to ponder their sacrifice, and, joining with their comrades in the solemn exercises of the day, pledge anew their faith in the republic and their loyalty to the flag.

The graves of these heroes, at home and abroad, in the local cemeteries and the national burying grounds, remind the living that to them is given the task of making effective their sacrifice in an alert citizenship that will resent the wrong and defend the good. We may gather in large assembly to praise their sacrifice, we may erect stately monuments to honor their memory, but far better still to keep enshrined in our own hearts the worth of their achievements and to hand down from generation to generation the high resolve to perpetuate the principles for which they lived and died. The heroes whose memories we revere today have passed from mortality into immortality. We cannot recall them to our presence. All that is left is their memory and the eternal principles for which they fought a possession to be cherished sacredly, a heritage to be transmitted with love and effection to future generations.

SUN-TELEGRAM,; RICHMOND, IND., SATURDAY, MAY 28, 1921.

. : 1,1

; ' Good Evening -

EDISONIAN MAXIM. This vorld is so full of a number of facts I can fool almost everybody 1 ax. A writer on "Censoring the Movies" says that "a kiss is chaste for ten feet" in Philadelphia. "I have often sprinted much further for one," writes J. M. Beats all how many "beautiful and well-known movie stars" we never hear of until they become mixed up in some shooting affair. THE FIGHT TO DATE. Dempsey lands the Freedom of Atlantic City on Carpentier's jaw. Carpentier recovers and leads a two-column interview for Dempsey's solar plexus. empsey counters neatly with a twocolumn wheel-chair ride on the board walk, which is a staggering blow. Catpentier replies weakly with fivecolumn layout of pictures on shipboard Dempsey comes back strong with picture of training quarters. Carpentier makes a strong bid for a knockout with pictures of five sparring partners in rotogravure section of Sunday papers. Dempsey appear groggy at end of round. Carpentier opens with five-column story of his life in France. This jars Jack considerably, but he recuperates and comes back with a crushing blow to1 the point of the jaw in shape of a new motion picture. Those at the ringside believed this would end the. Frenchman's chances, but he still showed signs of life and tapped -Dempsey lightly on the left shoulder blade with a new picture of his pompadour. He followed this with a three-column interview on French salads. Dempsey was staggared, but. gathering' himself quickly, he struck Carpentier a vicious wallop with a three column picture of the freight car on which - he used to be brakeman out wesx... Carpentier clinched to the end of the round. Carpentier assumed the aggressive with one column and pictures of himself standing under the Eiffel Tower. Caption: "The Eiffel Tower is the Tall One of the Two." Dempsey came back weakly with pictures of himself in airplane. (To be continued July 2.)

Two Minutes of Optimism By HERMAN J. STICH

-he is a dead one

"AS A MAN THINKS, SO IS HE" James J. Hill, king of railroad organizers, once handed a written order to a young, newly hired bookkeeper. The bookkeeper glanced at the order, thought for a moment, then said to the railroad czar: "Sir, this order is all wrong!" Mr. Hill took back the order, studied it a minute or two, then carefully scrutinized the young fellow before him. "I believe," he remarked finally. " you'll DO. You THINK!" The man who can think is the man who can DO, and the man who thinks is the man who DOES; exceptions to this rule simply emphasize it. "I think, therefore I am," reasoned one of the world's greatest philo

sophers. And the man who does not think simply is NOT

whether he knows it or not. The final test of a man's value is his ability to think. Inability to think which usually means unwillingness to think or mental laziness makes a men a liability to himself and to everybody with whom he does business. ... , The man who will not think as he works eventually degenerates into a worshiper of precedent. He prays to the calendar and the time clock. He becomes warped, incapabe, prejudiced, dogmatic and ignorant. If you want to improve, to move up and to enjoy THINK! THINK as often and as hard as you know how. A man may have knowledge, faith, initiative, graciousness and all. But if he will not think, if he does not use his gray matter while using his muscles; if he refuses to seeketernally a better way to capitalize the day, he is neglecting the one fundamental that alone can win him a place in the sun And he grows constitutionally inefficient and inferior. There need be no such thing as purely mechanical work, although much work is done mechanically. v When a man becomes so proficient that he "doesn t have to think about his work." he ought to get some other work, or somebody else's hat will soon hang from his favorite peg. THINK! "As a man thinks, so Is he," said the wisest of men. Think as a matter of self-preservation. For the man who stops thinking starts drifting always toward the rocks.

Correct English

Hope the movie censorship will not make the movies any tamer than they are now. Trotsky is ill and his condition is not at all encouraging. He is liable to get well. An Illinois woman is advertising for her husband, Gu3 Theodoropologopopopoplousolousosolos. If all of him can't be found, perhaps she would be satisfied with a part. Isn't it about time to limit cigars to one-half of one per cent, tobacco content. About the only place kings fhow up nowadays is in the poker deck, and not very often there.

Dinner Stories

i

It all happened in a southern courtroom. "Young man," said the magistrate severely, "the assault you have committed on your. poor wife was most brutal. Do you know of any reason why 1 should not send you to prison?" "If you !o your honor," replied the prisoner at the bar, hopefully, "it will break up our honeymoon." In Chicago they are telling of a widower who was married recently for the third time, and whose bride had been married once before herself. The groom-elect wrote acroes the bottdm'of one of the wedding invitations sent' to a particular friend: "Be sure to come; this is no amateur performance." "And what might your work have been during the late war?" asked an old "lady visiting the Atlantic fleet. . "Ma'am," . replied the gob wearily. '"I worked on a submarine and every time they wanted to-dive I'd run forward and tip her up."

Don't Say: He has many rich RELATIONS. Poisonous SEWERAGE passes through our sewers. The system of SEWAGE in the city is expensive. I have a RECEIPT for a salve. May I borrow your RECIPE for making cake? Say: He has many rich RELATIVES. Poisonous SEWAGE passes through our sewers. I have a RECIPE for a salve. May I borrow your RECEIPT for making cake? The system of SEWERAGE in any city is expensive. .(Note: Recipe used in referring to medical prescriptions; receipt or recipe in referring to cookery; but receipt is preferable.)

Rippling Rhymes By WALT MASON

IT'S A WINNER. This world is a winner, my masters, though troubles may on us descend;

we always live through the disasters,

and everything's right in the end. I've lived through k surfeit of sorrow, I've lived through an ocean of care, I've wept through the night and the morrow convinced me my woe wasn't there. Some people are always abusing the planet whereon we abide; they bint that if they had the choosing, on some other world we would ride. But when they are scheduled to leave us, and flee to a happier clime, they look on the journey as grievous, they think their departure a crime. The longer I live on this planet, the better and smoother it seems, this mixture of gumbo and granite is surely the world of my dreams. The knockers are dealing in fiction who call it a wilderness dread; there's just enough grief and affliction to season the happiness here. There's just enough hustle and hurry to spur us to showing our worth; there's just enough trouble and worry to keep us from dying of mirth. If others are putting up dirges, your voice to the wailing don't lend; the world from all shadows emerges, and everything's right in the end.

Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today

At a meeting of the Wayne town ship advisory board plans as submitted by the architects, Kauffman & Son, were adopted for the newschool building that was to be erected in district number three, replacing the one on the old Middleboro pike, about three miles north of the city.

Sole leather that also is suitable for heels of all kinds of shoes . is being made in Germany from leather waste.

Answers to Questions

Reader Will you please give me the details of the F-4 accident? Tho submarine F-4, commanded by Lieut. Alfred L. Ede, and with a crew of 21 men, went to the oottom aff the harbor of Honolulu, March 25, 1915, in maneuvers of the "F" squadron. It was located two days later, and a diver, John Agraz of the navy, descended 215 feet, establishing a new world's record, in an effort to facilitate the work of bringing it to the surface. The crew ,it is said, migiit have been alive at that time, but attempts at rescue failed, and March 30, Rear Admiral C. R. T. Moore, commanding the Honolulu naval station, reported that the F-4 lay in 270 feet of water and would have to be raised by pontoons. Secretary Daniels announced that the boat would be raised at any cost, in order to determine the cause of the

Cl'T THIS OUT, IT IS WORTH MOXKV Cut out this slip, enclose it with 5c and mail it to Foley & Co.. 2835 Sheffield Ave.. Chicago, 111., writting: your name and address clearly. Tou will receive In return a trial packagre containing Foley's Honey and Tar Compound for couirhs, colds and croup; Foley Kidney Pills for pains in side and back; rheumatism, backache, kidney and bladder ailments: and Foley Cathartic Tablets, a wholesome and thoroughly cleansing: cathartic for constipation, biUiousness. headaches, and sluggish bowels. A. G. Luken and Co.. 626-628 Main. Advertisement.

,INN

ON CAPE COD rHEOUESIT

V-l WELLFLEET, MASS.

Open Jane 25, ITnder New - Management. Boating;. Bathing. Tennis. Sea and Lake Fishing, OrchestraWater 74 Degrees GEORGE B. JIORAX, Manager. Formerly of the Masconomo. Man-chester-by-thc-Sea, Mass.

TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of . "You Can," "Take It." "Up TIME We sometimes think of Time as something measured. But it really is not. It is a running affair. Time will always be. But in it our lives are measured and fully appraised. We may romp with Time. We may even ride with it at its own pace. But we cannot lag beside it and expect to grow or to become useful. Take those who" live the longest lives they are the useful, busy, cheerful sort. I. think of a few, some who have cosed their life book and some who are still reading in it: John Burroughs. Carnegie, Edison, John Biglow, Gladstone, Chauncey M. Depew, Mme. Bernhardt. Bernhardt was recently asked where she found the time to do so much. She replied that the more one wants to do the more time one can find for doing it. "Life is always new," she said. The love of doing and living is what keeps life young and full of attraction. I heard Frank Bacon say the other day that he tried for ten years to interest producers in his play "Lightnin'," but in all that time he could not get anyone to read it clear through. One man finally did, however, and produced it. The result has been the most remarkable success in the history of American production. The play is closing its third year! . Time doesn't mean much to a man 'with an iron spirit. He treads right through it. It isn't the hours that one works, but the hours that one accomplishes that count. There are those who are able to concentrate more actual results in an hour than many do in a day. Take the sum total of what Theodore Roosevelt accomplished in his lifetime of but a litte more than 60 years. Most men could not have done it in 100 years. The acts of this one man's life will extend through centuries. Time may even be called a commodity. For we must have it to mix with what we are. So that we may become something! The greatest thing that a human being inherits is Time.

accident. Accordingly, diving- apparatus and divers were sent out, leaving San Francisco April 6. on the cruiser Maryland. One of the divers. Frank Crilly, went down 228 feet and found one of the compartments of the submarine filled with water. Another, William Loughman, descended 220 feet the next day and was injured severely by water pressure. The divers put lines on the F-4. by which the boat was dragged slowly up th shelving bottom, but in the process the stern was wrecked and work was halted to await the arrival of pontoons. Six of these capable of lifting 60 tons each, were sent from Mare Island early in August on the Maryland. The submarine was raised August 29. A naval board of inquiry found the accident was due to leaking acid tanks, which corroded rivets in the hull.

Readers may obtain answer to question by writing The Palladium Questions and Answers department. All questions should be written plainly and briefly. Answers will h riven briefly.

Who's Who in the Day's News

PROFESSOR JOHN J. TIGERT. . Prof. John J. Tigert of the University of Kentucky at Lexington, who has

been appointed commissioner of eduea-l tion by President Harding to succeed! Philander P. Claxton, has had a varied j

experience as edu-j cator. He has been; a teacher in several: colleges and in the A. E. F. University i in France. I Prof. Tigert was ! born in Nashville, j Tenn., in 1882 andj was educated ati Vanderbilt Universi-j ty, Oxford, and the: University of Minne-j sota. He was pro-

nL ' - 4W fessor of philosophy V -V at Central College.!

s cGexr Missouri, and later, president of the; Kentucky Weslyan college at Winches- j ter. In 1909 he went to the University of Kentucky, where he was first pro-! fessor of philosophy and then of psy-j chology. which chair he now occupies, j During the war, before becoming a i member of the army educational corps, ! the new commissioner of education , served with the Y. M. C. A. in France I Prof. Tigert went to Oxford Universi-j ty on a Rhodes scholarship, having , been the first Tennessee student to re-j ceive one.

Dutdapsville, Ind. DUNLAPSV1LLE, Ind. Mr. and Mrs. Will Baker and daughter, Mary Louise, of Brookville, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Geo. W. Weers in Dunlapsville Abraham White and family of Bentley 6pent Sunday here with Mr. and Mrs. John D. Richardson and son Joseph. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Albert Abernathy visited friends in Liberty Sunday Claude Gels, of Maple Hill Farm near Quakertown. who underwent an operation for appendicitis at Memorial hospital in Connersville, recently, has returned to his home much improved in health Mr. and Mrs. E. R. Taylor and Miles A Pate, all of Harrisburg. spent Monday with Mr. and Mrs. Budd Johns at their pretty country' home near Bath and called on T. B. Leech and family here ou their return home. . .Mrs. Nora Weers, Mrs. Ada Baker and daughter, Mary, and Mrs. Lon Weers were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Tom Dawson in Connersville Friday Harry Wooley and Miss Esther White, Raymond Coe and Miss Mary Shepard spent Sunday evening in Richmond. .. .Mr. and Mrs. Albert Crawford and daughter, Mary Katherine, Mrs. Anna Brookbank and daughter, Freda, attended church services in Liberty Sunday evening. . ..Mr. and Mrs. Fred Brookbank and daughter, Ruth, spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Thomas Dawson in Connersville David Templeton and family of near Blooming Grove dined here with Mrs. Mary Hannah Templeton. Sunday. .. .John Lake and family of The Willows, just west of Quakertown, were guests of Mr. and Mrs. Will Fipps here Thursday Mrs. Ira Shepard and daughter, Mary, had Harry Wooley and Miss Esther White, of near Billingsville. Miss Clarabelle Hodge, of near Quakertown, and Raymond Coe, of Billingsville, for their guests at 6 o'clock dinner at their home in Dunlapsville Sunday evening. Mrs. Nan R. Leech and daughter, Malinda, spent Friday with Mrs. Nellie Sheppler and family at Sou'h View Farm, their home Mac Hubble and family of near here spent Sunday with home folks in Liberty Robert Talbott was in Connersville Friday night for Orchestra practice as Mr. Talbott is pianist of the orchestra at the Presbyterian church in that city G. L. Fossler and Miss Grace Smith,

ANOTHER "LINCOLN TO PLAY THE PART

J O-i

Arthur M. Bennett. Another man has been discovered who, it is said, bears an exact ?esemblance to the "great emancipator" in facial and physical appearance. He is Arthur 1L Bennett of Worcester. Mass.

HniiiiininiiiiMitiiiiiiuaiinniiiiniiiuiiiuiiHiiiuiuintiiHiMiiiiHiiiuiiiiuiiiuii.f Don't Wear Spotted Clothes I Send them to f

WILSON

i to be Cleaned Phones 1105-1106 wiuiiiHiiuiiuiiiiiiiaiiiiniiiutiiiiiiiiuMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiuiiuuiiuuuuuiuJ

FOUR DOCTORS GAVE HER UP Through a Neighbor's Advice This

Woman Was Restored to Health j by Lydia E. Pinkham's I

Vegetable Compound

New Nash 4 Now on Exhibit at WAYNE COUNTY NASH MOTOR COMPANY 19-21 S. 7th Phone 6173

Mr. H. J. Hanes and alisa Alice Secrest, all of Richmond enjoyed a delicious ham dinner at Rose Corner Farm in Dunlapsville Sunday evening- . ...Mrs Anne Brookbank and daughter. Freda, took dinner with Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Talbott here Sunday Mrs. Ruth Tipps left here Wednesday for a visit with relatives and friends in Laurel. . . .Mr. and Mrs. L. D. Craig

For

a case of

rb - ML r.

Phone for a case to 2746 or 3137

spent Saturday evening wlwth Mr. and Mrs. T. B. Leech here.... Tommy Richardson and son of the farm spent Tuesday here with his brother John. ., Jacksonburg, Ind. Mrs. James Whltteu. Mrs. Lewis and daughter I zona, and Mr. and Mrs. Harvey Whitton attended commencement at Germantown Mrs. Virgen. of Fortville. is spending a few days with her daughter, Mrs. Frank Lutz A number from here attended lodge at Spartanburg. Saturday nighc... Albert Threewlta. of Centerrille, organized a teachers' training clajs here Sunday.. ..Mrs. Josephine Kinder was taken in the Rebekah lodge at Germantown, Friday night Mr. and Mrs. Daniel Kiser spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Will Hamilton, at Hagerstown Asher Baker was given a birthday party Sunday. Those present were his schoolmates. Paul and Carl Worl. Ralph Brown, William Mills. Charles Myers and Wilbur Ertel. Hugh Fagan, Raymond Roth and Guy Harrold and their families made a happy picnic party along the Martindale Creek, Sunday.. . .Mrs. Lolu Lindley and son Lawrence spent Saturday at Muncie with her son Nash.

pcura 3X

r

raicra

Is so soothing and cooling for baby's tender skin after a bath with Cuticura Soap.

lunhluirmtolld. Ad

tnumJItit lT0JUUam4.lfM " Said

ww sotpat. uioaaanisandtaciaiewse.

SMpuiTMwtUwrt

The Miller-Kemper Co. -Everything To Build Anything" LUMBER MILLWORK BUILDERS' SUPPLIES Phones 3247 and 3347

Henry Ji Pohlmeyer Harry C. Downing Ora E. Stegall WTilliam A. Welfer Pohlmeyer, Downing, Stegall & Co. FUNERAL DIRECTORS Limousine Ambulance 15 N. 10th St. Phone 1335

THOR

Stanley Plumbing & 910 Main St.

G

ES

IRONERS

Electric Co.

Phone 1286

FURNITURE OF QUALITY FERD GROTHAUS 614-616 Main St.

The Underselling Store

unumJumguiiiinminB-iioiiuTwmmiigitreuimiwuiiMmMiufiimiunm.i - 1 BUY JELLICO COAL NOW 1 r E - 1 Independent Ice & Fuel 1 Company ftiilitalunriiiirrepinmiiiiwilllfuiuimiiiiinrnimiarmntmntmtHifiimt.nn

Personal Service Regardless of size of deposits First National Bank Southwest Corner Ninth and Main

SMI

Kenosha, Wis. "I suffered with 8 female trouble and at last was in bed

for six weeks with what the doctors called inflammation

of the bowels. Four

of them said I coul1

not live. A neighbor

told me to use Lydic E. Pinkham's Vege; tahle Comnound anr

iter- mm heW ?

tne start, w nen me doctor came I told him what I had taken and he said,

Throw my medicine away and keep on with the Pinkham medicine. ' I did and it cured me. If more women would take your medicine they would not suffer so. I have recommended the Vegetable Compound to lots of people and they have oeen satisfied." Mrs. Mary Rhapstock, 270 i Wisconsin St., Kenosha, Wisconsin. When a woman is beset with such symptoms as irregularities, inflammation, ulceration, a displacement, backache, headaches, bearing-down pains, nervousness or the "blues" she should treat the cause of such conditions by taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, the standard remedy for

woman's ills. I

Advertisement.

miu:u:tu:iiuitiiiuuuiiitiuuuuiuiiiiiitiiiii:tiiiiuimiuuiiiuiiuuiuuiinmjuiiii Cabinet Safes, Underwriters' I Label, in Stock I I BARTEL & ROHE 1 p 921 Main f iiiiittJiiiiiuuiiiiiintHiHuiuiiiiimiiiiiiiiiiiiituiiUHuitittniuitiiiiiuiiuiiMiMiiiu'

GOODRICH Quality TIRES Rodefeld Garage West End Main St. Bridge Phone 3077

VIGRAN'C Ladies' ShopO

FOR BETTER VALUES

I Suits Cleaned and Pressed! ! $1.50 f I PEERLESS CLEANING CO. I

318 Main Street

immunomu uuiu uinw

''''''titTitHiniHiiiiuiiiiiiiiiHriinitniiiiiiiMnifiiiiiMioiiitMfnir"'1''' '""f"'!" r My office will be closed during the I month of July. i Dr. Dykeman, Dentist. i i'.iiiiiuiiuiii!uiun!iiinjjuitiinuniuiituiiimiiniuiivifiaiiiiiuuraun(Tvuniuii

Order Your Suit Now, until May 30, EXTRA TROUSERS FREE FAULTLESS CLEANING CO. Jack Newsom, Prop. 203 Union Nat'l. Bank Bldg. Bth and Main Phone 2718

Plans The First Essential in Home Building See GEO. W. MANSFIELD Residence Architect 9042 Main St. After June 1. Colonial B!dg.

Dresses Pink and Flesh Georaetta

Best Values In City

Lawn and Garden Hose feet - S3.00 5o feet $6.00

Holthouse Furniture Store!

530 Main St. ituMintnmiammiminwwintiuiuininiiuiiuuottiiHunia

Have Your Eyes Examined by

Clara M. Sweitzer. Optometrist 1002 Main St. Richmond

m m m m m ...t-.riJtjTir-0riJtLnj

J

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

Big Reduction on Willys Knight and Overland Motor Cars OVERLAND RICHMOND CO. 11 S. 7th St Phone 1058

The Best Place to Trade After All

AcK

erman

;! i

You will be surprised to know how many of your friends are regularly saving money. You can do what they are doing. Begin now. American Trust & Savings Bank Ninth and Main

SAFETY FOR SAVINGS PLUS 4V2 Interest DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY "The Home For Savings"

Rugs

You save from 35 to 40 if you buy your Rugs here. Weiss Furniture Store 505-13 Main -1

On Savings

OJO

account any time.

and 5 on Time Certificates. You can start savinos

Interest paid Jan. 1st and July 1st.

The People's Home and Savings Ass'n. 29 N. 8th. Cap. Stock $2,500,000 Safety Boxqa for rent

Always Fresh at All Groceries

Made by

ZWISSLER'S

Buy Tires Here and Save 20 per Cent Chenoweth Auto Co. 1107 Main St Phone 1925

DR. R. H. CARNES DENTIST Phono 266S Rooms 15-16 Com stock Building 1016 Main Street Open Sundays and Evenings br appointment.

LUMBER and COAL

MATHER BROS. Co.