Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 211, 16 July 1921 — Page 6

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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., SATURDAY, JULY, 16, -1921.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM ' - AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published 4 Every Evening Except Sunday by - 'J. Palladium Printing Co. Palladium - Building, North Nintb and Sailor Streets. Entered ; at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as ; t Second-Claes Mail Matter. ' MEMBER OF THB ASSOCIATED PRCS 9 The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the w tor republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local news published herein. All rights t republication oC pclal dispatches herein, are also reserved. . The Fire Hazard in the Country ' The extremely hot weather, which has dried

vegetation, is provocative of an increased fire

hazard in the rural districts that should induce urban " dwellers -who are in the country to be extremely careful of fire.

A boy, driving in an automobile near Connersville, threw away a few days ago a cigarette which set fire to dry weeds on the roadside and was only prevented from spreading to a wheat field 'by the hard work of farmers who

detected the blaze. ' Many urbanites are not considerate of the rights of the farmer. They seem to forget that they may inflict a heavy financial loss on him by their carelessness and neglect to obey ordinary precautions. ' ' - - Campers should be very careful these days to extinguish fires they have lighted to cook meals. Motorists should not throw lighted cigars, cigarettes and matches into dry weeds at the side of the road. - Farmers are unable to call a fire department which will respond in a few minutes. Usually a fire op. a farm means the loss of the barn, house or a field, because there are no fire fighting appliances. . . The co-operation of the city dwellers 'and the

exercise of good judgment on their part will prer vent at. least one fire hazard, in the rural districts.

"Times Improving, Worst is Over," Say Bankers The country's financial system is on the soundest basis.-in its history, the worst of the business depression has been succesfully weathered and the nation will soon enter a period of conservative prosperity. ' This was the keynote struck by all speakers

at the thirty-first annual convention of the Ohio

Bankers' association, held recently in Cleveland,

Ohio. It was advanced by President S. J. Brister

in his annual address and was emphasized by all the speakers. "We all concede that, though our problems

have been grave and many of them are yet far from being solved, we now have them well in handthe strained, anxious period is passed, the greatest tension relieved," President Brister said. One of the other speakers, H. E. Scott, Ohio state bank superintendent, declared: "America's financial system is on the most substantial basis in its history. The business depression through which we have been passing should not discourage us. The shadows are vanishing and the sunlight is breaking through and, in my judgment, it will not be long until the country will be enjoying what may be described as conservative prosperity the kind to be more desired, because it is more enduring." All the speakers emphasized the importance of the bankers' role in re-establishing public confidence in business conditions, and in leading the business world forward to better time by encouraging wise and sober spending and thrift.

Good Evening By ROY K. MOUL TON

"Were you ever married at the Little Church Around the Corner?" asked one Broadway picture star of another. "I never am . married anywhere else was the reply. Grover. Cleveland Bergdoll Bays he is to he married. He -won't be" able to evade any drafts then. They say we have a smiling cabinet, but it hasn't" been on the job very long. " ' : PROFESSOR STEINBRUGGE SAYS: Professor Einstein has made so bold as to state that women rule here in this country. The United States to ray the leastis a very successful country. There is another country in this world which might not have plunged itself into the abyBS in which It did if it had allowed its women to dominate Its policy a little. "Why men

tion the name? There Is one thing

about the Einstein theory of relativity for which we are thankful, it gave the humorists a chance and they use it The relative position which woman tball have in the future may still need readjustment and there are arguments

on both sides. Personally, I would rather stick to science than to make a statement about, women. Few -women care what is said about science, and those who do. understand it; but you are a brave man, indeed, when you start anything cynical about the fair sex and I want to go on record as never having started anything like that. Marcel Steinbrugge. London Opinion" believes a new nurse there must come from New York because she pronounces nursery "noisery," but perhaps that is the way it should be pronounced.

Two Minutes of Optimism By HERMAN J. STICH

TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can", "Take It", "Up" QO! The woods are sown with Invitations. The birds have already rehearsed their best .and choicest songa. The rivers are rippling their ways through fields and glen, and wild inhabitants of the out-of-doors want you to come. So, go! - Leave the work of the year. Find in Nature the wished for zest and thrills. . Hills are waiting to be climbed fields to be explored, and happy nooks want to touch your face with smiles. Then, go out into the open air of the country. Vacationize your heart. Get it tuned up for better times and greater service. Learn the language of the trees. Get renewed power from their towering arms and their spreading beauty. Sit at the feet of the mighty Pine, and walk beneath th canopies of Hemlocks, Elms, Oaks and Spruces. See the chipmunks play and rest a little on some great rock. And watch the world go by! The only way you can adequately work twelve months is to play in two of them off and on now and then. The best that you are is brought out as you walk arm in arm with the creations and children of Nature. For as you see in sunsets all the glories of color, and in the freshness of the after-rains, all the loveliness of a thinking God, you are reminded anew of your own smaU size . and importance and made to feel the spur toward a better and more useful life. - Go far from the hum of the city. Get away from the things that annoy. Self-examine and meditate. And remember that . "The groves were God's first temples. Ere man learned To hew the shaft, and lay the architrave, And spread the roof above them."

"The Love Pendulum" By MARION RUBINCAM

FINISH THE JOB

When they tell you or you tell yourself that it really doesn't make much difference, to let it go this time, that you can do it tomorrow, or next week, or next month or any old time or that Joe or John, or Jim or Jack will fix it for you or it's too late or too early, or too hard or too easy, or too inconvenient or too ANYTHING once you've started something, FINISH THE JOB! And argue about it afterward. Finish the job out of principle! Finish it out of habit! Finish it out of doggedness or cussedness, only FINISH it! Whether you like it or not, plug up the holes! Stop up the leaks! Patch up the ruffled edges! Once you've started something, FINISH THE JOB! And think it over afterward. At some time or other the religion of thoroughness has been ingrained into every successful man in the United States. If you want to be numbered among them, if you would bask in the sunshine and enjoy the sunsets and escape the shadows, if you want to get into "Who's Who" and to determine "What's What," if you're dissatisfied with being a kicked and cuffed about dog in a conscienceless machine once you've started something, FINISH THE JOB! When the hankering comes to lay off or lay down, when the crack of the baseball bat and the balm of summer lures, when the craving grips to chin and kick and knock and prick, when you're complacently congratulating yourself on having done a day's work and wondering why the whistle doesn't blow, when the crowd's kidding or snarling, joshing or taunting, laughing or leering and donning their duds, and slamming the door, and rushing pellmell downstairs YOU get a hustle on! Shake your legs and hands! And heart and head! And FINISH THE JOB! . - In the name of common sense, in th ename of justice to yourself and the man who butters your bread, in the name of everything and everybody you hold near and dear, by the token of the success for which you're striving, fighting, working, denying yourself and doing your darndest to pilfer a place n the sun once you've started something FINISH THE JOB! .

Rippling Rhymes By WALT MASON

POOR OLD NEBRASKA. Nebraska's -eyes are tearful, there's sorrow in her marts; her sons pretend-they're cheerful, but they havo aching hearts. Oh, still her hogs may

fatten, her steers do passing we

from Broken Bow to Stratton, from Hastings to Odell; she still may harvest glory through fresh and salted meat, and live- in song and story for raising corn and: wheat; her bard3 may. gain the bacon, her healers brins back health, but Bryan has forsaken that -TTadeyed commonwealth. There other living.-.wonders may dance around and sing, and with their verbal thunders make the welkins ring; the state- may always nourish Strong men whose aims are high, bay orators may flourish and fade away and die; and Warwicks-oft may ramble athwart the pleasant scene, and commoners may gambol upon the Lincoln green; the future is uncharted, we know not what may be, but Bryan has departed, alas and-hully chee! No home's so well defended It has no vacant chair, no flock so well attended but one dead lamb is there." From York to Weeping Water, Nebraska feels bereaved, and every son an daughter is sore and deeply peevedr men drink their bitter mixture, and say the fact's a crime, for Willyum seemed a fixture, a landmark for all time.- The altar's all are shaken, and rent the temple's dome, for Bryaa has forsaken his old Nebraska home. . V

Who's Who in the Day's News

Donald B. MacMillan will soon be on his way to explore Baffin Land, the vast Arctic island southwest of Green, land. He will take with him a crew of six men. They

expect to reach Baffin Land August 1". and return to the United States late in 1922. JlacJIillan is the son of a Cape Cod sea captain. He was born in Provincetown, Novem-" ber. 1S74, and was graduated from Bowdoin in 1898. After postgraduate

work at Harvard

y v fljjs

Dinner Stories

"See that 'man going into the office building?" the chaffeur inquired as he casually prepared to move his car from the curb. "I feel sorry for him sometimes he has to work so darned hard." "You mean in order r make his living?" the doorman, in response, asked Idly. 'No, the chauffeur replied as he gently let in the clutch, "to make mine."

Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today

3cw3.rlK'Kic.uAii

school principal.

That discourtesy, carelessness and impatience largely on the part of nonsubscribers, were the causes for some of the troubles of the home telephone

in 1910-12 he tooklcoinPany 'was the conclusion reached -. A. 1 C1 ? 1 C A. ? . u. - . .

oy me oinciais aier a quiei investigation. The company has been having considerable trouble, some of it beins due to instruments, storms and a good share to the abuse of the instruments.

Correct English

' ' Don't Say: Yes. I think it was THEM. I took It to be THEY. We are not as rich as THEM.

I invited THEMSELVES and their

friends. ...... It "could not have been ,THEM whom-you met. Say: ' Yes.. I think It was THEY. I took it to be THEM. We are not as rich as THEY. I invited THEM "and their friends.

It could not have been THEY whom

you met. -BOY FRACTURES BOTH ARMS

DECATUR, Ind..-July 16. Kenneth Schnepp, 12 years old, suffered fractures of both arms Friday, when he was thrown from a load of hay as it upset. The accident happened at the home of his mother, three and one-half lailes east of here. ' '

up teaching and be

came a p ub 1 i o He made his debut

as an explorer in the Cabot Labrador expedition of 1910, and three years later became the leader of the Crocker Land expedition. During 1911-12 he made ethnological studies of the Eski

mos in Labrador. In the meantime he

served as chief lieutenant to Peary in

the latter s successful dash to the North Pole in 1909. Altogether he has made eight voyages into the Arctic regions.

Answers to Questions

Inquirer: What are the thermal units used in England in measuring gas and coal? How many thermal units are there in a ton of soft coal? The British thermal unit is enough heat to raise one pound of water one degree Fahrenheit. In a pound of coal there are 1,400 British thermal units. There are from 600 to 650 thermal units in one foot of manufactured gas and there are 1,000 thermal units in one foot of natural gas, as it averages. . Mrs. E.. F. G.: How far was Harry Hawker from the Irish coast when he was obliged to descend, and where

was he picked up by a passing vessel?

Harry G. Hawker and his navigator, Lt Gcieve, were picked up by the Danish tramp steamer on Monday, May 10, 1919, in lattitude 50.20 and longitude 29.301,100 miles from Newfoundland and 800 miles from the Irish coast They started on their flight across the Atlantic on May IS and had been 14 Va hours from the land and 90 minutes in the water when they were rescued. The Danish ship, which was on her way to the Orkney

Islands, had no wireless, therefore the

captain could not send word that the men were safe until he was opposite the Butt of Lewis, in Scotland, where

the information was signalled by

means of flags. It was a week to an hour after they had left Newfoundland before they were heard from. Readers rony obtain annrrr to questions by writing; The Palladium Questions and Answers department. AU questions should written plainly and briefly. Answers will he riven briefly.

Heart Problems

Dear Mrs. Thompson: My problem is this I am a girl of twenty-five and do not have a gentleman friend that I may call "steady" company. I have men friends who treat me as a good pal and one to whom they can come with their disappointments ."and joys alike. , I appreciate this comradship immensely but wonder why it is that they regard me only as a good friend. I feel sure yiere must be something very essential lacking in my make-up and would like very much for you to advise me and tell me what qualities men most admire. Can it be that I am too much of a "good fellow" and do not command enough attention? E. That may be the real reason. Often boys will take their troubles to a sensible girl, but will not be- considerate enough to be attentive to her. Perhaps, if you held yourself aloof for Borne time, it would change their attitude considerably and they would begin to admire you and your qualities. Heard Broken: Your letter received. Cheer up and take a fresh look at life:- Remember you are only 16 years old, and all restraint is irksome at your age; but soon there will be a change and you will be happy. Be brave and overcome all your disappointment, for you still have very many happy years ahead of you. The present troubles will disappear soon, mark my word.

DEPRESSION. , 1 Chapter 5. "I won't go to Europe," I announced. "But no one will make you," "Yes, they will. -Dear Doctor Engel, won't you tell my family I must stay here all summer so you can keep

on looking after roe? I want to buy a little white house I saw today " Dr. Engel laughed and assured me

he would do everything possible to ! keep me away from Europe. I rej turned to the letter. .

"You aunt has just written details of your illness," the letter went on. It was dated two - weeks previous. "She said she would not cable me unless you were in actual danger, so as not to alarm me. but would wait and write. She waited for that, too, until you were out of the worst of it, so you see. my dear child, I have only

recently heard of all this illness. I deeply sympathize and I am sorry I was not there. Though I suppose your

aunt was competent enough and I would have been a burden at the time. "As a matter of fact, her letter did not come to me for many weeks. I ran down to Nice for a time, and then

to Rome and over to Alexandria. The

latter was a business trip, in connection with some excavations the curator of the museum at home is making in northern Egypt. The letter reached me when I landed at Naples. As you can see, I am now back at Paris." How father skipped lightly over the face of the globe! He was always going somewhere ,or always coming from somewhere. He possessed an apartment in Paris that was quite large, and here he stayed a great deal of the time and entertained generously. He had a very tiny and inexpensive apartment in Florence, and he belonged to a club in Rome where a room was always reserved for him. When he was in Monte Carlo or Nice, where he spent part of each year, ha put up at one of the hotels, always ordering the same suite of rooms to ba ready for him. It was only when in New York, where he had been boru and brought up that he was homeless. Then he wandered . from hotel to hoteji stubbornly refusing my aunt's offer of hospitality. I liked my father very much. I can't 6ay that I ever regarded his as a parent, he never seemed to have any relationship towards me he was merely an amusing older friend who' spent money on me, but insisted on taking me to places that bored me. I went back to my letter. "As a matter of fact, I think you had better come over and join me here. You did not like it here before, but you were a little prig then a quality you certainly never inherited from me.- rour aunt is most disappointed because you could not havo a season at home. But I think that can wait until next winter, though you

will be is it 19 or 20 then? Meantime, I will take you over to London for the end of the season there. I have a great many friends there, though I don't like the place much. We will spend the summer on the continent and go up to Scotland for some shooting in the fall. That should bring you around safely to November, and then I will turn you over to your aunt. "I hope you will be quite well when you arrive, for I am helpless with an invalid about. I want you to look pretty, too. Your last picture was charming. I showed it to Lord Rosedale, who quite raved about you and wanted to meet you. iTwo bad he's 50 and twice married! He has every thing desirable a title, wealth, a pedigree as long as that of a prize terrier in a dog shog. They say his first wife married him because she liked the looks of his family crest, and divorced him when democracy became the fashion and we put away our

coat-of-arms and our mid-Victorian principles" I stopped reading the letter. I was in no mood for father's cynicism's and flippancies. "

I remembered" Lord Rosedale -very vaguely he had been at Nice four

years ago when father took me there,

I was 15, he was nearly 50, and he was married to his second wife. I

don't think she was along they rare

ly lived together, I heard. He was

very witty but his wit carried a sting,

iu it. ne &eemea 10 nave reaa everything and to be tired of almost everything. I did not like him. I did not want to go to Europe. I knew what it meant a suite on ono of the big steamers, Aunt Harriet would have nothing less. She would go or else I would have a nurse - to look after me. The wealthy salesmen who travel first class on the big liners would try to flirt with me, the stout ladies would "take an interest" in me because of my de luxe suit and my nurse. People would stare, we would all dress for dinner every night and sit around and look stupidly at each other. There would be dances on deck and an orchestra playing all the time The more I thought of it, the worse it seemed. I went out on the piazza and stood staring into space. Parker had to hunt me to bring me in to my tea. I went to bed still more depressed. I was not going to join father in Europe, that I determined I would invent some plausible reason. Yet the alternative seemed to be my aunt and that meant a summer at fashionable resorts, and parties and bands and late hours and I was so tired and bored with all of it I wanted to stay quiet I wanted to live in the little white house in Wellsville. I went to sleep hoping I would worry myself into a relapse. Then I could stay on where I was at peace. Tomorrow Winthrop. .

MAN KILLED BY INTERUR0AN j DODGING FRIENDS' BLOW

MICHIGAN CITY, InO., July 16. Claude Freeman. 41 years old, a section hand, was struck and instantly killed by & northern Indiana interurban car this morning south of this city. He and a fellow worker were engaged in a friendly boxing match waiting for the car to pass. Freeman's partner lunged at him and Freeman jumped backward into the' path of the car. His body was brought to this city. HAYS GUTS EXPENSES $15,000,000 FOR YEAR WASHINGTON. July 16. Plans for

cutting down expenditures of the post-

office department $13,000,000 duringJ

the next 12 months are understood to have been outlined Friday to the cabinet by Postmaster General Hays. He was said to have declared the proposed economies would in no way weaken the efficiency of the service. The plans involve dropping from the payrolls about 1 per cent of the 300,000 postal employes over the country.

Assurances have been given, however,

that no efficient employes will be discharged. In many instances vacancies

that occur will not be filled making a

I substantial cut without discharge of

any employes.

Saves on Carriers. The department plans to cut $2,000,-

000 from the allowance for . city

carriers and like amounts from pro

visions for temporary carriers, the

railway mail service and mail bag

equipment.

By adoption of a conference agreement, legislative action was completed in congress today on the bill to re

classify certain postal employes, entailing additional payments of about $5,000,000, principally to the "special

postoffice clerks, laborers and other

employes."

Among the senate amendments finally retained was that providing for

sending American delegates to the in

ternational postal conference at

Buenos Aires next month.

SPANISH WAR VETS

WILL FROLIC SUNDAY Addresses, contests; and a general

good time is to feature the aTr-ual re

union of the Spanish war -veterans.

to be held at Beallv&w park, Sunday-

Activities will beam at 9 o'clock:

Sunday morning andj continue until 9

o clock Sunday nigral. Reception for new members win be held at 10 o'clock in the morning, following the registration an hour? earlier.

From 11 to 12 o'ejock a horse shoe tourney will be stirred. The "mM

call" will be sounded at 12 nnnn snd

again at S o'clock in the evening. Ad

dresses wuk oe given by the Rev. F. A. DresseL nasrnr nf Hi m t?-

. w- -.v i a t. ttuuou Lutheran church, and Mrs. Marie Williams, of IndianapoBJs, past depart

mental president on the Ladles' auxiliary.

Major Paul Corns bock will conduct

an "experience" meetfins- at K nvwir

In addition to dancfing early in the afternoon, a big dience will be held In the evening begiipimg at 7 o'clock-

Japanese farms kveraee two and

one-half acres to the family.

In China it is a custom widely observed for a shopkeeper to divide about 10 percent of the profits among the employes at the New Year.

WEEKS TO SEEK ADVICE ON MUSSEL SHOALS SALE

WASHINGTON, July 16. Further

conference with Henry Ford will precede final decision on his offer to buy the nitrate plant and lease the Wilson and No. 3 dams, near Mussel Shoals, Ala., Secretary Weeks said Friday. The negotiations which led to the offers were only of a preliminary character, he said.

YOUNG GIRL FINDS RELIEF Wants to Tell Other Girls All About It

-- 21

FVLI. OF PAIXS AND DIZZIXESS "I was full of pains and had such a swimming sensation in my head I could hardly sit in a barber chair to c-et a shave," writes Swift Nelson, 211 W. 35th St., New York, N. Y. "I felt KitAi tKa riovt 91 ViAiirfl flftAT talfino"

Foley Kidney Pills, and I haven't had1 any trouble since." Foley Kidney Pills;

give the help needed to overworked, deranred kidneys. Their action Is prompt, healing, tonic. Relieve swollen muscles and Joints, backache.

lameness.' dizziness and rheumatic;

pains. A. G. LuKen ana -o., bJb-63S Main St. Advertisement.

Evansville, Ind. "I am eighteen years old and have been bothered for

several monins wiia

irregular periods. Every month my back would ache and

I always had a cold

and felt drowsy and sleepy. I work in a

millinery snop ana x went to work every day, but felt stupid and would have such cramps. I had seen Lydia E. Pinkham's

Vegetable com

pound advertised and had heard several women talk of it, so mother , got me some. This Vegetable Compound is wondeiful and it helped me very much, so that during my periods I am not now sick or drowsy. I have told many girls about your medicine and would be glad to help anyone who is troubled with similar ailments. You may use my testimonial as you like." Stella Linxwiler.6 Second St., Evansville, Indiana. Some girls lead lives of luxury, while others toil' for their livelihood, but all are subject to the same physical laws and suffer in proportion to their violation. When such symptoms develop as irregularities, headaches, backaches, bearing-down sensations and "the blues, girls should profit by Miss Linxwiler's experience and give Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial. Advertisement.

Cuticura Soap Shampoos Best For Children If you wish them to have thick, healthy hair through life shampoo regularly with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Before shampooing touch spots of dandruff and itching, if any, with Cuticura Ointment A clean, healthy scalp usually man" good hair. wBpSaehFrMbrltan. irUrfn:-Oitmh. rt.rl.Dpt J0,M14m.U " Sold my whrg Soap 2bc. Ointment 26 asd Me. Talem 2te. ISBFCuticurm Soap hmw without muff.

NEW PRICES on Nash Fours and Sixes WAYNE COUNTY NASH MOTOR COMPANY 19-21 S. 7th Phone 6173

Zthebeer-y beverage"

The Miner-Kemper Co. "Everything To 3ulld Anything" LUMBER JV1ILLWORK BUILDERS' (SUPPLIES Phones 320 and' 3347

WEBB-COLEMAN CO. . Authorized Ford Sales and Service N. 9th St. Opp. Postoffice

Pleating Hemstitching Embroidery y LACEYS Buttons 8 S. 9 St Phone 1755 Covered Over 1st NatM Bank

r-BERTSCH SAYS:

Why Pay More? Ask for 3-B Coffee at 45c lb. Sterling Cash Grocery 1035 Main A. R. Berteh, Prop.

BOSTON STORE One Price to All

Yes, Building Business is " Improving GEO. W. MANSFIELD Architect Room 333 Colonial Bldg.

Big Reduction on Willys Knight and Overland Motor Cars OVERLAND RICHMOND CO. 11 S. 7th St Phone 1053

U TT WASHING I rill K MACHINES

Stanley Plumbing & Eleetrlo Co.

910 Main St. Phone 1284

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

W. Virginia and Pocahontas 1, I COAL !

I Independent Ice and Fuel II,

I Company CiiimuHHmuninmawMitiiMiiiun.tM .u.... mwnr1 rn

r n n n ii n ii

I Suits Cleaned and Pressed 1 $1.50 f PEERLESS CLEANING CO. i 318 Main Street I

yaimMiin.ffttiiiiiiii i muiannnum..uuuiT) mniiiHiiiiimnnni

itiwiitmmuurUiuiumminiuuuniiuiiiinimiHimiiat(tiniuittmw

The Bank of REAL Service

s 2nd National Bank!

BATTERY REPAIRING We give a six month's guarantee on all battery repair work. Drive up and Jet us test your battery free. Also free water. Paragon Battery Service Station 1029 Main St. Phone 1014

OH S3.V1I11?S Certificate. Yotl . TT . can start savings account any time. Interest paid Jan. 1st and July 1st. The People's Home and Savings Ass'n. 29 N. 8th. Cap. Stock $2,500,000 Safety Boxes for rent

Coal, Flour. Feed J. H. MENKE 162-168 FortWayne Ave. Phone 2662

SAFETY FOR SAVINGS

PLUS

4V2 Interest . DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY

"Tne Home For Savlnga'

The Cake That Pleases

Zwissler's Butter Maid Cake

at All Groceries

Made by Zwisslers

Buick D-35 Touring Model :

cneap it sold at Once

thenoweth Anto Co. l

1107 Main St. Phone 1925

m m nr rru

UK. It JUL. CARNESi DENTIST Phone 26E5

Rooms 16-1$ Comstock BuildlEs

msuu a creel Open Sundays and Evenings 1g

- appointment.

'"""" --- - - -iiTinnn... m p,

LUMBER and COAL MATHER BROS. Co.

- - - -innnruum i

FIBRE REED FURNITURE

at One-Half Price

Weiss Furniture Stozfle

505-513 Main St

Don't Miss Our Bigt Shoe Sale WESSEL SHOE C C. 718 Main St

t n?

I Holthouse Saves You TiJ !oney I on Furniture

j Holthouse Furniture ijltore ! - 530 Main St