Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 249, 30 August 1921 — Page 6
yAGE SIX
HE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., TUESDAY, AUGUST 30, 1921.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every Evening Except Sunday by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Second-Class Mall Matter. MEHnr.K OF" THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press ia exclusively entitled to the us 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 of republication of ep. elal dispatches herein are also reserved.
Delay in Good Roads Aid
"No one will deny that modern, well-built
roads confer great good and contribute enormously to the general prosperity," says the Cin
cinnati Enquirer. "But one is impressed with the good sense of Senator Lodge's plea for economy recently made in consideration of the federal aid good roads bill. "Urging the necessity for reducing government expenditure,- he said: 'Improvement of roads is one field where there can be delay without serious injury. The unemployment situation
is alarming and is increasing, and thinking men
must look with apprehension to the coming win
ter. The great need of employment can be met
effectively in only one way, and that is by a
general revival of business activities, to which all our efforts should be directed.'
"What is true of the nation is true of the
state. The cost of labor and materials, although
descending, still is too high to justify any extensive program of highway building at this time. We need the roads, but we can wait for them better than we can wait for some other things and better than we can endure increased taxation. The building of a mile of road in Ohio, for instance, is out of proportion to its value as
an improvement. The people have to pay for
these things whether they are property owners
or not they pay in increased rentals and ad
vanced prices demanded by these who are own ers of tangible taxable property.
"Materials of every kind are too high, labor-
is too high, both legacies of the war. Other things slowly are coming down as business readjusts itself to present conditions. Materials and labor which go into road building and house construction also must come down if we are to enjoy any stable prosperity. As Senator Lodge said, every effort must be directed to the revival of business activities in general. And while engaged in that all-essential effort, the roads well can wait awhile."
GUESTS OF PRESIDENT MILLERAND
Good Evening By ROY K. MOULTON
A GOOD DOCTOR Dear Roy: I ran across a doctor yesterday who, I believe. Is the boy that v.e are all looking for. His name is Dr. B. Older, L. S. C. A Missouri woman has offered to fell her husband for $5,000. Another profiteer.
It has just been discovered that when Oom Paul Kruger, president of
the Transvall, died he left $3,000,000. He had to. CONFESSIONS OF A CYNIC
I have never accepted any graft and may as well admit that none has ever been offered me. I never pat eees. When they are
plentiful I don't care for them, and)
when they are scarce I cannot airora them. I don't believe there is much use In telling women to leave off the rouge. The way to get them to leave It off is to tell them to put it on I see the price of beef is going to go up again. Hook 'em, cow. I think a Palm Beach suit in the evening is the most mournful looking thing in the world. I am very fond of work as long as somebody elfe does it.
Dr. Wiley once said a man does not reach his highest efficiency until he is 60 years old. According to that,!
this column ought to begin getting good about 20 years from now. You can always hear plenty of knocks in your car when your relatives are riding with you.
Two Minutes of Optimism By HERMAN J. STICH
OVERTIME THINKING "This stuff about forgetting your work as soon as you quit the office and 'resting the mind' is a lot of bosh," Charley Schwab once said to me. "Few big men ever completely forget or get away from their responsibilities."
Is it not bo? Haven't we all noticed it? Isn't it a fact that the fruitfulness of a man's office hours depends upon the turn of his thoughts in his leisure hours?
Almost every man who is rre-eminent whether as merchant, writer,
artist, scientist, statesman, lawyer or physician is inseparable from his work. You can't play at work, but you can always work at play. This does not mean that a man's recreative hours should be oppressive, burdensome, tense weighed down with the import and portent of his labors; it means 6imp!y keeping in a receptive frame of mind, staying on the subconscious watch for opportunity, playing yet with business. This is what I mean. A Massachusetts soldier in the Civil war went hunting with business; shot a bird that was hulling rice, and, taking its bill for a model, invented a hulling machine which revolutionized the rice business as Eli Whitney's cotton gin revolutionized the cotton industry. Archimedes took a bath with business; and discovered the law of hydrostatics. Newton rested under a tree with business; and discovered the laws of gravitation. Gallileo went to church with business; and evolved the pendulum clock. Goodyear cooked his meals with business and discovered how to vulcanize rubber. Our best writers go to bed with business and get some of their best idea3 on the verge of slumberland. When you hear people say that so and so was lucky, he came upon this or that by "accident" don't begin to lose faith and talk about "luck" and such. Do a little investigating and you will find in almost every case that the "find" was the reward of overtime thinking; that is, playing with business.
Left to right: Myron T. Herrick and Colonel Harvey strolling with a Japanese diplomat in President Millerand's gardens. Myron T. Herrick, ambassador to France, and Col. George Harvey, ambassador to England, were recently the guests of President Millerand, at the latter's summer home. After dinnsr the pair took a stroll through the president's gardens m company with the Japanese representative cJ the allied supreme council.
A dancer has just had her feet insured for $50,000, but we don't see why. They don't use their feet any more. A man never really has good sense until he is too old to take advantage of it. Occasionally the weather man has an accident and guesses right.
Rippling Rhymes By WALT MASON
Who's Who in the Day's News
REALISM
LORD RAWLINSON Despite the fact that the Russian Bolshevikl are begging help from Great Britain to relieve their terrible famine at home, they continue their
plots against tne peace and security of British possessions in Asia. Just now Lenine is working i n conjunction with the Turkish Nationalists under Kemal Pasha to arouse all the various races of Central Asia for an invasion of India. All this adds to the worries and re-
sen.payvlnS'ON. sponsiDUities oi
r 1 :
Answers to Questions
I took a slice of hard-earned kale to Lord Rawlinson, who is at the head of
iimno. hUctnra FSfth anrt Pine wai minglea army oi unusn anu ua.
and bought a realistic tale the critics troops in India, numbering at the
hmart o enmothimr tino it tratH ! very most a quarter oi a munuu iueu.
great distinction during the World war. When the war began he was a
(Any reader can pet the answer to any question by writing The Palladium Information Bureau, Frederic J. Haskin. director, "Washington, D. C. This offer applies strictly to information. The bureau does not eive advice on legal.
medical and financial matters. It does
not attempt to settle domestic troubles, nor to undertake exhaustive research on any subject. Write your question plainly and briefly. Give full name and address and enclose two cents In stamps for return postage. All replies are sent direct to the inquirer.) Q. Is the grape crop good this year? G. C. S. A. In the grape producing regions of New York, Pennsylvania, Ohio and Michigan, the reports are for light crops, not more than half the average yield being expected. Q. What does "Dail Eireann" mean and how is it pronounced? C. K. H.
TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can", "Take It",
'Up"
MAKING EACH DAY SIGNIFICANT All one has to do is to use his eyes to learn that life employs all too much of dullness and drabness. The unlearned day laborer knows next to nothing of what it is to live for an ideal, much less to work toward it. And even many of us who are able to see beyond the mist of necessities, are deadened to the crying of that spirit within us which may break many a shackle that binds us to intolerance, selfishness, narrow bickering and coldness. The fact is that few of us have in mind to make each day significant! It is not enough just to be courageous, to be self-controlled, to be privately happy, to find joy in food or clothing or shelter, to grow in will and in achievement We must be fusionists. We must be mixers of an enthusiastic type. We must touch the air of the universe and feel the warmth of the sun of all effort. We must make other people feel that we are in as much need of them as they are of us, else we are mere temporary stayers and laborers for sordid hire alone. Making each day significant is a task for us all. The mother does it in the love that she gives to the baby at her breast. And all through the activities of the world there is a constant cropping out of the desire to help and inspire others. Stevenson has a thought along this line. "The true realism," says he, "always and everywhere, is that of the poets: to find out where joy resides, and give it a voice far beyond singing. For to miss the joy is to miss all!" To break our externals and to stand bare before the world for what we are, is to make every day not only significant but what it should be. Just the moment we wake to the fact that there is a great deal of joy in the world we may get and give, then it is that we begin to get perspective and our wholemind is illumined for service. The world Is entirely able to live without you but you are not at all able to live without the world!
of "A Narrow Shack," inhabited by dreary skates; each bore, until he sprained his back, a sordid load of deadly hares. The husband loathed his sloppy wife, and she detested him so much he simply poisoned all her life she shuddered at his merest touch. -The son was married to a
freak, who hated him in forty ways;
he hated her till she grew
finished out her futile day
daughter hated all the world; she lacked all beauty and all grace; in vain her hay-like hair she curled, and ka'.somined her ghoulish face. Dissension was that household's law and pnger was its daily bread; and all hands hated Pa and Ma, and thought that they were better dead. There
major general, in command of the
third division. He was cited for his brilliant work at Neuve Chapelle in March, 1915. In the spring of 1916 he was given command of the British
Fourth army, and was in charge of the
matter of fact she is producing bumper crops and is solvent. They have thought of her as a nation of half-wild Indians. As a matter of fact her rich lands are drawing to her some of the best blood in Europe. A very large part of this blood is German. Young Germans of good education and with money in their pockets
1 , T . ,, - . , -1 i a I j 1 W U 1 1 , JUM. " "
reann means insn ana wu th0usands. Recently the Mexican ?Je this man reports, sold a
is. and Eireann practically like Erin. Q. How is it possible to obtain the picric acid that the government is furnishing for blasting? K. A. A. The bureau of public roads says that the distribution of this salvaged picric acid will be made through state agencies. The agricultural college of each state has been asked to act in
this capacity. Q. Can a candy thermometer be used to test jelly? Q. E. D. ' A. A candy thermometer may be
used, and if an equal amount of juice and sugar is combined the jelly will
great tract of land to 15,000 young Germans. Each of these men has 30 years in which to pay for his farm. Each of them will found a family. Many of them and this is a very important point will marry native girls of Spanish blood.
This German colony will form a great block of thrifty farmers, not
the Germans and other Europeans. Furthermore, the Americans form small groups and keep to themselves. They seldom intermarry with the Mexicans, and often they do not even learn the language. This man was surprised to find many Americans who had been in Mexico for years could not speak Spanish. In a word, while the United States holds a political club over Mexico's head, by reason of the Monroe doctrine and the great American investments ini Mexico, Europe is really taking possession of the country, and It is a Europeaenized Mexico that we will have to deal with within a few years more. The opportunities for obtainins rich
land in Mexico, provided you are willing to take your chances with unstable
The man whom we are quoting obtained options on two million acres of land at a dollar an acre. He asked the officials of the present Mexican administration whether, if these lands were bought by Americans, the titles would be considered good- The reply was that the government would hold the titles good. The land In question was wild land covered with forest, but rich in soil and well-watered. The
timber on it alone was worth many times the purchase price. There was a scattering of mahogany of which single trees would be worth six to eight hundred dollars each laid down in New York. This man's clients did not buy on the options which he obtained. And
the reason they did not buy was that
a few days after he returned from Mexico there was a great radical
demonstration in -Mexico City. More than 5,000 men marched in a parade
bearing the red "flag of Bolshevism, Should a bolshevist revolution over
throw the present government, it is doubtful whether any titles to large
areas of land held by non-resident investors would be good. These areas would probably be divided among the landless poor. The small land owner living on his land would probably not be molested. Reds Are Strong This growing strength of the Red element in Mexico is the unknown factor in the situation, according to our informant. He says that the
strength of this element has never!
been realized in this country. He points out that when a Red demonstration can get 5,000 men in line, and when the demonstration is carried out, red flags and all, without molestation, the Reds are a political force to be reckoned with. On the other hand, the great estates are rapidly being broken up, and the land distributed in small tracts among the peons. No doubt each peon who gets a good farm ceases to be a Bolshevist forthwith and becomes a Constitutionalist. When all who want land have been
given land, the extreme radicalism
will be confined to the industrial work
ers in the large cities, and in Mexico
they are a small fraction of the popu lation. The trouble is, according to our in
formant, that the breaking up of the big estates is being carried out clum
sily and in a way that disrupts the
economic life of the country. The
great land owners are being dispossessed of their lands without any com
pensation. They move away, taking their livestock and tools. The peons
who are given the land have neither animals nor machinery with which to
work it. The result is confusion and
idle land.
An instance Is related of a man who owned 50.000 acres of land. He employed all of "the several hundred inhabitants of a village, mostly Indians. His land was taken away from h'.m and given to the Indians. He gathered up his possessions, including his horses and cattle, and prepared to move. A delegation from the Indians waited upon him, hat In hand. They begged him not to go away, pointing out that they had no means of cultivating the land. An agreement was finally reached by which he furnishes seed, tools and livestock while the Indians furnished the land. It is farmed on shares. Everything goes on much as before. The former landlord is now the renter, and the former renters are now the landlords. But the difference is nominal. Everyone
had plenty to eat before and everyone
still has plenty to eat. In other instances the adjustment has not been made so easily. Lands have been left idle. Dispossessed landlords have sold out and have left the country. It would seem to be this readjustment of the land tenure which threatens the stability of the country. Once it is over, the country will probably settle down to an era of production and prosperity, if it is not disturbed from without. For it will be a land of contented agriculturists owning their own land. Such men furnish no stuff for revolution. Mexico's 10 years of revolution have been caused by political opportunists leading bands of land-hungry peons. With the land
It
DUBLIN WOMAN HEAD!
REUNION ASSOCIATION MUNCIE, Aug. SO. The fourteenth annual reunion of the Beach family was held last Saturday at McCullocn park, Muncie, with an attendance from Indiana, Ohio, Kentucky, Michigan and Illinois. A big chicken dinner at noon was one of the features. Leslie W. Beach, of Richmond, the family historian, read a history made and gathered during the year. Among those present was Mrs. Margaret Graham, nee Beach, of Indianapolis, who, although ninety-one years old, enjoyed the occasion and made a happy speech to the family. She was followed by Jesse Green of Kentucky, who is past 89 years old. Mr. Green is a veteran of the Civil
war and gave instructions to the historian as to the best manner to preserve the history of the boys who 6erved in the World war, a number of whom were on the western front and some who now sleep on the battle fields of France. Sankey L. Wolfla of Dublin, Ind. was elected president, Orlando W. Beach of Lewisville, vice president, and Mrs. Sankey L. Wolfla, secretary and treasurer.
hunger appeased, the force which the
professional revolutionists manipulated will be gone. And the average of intelligence and of education in the Mexican electorate will be raised by infusions of high-class European immigration. For good land draws good men. The United States drew a high class of immigrants just as long as it had a good grade of land of offer them. And when it had nothing but a shovel in a ditch or a needle in a sweat shop to offer them, it began to draw a poor class of immigrants.
Mexico is a land of unused natural wealth which will draw a wealth of human brain and brawn to It.
Italy has sent a steamship "emporium" to the ports on the Mediterranean to advertise the goods of Italian manufacturers.
J
weak and ole battle front when the Germans' don vheQ thermometer reads . The " "et!!219 to 221 degrees f. (104 to 105 de-
me war council in ersailles,
isolated but bound to the rest of th 1 political conditions, are probably not
DODulation bv ties of marriage. In the rivalled anywhere in the world. In
Britis
bupremtj war council iu eita.niea, which picked General Foch to coinmand the allied armies. During the ' last year of the war he was in command of the British Fifth army. : Rawlinson was at the siege of Lady-; smith, South Africa, and served as aid '
to Kitchener in the Soudan campaign
Land in Mexico By Frederic J. Haskin.
may be households such as this, in our i He entered the Sixtieth King's royal SANTA FE N M Auz SO The rebroad land where millions live, bleak riflpt. in 1S84 at tne asre of0 a'ndi ? , ' -u;-AU-iU- Ane re
nomes mat know no joy or uuss, three year3 later was -with Sir Fredwhere all hearts hate and none forgive. eriC Roberts, commander-in-chief in Ours is a mighty land, gadzooks, and India.
it must hold some queer galoots; out General Rawlinson was created a
baron in 1919.
why write long and turgid books about
the foul, abysmal btutes? uhen I r.ick mi a hefty tome I like to meet
such characters as I might welcome in ,
my home not yapping, hating, snarling curs.
Dinner Stories
Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today
"There are two kinds of men in this world,' 'thundered the orator. "There are just two kinds, the rich and the nnor!"
"You're wrong," shouted a barber.!
"There are two kinds; those who shave themselves and those who get shaved!" "You're wrong, too", said the manicurist. "There are two kinds: easy marks and tightwads." "You are all wrong." said the egoist. "There are two kinds: myself and others." Which merely goes to show that anything can be proved from the point of view. "Seems to me you ought to be out looking after your best girl on Sunday afternoon." The visitor addressed the young man. . The voung man in question looked at his watch. "Plenty of time yet." he answered "it's only 2 o'clock now. I never go to see 'em until about 7."
"PrAttv late, it seems to me, re
marked the visitor. "Well, vou see. it used to be when
you went to see a girl and take her
riding Sunday aiternoon, sne useu iu
say. "Well, you come on up to our house to eat.' Now when supper time rolls around they say, 'Well, where are you golns to take me to eat to-
With the approach of the date for the first meeting to pass upon the city budget for the next year, big improvements were being planned by city officials. It was evident that a larger amount of money would be appropriated for the street improvement fund than ever before. At a meeting cf the board of public works, under whose authority the streets were made or repaired, it was decided to place a list of streets that should be paved.
Correct English
Don't Say:
The industrious student is LIABLE
to succeed. The old boat is LIKELY to sink.
LIKE as not you will find them at home. I passed the examination EASY enough. It SURE was an easy examination. Say: The industrious student is LIKELY to succeed. The old boat is LIABLE to sink. LIKELY as not you will find them at home. I passed the examination EASILY' enough. It SURELY was an easy examin
ation.
public of Mexico is being quietly,
peacefully, rapidly colonized by Germans. This Is the word brought back by a traveler who has just returned, and who lias exceptional facilities for
learning the facts. Though a native
citizen of the United States he is of
Spanish olood, speaks and writes Spanish as well as English, and has many friends and relations in Mexico.
HS traveled ail over the republic seek
ing options on land for American cap
italists. He talked to Mexicans of all clssses in their own language and as one of their own race. He got facts which are not accessible to reporters and politicians In Mexico City. WTiat this man saw in Mexico was a young country going through a phase of swift development through colonizatio nand investment. While American politicians and capitalists are trying to formulate a policy toward Mexico, and trying to educate the American people to accept that policy, Mexico herself is becoming a different country. They have thought of her as bankrupt and starving. As a
opinion of the observer we are quot
ing, these men will become as much a part of Mexico as any men in it. They will support the Mexican government, to which they are indebted for their land, and the Mexican people, with whom many of them will have intermarried. In addition to these Germans who have bought a block of land, there are numerous small groups and individuals from Germany coming into the country in search of farms. These young Germans usually first obtain employment on some of the large estates for a year. They learn the language and the country. Then they buy farms. Americans Poor Colonizers. Some Americans are going into the country and buying farms too, it is reported, but they are few compared to
IF THEY COIXI) STOP AND BEST Your kidneys have worked without ceasing- from the hour of your birth. They filter and eliminate from the blood stream waste products that. If permitted to remain, cause aches and pains, stiff Joints, sore muscles, lame back, puffiness under the eyes and other symptoms of kidney and bladder trouble. Your kidneys cannot stop and rest. If overworked, weakened or disordered, give them help. Foley Kidney Pills restore regular, normal action of kidneys and bladder. A. G. Luken & Co., 626-62$ Main St. Advertisement
Jess Took Last Chance "After three years of doctoring for my stomach I became discouraged and swore I wouldn't take anything else. I was bloated with gas all the time. Someone praised Mayr's Won
derful Remedy so highly that I de
cided to take a last chance. I am now feeling like a new man." It is a
simple, harmless preparation that re
moves the catarrhal mucus from the
Intestinal tract and allays the inflam
mation which causes practically all stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, including appendicitis. One dose will convince or money refunded. Clem Thistlethwaite's 7 drug stores, A. G. Luken and Co . and druggists everywhere. Advertisement.
the first place, the Mexican govern
ment welcomes the bona fide settler and provides him with land on ex
tremely attractive terms. In the second place, the owners of the great
land grants, who are being dispossessed of their lands of the Mexican gov
ernment under the new Mexican con-
stitution. are ready to sell for a song.
Clears the Pores Of Impurities
Daily use of the Soap, with occasional
touches of
the Ointment as
needed,
cleanses and purines theskinand keepsitfree
from pim
l u Dies and
1 J I blackheads
Cuticura Talcum is ideal for
powdering and perfuming.
Btapl Ech Tre ty V&U. A 4dr?s: "Cvtlnra 1arttctlM, pt ISO, Utldas 48. tyi u Sold evcrrwh,re. Soap Xc. tMr.tment2and&fc. Talcum25c jflC"Cutieura Soap shaves without muz.
ill
t'ifc'C-.Sft'X
w A
The Miller-Kemper Co. "Everything To Build Anything" LUMBER MILLWORK BUILDERS' SUPPLIES Phones 3247 and 3347
GIRLS! WHITEN SKIN
WITH LEMON JUICE Squeeze the juice of two lemons into a bottle containing three ounces of Orchard White, which any drug store will supply for a few cents, shake well, and you have a quarter pint of harmless and delightful lemon bleach. Massage this sweetly fragrant lotion into the face, neck, arms and hands each day, then shortly note the beauty and whiteness of your skin. Famous stage beauties use this lemon lotion to bleach and bring that soft, clear, rosy-white complexion, also as a freckle, sunburn, and tan bleach because it doesn't irritate. AdvertiseTnont
jlr a case of j festal Reck! j
13 wvareursoriott K 0i Phone for a case to
Reliable Automobile Accessories Oils and Tires at reasonable prices RODEFELD GARAGE West End Main St. Bridge Phone 3077
liiiiiiHiiiiintiiiiiiiiin. .in '""i'i'i-;i-;-;-iniiiitiiiiinnTminnimmiw I Home-Made Pressed Chicken I I and Beef It's Delicious f STERLING Cash GROCERY 1 A. R. Bertsch, Prop. 1035 Main St 1 TiiiiimtnHiiiiiiiimnmmnmniTTniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiMiiiniiuiimiimimimnmmitt
WALL PAPER, lc Priced as low as 1 cent per roll 1,000 rolls to choose from "The Wall Paper King" MARTIN ROSENBERGER 401-403 Main St.
SAFETY FOR SAVINGS PLUS 44 Interest DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY "The Home For Savings"
liniiuiiiuiiiiuiuiiiiMiuiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiii:nuuuiiiiiHiiiunuiiiiiiiuimiuuiumiii Suits Cleaned and Pressed I ! 81.50 1 PEERLESS CLEANING CO. 1 318 Main Street 1 TniitiifnuituuiimiiuuniHiummuiwiutiiumiiiiiiiuiumiuuiiuuuinuitiiuiti
Ccal, Flour, Feed J. H. MENKE 162-168 Fort Wayne Ave. Phone 2662
imumtsuutmuiuuimMimiiiiimiimMiinimiimraMiiitiinaiaii).
The Bank of REAL 1 Service I 3 ! 2nd - National Bank) iiimiiMimimmmfMmwianmtmimwiiiuim
LUGGAGE OF QUALITY At Prices that are Right
mm
sO
827 Main St.
The Cake That Pleases
You'll Like
Zwissler's Butter Maid Cake At AM Groceries
Made by ZWISSLERS
nuiiuiiiiiiiiiunmuuiuiiiuiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiintiiiiiiiiitiiitiiifiHiiftiiiuituiitinti I W. Virginia and Pocahontas 1 I COAL 1 x 5 i Independent Ice and Fuelf Company f iiHiinuiinuiiiiiiiHtiMiiiiiiiiiiitnniiimitiiitiutiiiniimiiinitiimmfiimiitmtiiiti
"V O and 5 on Time On bavings 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 fop rent
iiiuniiuiiiiumitiHiitiiiiuiiiiiittittHiuinimiitiiiiiiimHiitiiiiiiiiiitHiiiifiHttiiit
WASHING I MACHINES I
IRONERS Electric Co. Phone 1286 I
jTHOR Stanley Plumbing & I 910 Main St.
Used Cars at Lower Prices'
Chenoweth Auto Co.
1107 Main St. Phone 1925
LUMBER and COAL
MATHER BROS. Co.
- - i- - i-iriri-iiTirwjj
MUliituuiunininiiuniitniRiiimtiiniiiiitiiiintfimiuiimiifiifitiHiiiiniiiiiiiiiiis
mtuuioBiiuuiiuuiuuiitiniiuuuuiuuiiniiiiiiuuiuuinnuiiiHiiumiuiiiiiuHiii
1 USE MARVELSEAL ROOF CEMENT I 1 Hackman, Klehfoth & Co.' I 5 S nitijrinim!t!ui!uiimim:4tmn!!wuiuiinmirtiiiniumimiifujimiiiHiiiiuiriiin
I DR. R. H. CARNES Ii DENTIST Phono 2665 i Rooms 15-16 Comstock Building i 1016 Main Street I 1 Open Sundays and Evenings br j I appointment. I
nuiniiuwDiitniiimiiuiiHMiintuuuiiuiuunutiniMiiiiimitmirtiiuuuniMuni TAT" T r9 m mm S
I Urv. 1. WltiST lj Special attention given to the treat- i j ment of Diseases of the Stomach, I ' 1 Intestinse, and Chronic Constipa-1 j tlon. - 1 1 Suite 204 K. of P. BIdg. Phone 1728 1 1 liiniuimiiUiiiiiiiimiHnniiniiwiimitniiiiHi.iiuMimniuiiMiiuiiiuiiiniiKtiiNi
Don't miss our big remodeling sale of furniture. WEISS Furniture Store 505-513 Main St.
