Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 277, 1 October 1921 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., SATURDAY, OCT. 1, 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 th Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Second-Class Mail Matter.
tion of warships and terminate, all military
preparations. Observers ask the American people not to! expect too much from the conference, but to b3 j satisfied if only a beginning is made toward a. disarmament program which eventually will, solve that perplexing problem. American offi-j rials fear that the people are a little too optim-i istic about the results of the conference andj
r
MEMBER OK THE ASSOCIATEO PRESS The A.ociate.l Press is exclusively entitle to the uso for republication of all new dispatches Vedited to it or
not otherwise credited in this paper, and also tne locaj -...fl,,. miir V,o riisnrmnintprl if thpir full news puhiiphed herein. Aii rights of republication of sp- consequently may oe disappointed li tneir iuii.
rim aifcpatch herein are uo rcserveo. expectations are not realized.
Hospital Tag Day Washington knows full well the general senti-j
Reid Memorial hospital is an indispensable I ment of the people on the problems of curtailing j
It
in
institution in Wayne and adjacent counties. h ni nrnverl its worth for many years and
thousands of instances. Annually the Ladies' Aid society, which performs many acts of service for the institution, conducts a tag day to obtain funds for the work which it does. The public has responded to this appeal with increasing generosity that bespeaks both an intelligent understanding of what a hospital means to a community and a sincere desire to supply the society with the funds which it needs. This year the appeal was no less urgent than in former years. The small sums of money which are paid for the tags mean little to the donors, but in the aggregate they supply the money with which many articles for the upkeep of the institution are provided.
A willingness to help this year was appreciated as fully by the members of the society as it had been in the past, and the donors will have the satisfaction of knowing that they have shown a personal interest in an institution of mercy.
Watching Our Step Correspondents at Washington who are watching preparations for the disarmament conference are stressing the point that the United
States government is not entering the conference
blindfolded and with the expectation of evolving
a program that will forthwith end the construe
sensible enough to know that if a complete disarmament project were sprung at the conference, the representatives of Great Britain, France and Japan would quickly pick up their hats and go home.
The representatives of the invited powers
also are apprised of the sentiment of their people
against increasing costs of the military and-
naval establishments, but they are forced to accept realities and to go slow in reaching the desired end. The United States cannot emerge from this conference as the only nation which will abandon its defenses and cease its preparations for a future war. That would be suicidal. If the conference can reach an agreement on a number of important problems pertaining to disarmament, and if a basis can be laid for the
eventual reduction of the costs of the war machine, the conference will have performed a
monumental service for humanity. The way for further conferences, in which other difficulties now besetting disarmament can be discussed, will be open. All the nations will welcome a plan to curtail military expenditures, but it is expecting much, unless a miracle happens, to believe that complete disarmament will follow the Washington conference. With the united demand of the people of the world supporting the disarmament movement, the first step toward the consummation of that
ideal will be taken at Washington, but the final attainment probably will be a matter of the
future.
TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can", "Take It".
'Up"
TO THE FELLOW WHO HAS LOST ' HIS NERVE This evening as I came out of a store. I was attracted to a man who passed me. His face was the picture of dejection and discouragement. My first impulse was to walk right up to him and offer him what little encouragement I might give. But I missed out. I did not. And so through this brief ta!k I want to try and make up. Perhaps I will reach many a man or woman, worse off than he whom I failed to help. The greatest tragedy in the world is to lose heart to feel that your nerve is lifeless and dead. I know how it feels for I have felt that way a thousand times. I passed through a city recently where, as a boy out of college, I had gone hungry for days and where for months I sought a foothold. I saw the restaurant where they refused to trust me a few cents for food. I saw where I had slept outdoors because I was too proud to ask for money, and because the landlady was too unfriendly to me and her bill all too large! This incident is not related as anything to boast of, but just as an encouragement to the fellow whose nerve seems shattered as mine was, and to say to him that a man is never dead until he turas over. Buck up, my friend! I took a book with me on one of my business trips. It was written by a man who had tramped over part of the earth, been a day laborer, a stree car conductor, and who had worked at anything he could get to do. Today this man is acclaimed by those who appreciate him, as one of the greatest masters of writing of modern times. And not Ion? ago he was given the great Nobel Prize for literature in recognition of his merit. The Salvation Army motto is well worth remembering: "A man may be down, but he's never out!" There is one man who will always believe in you if you will let him and that man is YOURSELF!
flHM I'HF&T iP.RFARF .
EXPECTED TO BE CUT t
building. It was carved out of a beam ! from old Westminster Hall, a building !
that dates from 1,300. The chair and coat-of-arms were a gift to the House of Commons. Canada's Library.
The Senate Chamber is similar in COLUMBUS, O . Oct 1. From pres-
its general plan to the House. Red ent indi,allons there will be a moderleather is here substituted for green., ate decrPase in the acreage sown to Both rooms have beautiful floors off .. f hni . Australian teak, a light brown wood t this rail, though there is no left unpolished. The cracks between ! reason to suppose that the cutting
the broad planks are filled in wun down in acr ge mil be very exten-
The New. Parliament Building By FREDERIC J. HASKIN
OTTAWA, Canada, Oct. 1. The place about which public life in this city revolves is Parliament Square. Ordinarily, the Parliament Building is a dignified background for the legislative and government business of the Dominion. But right now, interest in the building itself is keen, for the new Parliament Buildine: is nearing com-
the story is completed by a carving of a vicious looking goat the Kaiser's. The carvings about the building are full of interest. There are numberless heads about the sizeof a small cannon ball in the ornamentation of arches, windows, and pillars. Some are weird grotesques, gryphons and gargoyles. Others are human heads. One of the stone cutters is said to have immortalized his own features in one. and a
pletion. By next year, it will be entire-
iy imisneu, save lor ui """"Jgood many are caricatures of the lead carvings, which may keep workmen , . j.. .
M
e .1 r
usings rcr tne evening
A Canadian university professor declares that long-tailed coats are immodest and improper. But we are glad to see that our ambassadors are ftill wearing them. IN THE CURRENT HEADLINES With city ladies, it is said, The rouge will have no place, But will you know a city girl When you meet her face to face? The, old-clothes fad is going good, They're worn in every 6pot, And everybody's wearing them For they are all they've got. The price of things is going up, And that's how habits grow; They've pone that way so long That it's the only way they know. They say the peanut crop is shy, One of the sad conditions; But still we have a bumper crop Of peanut politicians.
Who's Who in the Day's News
The Pennsylvania man who handed his wife a revolver and told her to shoot him must have had a grudge against somebody else in the neighborhood. Scientist says the potato is becom
ing extinct. It would be worthwhile
'''I
After Di
The famous scientist. Sir Archibald Geikie, although a Scotsman, was not above thoroughly enjoying a joke, even though it is against his countrymen. One he told himself is about an Englishman and a Scotchman who went to Egypt together and paid a visit to the Pyramids. The Englishman was lost in admiration of the wonderful sight, and presently asked his companion for his opinion. The Scotsman shook his head sorrowfully. "Ah. mon," he said with a sigh, "what a lot of mason work not to be bringin' in any rent!"
An attendant at a certain institute for the deaf and dumb -was undergoing a pointless rapid-fire inquisition at the hands of a female visitor. "But "how do ydu summon these poor mutes to church?" she asked finally with what was meant to be a pitying glance at the inmates nearby. "By ringing the dumb-bells, madam," retorted the exasperated attendant.
Viscount Shibusawa, who at the age of 81 is hailed as one of the commercial leaders and grand old men of Japan, is shortly to pay his fifth visit to America. This time he will come
at the head ot a committee of Japanese business men.
who will be in
Washington during!
the coming confer-j f erence on limitation of armament to impress upon the Japanese delegation the discontent of Japanese business leaders with the recent course of the military party in Japan and of its generally very obedient puppet abroad, Jap
anese diplomacy. Viscount Shibusawa needs no intro-! duction to the American public. In j
i past years he has rendered many ser-
Rippling Rhymes By Walt Mason
if somebody could say this about par-j vices both to his government and to snips and carrots. those who have been associated with
I him in business by his activities in
TRY AND GET IT
Man wants but little beer, but. oh! He wants that little strong.
. , j j v...,. j nicnmona Dusiness men were re-WnavV-E,owe, has ived. one from the Indianapolis 1S.,lJ !2Iir::',i,,b,aJ Trade association and the other from
Answers to Questions (Anv reader can pet the answer to anv question bv writing The Palladium Information Bureau. Frederick J. Haskin. director. Washington, 1.1. C. This offer applies striotly to information. The bureau does not plve advice on lerai. medical and financial matters. It does not attempt to settle domestic troubles, nor to undertake exhaustive research on anv subiect. Write your question plnlnlv and briefly. C.lve full name and address and enclose, two cents in stamps fo' return postage. All replies are sent direct to the inquirer.) Q. What is the A and M berry? A. A new berry produced by hybridi
zation of the dewberry and the rasp
berry, is kn
The nlmt
large round, thick leaves, and produces
a dark red or crimson nerry 01 ungual Fiz and flavor. Q. What is the lowest temperature ever recorded in the frigid zc?ne? A. S. P. t a ThP wenther bureau says that
the lowest temperature ever recorded in the fri?id zone is 90 observed at Verkovansk. northeastern" Siberia. Q. What is meant by the word dishfaced in speakin? of a dog? J. C. H. A. The term dish-faced is used to " describe a dog whose nasal bone is hither at the nose than at the stop a feature not infrequently seen in pointers. Q. When a recipe call.- for two ounces of bread crumbs, how can I measure them in a cup? T. M. A. One cup of stale bread is equal to two ounces. Q. What is the food value of a peach? T. C.
A. Three medium sized peacne are approximately equal in food value to one large egg. or ss cup of milk, or 1 medium sizpd potato, or 2 slices of bread, or ?i cup of cooked farina. Q. Do both male and female mosquitoes bite? R. O. X. A. It is the female that bites. It is doubted that the male ever does. Q. What is meant by "actual service on the battle front? L. E. L. A. The term, "actual service on the battle front" means that a man has been sent with his troops into an active sector where the troops either engage in battle or are about to do so. It dors not mean troops that were stationed in quiet sectors abroad who were training and waiting for opportunities to go to the front.
New remedy that Is guaranteed to relieve tired, tender and sweaty feet. Kinglets C treatments Foot Remedy. all drug stores, 50c. Advertisement.
Xew York. His flotation of the Japanee war loan in Wall Street in 19o5 is regarded by all who are conversant with the details of the situation as a
great achievement, and in Japan it is
IDLE REGRETS My heart is sore and heavy now, I'm feeling far from gay; for I am thinking of the cow that I ran down today.
Ah, black and bitter is my mood, ana
small relief I find in saying that the cow was stewed, or had a feeble mind.
regarded as an important contributing! The man who has a motor car, the
busy for 10 or 12 years longer. It was on the night of February 3, 1916, you may remember, that the Canadian Parliament Building burned. The catastrophe was thought by many people to be the work of an alien enemy, perhaps an employee in the building. Investigations left the big fire as much of a mystery as the bomb explosion in Wall Street has since become. The Parliament fire may have been an accident, but Ottawa, recalling the attempt on the Capitol at Washington during the war, still suspects incendiary motives. Congress was sitting in night session when the fire broke out at 9 o'clock. The members escaped just in time . The city water power was not sufficient to reach the top of the tall central tower of the building and it was gutted. What was left of the
great building was so wrecked and
water-logged that attempts to renovate it were futile. So Canada set out to rebuild and to
! raise a finer edifice, over the ruins of
the old ones. The first Parliament Building, which had stood since 1860, was regarded as one of the most famous structures in Xorth America, and the new one promises to be even more distinguished. Except that it is three stories taller
than before, the building from the ex-i terior looks in general the same, both
for sentiments sake, and because it must conform to the East and West I Blocks buildings on either side which j correspond more or less to our House i and Senate Office Buildings. It is, j therefore, of cream colored sandstone, which time darkens to a rich, warm shade. The building is thirteenth century Gothic in style, with all the carvings.
gargoyles, arches, and angles that go with this cathedral type of architecture. A Great Building. It is in outline a v?ry long, building with low towers at the corners and a
very tall tower and spire rising 300 1
ing statesmen of Canada. A Cabinet
factor to the great victories over Russia on the Manchurian plains, only second to the valor of the Japanese soldiers and the technical preparation of the officers who led them.
Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today
Two letters praising the enterprise and co-operative spirit shown by
Richmond business men were re
wmcn ne tries to steer, should scan the highway near and far, and see that all is clear. But I was rubbering around, as drivers often do; I did not gaze upon the ground, or keep the
curves in view.
officer or M. P. of Canada is represented by some distinguished feature, as we recognize the Roosevelt smile, and the Lodge whiskers. So, these little stone heads are a source of delight to Canadians who see their celebrites in the stone. Laurier in the suggestion of a prominent nose, Borden in a curling mustache. The most important rooms of the building are the meeting rooms for Parliament. The cathedral atmosphere of the Gothic is strongly felt in the two chambers. The House of Commons Chamber is done in light-colored grayish brown unpolished wood and pale green leather. The members desks, made two together, liku old-
fashioned school desks, are along the sides of the long room, the government party on the right of the Speaker, and the opposition on the left. leaVing an
aisle down the middle of the room from the Speaker's chair to the door. The members on the two sides of the House face each other instead of all facing the speaker as in our capitol. The speaker's throne is one of the most interesting points about this room. It is a replica of the speaker's chair in Westminster Hall, London. It is a real throne of British oak, very dignified with its elaborate carvings, and with the royal coat-of-arms over it. This coat-of-arms is probably the most historically valuable object in the
ebony, and round wooden pegs seen in
the floor take the place of nails. 1 The decorations, such a3 gilding of the ceilings, marble and wood carvings, and most of the detail is different in the two chambers. The Senate, for the present, has its walls decorated with a fin series of eight large war paintings lent by Canadian artists.
Eventually these will be replaced by mural paintings. The foundation for the work is all ready for some Canadian artist to start work. A few of the portrait paintings of past speakers were saved from the fire to decorate the dim, arched corridors of the new structure. Canada has her Hall of Fame in one of these corridors where statues and portraits of her best-known members are to be placed. This hall ends at
tne entrance to the Parliament Libra
ry which joins the building on this side. The library corresponds to our Library of Congress. It is not impressive as a collection, its SOO.OOO volumes seem insignificant beside our national collection of 3,000,000 books. The Canadian official library is, however, a beautiful building. It is a polygon a sixteen-sided edifice with
spires to give it height, and lavish or
namentation both outside and in. The1 i outstanding feature of the reading
room is a marble statue of the young
Queen Victoria carrying a scepter and a wreath in her hands. The fire of 1916 came dangerously close to the library, which joins the
Parliament Building on the one side. Yet very little damage .was done. The parquet floor, warped by water which flooded it, is the only visible sign of the catastrophe. A good many books were soaked, though, and after five years, these injured volumes are still drying out. No artificial heat has been allowed to hasten the drying process. The library holds a firm place in the
affections and admiration of Ottawa. Otherwise, it would before now have been replaced by a large, adequate structure with stack rooms, reading rooms and offices. This may be done
some day. But in that event sentiment would demand that the library be left just as it is structurally. It would probably be made a Valhalla, something like Statuary Hall in the Capitol at Washington. The new Horary is probably a long way off now. The Parliament construction bill is costing Canada between $10,000,000 and $11,000,000, and it is not a propitious time for any but strictly urgent projects. The Parliament Building was urgent and Canada is making a good job of it. They claim its masonry is so solid that it should stand a thousand years.
sive. A Dumber of reasons may be assigned The l"w y'e'-ds of the present year has doubtless discouraged some farmers from so-ving wheat. Prices for wheat are not attractive to farmers so that ther may be more than the usual number who will let the ground lie until spring to be sown in oats. Farm wages have fallen considerably though farmers generally consider rates too high in comparison with the prices they are receiving for their produce and this has some influence in restricting the acreage sown to wheat. The price which the farmer is paying for fertilizer is one reason assigned for the decreased interest in wheat, according to reports received by C. J- West, state federal agricul
tural statistician. Corn cutting is virtually completed throughout the state. The damage from chinch bugs is severe in some sections. Cribbing of corn has alreadv begun in Part of the state and will be generally frcm two to three weeks earlier than usual.
Mr. Arthur Moore Tells How Cuticura Healed Pimples
V
"1 had pimples scattered all over my face. They were hard and led.
ana later festered and scaled over. They itched and burned and disfigured my face, besides being painfuL I tried other remedies without success. Th-n T t-
f 1 Cuticura Soap and Ointment
and used one cake of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Cuticura Ointment and I was healed in two weeks." (Signed) Arthur A. Moore, Oak Ridge, Mo. Once clear keep your skin clear by using Cuticura Soap and Ointment for every -day toilet purposes and Cuticura Talcum to powder and perfume. Bathe with Cuticura Soap and hot water. Before bathing, touch pimples and itching, if any, with Cuticura Ointment, dry and dust lightly with Cuticura Talcum, a powder of fasciiating fragrance, BvnvbEaeb rmbrMii Mdrw-"0tltTLk. ormtortu. Dpt UlUitoii J. Ibai " Soideverrwbere. Soa- iflc. 0:Mro2t2 and &Oe. T&krnm SSc. dj?"Cuticura Soap shave witixxit mas.
JOY BROUGHT
NTO HOME
According to a calculation made by a German physician, a man who has shaved himself for fifty years has
spent 250 days of 12 hours each, standing before his mirror with his razor in his hand.
iWrefcfiedness
OF
Constipation Can Be Quickly Overcome by CARTER'S LITTLE jm
UVER FILLS.
By Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, Restoring Mrs. Benz to Health
Altoona, Pa. "I am writing to tell
feet in the middle. This tower is to you what Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable
hold a carillon of 49 bells. In it. too. ;
is to be a war memorial room to 60,000 j Canadians who lost their lives in the j
war. France, Belgium, and Great Brit-
am have sent stone to build this
Purely vegetable act sure
v. l: Ti - 1
lieve bilious- H t. pea 1, a 4 A
w u .ache, dizzi
ness and indigestion. They do their duty. 'Small rm Small Dose Small Price
CARTERS
ITTLE IVER
PILLS
The MiUer-Kemper Co. "Everything To Build Anything" LUMBER MILLWORK BUILDERS' SUPPLIES Phones 3247 and 3347
DAVIS .MOTOR CARS
E. W. Steinhart & Co. 10th and Sailor St. Phone 2955
-iril-nrLW
niuiuiiuiitutaiuiiifiiniiiuiiitiitiiiuiriiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiituatiiiiiiitiiulttiinra Home-Made Potato Chips Fresh Daily 1 STERLING Cash GROCERY I A. R. Bertsch, Prop. 1035 Main SL I i s uimiiiiiiiiuiiiiitiiiHnujmiiiiDiiiiuiiuuiHiimtiiiiiiiiuiiiiitiituiitiiiitiiiiituiuiii
HuiiuiiiiuniiitiniimuimmHiiiHuiituiiiui
iimiMiiiimiiiuniiiiuiut
scribed with the names of Canada's!
fighters in the war, and in the floor will be a record of the regiments. The whole building is in many ways a war memorial. On the exterior, for
instance, there is an arch in the stone,! earth, for this baby is now four months
the citizens of Green's Fork. The former letter expressed the gratitude of the Indianapolis tradesmen for the hospitality shown them while in this city. The letter from Green's Fork expressed thanks for the support ac
corded the festival in that town by Richmond people. The citizens of Green's Fork extended to Richmond citizens and boosters gratitude and appreciation for the generous donations and boosting of their fall festival.
liio g'oj wunu ui mru aiar uau rov eu j Belgian marble. The columns are of along, m fancy I was treading then the j st. Acne's marble. In the center on
saining peab.s oi song, ine cow ap- a dais is to be a Doomsday Book in-
pearea upon tne piiie, aneaa, a rod or perch, and oh, the impact then was like the falling of a church. The undertakers found it hard through all the wreck to plow and harder yet ,to tell the bard froci motor car or cow. The cow is planted in the earth, beneath a cairn of stones; the owner tells me she was worth at least five hundred bones. My car is to the junkyard gone, and it no more will zip along the highway in the down it's made its final trip. And I sit here and nurse my wounds, in misery intense, and cry, "Odsfish!" and likewise "Zounds:" and wish I had some sense.
Lessons in Correct English Don't Say: The speed of some boats is equal to trains. His penmanship is better than his
teacher. This cigar is THE BEST of any manufactured. He is BEST fitted for law than for medicine. The athletes of America are better physically than other countries. Say: The speed of some boats i3 equal to THAT of trains. His penmanship is better than his TEACHER'S. This cigar is BETTER than any other manufactured. He is BETTER fitted for law than for medicine.
The athletes of America are better
physically than THOSE of other countries.
Frazlsr Receives Military Burial Sunday Afternoon HAGERSTOWN, Ind., Oct. 1. Funeral services for Private William O.
Frazier, who was killed in the Argonne Forest. France, Oct. 25. 1918. will be
held Sunday afternoon at the Christian church, at 1:30 o'clock. The Wil-
, liam O. Frazier post of the American
Legion will be m charge. Interment will be in the Green's Fork cemetery. The body of William Frazier arrived in this town Friday. He was a resident of Green's Fork before moving to this place.
f&ttr 1 I ilillfMhofi 'fi
Compound has done J 1
tor me. We have had six children die almost at birth.
From one hour to nineteen days is all
they have lived. As
I was going to have another, I took a dozen bottles of your Vegetable Compound and I can say that it is the greatest medicine on
BOSTON STORE
nmtiuuiuaummniai(iiitiiiituiitiiniuuitiiituiuiiimiiiiH(!tui!vti!itinui;iiHi USE MARVELSEAL I 1 ROOF CEMENT Hackman, Klehfoth & Co. 1 Tunmrtt'iRfHiminmiiiniiHiiuiiiiinuiHimtHHUiiDmiMiiiinttimfifiiuimiiniii
niuRituiiliiUiiiuiiuiniatiiiiuiiuiiuuiituuiuiiiiuiuuiiiituiiimiuiiuiiiiuuiiM 1 W. Virginia and Pocahontas I f COAL
1 . !ii Independent lee and Fuel I j Quality First ; Company MlMHnnriTmummiimimmmHtitimnmnnimmmntmniiiiimi.inmmniij j """"""""irillullllMiiHiililiiliiiintiliiii'iniiiiHiilliiTiMimillimiimnnmmim
decorated by carvings. Letters cut in the stone spell Vimy Ridge, recalling cne of the big Canadian victories. Vimy Ridge, Canadians regard as the place where they gave the confident Kaiser his first fright. So the carving shows on one side of the arch a typical German head, cut in relief with the eyes blindfolded, representing the German people at this time. Opposite is the head of the Kaiser with his mustache turned down and an expression of dismay on his face. And above,
London still contains two buildings that witnessed the performance ot Shakespeare's plays during Shakespeare's life the Middle Temple hall and the hall of Gray's Inn.
LUGGAGE OF QUALITY At Prices that are Right
B27 Main St.
on a Neces-
s.ty? Have
an extra pair of Glasses. Clara M. Sweitzer, Optometrist 1002 Main St. Richmond
C'l T THIS OUT IT IS WORTH MOSEY Cut out this slip, enclose with 5c and mail it to Foley & Co., 2S35 Sheffield Av., Chicago. 111., writing your name and address clearly. You will receive in return a trial packace containing1 Foley's Honey and Tar Compound for coughs, colds and croup; Foley Kidney Pills for pains in sides and bark; rheu
matism, backache, kidney and bladder j ailments; and Foley Cathartic Tablets. ' a wholesome and thoroughly cleansing cathartic for constipation, biliousness.! headaches, and slusr-ish bowels. A. Ci. Luken Drug Co., 6:6-628 Main St. Advertisement. ' I inimttnnuiiiiliitnniMMiilliiuiiiiltfllfHtiiiifitiiiiitiiiniinntiinittlHiiiiitiruiinn j f The Bank You Can Bank fj
Upon 1 !
old and a healthier baby you would not want. I am sending you a picture of her. Everybody says, 'That is some healthy looking baby.' You have my consent to show this letter." Mrs. C. W. Benz, 131 Srd Ave., Altoona, Pa. No woman can realize the ioy and happpiness this healthy babe brought into the home of Mrs. Benz, unless they have had a like experience. Every woman who suffers from any ailments peculiar to her sex, as indicated by backaches, headaches, bearingdown pains, irregularities, nervousness and "the blues" should not rest until they have given Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound a trial. Advertisement.
Wait for Our Big Sale Oct. 8th.
Weiss Furniture Store 505-13 Main St.
DR. E. P. WEIST Special attention giveu to the treatment of Diseases of the Stomach. Intestines, and Chronic Constipation v Suite 204 K. of P. B!dg. Phone 1728
(2nd National Bank TitiiiifMiimiinattiHiitmiaiiitiiiitiiMmitiiutiMnnniniinnmiaiiiiiiiuiimiiii
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BARTEL & ROHE I 921 Main I
E i
r. Vt'niutwoillitMRiiTititmiinuiutimiiumiuiliiiiliitiftiutiiimiuilHlinMlHMHii
tiiuii!iiiiiaiiliU,ll1UUJ1)tnt,UHtum,tuutiuiiitiiitiiiiitttiiiuiiiiHiiimmiiflinT 1 Don't fail to see us if you want 1 Furniture Bargains 1 HOLTHOUSE I 1 530 Main St. I MU!HnitnnittmiiiiHtt'iii!niMmiiititHiiimittHiiiHHHiiiiiiitinttmiintfifiMiu
GOAL
Pocahontas Lump or Egg. KentuckyLump West Virginia Lump Ohio Lump, per ton
a L
$9.50 $7.50 $7.50
Mather Bros. Co.
.
Ccal, Flour, Feed J. H. MENKE 162-168 Fort Wayne Ave. Phone 2662 ;!
Good Shoes for Men and Women WESSEL SHOE CO. 718 Main St.
Reliable Automobile Accessories Oils and Tires at reasonable prices RODEFELD GARAGE West End Main St. Bridge Phone 3077
U'" iiiifc,,iiniiiititiiiiiitnijiii(H.Hiii!ininiiii'iMiiiMiiiiiiiiiimmMmm I DR. R. II. CARNES !l DENTIST Phone 2665
Rooms 15-16 Comstock Building 1 1016 Main Street f 0Pen Sundays and Evenings by I appointment. 1 iHMintl,ninntnM,,,,l,l,l,mnllniiinm!iiinTmlinniii
timmiiiniiuinmiMnftiHifMtitMitniniiHimmntmttinmHminmitiuiimintiitt
9
f O - and 5 on Time On bavmgs sfKyiJE 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 Boxea for rent
I Suits Cleaned and Pressed
I $1.50 I I PEERLESS CLEANING CO. 318 Main Street I liimniuinimniiiiitiimiittmHiinuuituiuiiitmmiitiitiiitnHtmmtiuuiiiHmiM
Yes, Building Business Is Improving i GEO. V. MANSFIELD Architect S Room 336 Colonial Bldg.
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THOR Stanley Plumbing & I 910 Main St.
WASHING I
MACHINES
IRONERS I Electric Co. j Phone 1286 I
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i " it's a Used tar You Want,
:; bee us ; Chenoweth Auto Co. Main St. Phone hzs I
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