Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 46, Number 287, 14 October 1921 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., FRIDAY, oil 11, ISttl.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM ? . : ; , AND SUN-TELEGRAM
Published Every Evening Except Sunday- by ; Palladium Printing Co. ralladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Pest Office at Richmond, Indiana, as I I,:.. , Second-Class Mail Matter. ' ' MEMBER of the associated press The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the us for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or riot otherwise credited in this paper, and also the local n"s published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
: Armistice Day Celebration Veterans of the World war are rapidly comyteting arrangements for the Armistice day celebration, to vvhich they have invited Gov- McCray. This day is assuming large proportions in the American consciousness and will soon rank with the Fourth of July in the popularity of its observance. There is a good reason for it, too. If Indedependence day signifies the establishment of i new theory of government in which the rights of the people are paramount to every consideration, Armistice day commemorates the perpetuation Of those principles, not only nationally, but also internationally.
Besides culminating one of the most san
guinary wars in the history of mankind, Armistice day also signalizes much more emphatically the downfall of a system which exalted might above right and advocated force for the attain
ment of every purpose, irrespective of the moral
equation.
The celebration this year will not be as pretentious as it was last year, but nevertheless the real significance of the day will be stressed emphatically. The parade of former sen-ice men
will recall the days when the young men were called to arms, and the pageant will direct attention to their call defense of the flag. The presence of Indiana's chief executive in, Richmond will accentuate the importance of the occasion to every citizen. American Legion posts throughout the country will on that day again call on their com
munities to renew their pledge of loyalty. The!
patriotic impulses of our population will be stimulated anew to cherish the priceless principles of
free government under which we enjoy more! blessings than ever have been known in the history of mankind. The very enjoyment of freedow sometimes leads to an underestimation of the boon and a failure to live up to the requirements of free men and free women. Free government is maintained from within and defended against attack from without by an alert citizenship which understands the principles of our system and is willing to sacrifice treasure and blood to maintain them. Independence day and Armistice day lend themselves admirably to a renewal of this faith in our institutions and a re-dedication of our service to the nation. Tremendously significant also is the opening of the disarmament conference on that day. Every patriot will feel that
the well are 01 our own beloved country is in
volved in the deliberations of a body wThich has been called together by our own president.
Armistice day this year is therefore doubly significant. If the World war was fought to end
warfare, surely mankind hopes the conference will succeed in allaying some causes for war and in diminishing the financial demands which are made for the maintenance of armies and navies on a gigantic scale.
Led
oux
By FREDERIC J. HASKIN
WASHINGTON, D. C. Oct. 14. He Is the man who walks the streets with a white umbrella decorated with red hearts and the legend "lift up your heart," who puts the unemployed on the auction block, stripped to the waist, and sells them to the highest bidder; who gets himself onto the first pages
of newspapers everywhere he goes a
picturesque sentimentalist and visionary with a gift for self-advertising, you would say.
But when you learn that the same man buried himself in obscurity on the East Side for five years in order to study the poor, you are inclined to admit "that he must be sincere. And when you learn that he lived there on five dollars a week, and yet kept himself in such good health that he could beat a young athlete in a two-mile foot race, although he is 47, you have to admit that he is a man of some practical ability. When you find In addition that he has at the State Department an enviable record as a consul at Prague, Austria, that he has been a successful efficiency engineer, that he did highly commended work during the war for the War Camp Community Service and the Labor Bureau of the War Department, and that he has been successfully employed as a professional organizer in several other enterprises, you realize that he cannot be a visionary in the usual sense of the term.
ine mystery ot ms personality is
increased when you learn that he not
Musings for the Evening A horse in New Jersey chews tobacco, but he has demonstrated his horse sense thus far by refusing to drink any of that New Jersey hootch. There Is said to be ho more automobile stealing in Detroit. Perhaps everybody there has one.
SYNOPSIS OF THE OPERA. Suetonius, whose wife Julia is the daughter of Tiberius, loves Drusus. The one person in all of Rome who does not know this is Suetonius. Drusuu is famous for his frivolity and dissipation. Julia is beautiful and likes undisciplined frivolity. . Tiberius, her father, gives a feast and offers Drusus a golden cup filled with wine and a little poison. Julia rfuspects that the beverage is noxious and tries to prevent Drusus from drinking it. Suetonius then realizes that which all of Rome knew and rushes forward and strangles Julia. Drusus drinks the poison when he sees Suetonius strangle Julia. Suetoniu kills himself with his dagger when he sees that Julia is dead. Marcel Steinbrugge.
' New York man shot in the lunch room, according to report a vital Epot. Elephants live to be a hundred years old, says a scientist. But they look a hundred years old all their lives.
. CONFESSIONS OF A CYNIC.
" I don't take any more stock in yarns j
to the effect that Lenine and Trotzky have fallen out. , I would just as soon eat a motorman's glove as a piece of tripe. I have a riotous friend who says he never wears derby hats because they are so hard to sleep in. I see they are predicting the end of the worid again, but we probably will be out of luck as usual.
TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams. Author of "You Can", "Take It". "Up" LOST THINGS Not very many of us appreciate in proper proportion the many thing3 which make up our happiness. Nor do we realize the importance of the contributing elements to our success in life until they begin to leave us and motion, as they go, that we are being left poorer and weaker. We are inclined to pay little attention to our health so long as we have no discomfort and no pains. Nature is very patient. Our bodies were made to bear great abuse. And Opportunity is a most patient felkjw, camping on our doorstep for. years before he gets discouraged enough to leave us. But when that is lost which ought rightfully to be ours for a long time, we open our eyes and call in vain. Lost things leave but an echo and a memory! Be kind to your body. Have an inward reverence for all its marvelous powers. And how it will repay you how strong will you face every great-call made upon you. I believe in expression of appreciation to people while they are able to be made happy by it. Give your flowers while you may see the smiles reflected from them. A gentleman told me today of a man whose wife had gone from him and he was so grieved that he went to a florist and wanted the most expensive flowers placed about the silent grave where she rested. But he knew so little about flowers that he didn't know what kind to order for, said he: "I never gave her any flowers while she lived and I have no idea what she liked." Find out what will make the world happier and better by giving it something! If you do not use the talents that are given you, they will wither and die. Or more alert ones than you will see them idle in your lap and will take them from you. Of all lost things. Time is probably the most to be regretted unless you have squeezed every last ounce of value from its golden minutes. And lost opporunnities they never come back in the same form or with the same appeal. Be kind and generous and helpful today. Do the best you know today. Wait upon no man or event. Give while you have something to give. Save that you may have to give. But do not spend any time in regretting the lost things. Make up for their loss by planting new things in their places.
Rippling Rhymes By Walt Mason
THE AUTO TRIP. When starting on, an auto trip, be sure your tires are good, and see that all you spark plugs zip, with pep, beneath the hood. Have ample small change in your pouch, a baskerful of lunch; and oh, be doubly sure no grouch is going with the bunch. Be sure the crankcase has its oil, the best that you can buy; it's wrong to make a motor toil with all its bearings dry; your extra tire should he supplied with eighty pounds of air, and if a sorehead wants a ride, say, "No the walking's fair. You may be fixed for every chance that motoring can spring, be fixed to ride in circumstance, as happy as a king; but if a grouch is in the crowd, your glee will fade away, your weary head will soon be bowed in trouble and dismay. For if a puncture stops your bus, as punctures sometimes do, the grouch will make a mighty fuss, and many rags he'll chew. And if perchance you lose your way, when night is coming on, the grouch will wring his hands and bray, and keep it up till dawn. And if the rain begins to fall from black clouds overhead, the spineless grouch will whine and bawl until you wish him dead. You and your manly friends might smile when divers things go wrong, enjoying every outdoor mile, if Grouch were not along; you take him at a frightful cost when on a trip you go, for he is like the bitter frost that blights all things that grow.
Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Yean Ago Today
Answers to Questions (Any reader can ffet the answer to any question by writing: The Palladium Information Bureau. Frederick J. Tlaskin. director, Washington. D. C. This offr applies strlrtly to information. The Viurcau do not Kive advice on lesral. medical and financial matters. It does
not attempt to settle domestic troubles, nor to undortake exhaustive research on any subject. Writ your question plainly and hrlefly. Give full name and address and enclose two cents In stamps for return postage. All replies are tent direct to the inquirer.) Q How many Christians are there in the Philippines?.!. C. A. A. Out of a population of 10,350.-
fitO. there are 0,105,272 Christians, the non-Christians numbering 8F5,?68, most of whom are Mohammedan. Q. Who is the oldest coach in football and who is the youngest? G. K. A. Coach Yost of the University of Michigan is the oldest coach in the big colleges. He Is now 50 year3 of age. Chick Meehan, the Syracuse coach. Is the youngest, being only 2S years old. . Q. Please describe a boomerang. B. H. ' A. Boomerangs are made of the green acacia w ood or some other hard tree, treated with fire. They average
2'2 feet In length and 2'g inches in width. The boomerang is convex on one side and flat on the other, with a sharp edge along the convex curve. Q. What kind of nests do wild cats make? P. R. J. A Wild cats inhabit dens and lairs among rocks, in hollow trees or dense thickets, without any special preparation. Q. How may playing cards bo cleaned ? -R. R. M. .. , ' A. Soiled playing cards may be Hranrd by rubbing over with a cloth dipped in spirits of camphor. Q. What ran be done to prevent a maid from cracking and chipping dif-hes by hitting them on water faucets? E. A. V. . A Trovide a stool of suitable height and ha-e the maid seated while washing dishes. This eaves a great deal Of energy and she will transfer the
Who's Who in the Day's News
MORTIMER E. COOLEY. Just as he is ending forty years
of
After Dinner Stories The wealthy city man had taken a fancy to visit his village birth-place.
"Ah, me! There is the little red
schoolhouse, and yonder is the old church. How well I remember them! But the dear, old, familiar faces are
service at the University of Michigan. ;gone; not one remains to recall those
broken only by distinguished service
in the Spanish-American war, Dean
Elwyn
Mortimer
' .v?'.mv
M..COOLEV
political, problem?
I
Cooley has been
chosen by the organised engineers of America to take up the task laid down by Herbert Hoover. In announcing Mr. Cooley's election as president of the American engineering council of the Federated American Engineering Societies the executive board of the council outlined an extensive program of public service
happy "
The oldest Inhabitant approached !
with the remark: "Ye're Bill Judd, ain't ye? I knew ye the minute I set eyes onto ye. I trusted your father for a codfish in 1883 an' if ye've got the money handy I'd be obleeged if ye'd settle for it." A movie actor was up before the bar of justice charged with bigamy. "I'll give you one chance to explain yourself," said the judge. "The records clearly show that you married jour second wife a month before you were divorced from your first. How about it?" "It's this way, your honor," returned
me aeienaant, unperturoed. ' In our
The provision of sanitary
cups by the water works . was the most
important step advised oy ine mem
bers of the Wayne county Anti-Tuberculosis Society at their regular meet
ing in the Masonic temp.3. Several measures of interest were considered, and plans for the work during the fall and winter were determined upon. Owing to the lack of financial support for the society in this county, the meeting decided not to take advantage of the offer made by the state society, at
that time, and therefore would not con-
sider the erection of shacks at Reid Memorial hospital for the treatment of tuberculosis. Some members brought
out the splendid opportunities that ex-i
isted for lodges and churches to help along the work by watching their members and notifying the society when anyone contracted the illness.
only has great influence over the unemployed workers who are his special Interest, but that he also has the sup
port and friendship of such men as Arthur Woods,, of New York, Mayor Peters, of Boston, Claude Bragdon, the architect, and many others prominent in official and professional life. To be
able to reach and impress such a variety of persons certainly shows an unusual individuality. President Harding, after an interview with him, told
Ledoux that he considered his work "the greatest in the world." Many
laugh at this man who merely hear of
his exploits in getting publicity, but all seem to feel his force and earnestness
when they meet him. , A Mystical Philosopher. -To this account of his qualities and achievements. It must be added that Urbain Ledoux is a professing mystic. Indeed, without that knowledge you cannot hope to understand this strange man. "angel of the unemployed," who
has filled so much space in the newspapers recently, and has yet remained personally almost unknown. Ledoux believes in a thing which he calls cosmic consciousness, and that is all that he believes in. He is not a Socialist
or radical of -any kind. He has no recognized creed religious, political, or economic to offer. That is one reason, of course, why he is acceptable to all classes of men, and is commended by radical and conservative, capitalist and worker, at the ' same time. Iedoux does not believe that institutions and politics are worth worrying about. He believes that man is cap
able of a higher grade of consciousness than most men have yet attained, and that his only progress will come from education in the broadest sense, which will help him to come into that
consciousness. "I recognize no sin except the waste of energy," he explained, when he was interviewed in his little hall bedroom at a local hotel. War strife and violence of all kinds, personal and national he regards as waste of energy. All good comes from acting upon the motive of love from friendly co-operation: This friendly co-operation will completely replace strife of all kinds when the human race has reached its real maturity of mind. There will be no unem
ployment for example, because unem-j ployment is obvious and preventable J waste of energy. All life he sees as ; one vast stream of immortal energy in which every individual is capable of functioning as an harmonious and necessary part. The problem of life is the proper direction of that stream of energy. In the philosophy which Ledoux expounds speaking often in a sort of blank verse, with his eyes closed there are traces of primitive Christianity, of the teachings of Moses, Mohammed, Buddha, of the sacred books of the Hindoos, of Confucius and of the great American poet, Walt Whitman, whose works Ledoux says that he knows by heart. He does not deny that his inspiration comes from all of these. He says that all of the great religious teachers and the greatest poets were men who had achieved cosmic consciousness and who tried to impart it to their fellow men. That he regards as his mission too, but he hastens to assure you that he does not regard himself as either a prophet or a poet. He seems eager to escape the i rpnntp nf hpinc nna m n ra nmilaur
crillKlllg rnpeciah. He savs that hi n-nriis are
nothing, what he does everything. He proposes to preach a gospel by acting it by giving the example of a life
devoted to unselfish service. He has nothing, he says, and he wants nothing. He gave up a successful professional career for his present work. He wears cast-off clothing given him by friends and never knows
! where his next dollar Is coming from, i He has a wife and three grown chil- ', dren, all of whom he has taught to Ifupport themselves. He believes that
the individual who devotes himself to the feeding of another individual creates one loafer and one slave. He does not believe that any one should be a dependent after childhood.
Ledoux is perhaps our only public
figure who speaks to his interviewers
in a sort of poetry this:
He Speaks In Meter. "My mission is to lift up the hearts of the down-hearted, and to bring a greater measure of love and beauty into the lives of the long denied. For
that purpose I have become a servant
Cincinnati Zoo Manager Will Sponsor Similar Attraction at Newcastle CINCINNATI O., Oct. 14. Sol A. Stephan, general manager of the Cincinnati zoo, is to be the sponsor of the first too in Indiana at Newcastle. M. C Goodwin, a. merchants? ki1i
f . A , VOUV For example jMslted the Cincinnati zoo yeetenlay
in order to obtain "pointers" on the establishment of an animal park. Citizens of his city voted a tax levy and JL900 remaining in the war ahest was turned over to a special committee
of the servants, serving the hewers of jbdeh will establish a municipal park
of 150 acres as a soldiers' memorial. The. zoo will be a part of the park attraction. At the invitation of Mr. Goodwin, Mr. Stephan agreed to prepare plans and specifications for the animal park and to visit it for the opening, some time next year. Mr. Goodwin said
wood and the drawers of water the builders of the pyramids." Whether you like it or not, you have to admit that it is pretty good free verse. Ledoux is a big, barrel-chested, athletic-looking man, with a head of classical design, and a smile that never
wavers. He says that he is never un
happy because "he wants nothing and'seYer citizens have offered to donate
so cannot be disappointed. His pres
ence is undeniably impressive and magnetic. It would be hard for any one to overlook him or laugh at him. He is widely read. He is a vegetarian, uses no tobacco, alcohol or condiments. He says that he sleeps but two to four hours a day, and that he has cut
his sleep down gradually from eight hours, as he has eliminated from hi3 life the burden of personal desire and strife. He is a voluminous and eloquent talker, with a mind of astonishing variety. He will tell you a funny incident, outline a practical plan for a home for the nuemployed, and recite to you his poetico-mystical version of the
evolution of life from the protozoon to cosmic consciousness, all within an hour. Whatever else he may be, he is unique and interesting. What has he accomplished? One thing, undoubtedly. He has brought home to Americans the fact of unemployment the misery and waste of it. He has made them see it, both as a human catastrophe and as an economic problem, more vividly than ever before.
au.uiaw io me new zoo as soon as buildings are ready to receive them.
GIVE VALPARAISO $10,000. VALPARAISO. Ind.. Oct. 14 J. Lowenstine & Sons of this city yesterday presented Valparaiso university with a personal check for $10,000 as a gift. The untversity is In the midst of a bond sale campaign for the institution again. The Lowenstines were offered bonds for their $10,000 gift but refused to take them.
BIG EATERS GET KIDNEY TROUBLE
"Gets-It" Ends All Corns
Take Salts at First Sign of Bladder Irritation or Backache.
embracing social (business we never take the scenes in
econimical and technical
Lessons in Correct English
Don't Say: It's NICE to be out of doors. It's NICE AND WARM out here. I EXPECT he went yesterday. I ANTICIPATE it will rain to morrow. On a pullman one SHOULD REMUNERATE the porter. Say: It's PLEASANT to be out of doors. Irs DELIGHTFULLY warm out here. I THINK he went yesterday. I EXPliCT it will rain tomorrow. , On a pullman one SHOULD PAY (or "TIP") the porter.
the order they appear on the screen sometimes the last scene is taken first. If you'll only let me call up the continuity man at our studio, I'm sure he can straighten it out."
The American men and women must guard constantly against Kidney trouble, because we eat too much and all our food is rich. Our blood is filiyd with uric acid which the kidneys strive to filter out; they weaken from overwork; become sluggish; the eliminative tissues clog and the result is kidney trouble, bladder weakness and a general decline in health. When, your kidneys feel like lumps of lead; your back hurts or the urine is cloudy, full of sediment, or you are obliged to seek relief two or three times during the night; if you suffer with sick headache or dizzy, nervoua spells, acid stomach, or you have rheumatism when the weather is bad. get from your pharmacist about four ounces of Jad Salts; take a tablaspoonful in a glass of water before breakfast for a few days and your kid
Just As Good For Calluses. Back If It Fails.
Money
An Easy Way For Thin People to Put on
Flesh and Gain Weight
Strong, Straightforward Advice to
Thin, Undeveloped Men and Women
If you are thin, scrawny and unde
veloped, if your face Is peaked and
your cheeks and neck exhibit unsightly hollows, it's almost certain that your nervous system is at the bottom of the trouble. You can eat three, yes four, substantial, fat producing meals a day, but as long as your stomach has an insufficient supply of nerve force this food you eat will pas3 out of the body with little if any benefit. In order to assimilate properly the nourishing food you eat and convert It into healthy tissue and fat the nerves that control the process of digestion, and assimilation must be put in first-class shape and until that is done you might just as well quit trying to put on flesh. Your system is starving for something that will turn the food you eat into healthy staythere flesh and it can only be done in one way by correcting faulty nervous digestion. Thin, nervous, run-down people, however, with impoverished blood and half starved looks are hailing with delight a quick and certain maker of solid flesh called EVANS' TRIPLE
PHOSPHATES that is unequalled for
repairing faulty digestion and correcting nervous digestive troubles. In
fact, the makers of Evans Triple Phos
phates guarantee that one month's treatment will, increase your weight by several pounds and within ten days make you feel like a new being, full of ambition, vigor and a desire to accomplish things. Dafler Drug Company, A. G. Luken Drug Company and leading druggists everywhere have agreed to supply Evans' Triple Phosphates and guarantee it to do just what is claimed for it or money refunded. Caution: While Evans Triple Phosphates accomplishes wonders in nervous digestive troubles and as a general nerve tonic, it should not be taken by anyone who objects to a few additional pounds of solid stay-there fresh. Advertisement.
esinol
wwvviiin ana nesting Means a Restful Nights "No wakeful hours of itching torment if ' you apply freely this
cooung ointment and bandage lightly.
tonight ens the healing
The Miller-Kemper Co. "Everything To Build Anything" LUMBER MILLWORK BUILDERS' SUPPLIES Phones 3247 and 3347
Farmers' Nat'L Grain Assn. Inc. Dealers In High Grade Coal PHONE 2549 Old Champion Mill, N. 10th St.
DUSTY'S SHOE tfCBUlLDEBS
S04f8QSt
opnsrrt ihe KAHftOAB srm.
ft. 9 St.
SO STEPS X7t Of (utsomct f0 IS44
STORES
Thirty seconds after you touch the corn with his liquid corn remover the jabbing, stabbiDg pain of it stops, for all time.
Kfl? f-v T.'iT1!-'-" -yg ".'""II
Rh
euma
Conquers Rheumatism
It is an established fnrt that one tea.
dishes from the sink to draining board j spoonful of Rheuma taken once a day
at an elevation that does not endanger
them. Q. How much paper is made an nually? H. T. P.
A. The world s annual paper pro-
for a very short time has driven all
the pain and agony from thousands of racked, crippled and despairing rheumatics. While powerful. EratifTin and
A Tough Situation "My wife and four children were dependent on me for their living. My stomach and liver trouble of five years had made me despondent as no medi
cine seemed to help me. and I was tiey3 will then act fine. This famous gradually wasting away. It was a salts is made from the acid of grapes
tough situation. My cousin in Colum-!and lemon juice, combined with lithia,
dus wrote me about having taken Mayr's Wonderful Remedy and advised me to try it. I am now feeling better than for fifteen years." It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrhal mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflammation 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 Drug Co. and druggists everywhere. Advertisement.
auction is now about 8.000.000 tons. quick-acting Rheuma is harmless, and It is estimated that for every 10 years gives lasting and blessed relief althere Is an Increase In demand of, most at once. The magic name has
About 25 per cent.
reached nearly every hamlet, and
TRACY'S Coffee Fresh Roasted Daily and You'll Like It
q jf a vessel goes into the Pana-i there are hundreds of druggists who
ma Canal as rar as Gatun Lake ana can leu you or the good it has done then returns, doeB it pay toll once-in some of the very worst cases, or twice? T. S. I If you are tortured with rheumatism
t a Vessels returning from Gatun i (any form) get a bottle of Rheuma';
u9
rannl. without massing through it does not ria you or all rheumatic
the lock at the other end, are charged I suffering your money will be returned.
we seii skinners the highest grade Macaroni, Spaghetti, Egg Nood3e and yother Macaroni Products,
and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate clogged kidneys; to neutralize the acids in the urine so it is no longer a source of irritation, thus ending bladder disorders. Jad Salts is inexpensive; cannot injure, makes a delightful effervesce'!, lithia-water beverage, and belongs in
every home, because nobody can make a mistake by having a good kidney flushing any time. Advertisement.
Simple A. A. B, C No corn, hard or soft, is too old or too deeply rooted to resist "Gets-It." Immediately it dries and shrivels, the eges loosen from the true flesh and
soon ' you can peel it right off with your fingers as painlessly as you trim your nails. Don't coddle corn pests. Don't nurse and pamper them. Don't cut and trim them. REMOVE them with "GETS-IT." Costs a trifle at any drug store. Mid. by E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago.. Sold in Richmond by A. G. Luken & Co., Clem Thistlethwaite, Dafler Drug Co., Yes & Now Drug Co. Advertisement.
All Scrap Tobacco 3 for
25c
New York Dental Parlors Union National Bank Building, 8th and Main, at the "Sign ot the Clock". Open evenings. Phone 1378.
i"imiiiininuiinniiiiMiiiiniiiiuiuiuimmnnniiiiuiimniuiHiniiiuHiinuim( I JOHN H. NIEWOEHNERl
Sanitary and I 819 S. G St.
Heating Engineer I Phone 1823 I
RiMnmiinmtittiiniuiniiiiuiiuiniiiiiiiiiiiuiiTfimnfiftiuiitiuiiiiuHMiuinuiiiii
WATCH REPAIRING ff you want your watch to run and
depend on good time, bring
'hem to us. A specialty on; ligh-grade watch repairing.! J. & O. watch inspector. HOMRIGHOUS 1
1021 Main St. Phone 18671
ffnitiiuiiMniiiiNiliitiiniliuilllllllliiiiiuiiuiiiiiniuiKilitliiliMiliuiiiitmiiuKirI VESTA BATTERIES I for Super-Service I Piehl Auto Electric Co. I 1024 Main ' Phone 1891 1 iiiiiiniiiiiMiitiiiiiiit!iiimiftiiiiiiiii!iiiti!iitmiitiniMiitiiitiiitiiitiuiiiiiKiiiMfiiin
For More Pep, Use I: RICHMOND GASOLINE;: More Miles per Gallon Richmond Oil Co. 6 N. 6th and 6th and Ft. Wayne
Now is the Time to Buy Coal MATHER BROS. Co.
HAVE YOU TRIED "FAULTLESS FLOUR" Ask Ycur Grocer Milled by a perfected process
Machine Wcrk, Air Compressors, Sasollne Engines, Motors; Overhauling Trucks and Cars. Richmond Air Compressor Co. N. W. First and Railroad
Late Fall and Early Winter Furnishings for Men. LICHTENFELS 1010 Main Street
; If It's a Used Car You Want i See Us Chenoweth Auto Co. 1107 Main St. Phone 1925
QUALITY FOOTWEAR for Men, Women and Children
SHOE
STQPB
I nnfuiiHitnHHntnHtMmttniMtuniHtinitmmiiittnnHtnitfttmnHiiuiiininHiri i
1 t
BUY COAL NOW We have the right coal at the right price. Jellico & Pocahontas Lump. ANDERSON & SONS N. W. 3rd & Chestnut Phone 3121
We Save You Money on Shoes WESSEL SHOE CO. 718 Main St
J Voss Electric Washers
WM. F. KLUTER, Agent Gates Half-Sole Tire Station
1134 Main Phone 1595
MwmtiiraiiiuHimiiuitminiiiMHniiiuinuriiiiiimMiuimuiimtuMtiiniuuimiit
E.P.Weist,M.Dj
JSlectro - Therapy, Medi
cine, Electric Light and 'Shower Baths, Massage.
15 Years' Experience Treating Chronic Diseases Experienced Nurse Attendants K. of P. Building Suite 204 Phone 172S
Oldsmobile Four Touring $1250 Delivered Richmond CARROL & BROWN 1026 Main Phone 2512
mHntmftiMtinmimmitfwtiHtiitfninmimiitmitmiiMmniiminmHiHinifmtf Are your loved ones protected? If 1 not, Investigate life insurance I I TODAY I
KELLY & KECK
(Insurance Service) Phone 2150 901", Main
s
St. I
2nimnmininnnHitinimiunniinninmiu(iminniiiinniiinimniiiniHniti
I DR. R. H. CARNESI I DENTIST Phone 2665 1 g Rooms 15-16 Comstock Building I 1016 Main Street , 1 Open Sundays and Evenings by I I appointment. I iiiiiiimttimiiffiMHHiHtmiiuiiiiiiimtiii:HtiMiiiiniintiiHiiiiiHiiiiiiitiiuiuinijt
Teeth Tell Tales Free Examination DR. J. A. THOMSON DENTIST Phone 2930 Murray Theatre Building Open Evenings and Sunday
1
ioii for one passage only.
! Advertisement.
"""'iiMiiHuiMniiiiiiiHiiiniiiuniiumiiniiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiuiiiumiinimiiii
