Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 37, 13 February 1922 — Page 11
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DELTS TO STAGE CHAMPIONSHIP GAME IN COLISEUM TONIGHT Arrangements are complete for the big basketball carnival to be given by the local chapter of Phi Delts, in tbe Coliseum Monday night. Three games
of basketball will be staged, and the . Knollenbergs; Atlas vs. Atlas Spebig go of the evening will be between I cials; Richmond Baking company vs. the Richmond Phi Delta Kappas and j . . the Union City Pni Delta Kappas. furnished by Earlham .college and the This game will decide the Phi Delt j of f icialg also De furnisaed from championship of eastern Indiana. The i Earlham. first game will be a game between the Due to the inadequate space in the Business college girls team and the I high school gym spectators will not be Junior Girls' team of Richmond. The permitted to attend the game.
second game will be a basketball game on roller skates, between two teams picked from the local fraternity. The Phi Delts have put in a week of hard practice in preparation for the game and are in the best of condition for the battle. Union City is coming prepared to cop the long end of the score and are also heavily loaded, as they are determined to cop the victory. Defeated Once Before Richmond has one victory over the T-rtlM rittr laAa nnil ti - i 1 onflfirAr tn add another win over tbe Randoipn ; county lads. Union City is also deter mined to win the game and the championship, so a battle royal is expected. The locals have been putting a fine brand of game in their practice ses sions and unless something unexpected turns up will have little trouble taking the visitors' number. The team has developed a good passing game and are hitting the basket very regular. It is not known just who will stayt be game for the local Phi Delts, but will lie between the following six men. The forwards will be either Brehm, Hyde or Jessup; center, Simmons; guards, R. Harding, H. Harding. The following will be held in reserve ready to go into the game at any time they are called upon: Livingston, Weaver, Eggemeyer and Tauer. Jessup Added Jessup has been added to the Phi Delts' roster and will add considerable strength to both the scoring and defensive departments of the game. He will probably be used in one of the forward positions against Union City. Union City will present a very formidable line-up that will bear constant watching. They have been playing a fast brand of game and have lost only one game this year, that being to the local team. McGehen, forward and Metank, floor guard, are the bright lights of the teams, and the been largely through the efforts of these men. First Game. The first game of the evening will be played between the Business College girls and the Junior Girls' team of Richmond. These two teams are evenly matched and a good game is expected. This is the first time for many years that the girls have staged a basketball game, and if successful more girls' games will be staged. What is expected to attract the most- attention is the game to be played on roller skates. This has not been played for several years and it affords much amusement to the fans. The team3 will be picked from the Richmond Fhi Delts and will be captained by Burr Simmon3 and Floyd Nusbaum. The first game will be called at 1 Vioek and will be between the two TP.rls' teams, the second between the two teams on roller skates, will follow the girls' game and the big game immediately after the roller skate! game. The admission i3 55 cents. The probable line-ups for the main go: , . Richmond t Union City Brehm F McGehen Jessup F Iawler Simmons C Wilson R. Harding G Metank H. Harding G Schrieber LOCAL BOY FACTOR IN INDIANA DEFEAT BLOOMINGTOX, Ind.. Feb. 13. With Kversman, forward on the Purdue team, leading the atack,the Boilermakers handed the Indiana five a 24 to II) lacing here Saturday night in one of the bp?t played games seen on the Indiana floor this season. Purdue got away to an early start and hung up an IS to 5 count in the first half, but Indiana rallied in the last period and held the visitors to six points. Eversman was the bright light for the Purdue five, playing a good defensive and offensive game. Crowe played the best for the losers. The lineups and punimarv: " Purdue (24) Indiana 19) Eversman V Thomas Masters F Sanford Gullion C Coffey lUlweida G Sloat -ler G Hauss Substitutions Aldridge for Sloat, Bahr for Aldridge, Crowe for Thomas, ( haffee for Masters, Sloat for Bahr, Masters for Chaffee,' Aldridge for Sloat. FiHd Goals Sanford, Coffey 3, Crowe 3, Sloat. Eversman 3, Gullion 4, Masters 2, Holwerda. Foul Goals Sanford 3, Holwerda 4. MINNESOTA PULLED . OUT OF FIRST PLACE MINNESOTA. Minn., Feb. 13. Illinois pulled Minnesota out of first place in the conference standing Saturday night when the Suckers won a hard fought battle by the score of 29 to 28. The contest was close and interesting throughout. COLUMBUS, O., Feb. 13. So tight was the Michigan defense that the Ohio State five could gt very few thots at the basket and the Wolver ines romped off with a 38 to 17 vic tory over the Buckeyes here faaturday night. Ohio connected for only five field goals during the game. CHICAGO, Feb. 13. Iowa won her first conference game of the season when she defeated the Chicago five here Saturday night by the score of 27 .to 17. The Hawkeyes put up the best Jfr.ttle they have played this season. Purduo Jumped Into first place Saturday night when she defeated Indiana in a hard battle. At the same time Ifllnois was handing Minnesota a trimming. Purdue is now leading Wisconsin by one game.
Girls Asked to Attend League Meeting Tonight All girls enrolled in the Girls' Community Service basketball league are requested to be present at the meeting of the league In the Community Service rooms, Monday night at 8
o'clock. It is important that all girls who are playing in this league be present at the meeting. The league will open Tuesday night in the high school gym at 7:15 o'clock, when the Indianapolis Gloves play the WABASH FALLS UNDER DETERMINED ATTACKS OF RICHMOND TEAM Wabash high school basketball lads fell before the Richmond Hi five on the former's floor Saturday night by a 25 to 19 count. The first half stood 20 to 9 in favor of the Red and White iiwaders, but with the opening of the second period Wabash came back and out - played the Richmond team Through the consistent shooting of Yarner, the Wabash men kept in. the running in the last half, Richmond seemed to drop her fast pace which was set in the first half and showed signs of the work of the game on the previous night at Deca tur. Only five points were garnered in the last half while Wabash dropped itt-10 points. Star is Absent. Wabash was minus the star backguard who dropped several long shots in from the center of the floor against Richmond at the Coliseum last year and won the game. Yarner was the only man on the Wabash outfit to score with any regularity. Dan Rost, Harkins, Kennedy and Kessler put up a steady scoring game which was unbeatable in the initial period and the work of Greene at backguard spelled defeat for the Wabash crew. Richmond high will meet Splceland Academy on the Coliseum floor Friday night in her next game. Line-up and summary: Richmond (25) Wabash (19) Rost F Friedman Harking F Morrow Kennedy C Yarner G Snider Greene G Smith Field goals Rost 4, Harkins 3, Kennedy 2. Kessler 2, Friedman 1, Yarner 5, Marks 1. Foul goals: Richmond Kennedy 3; Wabash: Morrow 5. Substitutions: Wabash Game for Friedman, Marks for Morrow. Referee Miller, Indiana. INTEREST IS REVIVED IN BASKETBALL OF INDIANA COLLEGES INDIANAPOLIS, Feb. 13. Interest in college basketball, which has been somewhat abated by the professionalism investigations, is gradually returning. The tangle in the college situa tion is so complicated, however, by the defeat of several of the leaders that it is now certain there will be no state champion. College basketball is also overshadowed by the approach of the high school state tournament. The interscholastic games to determine the state champion will be played next Month. Indiana university has two more western conference games this week, with Michigan and Northwestern, and the Crimson followers are predicting their team will be up toward the top of the standing when these contests are finished. Meet Saturday. DePauw and Wabash will tangle Saturday night at Crawfoidsville in the second game of the season. Wabash won the first at Greencastle 25 to IS, but followers of the sport look for a cloe contest this time: The games of the Indiana college teams for the week follow: Monday Michigan and Indiana at Bloomington. Tuesday Franklin and Butler at Indianapolis. Wednesday No games scheduled. Thursday Notre Dame and Michigan Aggies at Lansing. Mch.: Muncie Normal and Indiana Dentals at Indianapolis. Friday Notre Dame and Kalamazoo at Kalamazoo; Earlham and Indiana Dentals at Indianapolis; Hanover and Central Normal at Danville; Muncie Normal and Rose Poly at Terre Haute; Valparaiso and Loyalo at Chicago. Saturday Chicago and Purdue at Lafayette; Indiana and Northwestern at p;vanston; DePauw and Wabash at Crawfordsville; Eastern Illinois State Normal and Indiana State Normal at Terre Haute; Earlham and Franklin at Franklin; Rose Poly and Oakland City at Oakland City. DePauw Has Ho Trouble To Beat Rose Poly, 6444 GREENCASTLE, Ind., Feb. 13. DePauw's offense was too strong for the Rose Poly basketball five and ran up a 64 to 14 count against the Engineers here Saturday night. White was the bright light of the game, mailing 23 of DePauw's points. The Conover brothers played the best for the losers. DECATUR. 111., Feb. 13. James Millikin, college basketball five proved no match for the fast Wabash five, here Saturday night, by dropping their game to the scarlet by the score of 49 to 16. The Illinois five had threo regulars out of the lineup, which probably accounts for the overwhelming defeat. SOUTH BEND, Ind., Feb. 13. The wonderful playing of Captain McDer mott, of Notre Dame, enabled the Irish to add another victory to its list, by defeating the Northwestern university five, by the score of 30 to 20. Mc Dermott scored six goals from the field and 10 free throws. The tusks of an African elephant often weigh as much, as 100 pounds each and reach a length of eight or nine feet.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., MONDAY, FEB. 13, 1922.
Armless Wizard of the George H. Sutton, one of the players, whose remarkable handling of encouragement to former American Sutton, in his exhibition matches, is games of his career. HABIGHS WILL CLASH WITH DETROIT RAYLS WEDNESDAY EVENING Basketball fans of Richmond and this vicinity will have the opportunity of seeing two of the fastest basketball teams in independent circles in the Middle West in action on the Coliseum floor next Wednesday night, when the Habichs of Indianapolis and the Y. M. O.'s or the old Detroit Rayls, mix in for a 40-minute battle on the hardwood court. Many players of national reputation will b seen on both teams and all are players of great experience in the net game, and are capable of putting some very fast basketball. This game will no doubt be a great treat foe the Richmond fans, as many of the players are favorites of the Richmond fans. The two teams are playing a series 1 of five games one of Which is to be played in this section, one to be played in Detroit and the other three to be played in eastern cities. In the Habich's lineup will be such men as Stonebreaker, Bacon, Johnson, Taylor and Hank Stevens. All these players are well known to the basketball fans of the city, as they have appeared here on many occasions. In the Y. M. O.'s lineup will be such players as Kavanaugh, Voss, Dermandy, Unger and Bostwick. These players have all played here before and will be remembered as being one of the best teams that appeared here last winter against the American legion five. Juddy Maloney of Notre Dame, who has been officiating for many of the Earlham games this year has been secured to referee the game, according to the announcement made by the promoters a the game. First Game The first game will be played between the Camera Shop Kewpies and possibly the Brownsville high school basketball five. If this game is not booked Manager Murrey will make every effort to book some fast team for the Kewpies to play. Tickets for the game are on sale by ' members of the Kewpies teams. The entire lower balcony is reserved and seats can be reserved at the Camera Shop, 512 Main street Reserved seats will be 75 cents and general admission 50 cents. Seats are selling fast and prospects look good for a packed house. CENTERVILLE DEFEATED SPARTANSBURG, 23 - 25 Centerville, Ind., Feb. 13. Centerville high school's basketball team defeated Spartansburg Hi on the local floor Saturday night by a 28 to 2j score. Spartansburg led at half time by 17 to 15 score. The game devel oped into a rough fray and was fast throughout. Fisher, Terry and Chambers played the best game of ball for the winners, while Hutchinson and Link put up fighting games for the losers. Lineup and summar;Centerville (28) Spartansburg (25) Fisher F Schumake Terry F Hutchison Cook C Pickett Davis G Brown Chambers.. G. . . .Tr. Link Substitutions Centerille: H. Har ris for Chambers, R. Harris for Davis. Referee Jim Harrington, Richmond. Brehm Specials Beaten In Newcastle Matches The Brehm Specials were defeated in the final contest at the 115-pound jur.'.or tournament held at Newcastle last Saturday, by the Anderson AllStars by the score of 45 to 13. The Richmond lads were out-weighed by many pounds by the Anderson lads who seemed to be much over weight and the smaller local lads could do nothing with the All-Stars. Quick reversing-qualities are one of the factors that makes electric driving power desirable for battleships. Cuticura Soap Is Ideal for The Complexion 3omp.Ofatmit.TalCTiP.25c.ew mben.orvamTm address; Cmtlcau t)xarUrlM Jtaft. X. ViUniXm
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W4t-v", -.' f.: v.: v. . .: world's greatest professional billiard a cue has been a source of great doughboys crippled during the war. said to be playing one of the best Chips and Slips WATCH HODGE! That's the tip that comes from the White Sox camp. Clarence Hodge, the Clayton, Ala. boy grabbed from Nashville during the 1920 campaign, is the gent re ferred to. Hodge and two other youngsters, Douglas McWeeney and Roy Wilkin son, are counted on to help Dick Kerr and Urban Faber materially this year Dodger was born at Clayton, July 6, 1534. He made his bow to baseball in 1915 with the Dathon. Ala., club by winning 14 and losing 12 games. He showed the stuff he is made of when he hurled a 17-inning game for the Dothan club on July Fourth, that year allowing the opposition six hits and only five bases on balls. Tough luck though. He was beaten 3 to 2. The next year he played with Mont gomerv, the following year with Lee Tannehill at Jacksonville and in 1918 started with Waco. He went to war and on his return was transferred to Nashville. . His work there that season and the early part of the next attracted the attention of the Sox scouts and in August of that year he was acquired by the Sox. He is credited with winning one and losing one game in 1920 for the Sox. His record in the Southern Association before leaving Nashville was 17 victories and 18 defeats fair enough considering that the club finished in seventh place. Ltst year he won six and lost eight games for the Sox. Mark Twain, who couldn't resist playing practical pokes, wanted to "put one over" on the preacher. After listening to one of his ser mons, he stalked up to him. grasped his hand cordially, and said: "Reverend, I certainly listened to that sermon with pleasure, but do you know that I have a book at home con tains every word of it." The preacher gasped in astonish ment and replied: "You amaze me. This is an origin al sermon. I wrote it myself last night." Mark Twain replied, with a mis Ichievous twinkle in his eye: "Well, Reverend, if you don t be lieve it, I will send you the book.". The preacher asked him to do so, and Mark Twain sent him a diction ary. , Richmond's early lead enabled it to trim the fast Wabash high school five at Wabash, Saturday night. Wabash came back strong in the second half and almost chalked up a victory The score at the. half was 20 to 9. The second peTiod saw Wabash scoring 10 points, while the Red and White chalked up only five. George Eversman, local high school graduate and basketball star, put up a wonderful game in the contest against Indiana at Bloomington, Saturday. The Purdue victory was largely due to his fine playing. When Lieutenant Macready broke the altitude record by going up 40,800 feet the cold was so intense 50 below zen) that the oxygen pipes froze. r A GREAT BOON There are many mothers, nervous and rundown in . vitality, to whom. Scott's Emulsion would be a great boon. It s the very genius ot Scdtt's Fmulsion to build strength. Scott & Bona, BloomfieM. N. JL ALSO MAKERS Ol (Tablets or Granules) for INDIGESTION -15sfc 8 -it"
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STATE HIGH SCHOOLS
WILL CONDUCT TRACK MEET HEREON MAY 20 Earlham college has been awarded the state high school track meet which is to be held "on Saturday, May 20, it was announced Saturday after a meeting of the Earlham bosfrd of trustees. It will be the third state high school meet that has been held at the college the last one being in 1919. The acceptance of the high school boards offer will necessitate the changing of the I. C. A. I. meet which was to have been held at the college on the same date. The new meeting place for the college tracksters has not been announced yet. Recent improvements of Reid Field were given as the reason for awarding the state meet to Earlham. Plans for the meet will be started immediately by the Earlham athletic commit tee composed of Prof. E. P. Trueblood, Coach Ray B. Mowe, Frank Elliott, Jesse Beals, and Miss Clara Comstock. Spring Football. Spring football practice will be started at Earlham Monday under the direction of Assistant Coach Higgins with the idea of giving the new men the chance to learn the fundamentals of the football game. Practice will be held under the direction of Coach Higgins three times a week, Monday, Wednesday and Friday afternoons. It is planned to have lecture work inside on very bad days. The work will con sist chiefly in drilling the men in the different plays and in practicing the rudiments of the game. It is hoped in this way to develop a nucleus with which Coach Mowe can begin advanced work early next fall. Five home games are included in the 1922 football schedule as announced by Coach Mowe. Football Schedule, 1922. Oct. 7 Dayton, here. Oct. 14 Rose Poly, here. " Oct. 21 Butler, there. Oct. 28 Hanover, here. Nov. 4-Muskingham, there. Nov. 11 -Kalamazoo, here. Nov. 18 Transylvania, here( Lexington, Ky.) Nov. 23 Thanksgiving Day, Franklin, there. LEBANON IS NO MATCH FOR EATON BASKETEERS EATON, O., Feb. 13. Eaton high school defeated the Lebanon, Ohio, high school basketball five on the Lebanon floor Saturday night by the score of 28 to 17. Eaton jumped into the lead at the ope$ z of the game and never was headed from then on. The first half ended with Eaton leading !
Dy ine score 01Z8 10 1. , not include private gifts and provisSherer and Nottingham led in thejions. it not be the part of attack for the Eaton lads, with Sherer;inteIlirence to reduce this awful ex-
making 12 points and Cottingham making 10. Dakin was the mainstay of the Lebanon five. Their offense was built around him. He made 9 points. The lineups and summary: Eaton (28) Lebanon (17) Sherer F Dakin Cottingham F Fisher Mclntyre C Toyme Walton G Til ton Watters . . ; G Warrick Substitutions Nixon for Tilton. Field Goals Sherer 5, Cottingham 5, Mclntyre 2, Walton 1, Dakin 4, Fisher 3, Toyme 1. Foul Goals Sherer 2, Dakin 1. Referee Shultz, Wittenburg. LEAGUE TO MEET The Community Service basketball league will npet in the Community Service rooms in. the K. of P. building Monday night at 7 o'clock. Managers of teams will not be permitted to sign any new players for the remainder of the season. The teams must finish the season with the rosters an nounced last year. AN OPEN LETTER TO OUR PEOPLE Kegarding a New Health Discovery Made at One of Uur Leading Medical Colleges. It will interest the people to know that leading medical men of the country have for some time" been advocating dietetic treatment for weak, nervous, run-down, anemic conditions, for feeble old people, convalescents and delicate, ailing children rather than medicine. Nutritional Science has now discovered an easy way of supplying the strength-creating, life-giving elements lacking in our daily food for there has been tested and approved at one of America's greatest Medical Colleges a Nutritive Tonic Tablet called SUSTO which contains, in concen trated form, all the Vitamines of1 veast. rice, ee-srs mill.- tnu-otVior with I beef protein, nuclein and iron. Therefore, if you need strength. lack energy, are nervous, anemic, run i flown, tnin and ailing, SUSTO will nourish the shrunken tissues, create strength, build up shattered nerves and energy. If you try it for one month, at a cost of 10 cents a day, and you are not in better health every way, weigh more, and feel stronger, your money will be returned. For sale by Clem Thistlethwaite. Advertisement.
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EVERY COMMUNITY SHOULD DEAL ADEQUATELY AND COMPREHENSIVELY WITH ITS PROBLEMS
F.d!tor Tint Thio l h rle or articles deallBK with noclal prolilpinn on the theory that each eoramunlly nhnuM deal intelllnjemly nod eomprehenNively with it prohlems. Prevention, rather than cure, In demanded. The old saying: "One half of the world does not know how the other half lives," does not' Justify the ignorance of the one-half.' It simply states a fact without excuse or apology. When a sensitive : pel son investigates this statement and finds it to be only too true, he feels like a condemned criminal, because he realizes that his complacency made tbe coinnet of such a statement possible. There should be a reinimum stand ard below which no huoian being should permit another human being to fall, or if he fall, to continue to lie there degraded and miserable. We may not realize it, but the condition of the other half reacts on us for the very simple reason that society is an organism and when one part suffers all other .parts suffer with it. . - ,t Ignorance No Excuse Ignorance concerning the other half is no excuse because it is easily pos- ' sible to be informed on the status of that half. Surveys, when made, confer responsibility on the surveyors be cause a survey discloses needs aust asi a physician's diagnosis discloses disease and determines its nature and degree. It would be a blot utron any physician's reputation if, after having diagnosed a case, he should walk away without attempting to cure or relieve the sufferer. So, if after we have read the facts pertaining to the other half we make no attempt to improve its condition we shall stand condemned. It is only the part ,of intelligent selfishness to studv the causes- of poverty, crime, and disease. From a financial standpoint, if from no other, it is only wisdom to protect ourselves from all three of these terrors which menace society. Every community is a center in which crime, disease, and poverty breed and from which their spawn spreads. We - have comparatively few of these social blemishes in our community, but when we look at the state institutions which house or confine the vicious, the tauures, ana tne wreoKage of every county the totals are appalling. There are 20 state institutions in Indiana whose population one year ago was about 12,000 souls. Cost Four Million. , The cost of providing food, clothings, custodial and other care was nearly $4,000,000. New buildings cost over half a million more. The total amount spent by the state and . its counties on crime, disease, and poverty reached the enormous sum of $6,000,000. And, remember, this does pense, even if we are not concerned with human wastage? The question is: "How shall we reduce it?" There is a way out if we will follow it. If we can prevent or reduce crime, poverty, and disease at the center we shall automatically reduce the total at the circumference. It is the business of each community to put its house in order and keep it in order as if it were all that there is to society. " " Efficiency is generally at the lowest point ii the curve in the average community. Efficiency increases in proStomach Upset, Gas, Gas, Gas "Diapepsin" "Pape's Diapepsin" ends indigestion, heartburn in five minutes. Sour, gassy, upset stomach, acidity, dyspepsia; when the food you eat fer ments into gases and stubborn lumps; your head aches and you feel sick and miserable, that's when you realize the quick magic of Pape's Diapepsin. If your stomach is in a continuous revolt if you can't get it . regulated try Pape's Diapepsin. It's so needless to have a bad stomach! Make your no-pt moot a favrito fnnrl mpnl (!i pn
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PAGE ELEVEN.
portion to the size of the area involved. The average community regards its disorders as negligible and adopts a policy of false economy conceining them but right here is where the greatest vigilance should be exercised in order to head off and root. out these disorders before they outgrow human control. Starts in Community. It is the community which is the fountain-head of the supply which ultimately reaches the state institutions and then the whole state has to assume the burden, greatly increased, that should have been borne by its communities. The community pays in the end, anyhow, but it woud have to pay less if it would show greater care in the handling of its problems. But, crjme, disease, and poverty should be combatted before they become community problems; they shouldjbe combatted in the home. It ought 'to be self-evident that every ward of the state and of every community within the state is somebody's relative. This makes the problem indivifiual and personal. The wayward girl need not have been sent to Clermont or the unruly boy to Plainfield if the home had functioned. Even when they came before the judge of the juvenile court there was still a chance if Mr. Good Citizen had only known it. He could have acted as a volunteer probation officer He could have been a big brother to the boy a d his wife a big sister to the girl, but Mr. Good Citizen could not be made to see that side of the question. He prided himself on the fact that his children had always behaved themselves and were a credit to the community. Let Mr. Weak Neighbor look after his own tribe. But, the bills come back to Mr. Good Citizen in the shape of increased taxes and a polluted social atmosphere. If good citizens will not give a little time they will have to give money for the erection and maintenance of reformatories. The problem Is not solved when the community sends an offender to a state institution, it is aggravated and augments until what was a possibility at the beginning becomes an impossibility at the end. The Social Service bureau, through its division of social education and publicity, sent a questionnaire some time ago to the various heads of the state institutions which are identified with Wayne county and the replies to this questionnaire will be published from time to time. The public. will have an opportunity of reading the statements and conclusions of persons who are giving their lives to the salvaging of humanity. Their views are based on long experience and actual contact with conditions and the recommendations that they make to this community are worthy of serious study. Coughs and Colds That "Hang On" To Get Rid of Them Take Father John's Medicine If you cannot get rid of your cough or cold - if in spite of what you are doing for it, it still hangs on, you are in very real danger. The longer you have this irritating cough or long-standing cold, the more your resisting power is lowered and the greater need for a wholesome food tonic. Take Father John's Medicine. It soothes and heals the breathing passages, drives off impurities and actuallyrebuilds wasted flesh and strength. - Advertisement. DON'T EXPERIMENT WITH COLDS It is dangerous. Take Father John's Medicine, which has had 65 years' success. Advertisement. A Clean Shave Gives you new pep. 5 skilled barbers Harter's Shop In the Murray Bldg. CARL C. YOUNG We Call and Deliver 8 No. 10th Phone 1451 Now All Merchandise 1/2 Price Confidential Charge Accounts A New Plan WHEN - 712 Main Just received new shipment Metal Girdles ..... 98c in all the new shades. Rapp's Cut Price Co. 525 - 529 Main St. Bender's PURE Ice Cream Yeast Vitamine Tablets 89c
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