Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 42, 18 February 1922 — Page 6

PAGV SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGKAM, RICHMOND,' IND., SATURDAY, FEB. IS,

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM

AND SUN-TELEGRAM

Published r Every. Evening Except Sunday by

, ' Palladium Printing Co.

Palladium BulIdiBg.-North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at . the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, aa

- Second-Class Mall Matter. meVbeh op thb associated press Th AaisM'atul Prui tm -1imtvelv entitled to the US

for republication of-all newi dispatches credited to It or not4 otherwtsa . credited In thla paper, and also the local

news published herein. All rights of rcpuDlicauon or. apecial dUpatches herein are' also reserved.

Excierpts That Stand Alone

In "The" Over-Soul," Emerson, in excerpts,

says, "We grant that human uie is mean, dui

how did we find out that it was mean? What is

the universal sanse of want and ignorance but

the fine innuendo' by which the great soul makes its enormous claim? Man is a stream whoso

source is hidden-1 What we commonly call man, the eatingdrinking, planting, counting man, does! not, as wre know him, represent himself, but mis

represents himself . A man is the facade of a temple wherein , all wisdom and all good abide. We are nothing but the light is all." The Over-

Soul is "that overpowering reality which con

futes our tricks and taJents, and constrains every

one to pass for what he is, and to speak from his

character and not. from his tongue.

"We see the world piece by piece, as the sun,

the moon, the animal, the tree ; but the whole, of

which these are the shining, parts, is the soul.

Only by the" vision of th.at wisdom can the horoscope of the ages be read, and by falling back on

our better thoughts, by yielding to the spirit of prophecy, which is innate in every man that we can know what it saith. Every man's words who speaks from that life must sound vain to those who do not dwell in the same thought on their own part.

'The learned and the studious of thought have

no monopoly of wisdom. Their violence of direc-( tion in some degree disqualifies them to think

truly." In other words, the specialized thinker

or student,, immersed in his specialty, lacks per

spective to grasp the meaning of the whole. "We owe many valuable observations to people who are not very acute or profound, and who say the thing without effort which we want and have long been hunting in vain. :. . "The action? of the soul is oftener in that which is felt and left unsaid. It broods over every society. : I feel the same truth how often in my trivial conversation with my neighbors, that somewhat higher in each of us overlooks this by-play, and Jove nods to Jove from behind each of us. '"' " "Our faith comes in moments ; our vice is habitual. Yet ' there is a depth in those brief moments which constrains us to ascribe more reality to them than to all other experiences. A mightier hope abolishes despair. The objector must explain this hope."

Gossip Back of every bit. of gossip is malice, vengeance, hatred, and a desire to harm by misrep

resentation and distortion oi iacts, either

txalting yourself while you debase your fellow

citizen. -

Gossip with evil intent does not spring from

a pure fountain head or a genuine desire to help

the person whose character is besmirched and his or her good name trampled in the gutter. If men and women really sought to reform and uplift the objects of their venomous attacks, they would confer privately with them, seek first hand information, give them the benefit of the

doubt, and put the best construction on every

thing, provided the facts warranted it.

Malicious gossip usually is the child of hasty

judgment and superficial knowledge. The character of a man and woman often is defiled by

gossipers whose only proof is information that

rests on the flimsy basis, "I heard it." Try to

trace back a scandal yarn to its source, and you

will seldom be able to find a person who actually

saw the occurrence or heard the statement which

has given rise to the gossip.

The damage done by idle gossip is incalculable. If it caused heartaches and worry only to the persons who are directly affected, its effects might be mitigated, but the whole community is made to bear the brunt of the attacks of the scandal mongers. The malicious spirit back of gossip, the destructive factor which 'poisons the mind and warps the judgment, precludes absolutely or hinders palpably the development of constructive agencies in the community. If our minds are filled with punitive thoughts and malicious suggestions, their capacity to entertain and cherish uplifting thoughts and policies is curtailed. The

good finds no opportunity to plan and execute, because the evil predominates and has mastery oi our minds. An entirely different social atmosphere pre

vails in cities where the good in men and women is constantly stressed as compared with those where their faults and weaknesses are eagerly sought for and exploited. You find true neighborliness and community co-operation in cities whose inhabitants do not constantly impugn each other's motives, search for chances to assail each other's characters, and maintain centers of ill feeling, rancor and bitterness. No city can go ahead so long as the brakes are kept locked by persons, who, in misguided zeal, find fault, denounce and condemn their fellow citizen without ascertaining the facts, and who seem to revel in unalloyed joy when they

are able to say something derogatory of their

characters. We wonder by how many degrees the happiness of our own city could be increased if we stopped gossiping? Suppose all of us would trace back to its source every bit of gossip that

came to our ears before we repeated it. How many of the yarns involving the good repute of many of our men and women would be substantiated in fact? Would we not be performing a

genuine service to our city ?

TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can," "Take It," Up" PASS ON! When you have done the best that you can and know pass on. Life must be viewed as something ahead. To be satisfied, and then to stand still, means failure. Those who stay with a sinking ship must go down with it losing their chance for being rescued by neglecting to grasp their first opportunity to leave. No matter how big a mistake you have made pass on. Acknowledge your errors, if necessary, but don't carry them with . you as a part of your equipment. The traveler is to be happily envied because he never stays long enough, in one place to grow weary or tired of his surroundings. And he may carry on with him all the beauties and fascinations of each place. Every minute life is passing on. We must be urgent In the things we do, so as to get as many done as possible. But pass on without regrets! And try to leave things behind that will continue to add cheer and gladness long after you have passed. Aim to live a permanent life. For Eternity is made up of the best and happiest which the Here and Now creates, through you and through me. Let the crowd wrangle if it will but you pass on. Gather the essentials as you go, and build big. Cleanse your heart o every imagined wrong and pass on!

.J

Road Building A Big Industry By FREDERICK J. HASKIN

Answers

(Any reader can irot

to Questions

the- answer to

anv question bv wrlttnB ins faunflium Information Bureau. Frederick J. Haskln. director, Washington. C. This of. . ,. , . . i a . I T 1.

ier applies mriciiy lo miui ihuiiuii. no . bureau rinev nnt eMvA flrivlra on leeral. '

medloal and financial matters. It does not attempt to settle domestic trouble, nor to undertake exhaustive research

on any snMect. vrlte your question

Who's Who in the Day's News

CHARLES E. PICKETT The naming of a successor to Sen-

rlalnly and brief!?. Give full name and,ator Kenyon. who is winding Up his

for return postage. All replies are sent affairs in the senate preparatory to direct to the inquirer.) . . . rji ij-

resigning

Q. Has the rate of exchange &neffect on commerce? A. C, B. A,. The department of commerce says that, the present disordered exchange situation militates against the recovery of the world's commerce, tut that it Is an effect rather than a cause. Exchange has beer, likened to a barometer; the barometer Indicates the

weather,' b'ut it does not make the weather. Q. AVht-n ?.as the Home Itule for Ireland movement started? L. H. I).

i JrV If

accept a federal judge

ship In his home state, had aroused considerable discussion and speculation in Iowa. Charles E. Pickett is one of three or four men prominently mentioned for the post. Governor Kendall has not made his selec

tion known as yet. Tickett has had experience at the capital, serving as representative sev

eral years ago and

After Dinner Stories

Perkins and Brown were walking

up Main street together.

"There goes an old Buddy of mine,"

Perkins remarked as a man passed. "Who is he?" asked Brown. "Bill Bristow poor old Bill!" "Why 'poor old Bill'?" "Well, it's this way," Perkins ex

plained. "When the war broke out

I enlisted and Bill got married."

"Yes. go on." "Well, can't you see? I got a discharge more than two years ago now!"'

WASHINGTON, Feb. 18. Road building in the United States is one of the nation's largest industries, a million men being employed last year throughout the construction season at building and repairing the country's highways. The roads completed of all classes totalled nearly 24,000 miles, all most enough to girdle the earth at the equator. It was the banner year in road building in the United States. "We are accustomed to thinking of manufacturing of steel, Iron and the making of automobiles as tremendous productive enterprises," said Thoma3 H. McDonald, director of the Federal Bureau of Public Roads, "but these institutions, great as they are ,are still not as large as the business of highway building." This year's program of the Bureau

of Public Roads calls for construction

After Dinner Tricks

No. 100 Coin Appears In Empty Box A matchbox is shown empty by sliding open the drawer. The drawer is closed, and when re-opened a half dollar is found inside. Before performing the coin is woJged between the ton of one end of thi; drawer and the inside of the box. Thus when the drawer is pushed open the box appears empty. By simply sliding tho drawer back in the coin falls into the drawer, and thus makes its appearance when the box is again opened. Copvrioht, 19!S, Public Ledger Company

cf at least 10,000 miles of federal aid highways during the 1922 road building season. Programs of 16 states so far submitted to the bureau call for as much more new or Improved highways. According to the government figures, there are 300,000 miles of improved highways or roadways in the United States, and about 2,300,000 miles of mere roadways. The construction of a national system of highways, which is now in full swing, was provided for by an act of congress of 4916, and an amendatory act of 1921. Both acts call for a national system of conected roads, each road a link in the national chain, bearing its due proportion of interstate traffic, serving with well-placed lateral roads to distribute and collect the traffic of the rural section. Machine-made Roads Now. The back-breaking druggery with the pick and shovel, and crude man pro pelled or horse drawn contrivances which made thi3 kind of construction work' difficult, are things of the past. Power propelled road-making machinery has been developed. The bureau takes men, trains them and pays them while they are engaging in becoming skilled in the handling and management of the new road construction machinery and equipment. One of the principal machines evolved is called the mechanical finisher. The finisher does away with all

Rippling Rhymes By Walt Mason

'TWAS EVER THUS

I wear my silken shirts and scarves, and shoes that cost twelve bones, and somewhere some poor aleck starves,

and sends up anguished groans. I eat long strips of costly pie, and drink imported tea; and hungry reubens amble

Musings for the Evening A United States court has just handed down an important ruling to the effect that a jewsharp is not a musical instrument. It sometimes takes a court a long time to find a thing out. Now if we can only have a decision

on the ukelele our doubts will be set at rest. Two kinds of women are hard to understand blondes and brunettes. A news report says that the exkaiser looks old and broken. It might be worse. He might be old and broke. He was sitting on a park bench and looked very shabby. There was the atmosphere of failure about him. He bad written a book on the "Psychology of Business and Finance,", but had never been able to make any money. Marcel Steinbrugge.

Beauty doctors say keeping the fists clenched will drive away wrinkles which usually gather around the knuckles. Gosh! , The wrinkles which Jack Dempsey must have around his

knuckles by this time.

ayracuse rerormer nas started a

movement to abolish tea and coffee

First thing we know, somebody will

start a movement to abolish reform

! of the old slow and laborious Dro-

cesscs. It drags, constructs, tamps and "dresses" the roadway. The preparation of,subgrades Is done with a machine called a honer or razer. This is equipped with projecting blades which plow up and collect the dirt or gravel. Another machine is known as a coring road grader, equipped with f coops. This machine will tear up the hardest surfaces and separate tho stone from the dirt by a screening process. Specially designed mixers and rollers also are used. Federal aid highways completed and under construction at the close of

j last year will require in all, 50,000,000

tons of gravel and stone. This means a million carloads, and it is equal to the total annual production of all conv mercial sand and gravel plants in 29

states in the eastern half of our country. Federal aid roads which were under construction or completed Dec. 31 last, called for 17,000,000 barrels of cement, or about one-sixth of the largest annual production on record. Federal Aid for States. The national highway act was passed by congress in 1913. It required the creation of a highway department in all states as a condition of the allotment 'of Federal aid. Seventeen states created highway departments as

the result of that act, and many others were strengthened and given larger funds.

The 1922 program of the Bureau of Public , Roads calls for construction work in all of the 48 states. Under the system, where the state agrees on a project and to the type of highway to be built, the federal government spends dollar for dollar with the state. Some of the states, such as New York. Massachusetts, Pennsylvania and Illinois, -while taking federal aid on some projects, independently constructs large stretches of highway. This rapidly growing industry not only will furnish stable employment for hundreds of thousands of men each year, but in addition is creating a demand for young men of technical training. "We need about 1,000 trained young engineers a year in the state highways departments and in this bureau," sas H. S. Fairbank, senior highway engineer for the bureau. There will be positions open each year for fully 1,000 properly trained young men, and in order to give them the proper additional specialized training and to improve its character in the technical schools and colleges, there was formed in 1920 a committee to develop courses to fit engineers for road work. It is gathering and giving to the technical schools and colleges the information that is acquired by the practical road building agencies." Results Shown by Figures. To be exact, 11,930 miles of federal aid roads were completed during 1921,

involving federal money to the amount of $94,057,089, and a total expenditure of $231,963,682. These figures represent 8,594 ciles of road in projects

wholly completed and 3,335 miles, the

Esther Griffin White Pat Devilment Into Minds of

Women, Declares Shank Mayor Lew Shank, of Indianapolis, ' created quite a bit of amusement Thursday afternoon when he alluded to the speech made by Esther Griffin White, of this city, at the assembly of Beveridge boosters at the former senator's home. Miss White, in a speech declaring that Mr. Beveridge would receive the majority of the women's votes in Richmond, urged the women to get away from the "highbrow stuff and learn some practical politics. -When she had concluded Mayor Shank said: "I like this White wo

man s talk except, she put a lot of devilment into the minds of women. They have enough devilment already." The crowd laughed.

equivalent of work done on projects not completed. Seventy-five hundred miles were completed after the first of July. These are the statistics of federal aid ! only, the bureau says, and doubtless i they will approximate the whole amount of new work done in the United States during the year. - According to the bureau, there was a grand total of $600,000,000 spent orf -highway construction and repair in the"

United States in 1921 by the federp

government and the states. An est!

mate of the derivation of this suri shows that 48 per cent of the total

expenditure was derived from local'

bonds and county, township and dis-k trict taxes, appropriations and assess-f

ments. Thirty-three per cent was de-j rived from state and federal sources, and only 19 per cent was derived fronj the taxation of motor vehicles. Oj the $420,000,000 which it Is estimate was expended for construction, th local subdivisions raised more thai one-half, and motor vehicles weii charged with but seven per cent

On Jan. 1, the Bureau of Publii Roads- had available $127,771,126 fa work on the 1922 program, and up tj February 1, 16 states had advised thj bureau that they planned to spent

from $1,000,000 to $18,000,000 for high

ways mis year.

The country is divided into 13 eng:

neering districts by the Bureau o! Public Roads, each district being U charge of an engineer. Headquarter are in Washington, and the force hcrti now numbers 750 persons. j

by, and doubtless snarl at me. I ride

around in my sedan, whose price was ; ers, and then there will be a squealing,

,t". This term in British nolitics deS'

ignated a particular movement begun I Ct. PICKETT

in 1870. to secure for Ireland a local gaining attention during his term of

legislature and thus recognize and -office. He is now considered one of

ratiefy a persistent sentiment of Irish; the most widely known and influen

nationality;

Q. WiUv rtorage hurt cotton seed which is to be planted?

A. The department of agriculture

tial political leaders in his state

Pickett has the support of the G. O. P. organization. He is flatly in favor of agricultural legislation which will

Memories of Old Days In This Paper- Ten Years Ago Today

tays that investigations Phow that the, help the farmer.s but has not come : . : j a , i i ii .it oct -j furm hlnc" man

HHrill 1 ilM Kill 111 ('(fMUIl P.fIMl IS- 1 II III 1 I UUI, HO M . t . uuu.

oftener by heating in storage than is fc.enorally believed. . . .. ;

Q. Was the earthquake on February! 1 as severe as the San Francisco earthquake? F. E. D. I A. This earthquake was quite as! severe as the one In 1906. Data have; rot been" compiled concerning it as yet, but it was in an !'earihquake i rrea" that extends from British Co!nmbia to EqnadoT. and was probably I along a fault in the earth's, crust 200 j to 300 miles long, and severe for about I 10 to 15 miles on each Eide of this line. - . . - ; Q. Is there an "Inhabited "Island of which nobody is ruler ar.d which is owned by no country? H. C. J. A. You probably have reference to the Island of Tristan da Cunha, an island hair way between Africa and South America in the Atlantic ocean. This was discovered by a Portuguese of the same name 400 years ago; England at one time sent troops there to watch for ships attempting to communicate with St. Helena, where Napoleon was imprisoned. On' the removal of troops, William Glass and family and some others preferred tQ

remain. The , colony

nearly 100. ; Q. Please give me 'the -meaning of the word "rosary." R A. B. A. The, word "rosary" Is- derived from th Latin-'rosarium,! whioh was originally a garland kjf roses and used .to cro-oro the image, of 4 the Virgin Mary. As a rosary- id Its present use. It w,as Instituted in honor of the Virgin by St. Dominic. v,'

At the meeting of the board of county commissioners Saturday afternoon, John W. Mueller and Howard H. Horton were appointed county bridge engineers. Mueller had been doing this work for some time. Horton's application for the position of bridge engineer was filed a few weeks before

and the commissioners decided to di

vide the work between the two men.

Bids on the contracts for the construction of several bridges were being received by the county commis

sioners.

Birthi

BLOOMINGPORT, Ind. Born, to

At r and Mrs Orn. Smith a QiicrVf

now numDerst .-r , " r.r -.".rf.:

Lane.

The leading negroes of the Georgia town started a bank and invited persons of their race to become depositors. One day a darky, with shoes run down at the heels, a gallus over one shoulder, and a cotton shirt, showed up at the cashier's window. "See here," he said, "I want mah ten dollars." "Who iss yuh?" asked the cashier. "Mah name is Jim Johnson, an' I wants dat ten dollars." "You ain't go' no money In dis here bank," said the cashier, after looking over the books. "Yes, I has." insisted the visitor. "I put ten dollars in here six mont's er go." "Why, man. yuh shure is foolish. De intrist done et dat-up long er go."

pretty steep, and pass some sore .and

seedy man who has no place to sleep.) Oh, is it right and is it just for me to ride in state, while, blinded by my smoke and dust, toils on some hapless skate? Am I a sinner when I eat, or buy a gorgeous lid, or clothe my large but shapely feet in kangaroo or kid? Would there be less of poverty, of sorrow and despair, if I should from the fleshpots flee and till a hermit's lair? I doubt it much; the wail of woe would rise from people riled, if I should let my whiskers grow and in the woods

run wild.. If I quit buying shirts and hats, with my spare chickenfeed, some girls in crowded city flats might lose the jobs they need. The boss would fay, "There's been a slump in spangled shirts and socks, and so I shoo you to the dump and pay you no more rocks." It's hard to know just what to do, in this cheap vale of tears; the thing

mat iooks an ngnt to you, to me a frost appears.

believe us.

Lessons in Correct English Don't Say: He DON'T know NOTHING about it. A man fell off OF the building. He sawed two feet off OF the plank. I am CERTAIN SURE of going. He acted AGREEABLE to his father's wishes. Say: He DOESN'T know ANYTHING about it. A man fell off the building. He sawed two feet off the plank. I am CERTAINLY going. He acted AGREEABLY to his father's wishes.

A remarkable fact connected with the use of the Bible at the present time is that it . has been translated into languages that know practically no other literature.

TTVFR ILLS

That sour smelly sink will lose power quickly if you use Blue Devil Cleanser. -Advertisement.

IT WEST TO THE SPOT Lingering colds and coughs that hang

! on and wear one out are uirricult to

get rid of, but-Henry tl. Campbell, Jl., F. D. No. 3, Adrian. Mich., writes: "I had a bad cough for three years. Tried several cough medicines. Got little relief. I tried Foley's Honey and Tar. It went to the spot. There is no better remedy on the market." Good for coughs, colds, croup and whooping cough clears the passages; soothes irritated membranes; stops tickling in the throat. Contains no opiates. A. O. Imken Drug Co., 626-623 Main St. Advertisement.

Dr. E. E. Paddock, specialist, of Kansas City, Mo., has distributed free over 100.000 copies of a booklet on cause

(and treatment of constipation, indiges

tion, bilious cone, jaundice, gas and inflammation of the Gall Bladder and Bile Ducts as associated with Gallstones. Just send name today for this Free Book to Dr. E. E. Paddock, Box R. P. 201, Kansas City, Mo. Advertisement. k

BOSTON STORE Only One Price

How to Prevent Influenza

SNIFFLES, SNEEZES, HOARSE WHEEZES DR. BELL'S Pine-Tar-Honey has for years relieved thousands of cohf and cough suffering men, women and children. Severe colds or colds newly contracted are benefited by its pleasant balsamic and healing antiseptics. Phlegm is soon loosened, irritation eased, inflammation allayed, breathing made less difficult. You can give the children Dr. Bell's Pine-Tar-Honey, too. Get a bottle today from any druggist. 30c.

Dr. Bell's

Riie-Tar-Hoiie

Jar Coughs and

OHA

OF LIFE

OMAN'S TRIA

oof That LjJia E. Finliliam'i Vegetable Compound 13 cf Great Help at This Period Metropolis, Illinois. "I have taken Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Com

pound and it is all it

1

-.rail

nfluenza

Is Here

claims to be and has benefited me wonderfully. I had beer sick foreightmonthf

with a trouble which confined me to my bed and was only

able to be up part of the time, when I was advised by a friend, Mrs. Smith, to trj Lydia E. Pinkham't Vegetable Com-

Dound and Liver Pills. I was bo much

benefited by the use of these medicines that I was able to be up and about in two weeks. I was at the Change of -Life when I began taking the medicines and I passed over that time without any trouble. Now I am hale and hearty, dc all my housework , washing, ironing, scrubbing, and cooking, all there is to do about a house, and can walk two or three miles without getting too tired. I know of several of my neighbors whe have been helped by your medicines. ' Mrs. Emma Culver, 705 E. 7th St, Metropolis, Illinois. Depend upon Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound. Nervousness, irritability, heat flashes, headache and dizziness, are relieved by this splendid med".cine. Advertisement

From Atlantic to the Pacific

Coast Reports Show an Alarming Increase. Influenza and Influenzal-pneumonlas

are again prevalent and care should be used by all or death toll may runJ into the millions, say all Health Boards. During the epidemic ot 1918-! 1919 one hospital reported 494 cases' and another 385 cases without a death. The only medication used at thesu hospitals was Balsamea, a western discovery. In thousands of cases Balsamea was used and no fatalities occurred from the Influenza or its running mate, pneumonia. Balsamea was used at the beginning of the dlseaso In most cases. i Take it at the first sign of Influenza or cold and prevent the deadly pneumonia. Formerly Balsamea wad sold only on physicians' prescriptions, but now you can buy it at any firstclass drug store. Get a bottle today and be prepared. Balsamea Is a palatable medicine, powerful in its effects on all respiratory troubles, either temporary or chronic. Advertisement.

BUY IT HERE FOR, LESS Plus Service and Quality Kahle Bros. Groceries 98 W. Main TWO 217 So. 5th Phone 3038 STORES Phone 2626 Cash Grocery Free Delivery

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"WV.. Li

Colds

Safeguard yourself and family against the ravages of influenza. Keep cheerful, avoid crowds and people who have colds. Don't wait for a sore or dry threat to appear, but at once dilute one part of Hydrosal with four

parts of warm water, rinse and gargle 1 deeply. It is safe harmless if swal- Opp,

lowed. Disinfect your nose and throat regularly with Hydrosal and ward off severe illness. Hydrosal is an astringent antiseptic, used and indorsed by the leading Hospitals, Physicians and Clinics. At your druggist's, 25c, 50c and 75c. If your druggist can not supply you, send 10c for large trial bottle. Hydrosal Laboratories, Cincinnati, O. Advertisement

juHiiiiminiiiifHiiiiiiiiiiiiuiHiiiianiHitiHMuiiiiMMiiiinmniiiiiiiMiiiimiiiiiiirr

Fresh and Smoked Meats BUELER BROS. 715 Main Street

AUTOMOBILE STORAGE and Repairing Overland-Richmond Co. K. of P. Bldg. S. Eighth St.

FORD LENSES

Passed with high record per pair

WEBB-COLEMAN CO. 1

Postoffice Phones 1616-1694

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70c

Off

o

Interest

Don't Wear Spotted Clothes Send them to WILSON ' to be Cleaned Phones 1105-1106

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DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY I "The Home For Savings" f

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THOR Stanley Plumbing & 910 Main St.

WASHING MACHINES IRONERS Electric Co. Phone 1236

For your next meal, use Richmond Rose Brand MEATS and LARD Prepared by STOLLE & SONS

HARTMAN WARDROBE TRUNKS

827 Main St.

Thl3

is a sitm

YEAR

New Models New Prices

BROWER AUTO SALES CO. Studebaker Dealers 21-23 S. 7th St. Phone 6019

The Quaker Challenge to a World of Force An Address by ELBERT RUSSELL -.T;!0 be had FREE by Addressing FRIENDS' GENERAL CONFERENCE 140 No. 15th St., Philadelphia, Pa.

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.

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J St. 1 r-

If

On Savings

You ean start sav. Ings account with navmfnfi nf

per week or more and same can be withdrawn

any time, interest paid Jan. 1st and July 1st. The People's Home and Savings Ass'n: 29 North 8th St, Safety Boxes for Rent

DOCTORS GROSVENOR

Scientific Glass Fitting Chronic Diseases a Specialty City Light Building 32 South Eighth S

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