Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 90, 15 April 1922 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM . . .... AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every Evening Except Sunday by - Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at; the Post Offico at Richmond, Indiana, as ' Second-Class Mail Matter. MEMBER OP THE ASSOCIATED PHESS The Associated Prss la exclusively entitled to the. use for republication of all news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise creflited In this paper, and also the local
news published her-in. All riirhta of rtDublicatlon of epe-
cial patches herein are also reserved. The Riley Hospital A great humanitarian project
in the erection of a hospital for Indiana children in Indianapolis. The hospital is to be a memorial to James Whitcomb Riley, noted Hoosier poet
and lover of children. The hospital is to perpetuate his love for the youth. It is a humanitarian movement whose appeal finds a warm response in the hearts of all of us.' A helpless or crippled child is an object of our tender solicitude and sympathy. Few are the men and women, here or elsewhere, who will not help to alleviate the pain of a child or aid in providing a treatment that will restore it to perfect health.
Secretary of Labor Davis, who was the principal speaker when the campaign in behalf of the hospital was launched at Indianapolis a few
days ago, said that what was being done in the name of Riley was being done for humanity. How true this is! Riley needs no hospital or marble shaft to perpetuate his fame, for that rests firmly on the basis of his achievement. But a hospital, dedicated to his memory, will keep fresh in our minds the love which all of us
should have for the unfortunate
or crippled. The help we extend to the founding pf that institution will increase our own love for humanity.
The hospital will be a state institution to which the children from all the counties may be sent on equal terms. It provides free treatment
for any afflicted child. If the parents are un 'able to pay for medical attention, they may ap
peal to the judge of the circuit court for permis
sion to send the child to the proposed hospital. The liberality of the people of Indiana will be
Answers to Questions (ny rrarler can pet the answer to nv question by writing The Palladium Information Bureau. Frederick J. HasltIn. director, Washington. r. C. This offer airlies strictly to information. The buraiB dops not Rive advice on lepal, medlcnJ and financial matters. It does not attempt to settle domestic troubles, nor to undertake exhaustive research on anv Hublect. Write your question plainly and briefly. Give full name and eddress and en-close two cents in stamps for return postage. All replies are sent direct to the Inquirer.) Q. Has Turkey a national air? F. A. T. A. Turkey has no national hymn, hut each sultan of Turkey has an imperial air composed in his honor. Q. How did the people of Alaska and Hawaii become citizens of the United States? R. A. K. A. Citizenship has- often been conferred on large bodies, of people by the annexation of territory as a result of ceseion or conquest, and it was in this way that the Inhabitants of Louisiana. Florida, Texas, Alaska and Hawaii became citizens of the United States. This is known as naturalization by incorporation. Q. In eliminating waste In industry, how many sizes of brick have been discarded? D. L. A. A. Last November, the number of sizes of brick in use was reduced from 66 to 11 and by a meeting held on March 27. four more sizes were eliminated. Now all bricks manufactured will be of seven izps. Q. What does the word Chicago mean? J. H. C. A. The name Chicago is probably derived from the Indian word meaning wild onion. This plant grew abundantly in this locality. It has been said that "Chicago is the oldest Indian town in the west of which the original name is retained." Q. Is it true that there are spiders that kill and eat birds? D. W. A. There is a species of trap-door spider, native of India, Australia. Africa and South America, that will actually kill small birds and suck their blood. . .It is the largest of all tpiders. j. Is the deep red mark which some people have always a birthmark? J. M. A. The naevus, a port-wine mark, is commonly known as a birthmark, or mother's mark, but the name birthmark is in some cases a misnomer, because'the naevus may appear at different periods of life. Q. How many kinds of mushrooms are edible? R. W. V. A. More than 700 species of mushrooms have been proved edible and authorities state that many others Voubtless will be proved fit for food. Lessons in Correct English DON'T SAY The plaintiff and defendant compromised. 7either the judge nor jury objected. I saw the president and vice-president. I am learning THE typewriting. SAY The plaintiff and the defendant compromised. , Neither the Judge nor the jury objected. I saw the president and the ricepresident. I am learning typewriting. HKLPKIJ HER MOTHKR WOMIKHKIIXV In these days of flu," coughs, colds, emtio- and whooping cough, it is well to know that every year there are used more bottles of Foley's Honey and Tar than- ff any other cou?h meiclne. Mrs. P. L. Hunt. 515 W. 6th Ht.. Cincinnati, Ohio, writes: "Foley's Honey and Tar relieved uie of a h tic kin cough, tickling' in the throat, wheezing and pains in the chest. It is helping' my mother wonderf ally." That's why druggists recommend Foley's. A. G. Luken rug Co., 626-62S Main. Advertisement "! Tracy's Coffee Fresh Roasted Daily
THE
needed to endow
tor many things. The state will erect the first unit. - On the basis of a survey of Indiana, it is es-! timated that 10,000 children require treatment iof one kind or another, which shows that there is j a crying need for an institution such as the pro-: posed hospital will be.
Starvation in Russia j i One shudders at the reports from the famine districts of Russia. Between 6,000,000 and 7,-1
is under "way
000,000 persons are destined to die there before the next crop is harvested. In' one district the American relief agencies are feeding 150,000, but the death rate continued unabated. Hospitals are crowded with thousands suffering from intestinal diseases due to eating poisonous substances in lieu of food. Cholera and typhus are taking an awful toll of lives. Drivers of relief wagons have been killed by the starving populace. Horses have been taken from the wagons and killed for food. Some relief workers, fearing their lives, have deserted their posts. In some districts, it is not safe to venture on the streets, as men and women are killed for their clothing. ' The intensity m of the suffering certainly teaches the folly of overthrowing the established system of economics and of substituting the dreams of men with paper theories.
Put
The fly season will soon be here, and those who put in their screens promptly will be taking the best of precaution against the insidious fly. Chicago's board of health says : "Fly screens are recognized by the health department as one of the most efficient preventative and sanitary measures. They should be put in place early in fly time, and used continuously until the snow flies. Keep the common housefly out of your house and away from your food. "Screen your windows. Begin now in your
child who is ill warfare against soon.
TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can," "Take It," "Up" LOOSEN UPS. I have noticed that there is In certain human beings a lack of free expression, and that from them you get the impression of a mind and body that is tied that continually frets under something. - You talk with them, and they often bark at you instead of easily exchanging views and entering into helpful conversation. What 90 per cent of the people in this world need more than anything else is to relax to loosen up! William James in one of his delightful essays speaks of "that blessed internal peace and confidence that wells up from every part of the body of a muscularly well-trained human being, and soaks the indwelling soul of him with satisfaction an element of spiritual hygiene of supreme significance." A Scottish Doctor once expressed this as his leading impression of Americans: "You Americans wear too much expression on your faces. You are living like an army with all its reserves engaged in action." Walk down the streets of any great city and study the faces of those you pass. I am not sure but the' noted Doctor set forth much truth. It is not necessary to appear busy in order actually to be extremely busy and accomplishing a full program. Those who complete the most work are usually those who do it with the most ease and by way of the simplest plan. Our nervous systems must either be our slaves or "bur servants. And it is our minds that trot along with the momentum that is constantly spurred by our nervous energy. But loosen up! Be calmer and remember that there is time.
Who's Who in the Day's News
REAR ADMIRAL DAVID W. TAYLOR A special board of admirals Is now studying the best means of disposing of the United States warships ordered scrapped in compliance with the terms of the naval limitation treaty. The orginal amount spent on the vessels' to be eliminated is over $500,000,000. The hoard seeks to realize as much as possible on that amount. The head of the board is Rear Admiral David W. Taylor, chief conconstructor of the navy. 090 iv. TVyta? Admiral Taylor is known as an expert and author on naval construction. He won reoosniUion on his graduation from Annapolis in 1SS5 by excelling the highest class record made there up to that time. Three years later he set another similar record at the Royal College. He was made a captain in 1904 and became a rear admiral in 1917. He received a gold medal from the British Institution of Naval Architects for the best original paper on ship-shaped stream forms, the ' f ir3t Americna so honored. In 1899 he constructed and still has charge of the first experimental tank liver m Dr. E. E. Paddock, Specialist, of Kansas City, Mo., has distributed free over 100,000 copies of a booklet on cause and treatment of inflammation of the Gall Bladder and Bile Ducts as associated with Gallstones of the liver; Bilious colic, jaundice, gas, indigestion. Just send name today for this Free Book to Dr. K. E. Paddock, Box R.P. 201, Kansas City, Mo. Advertisement. Don't Wear Spotted Clothes Send them to WILSON to be Cleaned Phones 1105-1106 1 VIGRAN'Q V Ladies' Shop O FOR BETTER VALUES
RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND
the institution and to provide ' in Your Screens flies. You cannot begin too ever built in the United States. He was retained by the British government as an expert in a suit growing out of th Hawke-Olympic collision in 1911. j TTe has hppn rJilof (nnetntMni- nf Hio naw nnd rhipf nf iha hnrn n I struction and repair since 1914. He is the author of "Resistance of Ships and Screw Propulsion" and "Speed and Power of Ships." After Dinner Stories "Lloyd George," said a Chicagoan, "made a good speech at a dinner we gave him in London last season. "Lloyd George said he was often accused of being inconsistent, of changing his mind. "'Well,' he went on, 'men change their shirts, don't they? We rather admire them for that. It's hygienic. . " 'So with the mind. As conditions change, the mind must be changed to conform with them. Blame the man who never changes his mind. How stale and soiled and dusty such a man's mind must be! He who changes his mind to harmonize with circum stances, though, is spiritually clean and tresn, is living according to the laws of spiritual hygiene.' " ECZEMA IS CURABLE Write me today and I will send you a free trial of my mild, soothing-, atuaranteed treatment that will prove it. Stops the Itching and heals permanently. Send no money just write me that is all you have to do. Address Dr. Cannady, 2055 Park Square, Sedalia. Mo. Advertisement mimininiffninnitiittnnininiiiitiitmiiiiiiitiiiinnmintiuiitmtntf SAFETY FOR SAVINGS i -PLUS I i 3 Interest I DICKINSON TRUST C.DMPAMV 1 Tne Home For Savines" s t BinmiiiiitniiHiuiuiiiiiiiiiiniuiiiiiiuiitiuiiiiMimtiiiiMmttuiHtiiniiiniiuiiitiiil THOR WASHING MACHINES IRONERS Electric Co. Phone 1286 Stanley Plumbing 910 Main St Cars Greased and Oiled a Specialty Overland-Richmond Co. K. of P. Bldg. S. Eighfh St.
SUN - TELEGRAM, RICHMOND,
qi Dinner 1 r 1 C k S No. 15s Vanishing Tumbler A tumbltt is -"overed with a piece of newspaper, which is pressed firmly around the glass to that the shape of the tumbler may plainly be seen. Suddenly the newspaper is crushed down 'flat on the table. The tumbler has disappeared ! In covering the tumble with the newspaper (Figure 2) the operation is performed near the ed;e of the table. When the paper has been shaped about the glass the whole object is carelessly drawn toward the performer until his hands, still molding the paper over the glass, hold it over the edge of the table. At that instant the tumbler is allowed to drop secretly from the paper into the lap (Fipire 3). The paper, however, still retains its shape and is immediately teet down on the table. The tumbler apjpears to be beneath it. To bring about the startling disappearance of the tumbler, the performer ha merely to crush Ithe paper with a sudden blow of his fist. Copyright, 19tt, toy PuMio Ledger Company Rippling Rhymes By Walt Mason NATURE'S GIFTS Nature took some soil and granite, and a tube of liquid glue, and she fash ioned this, our planet, back a million years or two. Ana sne made som3 lakes of water, strung them round with wondrous skill, eo the thirst-r pent might totter to the shore and drink his fi'l. Well she knew the human being would be thristy every day (for Dame Nature is all-seeing) as he baled his share of hay. So she filled the lakes with water, and the rivers with the same, and the little streams that potter through the fields unknown to fame, and the sparkling rills that babble, and the ponds whera lilies grow, where the ducklings quack and gn.bble while cavorting to and fro. Nature knew that human critters must be moistened well within, but she filled no lakes with bitters, and she made no streams of gin. And the rain that helps the cotter raise a bumper crop this year it is always made of water, it is never made of beer. And the dew that shines so brightly in the morning, on the lawn cooling off the tired world nightly, never knew a demijohn. When we're thirsty there are rivers, meres ana brooks from which to choose, but Dame Nature ne'er delivers anything that's labeled boobs. " Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Yean Age Toda - Indications were that the automobile business In this city would be greater than in any previous year in the history of this industry in Richmond. The local automobile manufacturers declared that they would put out at least twice as many cars during 1912 as they manufactured in the year before. The craze for motor cars was Increasing with astounding rapidity and the four automobile manufacturing concerns in this city 'declared that prospects for a record year were exceedingly bright. ' When the water is so hard It scratches the bath tub, use Blue Devil. Advertisement. KIDNEY TROUBLES Conquered or Money Back flogged up Kidney Deposits are Dis solved and the Toxins (Poisons) Completely Driven Out. Told to Guarantee it in stance. Druggists Every InFor over 40 years, said Dr. Carey, I have been prescribing my Marsh-Root for kidnev, liver and bladder sickness and now that I have retired from active practice I have made arrangements with leading druegrists to dispense this wonderful prescription at a moderate price, on the money back if dissatisfied plan. Beware of kidney disease thousands die of it every year who ought to be enjoying the blessings of life and health. Watch the symptoms. If you have specks floating before the eyes, puffy eyes, clammy feet or moist palms, backache or headache, you ought to get a bottle of Dr. Carey's Marsh-Root right away. Kidney and Bladder troubles vanish ss if by magic under Its beneficial influence. It flushes, builds up, and feeds inactive kidneys, stimulating them to normal activity. Tones un shrunken lazy kidney tissues and by neutralizing all bladder weakness. NOTE Dr. Daniel G. Carev was a practicing physician for manv years and his great Prescription. Marsli-Rnot. aided thousands of sufferers from kidney and bladder troubles. Hereafter you can always get this effective prescription in both liquid and tablet form at A. G. Luken Drug Co.. and all reliable pharmacists the country over. Keep in mind the name. Dr. Carev's Marsh-Root prescription No. 777. No other medicine can take its place. Advertisement. tmfwiifiiiiiiiiifiifmiiniiifHiiiiimiMiiimiiitiltmuiiilinnnntnimtitnitiiHiini For REAL COAL I PHONE 1178 MATHER BROS. Co. uiiitiiiuniiiiiiiiiimiinitntniiniiiiiniiiiiiiiaiiniiiiniinniiiimuiiniiiiiniiiiiii On
1 filial : AjCgCQTro ZiVkS 827 Main St. ' '
. . H I . aBBar
$Bo
DOCTORS GROSVENOR Scientific Glass Fitting Chronic Diseases a Specialty City Light Building 32 South Eighth St
IND., SATURDAY, APRIL 15,
Flappers Have Always Flapped By FREDERIC J. HASKIN "
NEW YORK' CITY, April 13. Let those who bemoan the bold, bad ways of the modern flapper take heart. In a few more years,. 6he will be endur ing her share of grief and envy as an even wilder generation flaps daringly before her outraged vision. 'Twas ever thus. History shows that every age has had its recalcitrant young people who have rebelled against' the disci pline of their elders and caused great anguish to the public-spirited. Take a few samples of the loud la ments on the subject of flapping re cently appearing in our daily newspapers and compare them with those written at various periods In the past (plenty are to be found m the archives of our libraries) and you will at once be struck by their uncanny similarity. Listen to this: ! "The girl of the period is a creature who dyes her hair and paints her face as the first articles of her personal religion; whose sole idea of life 13 plenty of fun and luxury; and whose dress is the object of such thought and intellect as she possesses The girl of the period has done away with such moral muffishness as consideration for others, or regard for counsel or rebuke if a sensible fashion lifts a gown out of the mud, she raises hers midway to her knee. . . . . She talks slang as glibly as a man, and by preference leads the conversation, to doubtful subjects." If it were not for the one word "mid way," one would scarcely guess that this vitriolic criticism was penned by Mrs. E. Lynn Linton, once popular English novelist, a3 early as 186S. We are so accustomed to having the late war blamed for all the giddy behavior of the present that it is something hopelessly wayward. As a matter of fact, there has probably never been a year .since the days of Adam and Eve when some querulous voice has not been lifted up against the heedless dissipations of youth. Thus, some Mrs. Grundy, complainMusings for the Evening OPINIONS Said the flipper to the flapper. You are rather neat and dapper. And I guess we may consider you the cheese; At the lipstick and the plaster We concede you a past master. And we've no pronounced objection to your knees. Said the flapper to the flipper, Huh, you're much too pert and chipper. Cork the chatter and do something if you can; I'm no subject for your rabies. And I have no taste for babies Wait a cycle till you grow to be a man. Perley A. Child. Undertakers banish gloomy scenery and props. But they cannot make a funeral party exactly a jazz party unless it is that of a rich uncle. The Prince of Wales probably has seen enough of India to last him a Mfetime. Some of the papers have an occasional article on "How much does it cost a girl to live and keep in good shape?" Undoubtedly, the last part is the most important. When styles change again and the girls wear their hats somewhere near straight, a lot of bright eyes are going to suffer from the strong sunlight. Stop Inflammation Prevent Infection Wonderful Immediate Relief From Any Irritation Don't endure suffering from sore throat, burn or cut. It i3 so unnecessary. Hydrosal, a clean, liquid anti septic, will afford quick relief from inflammation. .. Don't de- MU.i iaK J lay. Prevent in fection or . even 1 klJ?5 iil?ivi .. SiK.vri more serious results with soothing, healing Hydrosal. Made orginally for doc.ors' use, this tousehold a n t iI'll?!.' lil' . ;eptic may je had at nowJ4$ your Iruggist's without prescription. Easy o apply. Absolutely safe, non-poisonous. Is greaseless and cannot stain. 3rC-t a bottle of Hydrosal today. You need it constantly. 25c, 50c, 75c aizes. If your druggist can not supply you, send 10c for liberal sample bottle. Dept. 3 Hydrosal Laboratories, Cincinnati, Ohio. Advertisement. i;iuiiiiiUiiittHiiiniiiiiimiiiiiiuiiiMimiitimtiiiimtnmninnHmmimniiiiimf I 1 The Underselling Store siiiiiiiiHmntiiiiiitumnMiimimiiinmiitnuiiiiujiiiiimiinimiiittnininniniltd FORD LENSES Passed with high record per pair lUC WEBB-COLEMAN CO. Opp. Postoffice Phones 1616-1694 HARTMAN WARDROBE TRUNKS Savings You can start av. ings account with
4
per week or more and same can be withdrawn at any time, Interest paid Jan. 1st and July 1st. The People's Home and Savings Ass'nJ 29 North 8th St Safety Boxes for Rent
1922.
girls dressed to attract attention, ad - ded r,hiir.nr,hicaiivrw L , th But has not, in every epoch, the race-old instinct of the female to bedeck her boay so as to attract the male, through whom alone she can achieve her destiny, led to extremes, extravagances, even vulgarities? Doubtless every savage tribe, harbors some shameless minx, who, by her daring manner of putting on or taking off a single bead, brings down on her head the viais of wrath of the older women, who wonder what her mother can be 'thinking of." Bad Girls of the Eighties Even the prim eighties were not sufficiently prim to satisfy many of the good citizens of the period. According to Mrs. John Sherwood's "Manners and Social Usages" (1884) observers of society in New York and Washington in those days found it to be "a record of drunkenness, flirtation, bad manners and gossip, backbiting, divorce and slander." Far back in 1819, apparently, condi tions were just as bad. In this year we find Miss Emma Willard making an "Address to the Public, particularly the Members of the Legislature of! New York," in which she beseeches that body to contribute some Instant means for educating the young females of the state "a3 a possible panacea for the frivolity of the time." "Not content with doing nothing to promote their country's welfare," she declared, "like pampered children, they revel in its prosperity and scatter it to the winds with wanton profusion, and, still worse, they empris- ! on its source by diffusing a contempt for useful labor. To court pleasure their business; within her temple, in defiance of the laws of God and man, they have, erected the idol of Fashion, and upon'her altar they sacrifice with shameless rites whatever is sacred to virtue or religion." Miss Janet Richards, lecturer, recently charged that "good breeding" seems to be a thing of the past, and one can only infer that mothers no longer take the trouble to instill into their children's minds the fine high ideals of womanhood which were once given to them." But as far back in the past as 1884 we find Mrs. Sherwood registering the same complaint. "The American mamma," wrote Mrs. Sherwood, "treats her beautiful daughter as if she were a very common piece of Delft indeed, and as if she could drift down the stream of life, knocking all other vessels to pieces, but escaping injury herself." Chaperones Always a Myth t Much of the modern flapper's waywardness i3 attributed to a lack of chaperonage on the part of her mother, but as a matter of fact chaperones In this country seem always to have been largely a myth. Even in p reRevolutionary days, we are told by Mrs. Alice Morse Earle, in her interestsing book, "Colonial Times and Good Wives," "young men escorted young girls to dancing parties and also accompanied them home after the dance was finished." And although the automobile, to which is ascribed so much current iniquity, was not known in those days, one-handed driving evidently was, judging by some protests of the period. Indeed, the modern flapper might also herself gasp if suddenly confront ed with the bold damsel of the eighCuticufa Heals Face Disfigured With Large Pimples "I was troubled with pimples and blackheads on my face. The pimples were hard, large and red, and festered and then scaled over. They itched so badly that I could not icst at night, and tny face was disfigured. The trouble lasted about two months. "I read an advertisement for Cuticura Soap and Ointment and sent for a free sample. I bought more, and after using two cakes of Cuticura Soap and one box of Cuticura Ointment I was healed." (Signed) Miss Ruby Thomas, R. R. 2, Sotnerville, Ohio, July 18, 1921. ' Cuticura Soap to cleanse and purify, Cuticura Ointment to soothe and heal and Cuticura Talcum to powder and perfume are ideal for daily toilet purposes. Simple Etch Frt7 Mill. Addma: "OvtirotltborntorlM. Ept. H. Maldcm l,Kul." Sold everywhtfre. Soap 25c. Ointraent2& and 60c. Talcum 25e. 235 Cuticura Soap shaves without mu. Deposits made in our Savings Department on or before the 15th of the month draw interest from the first day of the month. American Trust & Savings Bank Ninth and Main CALL 2766 Lessen Your Housecleaning Worries Home watfer Laundry Phone 2766
I teenth century. Miss 1922 may prid? J herself upon her capacity for cigar- ; ettes and home brew, but 6he has. ! not yet adopted the habit prevaler f
among her prototypes of the year 1731 namely, the delicate Inhalation of snuff. That It was not accepted w' equanimity on the part of her elders is shown by the following letter signed "Old Subscriber" which ni,hnSh in fnriio irmrnal of May 31, 1731. "This silly trick of taking snuff Is attended with a Cocquet Air in some young (as well as older) Gentlewomen, and such a sedate Masculine one in others that I cannot tell which most to complain of, but they are equally disagreeable As to those who take it. for pretty action to fill up little Intervale of Discourse, I can bear with them; but then they must not use it when another is speaking who ought to be heard with too much respect to admit of offering at that Time from Hand to Hand the Snuff Box. "But Flavilla is so far taken with her behavior in this kind that she pulls, out her box (which is indeed full of good Brazile) in the Middlj of the Sermon, and to shew that she has the Audacity of a well-bred woman she offers it to the Men as well as to the Women who sit next to her. But i'mce by thi3 Time all the World knows she has a fine hand I am in hopes she may give herself no further trouble in this matter. "On Sunday ssvennight, when they came about for the Offering, she gav her Charity with a very good Air, but at the same Time asked tho Church warden if hevwould take n Pinch. Pray Sir (to the editor) think of these Things in Time", and you will oblige, Sir, your most humble Servant." Ancient Faces Painted The use of cosmetics by flapper? was also strenuously objected to in those days, not altogether without reason, since beauty "specials" wernot in a high 6tate of perfection thet.J so that numerous deaths from poisoning resulted. Husbands were particularly averse to having their wive use face paint, concerning which aversion some amusing tales have been written. Thus, we are told that one lady of high degree was accustomed to psing the cheapest white paint possible, which she left on for so long a time that it "had to be scraped off with a knife. In another case recorded by a gossipy diarist, a disgusted spouse chased his wife around the dinner table with a knife "to catch her and wipe the paint off her face with a napkin because be thought it to be tho cause of her ill health." Besides such lurid incidents of tho past, the case of the recent Arkansai flapper who was expelled from school for using a lipstick, pales into insignificance. In fact, there is nothing like a long look at the past to make u appreciate the present, with all of it curiosities even the flapper. A magpie seen near a dwelling in Scotland is believed to portend death to one of its inmates. Dr. Simpson's Vegetable Compound is the most effective "alterative" or blood purifier ever known. Cleanso your system thoroughly with this great remedy, and feel the effects Oi renewed health and strength. Pun blood invariably means good health and wards off disease. Should di3ease exist, it is all the more necessary. Try it and be convinced of this fact in your case. For sale at all drug stores. Advertisement. The Miller-Kemper Co. -isverytning to Build Anything" LUMBER MILLWORK BUILDERS' SUPPLIES Phones 3247 and 3347 PurePasteurized Milk and Cream Phone 1531 KRAMER BROS. DAIRY trtiiitnimiiiitiittttiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHfitimuiniHiiiiitHMt(iittuitiniHimitnuHnim Stop That Leak With j I , Marvelscal i a Liquid Roof Cement 1 Hackman, Klehfoth & Co. tifiimminumitininmittinniumitimitmmiKiiiMiiiifiinHfiiiiiittniHmiijiiMu YEAP. Light Six, $1093 "We are making Richmond a Studebaker town" Brower Auto Sales Co. Studebaker Dealers 21-23 S. 7th St Phone 6019 Chickens! Chickens! Plenty of Fine Dressed Chickens, any size; also cut up chicken by the pound. Order early. Geo. C. Schwegman's M EAT r?KET 309 South 4" Phone 2204 Ask For Zwissler's New POTATO BREAD the bread with the decided nut .flavor. At all groceries. Baked by . ZWISSLER'S Bakery 23 S. 5th St. Phone 1654 Restaurant S08 Main St. Phone 1656 .
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