Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 191, 12 August 1922 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., SATURDAY, AUG. 12, 1922.
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 Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Second-Class Mail Matter. MEMBER OK THE ASSOCIATED PIIESS TH Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use ror republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper, and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.
Some College Figures
Under this caption the Indianapolis News ap
plies some of the figures which Earlham college officials have supplied locally to show that a school of higher education has a business side as well as an ethical one from the standpoint of community appraisement. The data of Earlham officials were a sur- . prise to most Richmond business men, and their application to Indianapolis shows that the presence -of Butler college in that city is not appreciated as fully as it should be. Of. course, the primary purpose of every institution of learning is to provide educational facilities for a community, and, the business that accrues to a community as a result of its presence-is a secondary consideration; but neverthe
less,, the commercial advantages have a direct bearing when the institution occasionally appeals for f ands to finance a project. ,. In this case, Earlham has asRed for money to help pay for certain improvements in the athletic department. In so doing, it showed how the students personally and the institutions as an organii-ation spent thousands of dollars here 'annually. Emphasis also wa3 placed on the fact that hundreds of young men and women of this communfvty save money by attending Earlham. Using these factors as the basis of its comments, the News says: "Administrative officials of Earlham college have madepublic some data relating to the last
college year. Theyt show that Earlham had anjfgj Dinner Trick s'
enrollment ot iws. ine average cost or attendance for each student, including board, room, tuition and laundry, was $450. The cost to Richmond students, including tuition only, was $150. As there were 150 Richmond and Wayne county
students who attended the college and still lived;
at home, it is estimated that $300 a student or a total of $-15,000 was saved to those 'who lived close enough to attend classes and return to their homes each day. "An investigation extending over a period of
three years shows that the students spend in business houses of Richmond an average of $200.
Three other statements are interesting: n. sso Coin o the Forehead
'T?;l, ,4 ; ArricaA nr1oltr onrJ fovnr.' - A. !n ! . P.1?"1 n " Spectator's
itn,iiiiiunu la omwuoi-u ia,w- forehead, wbjcn he tilts slightly backoHir Viit TvorlViim rrHoo-o Vivo timps a manv ward, so that the coin will not fall
J J ' He In told to keen hi nmri fill.
Richmond people secure a College education as j Finally after he has held the coin there
in a city of equal size in which there is no col- r a Z Tteto STK lege. How many families live in Richmond be-1 fiEdsLto hls surprise that the coin is ! not there. cause Earlham college is located here? It is not The coin was previously attached, possible to determine. For every 100 families S th.MJV7ffiTn2lbSSa there would be an expenditure of $2,000 per fam-j bw& iTlX
liy SZUU.UUU. removing tne tnumo the ciTin came
v. 9 A
Rose Dougan Helps Indian Art Creates Fund Prizes to Perpetuate Artistic Expression of Southwest Indians and Plans Exhibition at Santa Fe.
Miss Rose Dougan of this city, In' an effort to perpetuate Indian art and to protect the artists from the rapac ity of traders, some time ago created an endowment fund for that purpose and suggested an exhibition of Indian art at Santa Fe, N. M. 0 Her efforts received the endorsement of tae Bureau of Indian affairs
j of the United States government and
oiner agencies. Frederic J. Haskin, -who is director of the Palladium Information Bu
reau at Washington has written an article on the revival of Indian art and Miss Dougan's connection with it. Miss Dougan has set forth her purpose and aim in the appended statement, which precedes Mr. Haskin's presentation. v
'Editor Palladium:
I enclose an outline of what I am trying to do and why, in reference to the fund I have established in Santa
i Fe for prizes to be awarded to tho
I Indians.
"These thincrs mieht well be thought of in! "L TJ J.Tl !ral years I decided the only way to
, v c it k.?- v iu- ajj-vtuiui iu liiiua 11JC
Indians to depend upon curio dealens in towns, traders on reservations and the missionaries for the disposal of their pottery, pictures, silver work, basketry, weaving, etc. These things are resold usually at enormous profits, profits out of all proportion to wha is regarded in legitimate business as a reasonable return. This condition is possible only because of the small amount the Indians
are able to get from such people. It discourages them in further production of careful and correct work and so destroys the only possible continuation of our Native American Art. ROE DOUGAN.
utes. Cowrioht.
19 i, bj Public Ledger Company
M
US1T12S
connection with the effort to transform Butler j ls.,s,tU1 'herc- and the illusion cf touch
j win uu t.eo a. wj iur ec verm nii.3
college into a greater, scnooi. Mucn nas oeeni
said about the ethical side, but the figures from Earlham show there is a business side as well. An institution that would meet the needs in Indianapolis would bring additional residents here. It would mean that money now spent elsewhere because of inadequate higher educational facilities would be spent here. If the Richmond students of Earlham saved $45,000 by attending a school that was close at hand, several thousand students of the Indianapolis school would have an increasingly larger sum to be expended, if spent at all, in Indianapolis. The Indianapolis enterprise promises to be an investment that will yield not only dividends in higher educational standards and better citizens, but in money as well."
By FREDERICK J. HASKIV WASHINGTON. D. C, Aug. 12. The Indian ''curios" picked up by
tourists in the southwest as souvenirs for the folks back home are not jusr. oddly fashioned articles made to sell to easterners. They represent the earliest art and handicraft of the first Americans, the aboriginal Indians who
it through the Museum in Santa Feithe prehistoric cave dwellings, no
where an annual Fiesta has been held ! body knows how many centuries ago
for several generations. Therefore I wrote to the director of the Museum
last fall, outlining my plan and sug-
These arts of blanket weaving, pot
tery molding, silver hammering, basketry and beading have been handed
Answers to Questions fAnv reader f an pet The answer to Rnv question bv writing The Palladium Information Bureau. Frederick J. Haskin. director, Wa.xhtnpton. T. C. This offer applies strlculy to Information. The bureau does not give advice on legal, medical and financial matters. It does not attempt to settle domestic troubles, nor to undertake exhaustive research on any subject. Write your question plainly and briefly. Gvt full name ani address and enclose two cents in stamps for return postage. All replies are sent direct to the Inquirer, x Q. When may a ball be said to be loft in golf? H. A. C. A. So far as the match behind is concerned, a ball is lost when the player cannot walk up to it, locate it promptly and continue his play; as
against his opponents a player cannot, be said to have lost c oaii untii ne has j spent five minutes in vain search fori itQ. Are both the male and female of the species given the name lightning bug? W. C. K. A. Only the adult males are called j
lightning bugs, ine temaies are winyless and like the larvae are called glowworms. j Q. Is it not true that General Hancock was overwhelmingly defeated for president because he said that the tariff was a local issue? 0 L. S. A. General Hancock did say that the tariff was a local issue, but if that was the cause of his defeat he was not overwhelmed for he was beaten by a popular vote of les9 than 10,000, and by only 50 votes in the electoral college. Q. Is a cubic foot of iron lighter than a cubic foot of gold? G. L. H. A. One cubic foot of pure gold weighs 1,200.9 pounds, while a cubic foot of cast iron weighs 450 pounds, and one cubic foot of wrought iron weighs 4S0 pounds. Q. Did the invention of the cotton gin make Eli Whitney rich? C. C. C. A. Before Whitney could secure a patent his machine was stolen and put on the market. Law suits in defense
of his rights consumed all of his prof-j
its and $50,000 voted him by the state of South Carolina. He turned his attention to the manufactureof firearms and was the first to effect the division of labor by which each part was made separately. In this business he did accumulate a fortune.
r'
TODAY'S TALK By George itfatthev Adams, Author of "You Can," "Take It,
" "Up" r
YES' There is a fascination for us all, I believe, in words of big meaning not necessarily, however, in big words. I like the word YES. Most of us have worked very hard just to get this little word to come to us in its full meaning. I remember it. well w hen I used to ask the teacher if I had passed my "examination," when I used to ask my father if I could "go down town," when I applied for my first job and was told by the big man that "yes," the job was mine! There is in the v.ord YES an inspirational note. Will you help me. will you be my friend? Will you trust me? Will you share with me the sorrows, as well as the joys? Will you believe in me? Yes! Yes, it is a beautiful day. Yes, I am able to carry the thing through. Yes, I will do my best. No matter where you connect this little word-fellow up, he does business "with neatness and dispatch." Eut with this small word, as with others as small or smaller, comes an added responsibility. You must not say YES unless you mean it, unless you intend to back it up and make it come up to its meaning. For YES is a sort of Flagship in the Fleet of Decision that goes out to meet so many foes and to conquer. Don't abuse this little word. Treat it fairly. Use it at the right time and then get happiness out of its use. Within us are the issues of life and destiny. Our yeses are all recorded somewhere. Like the mortar between the bricks of a wall, they hold our decisions together and help us to be real men and women workers In the moil and strife, doers and thinkers, strong for an contact. ' One thing more when you do say YES, be sure that you say it in a full grown manner!
rrr lh& r imninn ' gesting the co-operation of the Muse- down from generation to generation.
SLANG OF THE BEACHES Mv suggestion was met verv cordi- certain extent its distinctive type of
Nobody knows what the wild wares ' ally and within a short time not only ; handiwork which immediately identi
ties tne artist with the product. It is
find what the bathers and dancers ; Indian Affar. thfi United states
along the edge of the big sink are talk- Government proved to he very much
Who's Who in the Day's News
111 have a clock that none will dare to mock; some day I'll eat such costlv mmt 'twill make the neighbors talk. But I won't cut this ice until I have the price ;and so in brine these coins of mine I pickle once or twice.
iDg about. The shifters, flappers, cake eaters and puddle jumpers who cruised about in town all winter are now down at the shore, and they ha,ve invented a new slang. The beach dictionary runs in part as follows: Oyster: A person who is tight with his money. Swordfish: Person who is always prying into parties. Life-guard: A chaperon. Lifesaving station: A bootleggery. Shark bait : What they sell there. Eskimo: A person in a hired bathing suit. Flounder: A fat lady in the water. Eel: A dancing gent who knows the new numbers. Beach comber: Handsome young man on bathing beach. Weakfish: Any girl who admires a beach comber. Sand bruise: A dumbbell who is broke. Barnacle: Young gent who has everything but money. Sand crab: Young lady who is not interested in men. Undertow: Summer-resort gin. k Sand spider: A bathing suit censor. Bluefish: Young lady whose check
has not come from home.
Water-lily: Beautiful young lady
with no brains.
Radio: Man who runs launch out to three-mile limit every day. Gangplank: Old man, who lets his family walk over him. Smokestack: Flapper who Is a ha
bitual cigarette fiend. Anchor: Rich fiance who has to stay in town. Bellbuoy: Guy who talks about himself incessantly. Porgies: Young girls not yet in society. Mud turtle: Young man interested only in his business. A plodder. Sea serpent: Attractive widow who charms the men. Film: A bathing suit. Rudder: Person who steers the thirsty to a speak-easy. Boxing the compass: Ordering din
ner trom hotel bill of fare. Stowaway: Young man who goes to a party without an invitation.
interested in the subject, From this has grown two lists of prizes, one known as the Santa Fe Business Men's Prizes and the other
The Dougan Fund Prizes. First To encourage the Indians In the preservation of their decorative arts.
Indians have a decorative art based
j gan fund prizes having been offere'l j for the best individual exhibit from ;each pueblo and a grand prize for the j best of all. The following pueblo will enter exhibits of pottery: San jjuan, Santa Clara. San Ildefonso,
Tesuque, Santo Domingo, Cochiti, San Felipe, Santa Ana, Zia, Jeniez, Sandia, Isleta, Laguna, Acoma, Zuni, and Hopi. The exhibit room will not resemble a museum with its articles on display under glass, nor a country fair with
tables covered with tagged wares. The Indians themEelves will be present in costume to display their own handiwork. That is a feature of the competitive regulations. The Navajo blanket weaver must be present in native working apparel and with his working loom in order to -enter his exhibits. The Indian textile workers must wear their garments made of homespun wool and native dye3, and the silversmith must bring the tools of his trade and must dress in native style when he shows his collection of ring?, bracelets and belts. The Meecalera Apache basket maker must wear his
customary habit when he brings in his collection of baskets. Three piece3 of pottery and a dozen baskets are usually required for each single exhibit. Encouraging Indian Artist3 to Work The Indian artists who have coma into prominence in the art world of late will be given an opportunity to display their pictures at the fair. Prizes will be offered for the best drawings in pencil, pen and ink or water colors of Indian dances, ceremonies, games or occupations. Drawings of pottery designs will also be entered. Prizes will be offered for these in order to interest the school pupils, par
ticularly the girls, in the studv and
common knowledge that the Navajo use of the decorative art of their own
is the premier blanket weaver, that i pueblos. These designs are now be-
the Hopi makes the finest baskets
and that the Pueblo excells in pottery making. Even among the several pueblos the styles of pottery are easily distinguished.
Indian arts are fast dying out in
ing widely adapted by the white peo
ple for stencil decorations on garments and household linens. Indian dancing is considered anions the arts of the exhibit, A trophy will
be awarded to the group of not less
this country. To effect a revival of j than 20 from any tribe vhich perform
the native arts and crafts to encour
age the Indians to strive for the early
perfection of their forefathers, a great
upon symbolism, the original basis of (fair is to be held among the Indians
all primitive decorative arts; symbol-! ism connected with the forces of Nature they worship. As myths develop in reference to these forces and their origin, other designs referring to these myths are developed. I As the older people die and the younger generations come more into contact with a different form of civilization, the pure symbolism is forgotten and the designs become merely decorative and absorb the tendencies of the dominant races surrounding them. Secondly To present the Indian Arts intelligently and so increase the understanding of them among other races. Today the Indian designs are in the transition stage between pure
symbolism and mere decorative ef
fects and the Indian must be encour
aged to value and save the symbolism and methods of work peculiar to his
people for the records of Humanity to which every race has something of
interest and beauty to contribute.
Thirdly To enable the Indians to
sell their creations for a value based upon their careful workmanship and correctness of type. To be successful our encouragement must be practical. It must bo made worth while to the Indian in, a way he will understand. The mind of the average Indian of
today, like that of other average
of New Mexico and Arizona in Sep
tember at the time of the 210th annual fiesta of the city of the Holy
Faith, Santa Fe, N. M. The southwest Indian fair and Industrial arts and crafts exhibition, as it will be known, is the first of its kind in that section of the country.
the best and most artistic ceremonial dance. Judging will he made on elaborateness of costume and perfection of the music, singing and rhythm. The dances will be given before the fiesta audiences as a part of the program which each year includes several rare and beautiful aboriginal dances. Babies are to be classed with the arts as well. Little bronzed bov and
girl babies between the ages of one
Local fairs have been held on reser-:and two will be put on exhibition with vations and there have been exhibi-jthe best of the pottery and blankets, tions of Indian handiwork at county This is probably the first "better bafairs, but nothing of the scope and j bies" contest held among the red men
cnaracter or tni3 exhibition nas evert
been held in the southwest.
The exhibition, which is primarily
of the southwest, Indian schools, government and
sectarian, wm also enter exhibits or
for the Indians themselves, but will! the handiwork of their pupils. Among be an added attraction for the fiesta the miscellaneous articles for which as well, is being conducted by the prizes will be offered are headed
Facts About Indiana (By Associated Press) The years from 1S48 to I860 wer? marked by heavy foreign immigratior into the Ohio Valley, but Indiana received fewer of these immigrants than any other state. More than $10,000,000 worth of farm machinery was in use in Indiana by I860.
I ss--:-.t.;.:Ww.-: -
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Lessons in Correct English DON'T SAY: I should like to SEE the president I expected TO HAVE GONE. He said that knowledge WAS power. Is he a good speaker? I should say he WAS. , I DID this task in one day. SAY:
Arabians had plac-l I should like to HAVE SEEN the ed him in such ! president.
I expected TO GO. He said knowledge IS power. Is he a good speaker; I should say he IS. I ACCOMPLISHED this tasw in one day.
COL. T. E. LAWRENCE "The uncrowned King of Arabia," Col. T. E. Lawrence, has stepped from his throne.
According to word from London he!
has resigned as advisor on Arab affairs to the Colonial office. H i s work with the
Manufacturing establishments employed 329,227 persons in Indiar.a, according to the last census.
Indiana has an area of 36,045 square miles. Wages of school teachers in Indiana in the early days ranged from $10 to $20 per month with board ot the homes of the patrons.
high esteem how
ever, that his official title had almost been forgotten and the unofficial one of "Uncrowned king'' accorded him. Emir Feisul, king of Irak, commander iif chief ot the
School of American Research and it3
Director, Edgar L. Hewett, and by the Santa Fe chamber of commerce which is in charge of the annual fiesta and historical pageant. Lansing B. Bloom, a director of the state museum, is to be superintendent of exhibits.
Indiana Woman Provides Prizes The fair is the outgrowth of ideas advanced several years ago by Miss Rose Dougan of Richmond, Ind., who has interested herself in a practical way in Indian handicraft. She ha3 tendered an endowment from the income of which some of the prizes for the fair are derived. Other trophies
shirts and leggings, wools and yarn;.
ceremonial ornaments and articles, ancient weapons of offense and defense and Indian grown chilli. The Bureau of Indian Affairs of the
(United States government is heartily
endorsing tne fair and is encouraging its charges to enter exhibits of their arts and crafts. Although the work of the government for the Indian is primarily to promote industrial activities such as agriculture and stock raising, and to educate the children, the revival of the art work is approved because it means increased independence of the craftsmen.
Aiany or tne older Indians support
have been offered by the Santa Fe: themselves entirely by the manufac
business men who are interested in Jture of baskets, pottery, beadwerk and
Grapes Are Ripe! Don't Let Them Waste!
In This Paper Ten Years
Mgo Today
rilt v f c ajs I?
Ai-aciau aiui.v and son of the King of Hedjaz made Col. Lawrence staff officer with his forces as an indication
nf the resoect he held for Col. Law--' "
rr, who tvac: nUr. treated as a rfier- Permission was given to Rev. W. H.
the rank of Emir or! v"".v. i"e coum iinm bireet liap-
Memories ot Old Days
Make your own supply of grape juice. Most housewives do not seem to realize that grape juice, may be made in the home as easily as grape jelly, and that it is an extremely wholesome product. The Department of Agriculture has
published a booklet on grape juice, which tells all about making it at home. It explains the process of fer
mentation so that you will know howto prevent it. Every law-abiding citizen should have this booklet.
This is a free government publica
minds, is unable to grasp the value of ! the development of the Indian arts j blankets. During the last year 36,34
a thing unless it can be expressed by the white man's unit of value, money. An Indian who can make a beautiful bowl, for instance, cannot afford to spend the time and thought necessary for its creation going miles for the right kind of clay and for the minerals and plants used; working up the clay to the proper consistency; grinding the mineral colours; gathering and preparing the plants to obtain other colours; baking, polishing, decorating, all the things necessary for the correct making of a bowl for which he receives much less than for the same amount of time spent in manual labor on a railroad or in a sugar beet field. The result of this existing condition is killing the artistic, creative side
of the Indian and is therefore degen
erating in its effect. Fourthly To protect our Native American Arts from the destructive
tion ana our Washington Information mere curios and placed definitely
influence of the people who live oi be among the largest at the fair, Dou-
the Indians. In order to create an understanding and appreciation of our only real native art. it must be brought to the
attention of the public in an intelli-!
gent way, taken out of the realm of
and industries. Indians in the United States produced
The objects of the exhibition are i such articles worth nearly $2,000,000. given as "the encouragement of native' With the protection on the marketing arts and crafts among the Indians, tojof the Indian products which will rerevive old arts and to keep the arts j suit from the Santa Fe fair, the Indian of each tribe and pueblo as distinct i will become both a better artist and a as possible; the establishment and lo- better merchant.
ine securing 01 rasunaum priet-o, au-, thenticity of all handicraft offered forj
sale; ana protection or tne inaian m all his business dealings with traders and buyers." All of the villages and reservations in the southwest have been notified of the exhibition and are bustling with preparations to send the best of their products and their craftsmen to the big fair. Camping facilities for the visiting Indians, many of whom wi!l ride their horses in, will be provided in Santa Fe. and their valued handiwork will be guarded in tbe state armory there.
The entries of Pueblo pottery will
Marion county had 6.335 fr reignborn population in 1860 out of a total of 39,855. The lumber sawed in Indiana n I860 was valued at $3,169,000. In the early forties, fifties and sixties, there were many persons in In
diana who could neither real write.
iff and given
prince. Col. Lawrence's influence in Arabia
lis snown Dy tne iaci mat ue is iicuil-
eci wiui oemg ui mnu nu iuu6' about the revolt of the King of Hedjaz against the Turks. He raised an army of 200,000 Arabs - and within a short time harassed the Turks to such an extent that they set a fabulous price on his head. Col. Lawrence's career is all the more remarkable because of his comparative youth. He is only 32 years old. He has. however, devoted his
time to Arabian affairs since leaving Oxford.
nor
After Dinner Stories
The ladv dowager sailed gracefully down the "lawn, her prize Pekingese in tow. She released her little darling and turned to some flowers. Glancing up she was horrified to see "YumYum" squeezing through a narrow tpace in the wrought iron fence and escaping into the street beyond. "Help! Police!" she shouted, waving her arms above her head. Just then the grinning face of the Italian gardener appeared. Under his arm was the "Pek." "Oh, Tony!" she exclaimed, "can't you suggest anything that I can do to prevent Yum-Yum from getting through the fence?" Ton thought for a minute and finally broke forth with, "Why ou n9
Kta da bigga dog?"
tist church, to hold an ox roast on the grounds of the Richmond Park and Lake association by the directors. It was given under the auspices of the waiters of the Westcott hotel. All surplus funds were used for charity work.
tsureau wm secure a copy lor any reader who fills out and mails the coupon below. Enclose two cents in stamps for return postage. Write your came and address clearly. (Do not send the counon tn The Ti.
ladlum. Mall It direct to Washlnstoa D. C.)
Rippling Rhymes By Walt Mason
THE HAPPY LAD My car is made of zinc, my car is painted pink; but I'm as gay when on my way. as any wealthy gink. My home is but a shack, a woodshed at, the back; but when I'm there 'twould make you stare to see how high I stack. Mv watch is built of tin, and
has punk works within; it is a crime, j but keeps the time, the while I toil and ;
the colors fade, but still I spring a smile and sing the clothier has been paid. On liverwurst I dine, and I am feeling fine; the goods you see belong to me, and they are truly mine. No creditor appears with caustic taunts and sneers, to get his plunk or have my 'junk sold by the auctioneers. No sheriff comes with writs to scare me into fits; no bailiffs wait around my gate to bone me for six bits. I'll have a limousine some day, and mansion green: some dav I'll shine in raiment
1 fine, a silk hat on my bean. Some day
DOLLAR SPENT 27 YEARS AGO BACK TO ORIGINAL OWNER NEW YORK, Aug. 12. A dollar spent twenty-seven years ago at Lancaster, Mo., returned to its original
owner in Montesano, Wash. When Mrs. Torrence Hagerman was 7 her father gave her and her sister each a dollar coined in the year of their birth. The girls carved their initials on the coins and shortly afterward spent them. Mrs. Hagerman made some purchases in Montesano and received the dollar in change with her
initials on it. She says she is going i
to hold onto it this time.
Washington, D. C. Frederic J. Haskin, Director, The Richmond Palladium Information Bureau, I enclose herewith two cents in stamps for return postage on a free copy of the Grape Juice Booklet. Name
among the arts of nations. We speak of the Chinese, Japanese,
Slavic arts and agree with all who say we are a nation of borrowers and have no native art on this continent. We shall before very long have no native art if we continue to oblige the
THEY" ARK MILD HUT KFFETIVB A person with inactive or slowed up digestive organs suffers doubly from hot weather. Biliousness, headaches, blurred vision, bad breath, coated tongue are almost certain to be present with a mass of heat-producing undigested food in the stomach. Foley Cathartic Tablets keep the digestive organs active and the system fit and fine, purged of poisons. W. D. Kennedv. Albany. X. Y., says: "Folev Cathartic Tablets are mild but effective." Not habit forming. A. G. Luken Drug Co., 626-H2S Main St. Advertisement.
HARTMAN WARDROBE TRUNKS
827 Main SI
Street City .
State
muitimiuininti
Everyone of the 7,000,000 persons in Austria must contribute about 60,000 crowns yearly for the salaries of government employes.
&53&l&33ZEm A Sod pair NSTJR; Ms0- needed will
Clara M. Sweltzer, 1002 Main St.
make work easier. Optometrist Richmond
itttHninimiiitmHHnmmfmtiinmnntitinmmtmfintimitnigi
1 BOSTON STORE ! One Price To All 1 i!Miii'niuHtiiiii!MintiMtnuHiiiimiMMiMit'ituiMiimiifiuiniiiiuiuiitiMinimiini
g iiumiiuitHiiuujtiimituiTMiiiii.iuiiiiinm
Aus-ist i
Brower Auto Sales Co. I
I Phone 6019 I 21-23 South 7th Street I uiiiitmutittitfiiujiiiiniimuHitiHntuiiiuHimiiiMitmiiiiimiiiuimimiiinaiut
Let Us Do Your Washing by Wet CALL 2766 Home watfer Laundry 1516 E. Main
. V..
You'll Find It For Less at
cjDunm&c
17 South 7th St.
Sink or Swim Survive or Perish
"We are Still
in the Swim
BUTTER MAID CAKES Sold at All Groceries You'll Like Them All Flavors
ZWISSLER'S
Bakery Phona 1654
Restaurant Phone 165S
Special Monday
20c
MILK, tall cans 3 for RED BEANS 3 cans
20c
BUEHLER BROS
715 Main St.
tftnnmuffiiimtiiimtiiuinmitniinimutniniuninmiiintminiiiiiiBnimnmt: I You can buv a I 1 FORD TOURING CAR $122 Down, Balance in 12 Monthly 1 1 Payments f 1 WEBB-COLEMAN CO. j 1 Opp. Postoffice Phone 1616-1694 1 uuiiuwiiimninimmiuuiluuiiniunniHmiiaiifiiRifmnminiuiniiuiiiiiniii
SHINGLES Red Cedar. It pays to use the best get our prices. ASBESTO SEAL A never-leak cement; makes old roofs like new. Investigate. GOOD LUMBER at reasonable prices. COAL That burns well and gives satifcation. Give us a trial. Prompt Delivery. Right prices. BELL IN BEALLVIEW Ph. 2476
1000.000 ElOT-XS
MARTIN
tOSENBERGEl
IT Til W4 1m
401-3 Main St. RICHMOND, INDIANA
FREEseoS!f free
On Savings
Yoo can start tavJ Ings account with Davment rJI 9c
per weeK or mora and same can be withdrawn at any time, Interest paid Jan. 1st and July 1st. Pn'ck4 Home Savbgs 23 North 8th St. Safety Boxea for Rent
.v5
T
