Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 215, 9 September 1922 — Page 6
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i
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PAGE SIX
' THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., SATURDAY, SEPT. 9, 1922.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM
Published Every Evening Except Sunday by , Palladium Printing Co. T Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, aa . Second-Class Mail Matter.
MEKliF.n np firm t snri itfii pbem
, The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for 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.
Experts on the Crime Problem
"The special commission on law enforcement appointed by the American Bar association presented a report which confirms much that has been said in the press concerning an increasing spirit of lawlessness in the United States'.," says 'the Chicago Journal. "Of special interest to us is the comparison made by the commission between crime statistics for Chicago and for Canada. The neighboring Dominion has between four and five times the population of this city. Figures for 1921 show that Canada had 2,270 burglaries to 4,785 in Chicago; 605 robberies to our 2,594, and 57 murders to 212 in Cook county. The number of prisoners in Joliet totaled exactly the number in all Canadian penitentiaries. J ; "Now the interesting fact is that while Cook county had a murder for every 14,000 people and Canada a murder for every 200,000 people, the Canadian is shown by our own crime statistics to be less law-abiding than the native white
American that is to say, the Canadians rank
sixth in lawlessness out of the natives of seven
teen foreign countries resident in the United States. "Hence, the secret of the much lower proportion of erime in Canada than in the United States
manifestly does not lie in the better character of the individual Canadian. It must be looked for
somewhere else. "Probably the greater racial homogeneity of
the Canadian people is a factor; doubtless, also, the lack of many centers of big and congested population contributes to the difference in showing.
"But there is a significant sentence in the
commission's report which points to the most po
tent cause in holding down crime statistics across
our northern border:
" 'There prevails an undefined but palpable difference in the attitude toward the law of the two men unon the street the Canadian and the
A American.'
"Back of this difference in attitude are the
following facts, noted in the report:
"Administrators ' of criminal law in Canada
are absolutely beyond the reach of politics.
"A chief of police is secure in his office for
life if he makes good. So is every other police
man.- The judges are appointed for life. The prosecuting attorney has a life job, if he cares
to retain it.
"While substantive law is the same as our i i i. ; j;-c4.
own, procedure ana appucauuu ate urn em-. Justice is swift and certain. Conviction of crime in 99 cases out of 100 ends the matter. "Penalties for crime are more severe. The report rather naively adds, 'the theory seems to involve protection to the public, with only a secondary concern for the criminal.' "That is why the Canadian, at home, watches his step. He knows that he has small chance of getting away successfully with an serious infraction of law. When he comes to the United States he soon learns that it is no hard trick to get away with murder."
They Grow Big Out West Children of Pacific Coast Taller and Heavier Than in Other Sections of United States. V
After Dinner Tricks
iAnswers to Questions' (Any reader can gret the answer to anv question by "writing The Palladium Information Bureau, Frederick J. Haskin, director, Washington, D. C. This offer applies strictly to Information. The hureau does not (rive advice on lesral, 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. Give full name and address and enclose two cents in stamps for return postage. All replies are sent direct to the inquirer. Q. "What was the mystery or tory in connection with the famous question as to who struck Biily Patterson? A. B. :' v .; ' - A. - Various versions have been published of the Billy Patterson mystery. A recent one locates Billly in England and makes him a victim of a college prank. According to this story there was a feud between Oxford students and the river boatmen of whom Billy Patterson was the leader.- One night Patterson was captured by the collegians, given a njpek trial and sentenced death by the guillotine. The prisoner was conducted to the execution chamber, shown the beheading
block and headsman armed with a huge battle-ax, and then blindfolded, bound hand and foot and forcfd to kneel with his head and neck in the block. At a given signal the victim was struck on the back of the neck with a cord that had. been wet in cold water. It was only a light bio, but it proved as fatal as if it ha'l been delivered with the headsman's ax. Billy Patterson's heart would not stand the shock. The frightened students removed the body to the river bank and left it, and "Who Struck Billy Patterson?" became a mystery that has never been solved. - Q. What does T. H. stand for after Honolulu? H. H. T. A. The " T. H." after Honolulu stands for Territory of Hawaii. Q. How tall is the statue of the Venus of Milo?
A. The height of the Venus of Milo is 2 metres 38 millimetres, or a trifle over 6 feet 3 inches. Q. What is the correct version of the mountain and Mohammed proverb? P. N. A. In Bacon's essay on Boldness, it is given as "If the hill will not come to Mohammed, Mohammed will come to the hill." Q. Which is the largest bone in the body? K P.
A. The femur is the largest, longest and strongest bone in the uman body. Q. . Where does "Annie Laurie" the writer, live? W. T. J. A. Annie Laurie is the pen name of Mrs. Charles Bonfils, who also writes under the pame Winifred Black Her home Is in San Francisco.
-Up"
TODAY'S TALK r ftAen Matthew Adams. Author of "You Can," "Take It,"
J B , ARE YOU A "PHILOSOPHIC?9' I read a very Inspiring article the other day by John Brophy, a labor leader who is at the head of nearly 50,000 union coal miners in Pennsylvania. - This man came to America when but a small boy. He began to work in the mines when he was only twelve years old. He was born of a family of miners which had come to America from England. His early history was one of pitiable poverty and discouragement. But somehow or other, he aspired to be something more than an ordinary toiler. So he began to read books. He read the ones he could find. There were only two of these one about "Buffalo Bill's' Wild West and one about the American Civil war. One told him about the West, the other about the South. Then he had something to dream about. His imagination was stirred. He sought more books, and then what papers and magazines he could get. Soon he joined the union and his force of character impressed itself and he was made an officer in his local organization. Today he is a leader worthy-and fit. I wich to quote two things which are a product of his thinking. Here they are: -"A man's philosophy is bis suffering." "Loneliness, illness, and poverty keep an immigrant an alien. Good luck and good times make him an American." This last statement is a good one for us all to bear in mind. If America spent more tinie in educating and giving a helping hand to its' newcomers from all lands, there would be a different story to offer in the great industrial world. I hope to see the time when every alien will find the hand of Uncle Sam outstretched to welcome him to our shores and then to teach him the principles of good government and good living by no means starving him while he is under this instruction. John Brophy early became a "philosophic." He used his eyes and his head. Now, as a leader of the toilers, he is opening the eyes of the "other side" to the fact that cooperation and justice offer the only road to happy welfare in industrial life. I have gotten great inspiration from the story of this man Brophy's life. I woulfl like to have him for a friend. He is a labor leader worthy to be trusted and followed. "A man's philosophy," he says (it bears repeating), "is his suffering."
By FREDERICK J. HASKIW WASHINGTON. D. C, Sept 9. I the-justly celebrated climate of California breeding a race of giants on the Pacific coast? The scientists of tb.3 children's bureau in Washington think that It is, although with true scientific caution they qualify their opinion with a "perhaps". At any rate, it is certain
ly true that, age for age, the school children of California are considerably taller and heavier than the run of school children the country over; and the experts in Washington can find no better explanation of the phenomenon that that of favorable climate. The discovery that California children, and there is nothing in the record to indicate that the same would not be true of children of Oregon and Washington, are physically superior to American children as a whole, was the most notable revelation made in the study of school children during the "Children's Year," as the year 1918 was called. .In that twelve-month some 2,000,000 American school children, six years old and under, were weighed and measured under the supervision of the children's bureau.
No study of human growth on such a
Rippling Rhymes , By Walt Mason
GEMS OF SONG To James the blacksmith I repair to. have him shoe my old blind mare, since she i3 going lame; and when
his useful toil is done, and I am hand
ing out the mon, he says, "I'm glad you came; I have an ode I wrote last year; I wish you'd read it while you're here, and tell me what you think; is it a grand and soaring song? Is it
too short? Is it too long? Or is It on the blink?" The tinsmith, ere he
mends my boat, pulls out a bundle from his coat, a bale of manuscript;
"Sit down," he says, "and read this lay, while I repair your ancient dray,
that is eo badly hipped." The tailor,
as he plies his tape, remarks, "I wish 1 could escape -from this depressing
trade; the odes and madrigals I write would be acknowledged out of sight, if
by good critics weighed." The barber, as he dyes my beard, quotes passages
from poems weird, that he composed yest'reen; "wth all my being I aspire," he sadly says, "to punch a lyre, but ah, the fates are mean!" The waiter brings me ham and eggs, and, as I eat, he mildly begs five minutes
of my time ; he'd have me read a little book he wrote conjointly with the
cook, and which he thinks sublime. Oh, poets sell me oil and gas, and
poets mow my stretch of grass, and poet3 shine my shoes; and each on,e
mmKs nis nooie dope would rank with
that of Burns or Pope, if he but had
his dues.
Facts About Indiana
During the extra session of the leg
islature in 1869, the state election laws were so modified as to have elections
held biennially instead of annually.
Numerous rich mines of iron and
Lcoal were discovered in Indiana in
1S69.
At a trial of machinery at the state
fair in October, 1869, a steam boiler exploded, killing twenty persons and seriously wounding forty others.
Who's Who in the Day's News
MRS. HENRY FORD , The one person in the world who has had more to do with shaping Henry Ford's meteoric career, which carried him to wealth and international
fame, than any
M
usmgs ror ine evening
SOME THEATRE FALLACIES That every manager goes nround with a pad of blank passes and fountain pen in his pocket. That David Belasco puts his plays on for aTtistic purposes only and never makes a cent. That an actress is no good unless she is a graduate of a stock company
which played in barns and schoolhouses. That all the snobbish young men iw box-offices are members of aristocratic families and far above the customers socially. ' That orchestra members all go for a drink when they duck down under the" stage. That stage carpenters are so blase that they never look at a show or a new flapper in the cast. That every performer suffers f tarvatlon and frost-bite when he goes on tour.
That every person who gets a good
seat at a show has a pull with ta-r manager. Americans are hurrying home from Europa and steamships are booked full until October. Be it ever so thirstful, there's no place like home. Dancing teachers in convention assembled hailed the return of th-3 long skirt with much jubilation.. Putting on long skirts means that all the girls will have to learn all over again Also the dancing masters hailed with delight the return of thr oldfashioned" waltz. Nearly everybody now will have ta learn to waltz.
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other person is Mrs. Henry Ford. The auto king is frank about that. She was 23 and he was 20 when
After Dinner Stories Grace is a young lady of five years and also of a very difficult disposition. The other day a visitor to her father's home found her weeping in a corner. "Why, what are you crying about?" she asked. ' 'Cause all mybrothers and sisters have a vacation and I don't have any." "And why don't you have any vacation?" " 'Cause I don't, go to school yet" Everybody's,
An act providing for the teaching of German in the public schools was passed by an extra session of the legislature in 1869.
Maintaining of Indiant in the state
proved - a heavy burden on the residents of Indiana in 1S30.
A total of $54,000 was spent for the
improvement of the famous Michigan
road in Indiana in 1S32.
Sam, looking very disreputable and very much as though he had been
hit by something, sorrowfully appeared before the judge. In a stern
they were married, voice tho judge said:
She was Miss Clara I "Sam, it looks as though you were
Bryant, daughter of a farmer at Greenfield, Mich. Ford, then, -had gone to Detroit as an engineer for the Edison company. When Ford first conceived the idea
of the "poor man's car it was Mrs. Ford who urged him on in his formation of the company. When he reached the millionaire class and launched the first of his drastic steps tomake his employes get more happiness out o life by giving them what other employers called "unheard of pay" it was
Mrs. Ford who knew that his heart was in the plans and that the idea was not born of a desire for publicity. Mrs. Ford is given credit for convincing Ford that he should, "for old friendship's sake," pay $8,000,000 for the Lincoln Motor company to save Henry Leland, its ownerfrom bankruptcy. Ford admits that he had refused to take the step until Mrs. Ford called him from a conference at the Ford home and prevailed upon him to take over the company. Mrs. Ford, personally, Is a quiet, refined, modestly dressed woman of middle age, the typical wife of a prosper
ous business man. She is seldom seen in public, is rarely quoted in the newspapers, and what philanthropic work she does she accomplishes quietly with no desire to receive public credit
drinking again
Sam replied, very weak and mourn
fully. "Yes, sah. dat was sho' pow
ful stuff what Ah had. jedge. Ah was
drinkin dat chicken hootch."
"Chicken hootch" Why, I never
heard of that." "Yes, sah, jedge, chicken hootch One drink and you lay."
Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today
THE
Hackman, Klehfoth
u & Co.
10th and No. F Exclusive Agts.
NATIONAL CEMENT
English is the most widely used language commercially.
BiiinfiinnnnininiiuiiitniiniiiiiiuititiiiiumiiitHn!iumit:i!ittmttiininmiinii I Victor Addinjr Machines I
J 100 I I BARTEL & R0HE I 921 Main St. luminmlHnuMmtBHmitiniiiiummimnmmuHmtiimwiTiuHtliriiMitmiimui
An effort was being made to prevent
fraudulent vending of milk in the city
This was the decision of the board of works and the city sealer of weights
and measures.
Inspector Taylor reported that he had examined measures and bottles of
12 dairymen. All the measures were
found correct.
The mayor warned the dairymen
about selling milk -in other than, pint and quart bottles. He said that the people were being fooled about their
purchases of milk.
Be Sure to Visit Us when you come to the Fair, Sept. 13-14-15.
cruiiuuiNimFtmiimitnimtmimui iiiiiimmauttm iftaiittiHKi mmmunmmin I WE MAKE LOANS I See Us 1 PRUDENTIAL LOAN & INVEST-1 I MENT COMPANY I 20 S. 8th St. Phone 1727
muimmiwiinuwniunnmmirtniimimmiBmiiuimimMmmmmiiiimiim
You Can Always Find It Priced Less at
Dumn
In 183S, Indiana was in financial dis
tress, having borrowed for internal improvements, $J,827,000.
Plank roads cost between $1,200 and 1,500 a mile in Indiana in 1850. Build
ing of roads at the present time costs many, many times more per mile than
this amount
Lessons in Correct English
DON'T SAY: AIN'T you coming?
Did you say you COME here a year
ago?.
Thank her for what she DONE for
you.
We COME home after waiting an
hour for him.
I BEGUN this book this morning. SAY: AREN'T you coming? Did you say you CAME here a year
agoT
Thank her for what she HAD DONE for youWe CAME home after waiting an hour for him. I BEGAN this book this morning.
6cale had ever before been conducted in this country. The records have now undergone analysis by the government statisticians and their conclusions are of great great practical interest. The tabulations show that California children are two-fifths of an inch tall
er and three-quqarters of a pound heavier than children of the same age
the country over. These qquantities
by themselves seem small, but as
averages they are large. They axe
so large that it is probable that an
observant traveler, going directly into
California from the East, could with
his own eyes notice that the Pacific Coast children are bigger than thostf
in the rest of the country.
American Bred Are Largest
California's showing is the more re
markable because of the large per
centage of Italians among the school
children weighed and measured there.
The Italians, these statistics demon
strate, are below the general stature Scandinavian parents jn the United
States are considerably, and those of German parentage somewhat, above
the national averages in weight and
height; yet the percentage of children
of these stalwart nationalities is ex
ceedingly low in California. But with
no racial reasons for large stature in
California on the contrary, with au adequate racial reason to acount for
staure lower than average the Cali
fornia children nevertheless proved to
be as much bigger and heavier than
the American average as are the child
ren of pure Scandinavian blood.
It is evident therefore that, 30 far
as the children are concerned, Call
fornia is breeding a race of paople as
large as the Swedes, Norwegians and Danes. The scientists d6 not attempt
to account absolutely for this fact
They suggest favorable climate as a possible cause. They also suggest another reason which may cotimend itself even more strongly to the biolo
gist namely, the principal of selection
m the parents. The human stock of California is a pioneer stock. The
pioneer is a person of superior courage
and initiative. It is reasonable ti con
nect courage and initiative with rug
ged health and health with superior
physique. Thus the parent stock of California may be regarded as physi
cally select
Iowa furnished an intersting study
for the scientists in that the percent
age of native parents in that state
was higher than in any district stud
led- Less than 20 percent of the child-
ren examined . had foreign-born par
ents. In New York City it was just the reverse, less than 23 percent of the children examined having native
parents, ine Iowa children were slightly above the national average in
height and slightly below it in weight
inwv iorK cnuaren averaged more than half inch shorter than average
American children of the same ages
The New York children were weighed
m their underclothing, and N so the
scientists have made no attempt toj compare their weights with those or other children. On the average.New York children are nearly an inch shorter than those of California. Children Thrive in the Country Whatever satisfaction the cities ot America may take in their low death rates as. compared with the rural death rate, it is shown by this studj that the country is more favorable than thai city to the growth of the child. Rural children measured in 1918 averaged one-quarter of an inch taller and nearly ont-quarter of a
pound heavier than city children. Colored children averaged shorter and lighter than white children. The weight and stature deficiencies in colored children,, however, occurred
only In the younger ages. From age four on, colored children craved to
be, If anything, a little taller and heavier than white ones. The reason for this may be that high child mortality among negroes kills off the stunted and starved victims of poor nutrition and leaves at age four and onward only the vigorous survivors who compare favorably with white children in stature. Or it may be a negro racial characteristic to grow slowly the first three years of life and then to gain weight and he'sht at an accelerated rate as compared with growth of whites. The less serious physical defects to which children are subject adenoids,
enlarged or diseased tonsils, or bad teeth seemed to have no great effect upon height and weight, although children so afflicted were shorter and, lighter than the average. Rickets and malnutrition, however, were shown by marked deficiencies, malnutrition-' re-
suiting in children an inch and one-
iuhu ueiuw average aeigiit anu nearly three and one-half pounds below average weight. In thousands of American homps Dr.
-J" ' ' "-'V ' 1
NUPkl
No. 287-Breaking an Apple To break an apple in half requires a bit of strength. Accordingly, you will be credited with creat skill when you pick up an apple, show it to be free of preparation, and then break it in twain by merely twisting it with the tips of yonr fingar. ' The apple, however, - iu previously prepared, but bo cleverly that nothing appears to have been done to it. Take a neejle and thread, and push the needle through the skin cf the apple bringing: it out a bit further on. Re insert the needle at that point, and repeat the operation until the apple ha been girdled, .and the needles comes out of the original hole. Then , pull both ends of the thread, so that it comes right out of the hole. (The diagram explains the ccrrect procedure). The apple will then be severed except for the skin, which appears perfectly normal. If the apuie is lying in a dish of ordWary fruit. It can be picked up, passed around for careful inspection, and then broken with virtually no effort.
Emmett Holt's books on the rearing of children are the standard textbooks
of the nursery. It may be of comfors
to parents whose children fail to come up to D. Holt's weight and height
averages to know that the Children's
Year averages do not come up to them
either. Dr. Holt's averages are based on the measurements of a relatively
small number of children brought to him in his private practice. In fact
other standard tables of measurements
for children show averages higher than the new averages obtained by
ine cnuarens bureau. The reason
probably is that the averages ascer
tained by individuals are affected to some extent by . the unconscious selection of better physical types. The Children's Year averages, based on the
measurements of nearly 2,000,000 from all sorts of homes and from every section of the United States, represent the true cross-section of American childhood.
WINCHESTER SWINE
SHOW BEING PLANNED
WINCHESTER, Ind., Sept. 9.. Plans
are being made for the swine show
which will be held in the streets of Winchester, Sept 18 and 19. It prom
ises to be the largest exhibition of
fine hogs ever held in this country.
Two hundred and forty head have al ready been entered. All organizations are promoting the show, and breeds of
all kinds are eligible, providing tney are owned by persons, residing in Ran
dolph county. The prizes -will be do
nated by Winchester merchants and tho swine organizations of the
country.
Contest Winners. Announcement has been made of
the winners in the wheat contest re
cently held in this city. They are as follows: For best quality, first, Harry
Odle, of Ridgeville; . second, Ernest
Edwards, of Winchester; third, Alva Rowe, of Union City. The judging, was done by Joseph Helms, of Rich
mond.
Ask Drain Report. Petition for repair of drain has
been filed in the circuit court by
James C. Jarrett, et al.
, . Petition Filed. Petition for order to pay taxes has
been filed by the state of, Indiana ex rei Melvia E. Mull, treasurer of Ran
dolph county, against Nathan II. Chenoweth, clerk of the Randolph circuit court. Cornetist Coming. Ernest H. Williams, of New York, son of Prof. S. E. Williams, of this city, will play with his father's band, at the last band concert of the season, Tuesday evening. Mr. Williams has been cornet soloist with Goldman's band, New " York city, and has been director of the New York City Shriners' band. He and his w'ife both are cornet soloists.
Liberty To Hold School In Condemned Building LIBERTY, InLt Sept 9. Permission to hold school in the condemned grade and high school buildings of Liberty has just been issued by the state board of health. The permission extends only over the period of the next school year. Enrollment in the grades, when school opened Monday, was 200 and in the high school, 75.
JOB GOES BEGGING (By Associated Press) BRADNER, Ohio. Sept. 9. The job of carrying the mail between the postoffice and the railroad is going begging. A call for bids brought no response, and the pouch now is being carried by Hocking Valley railroad employes.
GOULD HOT TURN IN BED Operation Avoided by Taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Dayton, Ohio. 1 had such pains that I had to be turned in bed every time I
wished to move, i hey
ifl
Dr. Simpson's Vegetable Compound is recommended by hundreds of people who have been helped by its use. An "alterative" medicine capable of keeping the blood stream pure and uncontaminated certainly covers a wide range cf ailments. Try this great remedy in your case. Supplied by druggists. Advertisement
HmituiiHiiiiiHiiiuHiifliiiiiiuiiiitHtnttiTfiHimtmitnriniiniiHiiMiitiintiiiHiuw I SAFETY FOR SAVINGS 1 I PLUS 1
said an operation was necessary. My
mother would keep
saying: Why don t you take Pinkham's. Henrietta?' and I'd say, 'Oh, mamma, it won't help me, I've tried too much.' One day she said, 'Let me get you one bottle of each kind. You won't be out very much if
it don't help you.' I don't know if you will believe me or not, but I only took two bottles of Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and one of Lydia E. Pinkham's Blood Medicine when I began to get relief and I am regular ever since without a pain or a headache.. When I lie down I can get up without help and without pain. I can't begin to tell you how I feel and look. I have befin to gain in weight and look more like ought to. I think everyday of ways
I have been helped. Any one who does ; not believe me can write to me and I ; will tell them what shape I was in. I am I
ready to do anything I can to help your medicine." Mrs. Henrietta Miller, 137 Sprague St, Dayton, Ohio. If you have any doubt write to Mrs, Miller and get her story direct. Advertisement
ALMOST CRAZY WITHP1MPLES On Face. Cou!(Not Sleep. Cutieura Healed. j . "Pimple broke out on my forehead and soon spread all over my
face. They were hard, large and red and festered. Tee pimples itched and burned so that I was almost crazy at times. My face was disfigured, and at night I could not sleep on account of the irritation.
" I read an advertisement for Cnticura Soap and Ointment and sect for a free sample. They helped me so I purchased more, and after using four cakea of Cutieura Soap, with the Cutieura Ointment, I was healed." ( Signed) Earl Johnson, R. 3, Box 37, Peebles, Ohio, Mar. 1, 1922. Use Cutieura for all toilet purposes. Staple Zacfe FRa fcrMaU. AMrras: "CV.lmr LibKMoilM. Dept. H, Hainan 48. Ilajii." Sold fwv-wh-r. goapSSc. Ointment i!i and 60c. Talcum 13c. J5lS Coticora Soap ahavea without nun.
JL -ir-
iiiiiiniiimniainiiiiuniiiniiniimiimniitinHiuiinuniiniimiiHimiiiuHiii'imii ! STUDEBAKER 1 - Big Six Show Sept. 13, 14, 15 23 South Seventh Street I iifnuiimuiuiHifii!t!ni:Miit')iimifiiitmitiiMiimHfttMm!titi!i:t!'.t--i!ii""-i MnHimwimmiintuHtiMiiiiwiHiMimiiniuiHifiuiuiiiu.iiiitiuuiiiMutufiiuM.j Z Interest on Your Savings 1 Accounts 1 American Trust Company I Main and 9th Sts. I "(iuawt.ii.ii.iimt Miniirii.ii.in.iTiiL..ii..t..it.....i I1 "Vlllllll1lMia,
USED BY THREE GENERATIONS "I use Foley's Honey and Tar personally, give it ta all my children and now to my grandchildren with the sam good results. I tried many kinds of cough medicines, but never want anything but Foley's Honey and Tar," writes Mrs. E. K. Ol?on, Superior, "Wise. Foley's Honey and Tar was established in 1ST5 and has stood the test of time serving three generations. It quickly relieves colds, coughs and croup, throat, chest and bronchial trouble. A. G Luken Drug Co., 626-628 Main St Advertisement.
3 Interest
I DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY i I "The Home For Savings" I KnwiiMiwuwutMuimiimmiM
W. Virginia and Pocahontas COAL Independent Ice and Fuel Company
Fresh and Smoked Meats BUEHLER BROS. 71S Main Street
New Fall I
Clothing You make your own terms. HIRSCH'S 718 Main St
Don't Wear Spotted Clothes Send them to
WILSON to be Cleaned Phones 1105-1106
HARTMAN WARDROBE TRUNKS
yjggH
827 Main St.
I.
Thoroughly washed and - properly screened GRAVEL makes better concrete and does not cost any more than the other kind. Plant No. 2 The Richmond-Greenville Gravel Company
Phones 4132 and 4032
PurePasteurized Milk and Cream Phone 1531 KRAMER BROS. DAIRY
AiiimiiiiiiiiiumilliimiiiHmtKKmitwuiMunniitiiiiimmiHitiflBwtntuimnint.
You can buy a I FORD TOURING CAR I
$122 Down, Balance in 12 Monthly
payments
WEBB-COLEMAN CO. ' I
I Opp. Postofftce Phone 1616-1694
uuiutiuiuiuiwiuti.-iiiumimuuiiiiuiiuiittiiHiiiiiHiiuuiiiiimnHHiHmiiiiHa
LUMBER
POSTS ROOFING BUILDING MATERIALS of All Kinds Right Prices Prompt Delivery MATHER BROS. Company
1
BETSY ROSS BREAD
and
BUTTER MAID CAKES - . Sold at All Groceries ZWISSLER'S 23 S. 5th St
Quality and Service
" Is
Lumber, Shingles and Roofing; Poplar and Oak Plank and Timbers. COAL that bums well and gives satisfaction. ' BELL in Beallview S. 8th and M Sts., City
On Savings
You can start sav. Ings account with payments of 9c.
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'nl 29 North 8th St Safety Boxes forleS .
