Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 239, 7 October 1922 — Page 6

rAGE SIX

!THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND., SATURDAY, OCT. 7, 1922.

AND SUN-TELEGRAM

Published Every Evening Except Sunday-by Palladium PrintingOo. J Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Streets. , Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, aa 1 ' Second-Class Mall Matter.

MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS Th Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use for republication of all news dispatches credUed 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. Preparing Better Teachers Gov. McCrayin a speech here a few weeks

ago described the poor preparation which many

teachers of rural schools had, citing instances in

which teachers who teach primary grades spent

their time at a normal school studying branches .that did not prepare them for their immediate tasks. Conditions in Indiana are duplicated elsewhere. Ohio is trying to weed out poor material in prospective teachers before it reaches the normal school. V. H. Riegel, state director of education, will advocate a change to, this effect before the next state legislature. "It's becoming a" fact that many graduates of normal schools in this state are not fitted to teach," he said. "A girl who doesn't know the things she is supposed to teach, can't teach them." He estimates that at least 10 per cent of ap

plications for licenses to teach under the present system are not qualified for the profession and should be barred. Gov. McCray is acting on the theory that if a teacher proposes to teach the subjects of the lower grades, she would be thoroughly trained in methods of accomplishing that end and should not be wasting the state's money and her own time acquiring learning that has no specific value in the particular work she will perfqrm in the school system. Most citizens will agree with the governor's view, which seems to be corroborated by the

statement of the director of education in Ohio. Teachers of the rural schools should be as effi

cient as those in the cities. Their training in the normal schools should fit them" for their tasks so that the boys and girls who are under their tutelage will not be made to suffer from the poor groundwork which the teachers lay in the early years of their schooling. If the work of teaching the rudiments is bungled by inneficient teachers, the boys and girls will suffer throughout life. And this becomes all the more important when one remembers that the vast per centage of boys and girls do not have an opnortunitv to attend college. The standard of the

grade and high schools should be maintained at the highest notch, but this can be done only if the teachers are carefully trained for the work which they are to perform.

RURAL MAIL DELIVERY SERVICE COVERS L 180448 MILES. G Postoffice Department Shows Illinois Leads All. States

withJpl74jnioPComerj.Routes .

COST

$&g,ooo,ooo Annuafb

Service Established IfiGS

Total Number Routed 44,186 .

COPYRIGHT 1922 BY SCIENCE SERVICE," WASHINGTON. D.f

A Free Booklet On Fire Prevention For School Children

Oil Wells Old and New Kentucky Wells Bring Riches to Many Mountaineers from Land Too Poor to Cultivate.

After Dinner Tricks

Dr FREDERICK J. HASKIX BURKESV1LLE, Ky., Oct 7 In the : history of the conversion of natural products into commodities useful to man nothing seems stranger than that petroleum was known by ancients and known continuously for uncounted centuries, yet did not become an important commercial product till 50 years ago. From the Latin words "petro", a rock, and "oleum", oil, we get the name "petroleum" "rock oil." The "slime" spoken of in the Old Testament in the construction of the tower of Babel was partly evaporated petroleum. The inhabitants of Nineveh and Babylon used it as a binder for brick as mortar is used nowadays in making walls. Oil springs on the island of Zante ard mentioned by the Greek historian Herodotus. Egyptians used petroleum in embalming and imported it from the v.cinity of the Dead Sea centuries before the birth of Christ. Lamps of the temple of Jupiter were lighted with oil from the springs of Agrigentum on the island of Sicily. .

Persians, Chinese, Japanese, used it

to a limited extent 3,000 years ago,

The mound builders who preceded the

American Indians of the period of

Christopher Columbus, made use of it

Yet when a man drilling for salt near Burkesville in southern Kentucky in

1829 struck oil he was disappointed

and alarmed, and did not" realize that he had tapped what was to become a

natural resource enormously valuable. The story as told in Burkesville is

that the salt well driller had been sev-

eral times disappointed. Making an

other attempt he remarked that he would drill till he should "strike salt

or strike hell."

When he struck oil and a gusher

poured its contents into Cumberland

River, caught fire and covered the surface of the stream with flame, for 50 miles, he was sure that he had made

good his boast. According to the leg

ends of the Cumberland he starte.l running from the scene and perhaps still is going, as the Flying Dutchman

still is sailing his ship.

Nowadays every drug store " sells

clear tasteless "mineral oil" as medi

cine. When the Burkesville well stopped burning, or when means were

found to stop it a company began bot

tling the crude oil and selling it as

medicine, while "Senceca oil was be

ing sold from the salt wells of the

Pittsburgh region and from a spring in which oil flowed near Cuba, New .York. Beeswax, tallow, whale oil and lard oil were the popular illuminants in those days, and whales were becoming scarce. Crude petroleum was unfit to

burn indoors because of the smoke and odor. ' The first patent for refining it was not granted till 1850. All the .history of kerosene has been written since then. Gasoline is a later product, and more recent than the first manufacture of gasoline is the use of oil as a binder for roads, a use somewhat similar to that made of it Babylon. Oil and Coal Development. Oil wells have changed the aspects of life in the oil counties in Kentucky much less than coal mines have changed life in the coal counties. Coal development makes cities a business up- ' on a far larger scale than oil development. The former villages of the valleys of the Big Sandy, the Cumberland

and the Kentucky have been made so important by coal that various cities are in hot competition for the business that is to be done in them. Cincinnati. Louisville, Knoxrille, and Hungtinton send traveling men into territory which hardly was on the trade map till coal made it rich. Oil is tapped. There is a boom. The oil towns are crowded beyond capacity for a time. But when the last wildcat territory has been developed and the oil is flowing through the pipeline, evidence o! the boom consists to a considerable degree in tales of sudden wealth which came to poor land holders who, la many instances, left the mountains to settle in the Bluegrass where roads ere good and automobiles may be used t is said commonly in the Bluegrass that mountain money has done more

than anything else to advance the

price of farm land in the central count ies. -

Many mountain farms, which' rewarded labor so slightly that no sentiment for the home bound the owner

to the soil when he sold out to aa oil

company or took his one-eighth royal

ty are abandoned to idle growth.

Their former owners are living in the section of the state which James Allen has celebrated in novels descriptive of f.e soil and the social life of the region in which all roads lead to Lexington. Irvine, In Estill county has become a substantial town, but mainly because of large railroad yards established nearby after the oil development. Beattyville, i the county seat o Lee,

the largest oil producing county in

Kentucky, and among the largest pro

ducing sections in America, is little

cnanged. The station is three-quar

ters of a mile from the old fashioned

mountain tavern that has been the

leading hotel since the large modern hotel became a school when the boom

subsided. No light burns in the office of the tavern late at night. "The boys have been doing some shooting lately,"

was the explanation. Elaboration of that explanation revealed survival of old conditions under which it was deemed safer not to use lights unnecessarily, attracting attention of village terrorists full of moonshine whis

key and the spirit of sport.

Many Lee countians. beneficiaries

of oil, left the roadless section of the

state never to return. The effects cf the exodus are less apparent in Monticello, in Wayne, the oldest il county in Kentucky, because Wayne is a foothills county in which there is Rood

land and a modest mileaee of roads

fit for automobiles. Yet Monticello, an old oil center, remains a small town.

FIN&ER BANDAGED

finger BENT IN

F1&2

5?2

Two Classes Are Enriched. Kentucky oil enriches two classes, the landowners who are wise enough or lucky enough, not to miss their opportunity to participate in the profits

of wells drilled on their farms, and oil

companies wnicn as a rule are not

founded upon capital owned in the oil

region.

Kentucky's oil resources are as yet

not fully known. Much of the territory has good agricultural resouces destined perhaps to produce more

wealth in the long run than would come from oil wells. But immediate wealth from oil has caused many farmers whose soil is fertile to lose in terest in farming and to neglect theifarms. The search for oil is not unlike, in point of excitement and hardships endured, the searcher for gold. Oil rigs, cumbersome equipment for drilling wells, are dragged in by oxen or mules, to points, 40, 50, 60 miles from railroads in wild cat fields where the drilling may or may not pay. Such expert-, menting, done sometimes by adventuvers whose financial collapse follows failure to strike oil, is extremely costly but one gusher is regarded as good ground for belief that others will be

found in the same territory. The prospect is always appealing because striking a spouting flow of oil is like striking pay dirt in an Alaskan gulch.

Oil development brings about all the types of humanity found in i goldfield, including the adventurer who must make good or walk away from the scene of his failure, the gambler who comes to fleece the fortunate, the girls, not all of them youthful, whose like followed the army of Xerxes and the rush of gold seekers to the Yukon, and whose sisters-in-adventure flock to Louisville when the Kentucky perby Is run for $50,000 at Churchill downs. Agricultural development is a health ier growth and a more lasting source of welfare. In the Cumberland oil pool there is large opportunity for agricultural development which at present is impossible because of lack of transportation by railroad, highroad or river.

Along the Cumberland river there !s a block of eight counties wholly un

touched by railroads and almost whol

ly without publis roads, a strangely r3tarded but potentially fruitful rerfon

Oil wells will not make it populous, but with agriculture and adequate transportation it would blossom like

the rose.

No. S23 The Removable Finjer The performer holds out his hand with the middle finger bandaged, as in Figure 2, and asks some one to tie the loose ends of the bandage. Aa the spectators takes hold of the ends of the bandag both the bandage and the finger come right off! Before he hn recovered from his surprise he sees tha finger back on the performer's- hand, while the bandage is empty. To do the trick, first lie a bandage about the second finger above the knuckle. Remove the bandage and bend in the finger (Figure 2). Then place the empty bandage between the first and third fingers. Hold the back of the hand upward. "When the spectator takes the bandage he sees the upper part of the finger missing, a? the finger is bent in. When he looks into the bandage, merely straighten your finger, and there it is back again. Copyright, J9M, by Public Ltdoer Company

Memories of Old Days In This Psper Ten Years Ago Today

TODAYJS TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can," "Take If "Up" STRINGS God doesn't tie any strings to His promises. Nature gives face forward. The fact is that Life's larder was well filled when we came on the scene filled for us. There are more things free in this world than those you have to pay for. And yet, just the minute that you choose to, possess anything and make it yours, it takes upon itself an established value and you have to arrange for its up-keep. God and Nature and Opportunity didn't bring strings into existence. Human beings did that job. Take the politician, for example. He has a thousand stringsmore or less tied to every one of his eloquent promises. And what a common thing it is for all of us to praise a person or a good event only to tie strings to what we say. , What wholesomeness there is in honest expression, and sincere praise, in straight-froni-the shoulder statements that ring with true belief. How rarely are our services rendered without thought of any return except that one great return of appreciation and personal glow of soul. With what affection we are surrounded. How ignorant in heart most of us are. How keen is the competitive urge in the world In what a small degree are we are brother's keepers. If you have praise to offer, why not send it out from a whole heart? How useless, petty and silly are the little jealousies that hop out from so many people's consciousness. What a world of friendships there are with strings tied to every corner of them. If you have a friend a pal be glad. You are indeed rich. Do not undermine your wealth by putting strings to this relationship and pulling them to you every once and a while. Offer your best and all or stay out of the blessed game. Always try to give as much as you take. Therein lies concord, wholesome communication and affection de luxe!

There wiU be 1,500 fires in the United States today. There were that many every day last year, and there will be that many every day this year, and every day next year unless people are more careful. A fire due to carelessness breaks out in this country oftener than once a minute, day and night, the year round.

These fires cost the American people each year more than the value of all the land and improvements in the state of North Carolina, or Maine, or Louisiana. Ordinary care would prevent nearly every one of these fires. "The National Board of Fire Under

writers has compiled a fire prevention

manual , for the school children of

America showing the common causes

of fire in the home and simple methods of prevention.

The information in this splendid booklet is valuable alike to children

and grown persons. There are 94

pages of text and 90 marginal illustrations. The value is enhanced by

the addition of hints on rendering first aid in all cases of scalds, burns, smoke or gas suffocation, as prepared by the

American Red Cross.

Our Washington Information Bureau will be pleased to supply any school pupil, teacher, or any one else, with a free copy of "Safeguarding the Home

Against Fire." Fill out the coupon be

low, and enclose two cents in stamps

for return postage. Write your name

and address clearly. , (To not send th coupon to The Pal

ladl'im. Mail It direct to Washington.

O. C.)

WTork of preparing Glen Miller park for winter was in progress and Superintendent Ed Hollarn and his men were hard at work. All the animals wrere in their winter quarters. Mr. Hollarn was also superintending the work of planting soft maple trees in South Seventh street park and in the Starr park, at the corner of North Tenth and. F streets.

A fi TV. O.

mier umner otones

She had been working valiantly for weeks in an effort to instill into their young heads a working: knowledge of the infancy of Moses. She was putting

them through their paces in order

that a visiting superintendent might

see what could be done.

"William, who was Moses?" she

asked.

William, nor some half dozen others.

had the slightest idea; but Sam, the

black shsep of the class, yelled "Moses was a Jew."

When the spile had disappeared from the superintendent's face, ho

asked Samuel: "WbeTe, did Moses's

mother hide him?" "In the bullrushes.' "Fine. Now tell me, what is bullrush?"

"A bullrush is a large male weed."

Musings For The Evening TWENTY YEARS AGO TODAY People were just beginning to believe that wireless telegraphy was impossible. They were saying that eggs would never be a nickel apiece. Women who wore only one petticoat were talked about. The "Divine Sallie" was making her "farewell tour" of America.

People were getting their first laugh

out of the preposterous idea of practical submarines and airships.

The automobile industry was stag

gering on its last legs.

Thirty-cent porterhouse steak was

called an outrage.

Some foolish women were talkine

aDout demanding the ballot.

Every man who owned an auto was

considered a daredevil.

Some darn fool was experimenting

witn racno. iaw-naw: -

American life insurance companies

are aoanaoning their Euorpean bus! ness entirely, which is another indica

tion that Europe may soon have to go to work for a living.

HAIL AGE!

I am unafraid of time or age. Let the heyday in my veins The frivolous thrills of life

And the hours of callow thought

Depart. Only the craven fears bewail!

The flight of youth into the dirfi beyond. The ripened fruits of life Are sweet to eye and taste And satisfy.

Let the hunters of beautiful Seek for the real amid the unreal. Youth will be served But age is likewise served , From fonts on high. William Bradford Dickson.

King Boris of Bulgaria desires to1 wed a rich American girl. Being at liberty, perhaps Peggy Hopkins Joyce might oblige.

TINGERIAG COT'GH RELIEVED "Had a bad court for three years,' writes H. E. Campbell. Adrian. Michl

pan. "Found no relief until I tried

Foley's Honey and tar." Lingering

coug;ns, severe colds, croup; throat,

chest and bronchial trouhle auickly re

lieved with Foley's Honey and Tar. No need to suffer and take chances with nesrlected cou&hs and colds. Free from

opiates ingredients printed on the

wrapper. Larest sellinar conch medi

cine in the world. A. G. Luken Drug

Uo- 66-b2 Alain St. Advertisement.

Answers to Questions (Anv reader can fret 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 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 anv subfect. 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. Who originated the term "dark horse?" C. D. E. A. This has been attributed to Sam Flynn, a horse trader of Tennessee. His horse "Dusky Pete" was quietly entered in a country race meet, and unexpectedly won the purse.

O. How much glass is used in the

manufacture of automobiles? P. F.

A. There was 16,500 square feet of

glass consumed in 1921 in the manu

facture of passenger cars and trucks. The greater part of this was plate

class.

Q. Please describe the condition oi

corn when it is ready to be cut for the silo? ' C. C. A.

A. The department of agriculture

says tnat wnen corn is reaay to De cut for ensilage the lower leaves will be dead, some of the husks will have

turned brown, and the ear3 will be

hard, but the stalks and upper leaves

of the plants will still be green and

succulent. Q. How ic the hydrogen gas used in airships stored? F. T. ' A. The Air Service says that the following three methods areused in storing hydrogen gas after generation: First, storage in a gas holder (fabric or metal) at a pressure of from one to nine pounds greater than atmospheric pressure; second, storage in medium-pressure tanks at 300 to 600 pounds per square inch - pressure; third, storage innortable cylinders at from 1,800 to 2,000 pounds per square inch pressure. The selection of the type of storage system is dependent on local conditions. Most British air stations have all three systems installed, but the medium-pressure system is net in favor. Q. What are the Janissaries? F. L. A. A. In 1330 the Turkish ruler Urkhan or Orkhan issued an edict com

pelling each city or town to contribute a quota of male children, usually about 7 years of age for the service of the

sultan. Requisitions were made about

every four years, and from four to seven taken from' each city or town. The children were given special training and the troops thus formed usually constituted the sultan's body guard

and were known as - the Janissaries.

They. were also recruited from captive

cnristian cnnaren. ine troops mu

tinied in 1825 and the force was suppressed.

Rippling Rhymes By Walt Mason

SPENT HALF HER

TIE IN BED Farmer's Wife Tells How Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Made Her a Well Woman Carter's Creek, Tenn. " Three years ago I was almost an invalid. I spent

half of my time in

DO IT RIGHT

If you have a task to do. do it right;

if you're making Irish 6tew, do it right; if you're darning Father's sock, if you're'putting down a walk, if you're winding up a clock, do it right. Sloppy

work will hurt your fame; do it right

careless workmanship's a shame; do

it right;-when you paint the kitchen

floor, when you fix the stable doorwhatsoever be your chore, do it right

If you'd play a game of ball, do it

right; if you'd lecture in a hall, do it

right; if you'd build yourself a home

if you'd write a noble poem, if you'd punch your neighbor's dome, do it right. Though you have a humble task

do it right; if in Easy street you'd

bask, do it right; for the fellows who

advance, taking hold of every chance

profiting by circumstance, do it right

If you duty's hign and great, do it right; if you labor for the state, do it

right; high or low, it s 3ust the same;

man should always play the game; he must, if he'd sidestep ehame. do it

right.

Lessons in Correct English

Don't Say: Constantine may RESIGN.

Spain SURRENDERED many islands

to America. He DESERTED the enterprise. The premier may ABDICATE He CEDED the fort to the enemy. Say: Constantine may ABDICATE.

Spain CEDED many islands to

America. He ABANDONED the enterprise. The premier may RESIGN. He SURRENDERED the fort to th enemy.

SAFE FAT REDUCTION

ijlin-r-iijlj

bed. beinsr afflicted

with a trouble which women of a certain age are apt to have. I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound Tablets and used Lydia E. Pinkham's Sanative Wash. I am a well woman now and have been for two years. I can work as well a3

any one who is vouncer and as I am a

Reduce, reduce, reduce. ( th iinn , farmer's wife I have Dlentv ta do for T

of all fat people Get thin, be slim, is cultivate my own garden, raise rnanv the cry of fashion and society. A-.id chicken and An ttTv nm hn5Qn,.i; the overfat wring their hands In morti- vi,. vS- u?- 7? housework, fieation and helplessness; revolting at! ou may Publish thl3 letter as I am nauseating drugs, afraid of violent ex- ready, to do anything to help other ercise. dreading the unwelcome and un- ' women aa I have hpn kow11 anVI i-t satisfying diet, until they hit upon the i ! 1 D?, Deen 50 We,U hE7 harless Marmola Prescription and learn fincemy troubles are past." Mrs. E.T. through it that they may safely re-; GALLOWAY, Carter's Creek, Tenn. duce .steadily and easily without one. vrf , , . . . change in their mode of life, but harm-! ,. Most Women find plenty to do. If

lessly, secretly, and quickly reaching their ideal of figure, with a smoother skin, better appetite and health than they have ever known. And now comes Marmola Prescription Tablets from the same famously harmless formula as the Marmola Prescription. It behooves you to learn the satisfactory, beneficial effects of this great, safe, fat reducer by giving to your druggist one dollar for a case, or sending a like amount to the Marmola Company. 4612 Woodward Atenue, Detroit, Mich., with a request that they mail to you a case of Marmola Prescription Tablets.- Advertisement.

Mr. R. Ellsworth Tells How Cuticura Healed His Scalp

"My trouble began with a sore and itchy scalp and my scalp was

covered with red spots which caused restlessness and sleeplessness. Every time I washed my head it hurt terribly. My scalp was covered with dandruff. Then pimples

appeared all over my face,

and they , caused itching, burning and disfigurement. "I used every thing I could get to cure me, but the trouble gTew worse all the time. I was advised to use Cuticura Soap and Ointment and I used two cakes of Cuticura Soap and two boxes of Ointment, when I was healed." (Signed) Ralph Ellsworth, 112 W. 12th St., Joplin, Mo. Cuticura Soap, Ointment and Talcum are all you need for every -day toilet and nursery purposes. upl ltd Trt by IUII. AiWrfM: "Cittern LbntotlM, Sept. H. Mftidea 41, llut." Sold tmrr-lrhr-e. Sop 2Sc. Oratmnt25anda0c. Talcum Sc. &jW Cuticura Soap ahavea without mug.

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 Fire Booklet.

Name

Street

City

State

Who's Who in the Day's News

RED GROSS CHAPTER

WILL HOLD ANNUAL

CONVENTION OCT 9-11

WASHINGTON, D. C, Oct. 7 Sol

ving of soldier service, health, child welfare and other national problems will be discussed at the annual gather

ing of the representatives of Red Cros3

chapters at the national convention, called by President Harding, to be

held here, Oct. 9, 10 and 11.

Early reservations from chapters

delegates indicate that a highly representative gathering from the 3,62 chapters of the nation will be present. The convention sessions will be held in the Continental Memorial hall.

President Harding will address the

convention at the opening session Mon

day morning, Oct, 9. During the remainder of the day the delegates will consider the interests of former service men and their families. Addresses will bo made by General Pershing,

Col. Albert A. Snrague. chairman of

the national rehabilitation committee of the American Legion, and Col. For

bes, of the Veterans' bureau.

Taft to Preside Chief Justice William H. Taft will

preside at the Monday evening session which will be addresed by Herbert Hoover, secretary of commerce and

fair Claude Hill, chairman of the international league of the Red Cross

societies.

Neighborly co-operation with other American countries will be planned at

a group conference to he hfid in th

Pan-American building, where Emilio del Torres, chief justice of Porto Rica will preside. Representatives of the Red Cross from Brazil, Cuba, Hayti, Costa Rica and the Latin and Central American republics, will be present.

utner group conferences will be heldi

on public health nursing, home hygienet

ana care or the sick, nutrition, Junior Red Cross work, civilian home ser-' vice and other subjects. Formal programs will be departed from tha more extended debates and group meetings, stated James L. Fieser, vice-chairman in charge. "The increase in acquaintance and the interchange of opinion through these gatherings will prove of increasing value in the promotion of both local and national programs."

We Give 3 ner Cent Interest

and. Personal Interest First National Rank SouthwestiCorner Ninth and Main

RT. HON.

REGINALD McKENN A I McKENNA

One of the most interesting of the

many visitors to our country irom

abroad and one of the most distinguished is the Right Honorable Regin

ald MCKenna, iormer chancellor of the exchequer of Great Britain and now chairman of the London Joint City and Midland Bank, Ltd., said to be the largest banking institution in the world. Mr. McKenna is in the United States as the guest of the American Bankers' association to attend their fortyeighth annual con

vention in New York and will deliver an address on "Reparations and International Debt." Mr. McKenna was born in London, England, in 1863, is married and has

two sons. He was educated privately,

later attending King's College, Lon

don, and Trinity Hall, Cambridge. Was

elected to parliament in 189o. He has held the positions of financial secretary of the treasury, president of the board cf education, first lord of the admiralty, home secretary, and chancellor of the exchequer. His favorite recreation is rowing.

feh 1 rA' r v

D AA c 1CKI M A

A "Say It ; With F,ow,"

pmiiiMtmiiiiiiiiitntiimMiiHimimumiuiuinttittimitttinniniiiuniimmiiiH 1 Victor Adding Machines 1 I $100 BARTEL & ROHE I 921 Main St. DiiiiimtfmitmifnmiuiiutimninraifmitiiiiiiiHtimiimtttmtnmitfmiitnimiitt

I -v

HARTMAN WARDROBE TRUNKS

SI

Main

Sore, Tender Feet Sufferers -with sore, tender feet find Jack Frost Cream a qaick and sure relief. At cools, soothes and heals. All drugs is ta.

Fresh and Smoked Meats BUEHLER- BROS.

715 Main Street

they are upset with some female ailment and troubled with such symptoms aa Mrs. Galloway had, the smallest duty seems a mountain. v i If you find it hard to keep up, if you I are nervous and irritable, without ambi- i tion and out of sorts generally, give the Vegetable Compound a fair trial. We ' believe it will help you greatly, for it has helped others. i Advertisement j

Don't Worry With FamOy Washing CALL 2-7-6-6

Home waSr Laundry 1516 E. Main

Quality and Service

Weekly Payment Terms At Cash Store Prices This friendly Family Clothing Store solves your clothes problem for it offers you ace-high styles, ace-high quality, new low level prices and a generous CREDIT arrangement that is absolutely without equal. HIRSCH'S 718 Main St.

"If It's a Gravel Product, We Can Produce It" We deliver by truck in any quantity. Plant No. 2 The Richmond-Greenville Gravel Company Phones 4132-4032

Still in the swim! Yes. still in the swim! We offer you good Lumber, Cedar and Composition Shingles, Wallboard and NeverLeak - Cement at reasonable prices. GOAL that Burns Well and Gives Satisfaction Phophecy: Coldest wintCT of the 20th century. BELL in Beallview

Classified Adages

H

E WHO saves.

finds. And he

who finds the opportunities among the A-B-C Classified Ads, saves.

Read Them Today!

(Copyright 1922, by Basil L. Smith)

On Savings C3 payrr

can start ta.

account with

. r j w i ua

peiweeK p more and same can be withdrawn at any time, Interest paid Jan. 1st and July 1st. The People's Home and Savin? Ass'n. 29 North 8th St. Safety Boxes to, Ren?

17