Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 92, Number 251, 21 October 1922 — Page 4

PAGE-FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM , Published Every Evening Except Sunday by Palladium Printing- Co. 'Palladium Building, North Ninth and Bailor Streets, entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, u Second-Class Mall Matter.

MEMBER OP THE. ASSOCIATED PRESS f T? Associated Presa s exclusively entitled to tha VM '"Wcatlon of all news dispatches credited to it or S2L-LheJrle.cred,ted ,n tfcl. paper, and also the local 2iTPubllsJ?ea Jr1n- All rights of republlcatloa of spatial dispatches herein are also reserved.

The Ex-Kaiser's View of America The former German emperor confines himself mostly to a discussion of Wilson's Fourteen Points in the chapter which he devotes to America's part in the World war. He is unable to find any ground to charge us with being responsible for the war, something that came as a surprise to the American reader, who might have inferred, judging from the preceding chapters, that the United States also might come under his ban. ... His reference to our part in the fighting also i is brief. He merely admits that our men and J means made impossible the-chance of success for the Central Powers. No one expected him to I have-much to say on this point, especially not in view of the effective manner in which the 'marines checked his final rush to Paris, and the valor and heroism of the Americans in the other ' major engagements in which they participated. Throughout the installment, which is printed today, one finds a studied but vain effort of the

Answers to Questions (Any reader can rut the answer to any question by writing1 The Palladium Information Bureau. Frederick J. Hask1n, director, Washington, T. C This offer applies strictly to Information. The bureau does not give advice on leiral, medical and financial matters. It does rnot attempt to settle domeatlo troubles. nor to undertake exhaustive, research on any subject. Write your question plainly end briefly. Give full name and address and enclose two cents in stamps for return postage. All replies are sent direct to the lnoulrer. Q. At -what time- can the- cadets at 'the United States mflltry academy he ' Been drlHng? E. E. A. Several companies of the cadets I at West Point drill each day about four o'clock. The entire corps does inot drill at one time, after Beptem1 ber 1. Between June and September the whole corps has parade every afternoon. Q. Were the words "discovery of the North Pole In the pension bill o" Robert E. Perry? P. I A. The bill retiring Admiral Peary and tendering the thanks of congress does not contain the words "discoverer" or 'discovery," but declares that Peary "reached the North Pole." Q. When did the government coin half-cent pieces? F. W. R. I II A. The coinage of half-cent pieces commenced in 1793. None was coined in 1798, 1799. 1801 to 1824. inclusive. 1827, 1830, 1837 to 1839 inclusive. The coinage was discontinued In 1857. The total' coinage in half-cent pieces r.mounted to $39,926.11. Q. What is the record for deep sea diving? M. M. A. Th-i record is given by some authorities as 204 feet, a depth reached by Jamf s Hooper at the wTeck of tho Cape Horn, off Pichidanqua, South America. Benjamin Franklin Leavitt of Brooklyn, however, the inventor of a new kind of diving suit claims to hold th'. record, having reached a depth of 361 feet in Grand Traverse Hay, Michigan, in 1916. Q. Does England draw revenue from the Canadian government? C. L. A. Canada does not r-ay any direct taxes to Great Britain. The chief benefit of Canada to the mother country is in the matter of preferential trade. Q. What will make plaster paris adhere to wooden picture frames? D. V. A. Add whiting to glue until it la nuite thick. Cover the wood with the paste, then apply the plaster. Mi v ti r lusmgs ror ine evening A Waste of Wind. There's a young gentleman In our block learning To play the bugle. I have Never boen able to figure why Anybody would want to play A bugle. It certainly Has been very painful Experience for all concerned He has got so now that he Can give a rough sketch Of most of the bugle calls And he attempts to regulate The life of our neighborhood On the regular army plan. At 7 in the morning He sounds reveille,Or something that approximates But. it doesn't do any good. Nobody gets up at 7 o'clock That's the middle of the night. At noon he sounds the mess call, ' But nobrtfy eats at noon At 9 o'clock at ni-ht He sounds what wr suppose Is t?ps. He gets one or two Notes correctly, but nobody Ever goes to bed it 9 o'clock. So this young gentleman Is wasting a lot of time And wasting enough of wind To run all the windmills In Holland twenty-four Hours a iay. Or to run Congress steadily For years. When the government comes to take the fingerprints of about 95 per cent of the young gentlemen in this coun try, it will have no trouble finding them on the backs of their dancing partners. After Dinner Stones A New York writer who comes from Misissippi, went back to his old home this summer for a visit He was particularly anxious to see a darky named Prince, who had formerly worked for the family. He was informed that Prince was running a barber shop for the negro trade. The writer called at the barber shop and Prince met him at the door with a big welcome, saying that his business was doing wonderful "But, Mr. AL you bein a writin man, I want to ask you sump'n, I want you to tell me what's the matter wid a: sign bangin' on de wall how come all de jrhite gemmum laughs when dey see T wrlter looked. On the wall r I I sign In a pretty gold -frame.

THE

argument which starting the war abundant, that

ridiculous in places. - :

without, does

he constantly rattled in it3 scabbard.

It is a sorry contradicts his

TODAY'S TALK By George Matthew Adams, Author of "You Can," "Take It," "Up"

This .world will never be brought to anything like Its normal, happy elf with marching armies, battleships or schemes. There Is only one recipe for the redemption of the world and that Is to get a full measure of love and a desire to- serve others into the hearts of everybody. t Selfishness and selfishness alone la the great besetting sin of the world! Happiness Is able to come to yon, and fill yon to overflowing, so that you will feel warm In your heart. But yon will have to find it la the first place by giving it to someone else. Yes, my friend, we all do want to be happy.- That's what the miner-prospector has in mind when he gives up all and digs in the earth. But, even though he wins, he Is disappointed. For wealth can't give happiness. That's what the writer, the artist, the orator, the statesman thought he was after but after a long while he learns that only simple service rendered in the behalf of others can give him any reaction that glows in his heart. The mother finds genuine happiness In her baby for she feels that her very heart and body have gone into the bundle of life within her arms. Appreciation makes yon extremely happy, for you get back what yon have unselfishly given away. Europe is unhappy, tired, discouraged, and full of fear because the nations over there each want something that the otherhas, instead of wanting to give what the other needs. The Poppies "in Flanders Field" understand and weep every night as the sun goes down. And that is the trouble In America too many people see something in the pocket of the other fellow which they want. The sad, grim tragedy of this human life of ours, Is this hungry, crying hearts! Don't say that God has gone away, that He Isn't around any more. You have to go where He is and He is wherever human need is. You see Him where there is work to be done and service to be performed. Find Him and your own redemption will become a fact!

Who's Who in the Day's News DR. SAMUEL WESLEY STRATTON After 21 years in the service of the United States government as director of the Bureau of Standards in Washington, D. C, Dr. Samuel Wesley Stratton will leave Uncle Sam's employ to become president of the Massachusetts Institute of Techr noiogy. W J l He recentlv was elected to take the post Jan. 1 by the board of trustees of the institution. The post has been vacant since the death of its former president in 1920. Stratton was born in Litchfield, Mass., in 1S61 and has a long list of university degrees, both earned and honorary. While with the government Dr. Stratton built up the Bureau of Standards from a small office, dealing with weights and measures and employing but three or four men, to a department which occupies a dozen buildings and now employs more than 900 men. As head of the Massachusetts institute Dr. Stratton will draw a salary three times greater than that which the government paid him. Memories of Old Days In This Pcper Ten Years Ago Today The location of a new school building in West Richmond would be determined by the Richmond city school board and the committee on public grounds of the West Side Improvement association. Charles W. Jordan, representing the school board, appeared before the Improvement association and informed it cf the willingness of the school board to co-operate at once with the association in providing additional facilities for school children tn West Richmond. COL. THORPE, FAHTOUS ARTIST-POLITICIAN, DIES HUBERT, Minn, Oct. 2L Col. Freeman Thorpe, Internationally known artist, whose portraits of all presidents hang in the capitol at Washington, died here yesterday. He was born in Geneva, Ohio, 78 years ago, and was influential in the politics of that state for years. lettered by the hand of the proprietor, reading: Roses is red, and violets is brae, But don't ask me for no credit. For I'll have to say NO. Saturday Evening Post "I have Just succeeded to, borrowing J 50 from Mr. Wadleigh,'' announced the impecunious citizen. "Well," said Mr. Dubwaite, pleasantly, "go and finish the story." "How?" "Did he take gas during the operation or did you apply a local anaetheetic? Birmingham Age-Herald

41 9

LA

RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND

ex-kaiser to find some plausible explanation of Germany's responsibility for the war. Every

he adduces to shift the responsi

bility on the allies is bo forced that it takes little penetration to see that he has exhausted every means at his command to attain that whiqh is hopeless. The facts of German culpability in

are so obvious, the proofs so the ex-kaiser's-presentation is

His main argument, one that he has reiterated throughout his memoirs, that he was a man of peace and opposed German militarism, favoring only an army of defense against a foe from

not square with the martial ad

dresses which he delivered to his soldiers in the days before the war and with - the sword which

picture which the former war

lord paints of himself as being a lover of peace. The expansion of his army and navy, for which he took tremendous credit in -preceding chapters,

assurances now that he and Ger

many constantly sought only the peace of the world. No one will give serious heed to his utterances. The memoirs do not strengthen his cause. They confirm and intensify the opinion of the allied governments that he was seeking an opportunity to strike a telling blow when Europe .was unprepared, so that his country might shape the destiny and dictate to England, and ultimately even to the United States.

After, Dinner Trick No. 393 The Knot on the Wrist The performer states that be can hold the opposite corners of a handkerchief and tie a knot in the handkerchief without removing either hand from its corner. This sound impossible, but it can be done. Merely loop the . handkerchief as shown in Figure 1, and quickly thrust the right hand through the loop from the tar side. The handkerchief will then be tied in a loop on the wrist at show in Figure 2. Slide the handkerchief off the wrist, and show that the knot has been tied. lf this trick is dona rapidly no one will be able to follow the exact movements. Lessons in Correct English DONT SAY: They wfll kill YOUR SELF. We have armed US. They never think of THEIRSELVES. The captain Is always TELLING about himself. SAY:. They will kill YOU. We have armed OURSELVES. They never think of THEMSELVES The captain is always TALKING about himself. Rippling Rhymes By Walt Mason THE BUGGY My Uncle Hiram had a steed, a critter of a gaudy hue, and he admits hia greatest need is something he can hitch it to. He wants a buggy, neat and mice, such as he used in other times; my Uncle Hiram has the price he Is lopsided with his dimes; and yet he roams the town in vain, and brandishes his wad of dough; he can nc find the1 sort of wain that needs a horse to make it go. The dealers see his bundle big, and weep the tears of bleak remorse, for they can't find a decent rig that might be fastened to a horse. "We'll sell you cars propelled by gas," the dealers cry, in pleading tone, but Uncle Hiram says, "Alas, I want to drive my swaybacked roan. I long to make a daily trip on wheels, along the village street; Ihave the horse, I have the whip, I have the harness all complete." "Well find you piebald unicorns," the dealers cry, in their despair; "and blandersnatches docked with horns, we might provide with proper care; but buggies. Uncle, are extinct. They fell beneath invention's blows; in modern school books they are linked with mastodons and things like those. So buy a car from us, old scout, the: buggy's gone, from camp-and court; we need the roll you pack about, for we have children to support."

SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND,

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Insects and Their Senses Sight Plays Small Part, but Olfactory Sense is Highly Developed, Scientists Say.

By FREDERICK J. HASKIX WASHINGTON, JJ. C, Oct. 21. Did you ever imagine what the world resembles to a bee or an ant? Putting yourself in an insect's place is not just a matter of picturing your normal self reduced a million or so times and walking about seeing crumbs as loaves of bread end lumps in the carpet as mountains. Yon must build up a new world, one that is more fantastic that H. G. Wells idea of Mars. And even then a human being can have only a dim conception of what life would be if he had six legs and depended on his sense of smell more than his eyes to tell him what the world is like. If you fancy yourself a worker In the bee world, for example, you must imagine yourself recognizing hive neighbors by their distinctive odor. Family resemblance in the social order of bees is a matter of a hive and family odor rather than of peculiar appearance. When you returned home after a long -journey in search of nectar the sentinel at the door would know you by the odor of the hive which you carried. If by come mishap you became lost or injured and did not return to the hive for several days the hive odor would gradually become faint and when you arrived the guardian of the door would sound the warning that a stranger was trying to break in. The result would be a tragic ending of your useful career. As a honey bee you would have an intense passion for sweet things, and if a scientist got you in his power and put you to work .in his experiments you would show him that a bee cannot be fooled by bitter salts in candy. You would be a connoisseur to the extent of recognizing the difference between candy containing strychine and candy containing quinine when the scientist himself could not detect any difference in the taste. These random glimpses of life In an insect's world are gathered from the experiments of Dr. N. E. Mclndoo of the bureau of entomology. Dr. Mclndoo recently has published' a paper on the senses of insects in which he explains his latest observations and conclusions, especially those relating to the olfactory sense. Insects Have "s New Science. "In regard to odors," he says, "insects have already evolved a new science and are capable of classifying and analiing odors, many of which are unknown to us. Furthermore, they have evolved special organs foi producing odors and highly developed ones for receiving them. In fact, the olfactory sense of Insects, particularly in the honey bee is so highly developed that we do not have any more conception of it than does the honeybee (if it could think as we do): of our wonderfully developed sense of sight, which is able to distinguish accurately the size, form, and color of objects." Science for centuries has puzzled over mysteries of animal life and wondered how some of the tiny creatures are unerringly guided to their mates, to food, and to their homes. It was proved long ago that sight plays a minor part in insect life. Some scientists attribute the remarkable feats of insects to instinct and others believe that strange occult powers guide them. Still other entomologists are persauded that one of the five senses, highly developed, must rule insect activities as sight rules human life. Dr. Mclndoo believes that a keen olfactory sense accounts for much MiuiuiutuaiijHMinuiifiititmtnitiuittauiiwiiiiHiHiiiiiHifmiHmtutitmwn' I For Quick Loans Call, Write f or Phone PRUDENTIAL LOAN & INVESTI MENT COMPANY 1 20 S. 8th St. Phone 1727 imininMimamuitiuimHmiiiinnifmtmiimnnmiiiiiHmiinmuiuumiwui miMiiii iiuwrmiiamnitntmHi inn mumtmmimtimmiifiiiti f SAFETY FOR SAVINGS 1 PLUS I 3 Interest I DICKINSON TRUST COMPANY 1 "The Home For Savings" jwrmuunuutmmmmimii PurePasteurized Milk and Cream Phone 1531 KRAMER BROS. DAIRY Quality Always Stop That Leak With MarvelSeaL Liquid Roof Cement Hackman-Klehfoth & Co. N. 10th and F Sts, Phone 2015-2016

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59.000 ITALY ,$1,648,034,000 ft. ,$283,920,000 w 0 0 uiicrci SCIENCE SERVICE WkSH.B.C of the extraordinary behavior of In sects. Some moths, for lnstance,at tracts mates from miles away. Dr. Mclndoo carried 450 Prometha cocoons from Massachusetts to small islands of the Florida . Keys. Tho moths were then sufficiently far from their regional home, the doctor figurea, so that no other specimens would interfere with his observations. The female moths were kept in glass Jara some turned upside down on the sand, and some with netting over the top. The males were released at various distances. They quickly found their way to the females In the Jars covered with netting, but none came to .tne jars with mouths buried In the sand. As the females In all the Jars were equally visible, Dr. Mclndoo found it reasonable to believe that sight had little or nothing to do with the attraction of the male moth to th fpmai.4 tie Delieves that emanations passed away from the jars whose mouths were covered with netting and that these emanations were sensed in some way by the male moths'. As delicate odors cauld not escape through the jars with mouths In the sand, the signals from the jars were disregarded. Ants Exude Various Odors. To support his theory that the ollavtuiy Bense aominates in insect lire, Dr. Mclndoo brings the evidence of other scientists. Wheeler, he says, found that different species of ants have different odors that can be distiguished even by the feeble nose of a human being. The odor on one species is described as being pungent and ethereal; two others are smoky; others are like rotten cocoanuts; and still another species of ant has a smell reminiscent of lemon geranium. Another scientist, Miss Fielde, thinks that the mother ant transmits a family odor to all of her offspring, and ehe says that ants can differentiate the innate odors peculiar to thp species, sex, caste and individual, and aiso me acquired odor of the nest and environment. Each ant, ehe claims, has three odors: (1) a scent deposited by her feet, forming an individual trail whereby she traces ber own steps; (2) an "inherent odor, manifested over her whole body, identical in quality for queens and workers of the same lineage, and a means for the recognition of blood relations; and (3) a nest odor, consisting of the commingled odors of all the members of the colony and used to distinguish their nest from those of aliens. Besides all this. Miss Fielde puts forth the theory that ants can even detect progressive odors due to change of psychological condition with the ago of the individual ant. A human being can dimly understand this specialized use ot the sense o smell. With his dulled olfactnrv nr gans he can, it has been pointed out make the crude distinciton ht a horse and a cow, or a cat and a dog. iuier wore, a scientists discover that drones, workers and queens in a bive all have peculiar odors that ahu man nose can learn to distinguish, and that lighter odors about which TRACY'S COFFEE .Fresh Roasted Daily W. - Virginia and Pocahontas COAL Independent Ice and Fuel Company HARTMAN WARDROBE TRUNKS E27 Main St Leave Your h Party Order fo illoween Doughin i r nuis ana rumncin nes early. ' ZWISSLER'S 28 8. 6th St? Phones 1654.and 165S

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Called by Death

MRS. ELSIE CADWALLADER LYNN, InL, Oct 2L Mrs. Elsie Cadwallader, 81 years old, died Friday at the home of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. Andy Macon, north of Lynn. Blood poisoning caused her death. Besides her parents she is survived by her husband. George; one sister, at home, and three brothers, John, of Hagerstown, and Charles and Ever: ett, of near Lynn. Funeral services will be held Sunday afternoon at 1:30 o'clock at the ML Pleasant church. The Revs. Logan Hunt and Henry Pickett will officiate. Burial will be in the Spartanburg cemetery. A NEW KIND OF FRICTION The Insurance adjuster who had been investigating the fire turned to go. "I came down here to find out the cause of this fire and I have done so " he remarked. "That's what I want to know. What caused ft?" demanded the houseowner. "It's a plain case of friction." "Whatrva-mean friction?" "The fire was undoubtedly caused by rubbing a three-thousand-dollar insurance policy on a two-thousand-dollar house. From Everybody's Magazine. . irtwwii.j (Continued from Page One.) school building, and for the east side building the site between South A and B streets on Twenty-second street. The decision was made to proceed at once with building of the west side school, construction of the east side school to follow as soon as possible. In October, 1920, advertising for bids took place and contracts were let -Contracts Assigned Bids for the east side Junior high school building were received July 3, 1922, and the sale of bonds and assignment of contracts took place. Yeager and Son, of Danville, HL, received the general contract for the building. The Lige Heating and Ventilating com pany, of Auburn, Ind., received tho - bi for heating the bunding. Hayes Brothers, of Indianapolis, were award ed the plumbing contract W. D. Tibbets company, of Marion, Ind., re ceived the contract for the electrical work. The east side Junior building was named after .Julia E. Test by the board of trustees as an expression of esteem for one of Richmond's beloved teachers who had been connected with the schools throughout practic ally all her life. Enrollment Increases Richmond's first plan of a Junior high school started In 1895. The grad ual increasing enrollment in the city schools tended to justify the senti ment toward building more schools, and it was finally decided in 1919 that the new buildines would have to be provided. The Richmond high school building, now called Morton, was built to take care of 700 pupils. The David Worth Dennis building was erected to take care of 500 pupils, and is now occupied by 52.0. Garfield now holds 650 pupils. . With' the need growing for the wept side Junior high school Building, ihe school officials had a definite build ing program arranged after the summer of 1920. Bid3 were advertised for and contracts let for the construc tion of the building, with the date of completion eet for Feb. 1. 1923. Work on the site for the Julia Test Junior high school on what was known as the playgrounds started early in the spriner of 1922, and with the foundations all laid the cornerstone laying marks the completion of the preliminary work on the building. man can only speculate must guide the actions of insects at astounding distances. In fact. Dr. Mclndoo believes that the world of such "insects as the ant and bee is not only a world of odors but that the olfactory sense is so impartont to them that they cannot exist if it is destroyed. Yet man thinks his sense of smell is acute when he can distinguish blindfolded between an ronton and a violet For Correct " Glasses See ' . Optometrist Richmond Clara M. SwelUer, 1002 Main St SfmmirareiuiHMiMutMMMttimHUflfnini I You can buy a 1 FORD TOURING CAR 1 $122 Down, Balance in 12 Monthly f 1 Payments 1 WEBB-COLEMAN CO. 1 Opp. Postoffice Phone 1616-1694 King's Klassy Overcoats $25 No More No Less 912 MAIN RICHMOND GRINDING CO. Cylinders Reground. Pistons, Pins and Rings Fit Guaranteed Quality and Service 'Henley Bldff. N.16th & R.R. Ph. 3452 . Don't Wear Spotted Clothes 4 Send them to " WILSON to be Cleaned Phones 1105-1106 Say It With FIow.ts- - i jisTisrsrarnw On

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SWEDISH STARS HOPE ; TO BETTER COUNTRY'S REIATI0NSBY TRIP STOCKHOLM. Oct 21. As a result of the purpose to bring abont closer relations between Sweden and the United States, Swedish leaders In the theatre, the opera, science and athletics are about to leave thesa shores for America, there to appear each In his or hex particular Held. Thus 19-year-old Arne Borg. who has broken the world's swimming record for 440 yards. 400 and 500 meters, will go to the United States in February to match his speed with Welsmuller In a series of races under the auspices of the Illinois Athletic club. Another athlete who deserves to be watched s Ohristiernsson, Sweden'd best hurdler, who also is going to America. Among the men of science who have already left. Is Dr. Robert Barany, of Upsala university, who has made important contribution to the knowledge of the labyrinth of the ear as the organ of equilibrium. Dr. -Barany will lecture at American universities and before various sckntflc associations. Another medical expert who will lecture In America is Dr. Einar Key, a specialist in surgery. Will Lecture Here. Dr. Sven Hedin, discoverer of Trans, himalaya, also will lecture in America this winter before starting on a new expedition into Thibet A theatrical star who has Just returned from America is Anders do Wahl, generally rated as the leading actor in Sweden. He appeared in recitals in New York City and elsewhere, and has ' expressed his intention cf starting a more extended American tour two vears from now. MmhwW'h

Miss Kaima Wifstrand, brightest comic opera star of Sweden, is going to cross the Atlantic in a campaign for new laurels. Swedish names In the caste of the Metropolitan Opera in New York are not unfamiliar and, according to In formation here, a new one Is to added to the list for Miss Goeta Ljungberg?- of the Royal Opera at Stockholm, has signed a contract to appear at 28 performances at the Met. ropolitann during the season of 19231924. Modern Cowboy's Life No Longer Wild, Wooly The life of a cowboy of today is not as wild and wooly as it was a few years ago. Prohibition is one cause; the growing-up of the country as agricultural lands, the laws governing the carrying of firearms, Henry Ford'? gasoline buggies taking the place of so many riding ponies, and many other modern improvements are helping to do away with the old-time cowboys. Most of the ranches of today are more on the style of stock farms than of ranches only. Some of the ranches in southwest Texas are more on the old order of stock raising. A majority of the ranchmen are going in more for the registered pure-blooded stock than they did formerly. The long-horned stock is becoming less each year and the shorthorns are becoming 1 more numerous. Adventure Magazine. "MISTUS" DAY It was the eleventh of November, and a darkey down south was asked if he knew what was being celebrated that day. "Suttinly, suh," he replied; "Mistus day, suh." "Armistice day. Sam," he was corrected. "No, suh Mistus day, 6uh. You soe. we was ordered to go over tho top that mornin,' w,hen along comes de news dat de war was over; so de Germans done mistus suh; dey done mistus." yrom Everybody's Magazine. Dr. Simpson's Vegetable Compound is the most effective "alterative" or blood purifier ever known. Cleans your system thoroughly with thi3 great remedy, and feel the effects of renewea health and strength. Pure blood invariably means good health and wards off disease. Should dis ease exist, it is all the more necessary. Try it and be convinced of this fact In your case. For sale at all drug stores. Advertisement Put a new Top on your Ford. Ford I 1 Too renewine. including rear pnr. i tain, tnis ween I only $5.76 RICHMOND TIRE SERVICE Corner 11th and Main The Bank for ALL the People Second National Bank Quality and Service 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 Bums Well and Gives Satisfaction ' Phophecy: Coldest winter of the) 20th century. BELLA in Beallview

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