South Bend News-Times, Volume 39, Number 79, South Bend, St. Joseph County, 20 March 1922 — Page 5
MONDAY MORNING, MARCH 20, 1922 THE SOUTH BEND NEWS-TIMES
SECY DAVIS ASKS EVOLUTION OF U.S. SYSTEM OF SCHOOL Secretary Declares Present Methods Do Not Give Proper Training. (Special to The News-Times.) BY JAMES J. DAVIS, Secretary of Labor.
WASHINGTON, March 19.--The
national system of education needs reformation.
It has stood still in its fundamentals while every other art and science has advanced.
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. a-;. I- f j! I' ' to the dull . 'i;il. i,f Di, v. .ri. ir;' ir? and the 1,. 1.. 1.,- - i;i n, ikirr-: th.tt h.iru'.i pi. 1 ;m;- I!.-!..- of srrn:;t!i i m 1 nl husi.'t :- ni, of j . I ; i - ' i " 'i t - that .eld !. r.i-i:y n: my tirn. -i t th- tinv;-is f in u:ii--t.'i!:'-' a r i -1 n vir miw nt. of i'U.tis t ! i 1 1 ir.ay ) -i.it;!'-! by th'i U'l 1. rt r I . if !,.-- it y. I'iiiMi a .--? i i ; : . 1 ' Tr.iir.'-d to ap-!!-riati'.n of th. Ji !. .- thirds in life Tut th y f in n v r un- ihos- fine things Jiiil-v- tin;, at-- ii'iil'l" '1 to x r ii 1 t l.fht : ! ! . : r . t . i - c every iovrr nature v.c ?!.' m ;it birth and Ariiri' a" .lifiti'.p il sy.-t-ru today in n-;l. din,.: too n: icy ! thos" pr,vir? ami fc. ilh.' to .M .th' r.--. V A:ri'riar- li.iv.- )fr.z V"-n jtj-ly jirou'l r.f mir fi - iuMi'.- shnul systf-m. !'': thr rncr' -;isy-uroin; if' wi- lc ;i ui..i ti y- arn auo it l.fl vry N" , it s u.s to tue, mir l'-oprst, f u i i 1 1 ; fi) utal notions of what ;t i-X(u of sc hooling should la- aro In n I "f ,t ompl t- r -.haptni:. V- hav' ": t i ruling (ur hi'.lr-n out int.. tl.- vnM to uark thir way upw.ar.i, lut with l.lunt-l tools in tht.ir h:unl-. Now tin y n-'-l iiior nrcttrat'- tittint; for thf work tliy aro t !o, ami ". nm-t Mipply it. I.lfr's Krai Xfils. l.ot look at the matter mi.ro in detail, r.yrry year a certain projiortion of our children mu.-t hein work and I' ave sc hool at tho end of tho grammar Krads. They leave theM grades with tin; eh-rn nts of Ktithm'die, r'o-raphy, history, i:n'lii and othT lanmia hardly nnieli more. Thosf who ar. fortunate enouuli to lini.-h hih school hae, nf fours'1. one much farther into rnatloTnati'.-s and history and tho larmu.irs. and into tht past and present activities of the world what we- c all oMno'my. I'ut the point I am iPi.kim; is that this system of education strikes me as heinnin at Ih" end instead of at the he-itmimr. All these studies piven our chillre,; have hecn tiseful noimli. 1-ut except for mathematics and llr.li-Ji study, tln-y all constitute a tiainin--;- for the finer things of life rath.'r than for life's lirst Jitietiea! needs. I. et no- hasten to say that I am nvt fi.r cuvtailir.t: m any measure th training of the ry humblest of our children for enjoyment of the finest things in life. The point is that this trnininc: should cooo at the proper time, and that life can mean nothing to hlrn until he has been taught omn means of arnin his livrli-j hood. Our colh ires themselves -arly rej.-ao to tl.-- world jreat rowtls of ea r joiir.;' jeolc highly ti. tine l in the appi'et iatioii of life's finest, thin us. They know the uteat died and the un at works of art of the far past. They I ae a deep unih tatidinc; of natural and economic 1 . They hac b. en taught to understand and enjoy life, and measure the present against tho bickeround of the past. I'ut all thi- is f(.r enjoyment and understanding, it is not a tcunim: for actual work. Jinny a colhce qradu.it' enters th world wise enough, but actually bewildered and h lplcss. 'lian e I 'or Vunl: I would not fen anything nrrender or rurtail the training w r should ;ir cur chll lien in appre atb n of the line tilings of life. I'.ut lop ao ir stru' k me that for the safety of the individual and for the saf ty of tlo country, the ideal system of din ltion for the a rau'e yotjttq l,,.y or li'.rl in our land consist t d of a l least a hih scho-d training and tina rjuisit i- :i of a ju actical trade. This h is been no id!" theory of mine. The tlc-ory has been in prac
tical operation m the home school s'artd and maintained by the I...y ,d t Order of Moos, at M ooshea 1 1 , ict j far from Chicago, alone the l'oJ rier in U'piois. l'p'its have h. . n : ra reu nini:li to prai-e this e-J
Ihm inifnt in the hi-!tet t-rios. They l';.e pronoU'-eed it ret simpiy a remarkably suri-. -ful tliii.c: in it? lf, hut R Illdel to t:o- I' -? i.f th OH1I1try in rourid edu d'er. Tl;e ldr-a of M o i s e h a r t o-riirroi
to m- wba-ti 1 '.'.. a w oiker in : h j iron i: ills of IMttsbu: jr. Th r' 1 saw !
his br.n ;, fr-. and untramm led f xperltnent. In th" f.rt place. J eloo . he , J t is a hotli'-. MothfTH .Ite ! if '' . tlt they need ,,.,t f.o ejai .it. d from th'ir c hill r-n. Itabie 1 ie i , n horn thf re. to expec tant ! tk-.r.- J. ft without aid by b-.s for-tunatf-members of our rirder. This j I.on.e at M-.oshJart i5 a comfortla b!o litt I town of homes, cot 'a
o:,!r, s, y 1,1,1,1 lai; , iri-j. work shoos.
a hospital, an auditorium and everything th. at l.ep.nus to a h'ltui' omrnuidty. The tract consists of more than I. ft 0 0 acre-, and th farm that suppd! Jt with milk and other foods i- at tli" same tin," a rnoltl prhof.l of atrrj' ultur . In th midt of th" plaeo Js a lak- frir water sports and
the whop s-om.e xrr ise they j,ro-;
mde. And ve hav- not forgotten a for.thall fj Id. a has. hall diamond, and a playir, t; space for all. Vo h.aye an orchestra, and a band of more than ou pieces. The students who form theso bodies do not simply s-rape and toot and make noise; they mo und r th" training of a skilled nnd inspired Instructor, and they play th best of music and play
Half of Students At College Working ' 9 Own Way Through, Bureau Probe Finds
i':? h- f. It th - co-ir.fry'cr ra d off nn'i'iiy and conservator: w a r ;
Tent. II- is iJoJr.C e v e r V t lilt'. ' ' an t make both ends . T'
NT7V HAVIX, Conn.. March 13. Toun? niin. c.o you want to ko! to colht:"? s-'.-iy V.i'f or Harvard or
Cclumhia or C'o-r.e!l or Northwest.
em or ny of the Lie American colic re.? "!f.," you say, "that tvouH be fine. Hut I hivfn t the money." You den't need the money! Mako th money aa you fro alonjr. Half the collf -tudents in America are amine their way through college, at leat in part, government experts hav: found. A trip to Yale ."hows you how they do it. A ju-vtlonn aire was .pent out by the Hurcau of Appointments of Yale to determine how manv students
it weh. Some of the houses and I .v... v.,. .-
. .1 . l.'. ir ..ni ii l r:i un Ii a.) I') HUIA"
unücri.i mar. mu. i i hnildins were desiirned bv Moom- .
heart stud', nts. from materials shap-d in the schools anl shojts. While th" students were about it, thy fashioned ornaments for these iiuildin-.-s, .as well as blocks and lath. School Is (iainim; I-en now barely well becun. Mo-.seheart has prown in th" cittht years of its life so that 1.034 children, from babyhood to youni? man and womanhood, enjoy its, advantages. It is distinctly on tne make. 't: are now building a il!ae for babi'.a under school They rereive, in babyhood, a care that is scientific and practical but yet sympathetic and homelike. At every statte all institutionalism is cerefully avoided. Xo uniform has been adopted. The children wear Individual clothing, .and when they arrive at suitable acre they select th"ir own. At a still later ape, they make their own. At all times they romp together as a hucro happly family, as much as possible out of doors in the country air and subject to the influences of the natural loveliness about them. At Mooseheart the rod is spared. V.'e find it an effective pun
ishment to deprive the misbehaving!
of the privilege of going swimming, or seeing baseball and football games, or the movies. For we regularly exhibit motion pictures in the auditorium, and we are favored with th; latest and best. Trades Art; Taught. Where we do go far beyc.vl the public school is in the vocational training that we make compulsory. The utmost skill is applied in fitting each child to the trade for which nature and his own tastes have adapted him. The boys learn carpentry, farming, moulding, machine-work, metal-work, and work in concrete, and the like. Th girls are taught housework, stenography, secretarial work, and kindred pursuits. They know drc-ssmaking and domestic; science. Whether as wives, as wageearners, or as destined for a career, girls who leave Moceheart are equipped for mastering life, for understanding life, and enjoying it. Ho are the boys. Hut the point of this, the everlasting itviiit of it, is that while these yotrtig people leave Mooseheart to take up life, and while they are trained to make the most of life and its fine things, to the playing of music and the painting of pictures where they can, they all leave with some useful trade. Whatever happens to them in after life, they will he found on the rock of self-support and S. lf-prescr a tion. Their idf-rcs-pect Is as secure as their livelihood.
i'res't Angell of Yale says that) hclf of the studert of the college! ar swered, and of ihe5e 52 per cent j were working their r.-ay through. j Under Handicap. J One of th"m is Antonio Fresnela. j H? is a Cuban, and lie started under j a great handicap. Fresneda 1 now in his junior year, j He fiyi It is a ci-.cll for a young . man to work his way through collose j "My freshman year was the hard-, est' says Fremeda. "The only thing, 1 knew was manual lalior. "I waited on Mh!c for my board, j took care of a fdrraee and shoveled j sr.ow from tho sidewalks for my j
room. I sold Sunday papers, acted a-? agent for a taundry and at various other Jobs, made enough to pay for books? and c'oth"?.
Vacations I worked as section j hand on the railroad and carried) bricks. ; Stuck In It. I "Hut I stuck to it while other fel
lows were becoming athletic heroes and taking part in ocial affairs. "It is easier now. Tutoring and typewriting furnish me with enough to get 'by on. "J pay 3 a we-k for my room. My board costs me 11 a week, tuition $8.30, books and papers $2, clothing $, laundry $1.50. incidentals $3. This- totals $33 and I find no diillculty in earning It. "The experience ha been valuable to me. It has taught me that if 1 believe In a thl.ig. I can do it." "iale is not an exclusive school for the sons of rich nvn. It counts its se'.f-pupporting students by the hundreds. However, exceptional qualities are demanded of th su.'.ent who works
his way through. The leisure time
BULGARIAN KING SELLS HIS WINE
TO SECURE CASH :v: , in r.;- d"-ir to - ? an ximpl' d
1 rio;;.t pn n .
1 y h
' r r" r.nw th" prop, rt v of th" : -.
f t h rw !--" f. r r
O .,,;, ; the K;.
i:. i U :-: th:- ? for a lor:; tin:
Automobile A1?0 T)i-)O0l Of ' " ' aI -t-rtai: t .:.o,-.
lO .Mailliaill AlOdOl o s ho.', of thr. . fn;;;
"d or.-"1 or two guards.
Hor-is is j.;
..,.p. co :rr
a
Houeliold.
pisr .'. H.i reo-
SOFIA. !-Vb. 1 . (Hv Mail i Th -ay h- h t all t'-e :r":r, ,,f ' young Kin r Hori- of Itulcana is so mot!;-j- a: "i r. :: ,,f tl-e .--. u-i- -i much in rued of ready cash to main- ; t i i of hi f it!:- r. He ;; a;! .f : .. tain hi n odest household that nd i. a, ir, ' t; i:r- - Ii- : (
jor ein ennn Ti' Dor. out., iilm b !h.hu i U'Jp, OHir
F.fok n o;t ski'i imI I-, . o i H t; ! r N .
' trm : i; , nr:- : ! a-
arr."str.'s-- ard :n ri v t' star: a d m :r a " .
j has sold son:e of his automobil- s av. : I all of th .vines and 1; i::o; :don--ir.g to his father, the ih d Ferdin-!
! n A ... ; .. ; . - .... . I II; .
.too. 1 1 1 v I . i i in i i s xo i u i -a r; t : . . m : c .
j have b cn surprised to tin-1 old vint- ' is neVT i-ile. ;f ;. atre wir.rs '.r.l rare diajn pa:i s fron: 1 w;th ti. af:'a:r-- -f f .
the royal palace on th" talks' of : it' z. Ilorti- al:::r . -. it ;:. Sofia's hotels at $2 a bottb-. 'ard . er.;. -. - ar- ..- The former Czar Ferdinand, now j Within th, pa:., ronr N barred from Ihilgaria. enjoyed in Iiis j ha.s had r irro-.y days of imperial pow er all the luxu- ?,'i'!t fo.- h -;v n . :..-ri.... ries and e ttravagancr s of the royal J P,K'. H- is abso-p.-d sovereigns of the Klizabcthan age. i et of 1 ngim ring a-.d ; Hut his son, who is beloved of all the ! 'Vjth mos 0f the b.- At;;. : people for his simpli- ity am! la- !; ' u '' syst- ms. of ostentation, lives almost as hum-! Th Kit: : d .i;oii 1 bly and plainly a-! one of Ids p.-as-lthat r."t I-r.g ago I'r.r.:-
1 ants. 1 ud Carums say that when the M.irchoii.ivvy, who !.a-:;s j father fled th. country, just U--for' ' yontlifu! mT.ar. 1; w;h .1 j the amistire he td. with him ad' tlm crown jewelry, money and real:.- ! " rrr:
I able assets and left the son nothing, j j Horis' civil list is much below th--' , salaries rccriverl by American cor-j ! poration president-. TP." young ! ruler has repeatedly r fi;sed financial j (assistance from the govt -rnment be- j
1 :. . x
Mir.:?' aft.T !'-.
?' .:,:x f ';:'' X
SAGE TEA DANDY
0 ' - A j 11 s vjranamother s Kccipe to I
Dring Dack eolor and
Lustre to Hair
ANTONIO FKFNd-:iA AT MIS STFIUFS, AND ( I : T : I W ) AI W(KK; lA'AT. TFTOKLW. AN'oTII I'll FFI'Il,; t;H;HT. DdNO STKNof:i:ArHic w(i:k. that more fortunate students ypen-1 I la 1. nt pro:n;.-e an allowance of $120 in seeking pleasure the self-support-: th total tuition fee of Jl.'O for ing man must .'-p-nd in earning hi.-'the hrst term may be made. The vay. i'al'owanr for th.e second term ol r.iii't .ni Aids stiidcnls. j t !.e school y- ar ara! for sucreeiling A bureau of ap't c.ntno-nts w ho-- t- i rns de-nd- o: the s"tudcnt's chief aim is th.'- aid of tu -ly stmh nts a ademic stan-timr. is maintained. ' Fr flic first two years these alTho bureau 'nrl:s in two ways : ( Iowam e.? are ma le with the underlay granting VeT.eticiary college -;arding that no ohlication of reschclarships nr.d ar;ng a-- a eh ar-; pa mem is i net: -red. ing house for work. . After the lir.-t two years, non-in-Where the V::r'.iu. aft r c.i r f n 1 ' t -. st bearing notes are taken for investigation of the applicant, deem - ; t h run:tted tuition, payment on that a youth's character and second- which is due tiv vans after gradu-
exempt from classes and studies, ary school board l :'. e b en of suf-iation.
PLYMOUTH About 10 business men met in the library hall Thursday night to he ir th.e talk given by Frank ftoekdale of Chieago. This was the first address in the Merchants' InstitJte, and the subjet was, "Meeting Today's Competition," alfo a special talk to salespeople. Misses Lulu and Mary McCoy, and Miriam North spent Thursday in South Fend. Mrs. J, K. Cook has been very sick this week at her home on N. Center st. The out-going officers of the Presbyterian Ladies Aid entertained the in-coming officer. and other mem
bers of the society Friday afternoon at the home of Mrs. L. J. Hess on N. Michigan st. The funeral of Henry York will he held on Saturday morning at 10:30 at the Trinity church, west of town, with burial at Oak Hill cemetery. Mr. C. Firestone, aecompanird by his wife, has gone to Hochester, Minn., to take treatment at the Mayo Bros.' hospital. Miss Maude Fink has accepted a position inthe South Hend schools. John Capron. formerly of Plymouth but now of Fort Wayne, escaped from a sanitarium in Marion. Ind., about three weeks ago. .Though inquiries were put in the papers throughout this section, he. was not found until this week, when he wa located at Cincinnati by a brother
Klk. He has been having som"
the children given to the father. I. It. Imnoghti", of Adams st.. H ill with the flu. Miss Julia Yoekey spent Saturdav in Fnion Mills, T,aporto county, at a Sunday school convention. Miss Maude Nye. of Warsaw, spent Friday in Plymouth on business.
I
Phone! f-'-tf.jh
DD) PAIN DISTURB I
r
ici:: in:: n;n: Appreciate good service. Call H. A. Hay Ice Company. Ask my hundreds of satisfied customers. "Ol E. Por.ald s. Main 210.".. 7ß
You can turn gray, faded hair beautifully dark and lustrous almost ! over niglr. if you'll get a bottle ol j Alt r .
wyetns fage and Sulphur Compound" at any drug tore. Million of bottles of this old famous Sage Tea Recipe, improved by the addition of other Ingredients, are sold annually, says a well-known druggist here, because it darkens the hair fo naturally and evenly that no one can tell it has been applied. Those whose hair is turning gray or hecom ng faded haw a surpri.s awaiting thm. because after one or two applications the gray hair vanishes and your locks become luxuriantly dark and beautiful. This Is the age of youth. Crayhaired, unattractive folks aren't wanted around, .so get busy with Wye-th's Sage and Sulphur Compound tonight and you'll be delighted with your dark, handsome haii and your youthful appearance within a few day?. Advt.
c
H a A "E" TT tn
South Michigan Street
rs
i oiiiei
AT
i
The Reliable Kvj
CU1
- 71 .''S '-!
r xx i ü ,j
1
Swank. Mister Cleaners Main 701.
CTIC
YOUR SLEEP?
1 W t
dim
THE pa anc torture of rhcu- Lj matism can be quickly relieved
kJ J UpU wV V s-' m V w
Consists Entirely of Adjusting the Movable Segments of the Spinal Column to Normal Position
Liniment. It brins3 warmth, case and
mental trouble for several months. ! comfort and Iet3 you sleep soundly.
A son wa.i born to Mr. and Mrs.j Louis Fl ox. Tuesday, at 'the Marshall County hospital. Mrs.s J. K. Cook and daughter, Rebecca, are ill with the flu. V. V. Clarke, the county agent, i holding pruning demonstrations
I V
Always have a bottle texdy and .1
apply uhen you feel the hrst twinge H It fntcirates without ruhbir.. ; It's Eplendid to take the piri out o! :
tired, aching- muscles, Fpram3 anci , t
HANDICAPS
strains, 6tiH joints, r.nJ lame backs. (rr9 -onru mln'a rnv. Al? :'
0
yt)ur neighbor. - . . . . ,
in various parrs o no counxj. all drUgistS-SSc, 70c, UAX 3 George Martindale was arreted 11 s ' ; ! j
for carrying concealed is out on a $'00 bond
will come up in the next
I r
A divorce wa.i granted to Mrs.! j X-..1
Ihnma Tfess from Irvin Hess, and i
vas rrc.ne,lIa",u--l3LO -, .'-, v. ,m weapons, lie! 75 cr U
h'.?ds cl famili'
d
nd b a s th ir i
dperdnfs total! ln lpl-ss. th chil-, Iren with. 1 : 1 1 1 or i -- du-ttion and; '.rien. to w ot k w.;h",:t the !ight-st'
trninir ft- n
: i w r- 1 1 ' - per v. d
s that brth rs i;r w up apart and j ur.kn-.-wn to ,o li .;!; r tin ii;gliout ' their li-s. I What Mo-clicarf Mor-. h' .ut I- not an institution. It is not a S". ?ar:i?i i-t! at. It is'
a r.-'forr -a :--ry.
P h;,s no ufti- ; t
ia'..b'm to rub- it. 1 :::: th- tirsf it j
This will fix my cold T ALWAYS keep Lr. Kind's New Dicovrxy har.dy. Ir breaks cp hard, 5tuhrrn co'.i's and 5tcrs the rirarysrr.s of couching. No harmful iru?, but t gcxi rrxdicinc Ail clrucists, tjOc De King's New Discovery For Colds and Coughs
Stub-born Bowels Tamed. lravIrrg th-; bowels unuiov cd rrsults in bcailh c'.etriKtion. Let the yrttly iinauhitin Ir. Kind's Frlis bnr tc yrxj a reg'jLir, norm-tl l-owel factionm. 25(rr.ts. All iri:.its. D PROMPT! WON'T GRIPE r. Kino's Pills
John J. Wynn
MR. WYNN'S big-
gest problem is
YOUR biggest problem. But he solved it beautifully. Learn how. His own story--
The greatest handicap of the ages has been Disease and Habit is as old as man, it is also his closest friend and enemy. The most serious of all habits of man is the one who possesses the unhappy faculty of procrastination when he or she is suffering some minor or serious ailment. Ihousands of times you hear the old familiar expression "if he had done this or if she had gone there," but people with sense and intelligence aic daily overcoming the handicap of ill Health through the undeniable fact of CHIROPRACTIC SPINAL ADJUSTMENTS removing the cause of their Disease. CHIROPRACTIC IS logical, theoretically right and in accordance with the greatest law of the land, "Nature's Law."
Overcome the greatest of all handicaps by having the cause of your Disease removed by CHIROPRACTIC SPINAL ADJUSTMENTS and you will enjoy good Health which is the birthright to all humanity.
The Chiropractor b s not treat th - trouble, if th r-- i s trouble, but looks for its cause. He linds It ami fixes it; and then Nature ff ts the Cure." ( nichts Kcscrvcd ) The l'ni:- d Chiropractic Hoard Of Kdueatiori lias appoint.. d the following committee of Chiropractor;;-, to carry mi an educational campaign for the science of Chiropractic. Articles will 1 published in tr is newspaper f ach Monday. WHERE TO GO AND WHOM TO GO TO SoutrT.Bend
Hudnut's Bandoline, lor the hair, bottle 2nc Kirk's Cocoa Hardwater Castile or Kirk Olive, special 6 bars : 35c Woodbury's f a c i a " c r c a m . cold cream and facial pow
der, all 25c articles, choice
19c
Petoxi'lr of
i
0
at
i
i
8
( I'
I
4 I
i i
fi !
i
1
i '
Java Rice face powder, at special prices, domestic 17c; imported .d5c De Luxe faci.d powder, superior quality, special . 75c Pinaud's toilet water, a superior toilet perfume. for $1.25 Pinaud's Lau-dc-Quinine hair tonic, 4 ounce bottle for 75c Jergen's lotion, of benzoin and almond, preserves the skin and complexion 29c Kolynos dental cream. tiseptic, cleansing, . special 21c Palm O live shaving cream, leaves the face soft and velvety, special. . . .29c Best quality shaving 5oap, special, 5 bars 29c Williams' dental cream, at 10c and 25c Camphor ice for chapped hands, fare, lips, rouh A in and sunburn 15c Wa-Ne-la. for tired, aching, burning feet, special 19c Jap Rose toilet soap, special, 3 bars 21c Williams' and Packer's liquid shampoo, special. 45c
i ivdro :-cn.
snecial. bo tue MJc
Lrupd ; "love Mi sp. for the proper wa-hir.g of si;!v. fabric and (ape J;id '.;!n. .
b.r 10c
Babv b t ! 1 1 i-tilc ap l (
) ! i v e -1
o :
p. bar
ioc !
V. netiL'.uv':; and P.-r !.f r's
hir soaj
". li'i
i r, b.,r. . . 19c
R'sii-ifl soap. I :l ci ! i " ,, t r for the 4JI1 ' c.::uIci-:ii,
b.tr
i
Jap Rose I . I "t;:n j:? v wrl f special, can 10c .icnru n s and Yviiii.tms' talcm povf!( r. 5peciaI.19c Palm Ohve 'al-nni powder, special, can 19c Tuiki !. hall-, and 'c Olde Ln::!i di i'.Iflcr I lawrr vmp, special, bar 12c .le!'b, dry jou-.'c, 50c;
oil !),;'-
It:: ee 1 ; r; ry
25 c
. d 5c
. I f I ' I, 1 ,( ,V I : , ' . t ..I . r.
( h
iv e
t ( )r !iifi. ( .ir-
df nia ( li : Mii;:T arvl jorjr t a!- u : n 1 1 w rl r . : : ' i - e
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25 c
Mud net - .kiel M elf, , 1 ;.,t -tied pf riurüf hi VaT ! odors ot 75c, .$1.00, fT.25 and c2.00 1 ludr.uf s. .-.' t. ( .! -'.'te s a. ad Cnh -. 1,'il'r: p- rmure 50c, .Sl.no, 51.50 nonce 50c, 1.00, 51.50 and -Vb)
I o ; J t , ; t c r
Meiba and Co!. ,b are v, hid ' ro - ' .
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O-'.OJ
! Vailov
and and
!l,ar.
1' a M b pi l
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I Wish You the
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SHAW WALKER j
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FILING SAFES
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filing problems. Index and Folder Stock to Fit All Makes of Cabinets.
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A First Quality Line.
begins in this newspaper next Thursday Read every word
wi.viv si i:i:rncir. i. c. smith a. smith, d.v c. I'ltofw I.. t;s-2Z. riione Mi-h. ir.7. ."21 .V. .Main St. "-7 laiKoIn Way Wot.
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Tuttle Corporation
We Sell Coal for Less SAM C. LONTZ & SONS On Colfax Av. Main 74
Edwards Iron Works cirr ont rmci: ItcinforclnK. Channels. 1 IJcam. Angles, Ikir 5101 S. MAIN fT. M. S7:i
119 W. Washington Ave. Phone Main 949 A CALUMET FOUR DRAWER OAK CABINET FOR LETTERS AT
$20.50 I
