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V NORTH CREEK ENTERPRISE

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,Welfare Workers Baseball ''•'•• ^^n(|apierltal, Trutlis . - - ©,* V!>3f3;. Bell syndicate;—-WNU Set-vice.

By E D H O W E '"RSLF'ARR workers have 'always' robin o! the r)6or .'as cruelly i s the

poLiticians have robbed 'the people. The earliest booh and public Speaker, began' with a plea for- the" poor, and the elarnoi* has grown ever' sluice, but the poor hfjve not been relieved. Wel­fare .workers seem to prefer to keep the poor a s exhibits when they inaugu­rate a new drive, as teachers exhibit children wh^B school directors a re be-ins appealed t o ' for another.appropria­t ion The present World-wide poverty' is disgraceful; had vve handled our­selves witti the intelligence and vigor we are capable of, have actually shown hi -other ways, poverty would not exist..

' ' . . - * * —-*' 0. O. McTntyre says baseball is slow­

ly passing out, .and must inevitably dis­appear. - 1 hope so; ' baseball has be­come one of. the greatest \ .American bores. The first ambition of~*vn Ameri­can youth' should be to become a good provider far a family,'a safe and re ­spectable man in h i » community; t o occupy a good job so capably he is more apt to be-promoted th'ffirr dis-. charged, tt is bad for a young man when his greatest ambition is to be­come a 9ancftot fdtydy called Spec Hit-emhard >r Red Bringemin;

* * * There ure millions of thinkers a t

present, and millions In the past have left records of their thoughts, yet fev? have ever recognized fundamental t ruths thai should occur to almost any* one. One of. such truths generally missed is that all men have equal rights in ttie world,___You may say this right has been abundantly granted. I t h a sn ' t ; no one' grants rights except to the pour. Have. the, rich not been denied their rights from the begin­ning? And are we not lately agreed In denying the rights- of the ; middle class? You may say again 1 am mis­taken," but in this case I am not : no onei Is freely and generally granted human rights except the poor man, wtw> will not take advantage of them..

» ' * * I n the few cases where writers have

sound sense, they will-not lie under* sto.od unless extremely careful in ex­pressing it. There Is,, so much going on people will not bother long with paragraph or page not simply written and easily understood, Among the small number of men whose names at­tract my attention on encountering them In print is Benjamin PeOasspros. I do not know who lie is ; only that he seems to be struggling to maho a liv­ing as a writer, has a good deal of real

.genius, and writes too mueifabout the old clays of heavy drinking and bar­tenders.

Lately he had 'two pages of para­graphs in a magazine, ami T was able

,.to understand only ('our of Ihem: t . The honest mun Is one whom the.

world hoth respects and plunders ; 2. Belief of any kind ts impossible

without some degree of intolerance; 3. Whatever exists aspires to "tell a

potty lie about itself; 4. There-is_a kind of sweetness ot

character that, is extremely disagree-" able. (1 have changed the last para­

g r a p h somewhat, its DeCasseres uses many objectionable words in ids writ*

, ings, mistakenly- believing they add s t rength) . :

— • # * *

Dog story for 0, O. McTntyre t As nice-a girl of nineteen as 1 know owns

"a pup seven months old; and' there never was a more useless, troublesome, lovable, iifffmdent natural or amiis-lbs 'r-'iisanee. Being given a bone, and unable to Vet outside to properly bury It, he hid it In thf 'bed of his mistress, and awoke her in the middle of the night vigorously digging'""it up. An­other (and Mr. McTntyre . will miss this, unless he is careful); A woman owns a bulldog very smart, goockut-

"tiife'd and appreciative, but, alas, he is getting old. l ie usually sleeps o\\ the floor in the bedroom of his' rather elderly mistress. One morning, when she awoke, the-dog 'was sound asleep, and his mistress addressed him affec­tionately. As1 he paid no attention, she then declared be no longer loved her, and threatened tears, etc. Finally the old dog. actually disposed to polite­ness, and really loving his mistress, could no longer ovoid paying attention t o ' the proprieties, so he very slowly began to yawn, to "stretch, (This is. the. point of the s tory: his slow, detih urate recognition of the affection of­fered, owing to age. Finally, In his stretching, he managed to turn over, and went to sleep again).

+ * *

No pope, professor, poet, statesman, patriot ever lef t 'a simple guide to db root simple people, although these are

-the guides we simple people a r e urged to follow.

* * *

- - I think i a m injured, a s aujtunoeent bystander ofte.ner than Is thef averages

Living "Close to the Soil derm Hustle, as

—W©rH, Is a

^

n

mea raNOther Parts of the g Unknown to & ^ Simple '. of Old France.

In the Pa r i s Herald of July 7 we • find" the following, descriptive; of

French peasant life, with, t o Ameri­cans especially, interesting comments by. the wr i te r : y . . . .

"During the coming week, in a corner of sovithwestern Prance, 380. elderly couples are. to be the heroes and heroines of- -a collective marr r iage anniversary. IjSaeh of these old coiipies.has been united in wedlock

_ for fifty \years . or longer. > It ' will be . France 's nearest approach to an- bid-

home"-week. It serves as.„confirm'a* tion of the not unfamiliar dictum that America J s sit"great country for-the .youngi but France is a land where t h e aged find especial sym-

.palhy and comprehension. " "The 380 pld couples live In the

• Medoc, the sandy peninsula lying be­yond Bordeaux, • which protrudes

. westward between- the" Bay of- Bis­cay and the River Gironde. The soil is too thin for grain. . I t is charac­terized, b y the marittme/pine and the scrub oak. In fortunate years po­tatoes a n d oats prosper moderately. Gravel i s .everywhere near the sur­face. But, with its torrid days and nights, i t s acidity and stony slopes, it is ideal country for the vine. It

.lives by its- grapes and i t s ••wine. Among this sparse .and poor popula­tion, however, ^gathered In tiny vil~. lages among the unending pine for­ests and vineyards, there are po fewer than-380. pairs of old partners , who have summered and wintered no-leSs than fifty years in one anoth­er's company. Can any like s-urfaee-of the globe' equal' this record of longevity and conjugal fidelity? While it would be unscientific to deduce haVd-and-fast cdnclusions\ Fron*-iti Several facts-mil s t ipricl i t h e 1-m.a'gi* nation. ' ,..„_*__I_. •. • "The beverage of these p e a s a n t families is the, red wine which they produce. On high' days they treat

.themselves to coffee, with sugar-When unwell, they procure and drink -milk, upon the loetor'a prescription. Water is . considered InJBiicgJL. to health a s too chilling for tire stom­ach, Probably' hone of these golden-wedding.Jk)Vk has consumed a 'gallon of pure water during tin--last decade.1

In the Medoc there a r e no cinemas, theatefs or amusement parks. Cook­ing is done over, a wood-fire in a chimney. Steaming bowls of vege­table soup .are the foundation of e v / ery repast ' Tobacco i s the luxury of

the men, conversation the solace ~of the women. Sleep i s gauged by the setting^ and ' the rising of t he sum Husbands, wives, grandparents and babies labor together in the • hay field, t he potato patch;, and the vine­yard. Thei r routine, timed by the c loelr in the village spire, is almost as regular as aW-coeess' of nature. In this , t ranquil and robust orbit of existence r o m a n c e i s neither shaken nor shookeu t o extinction: Nerves and -arteries sustain.-the passage of pacific seasons, in our metropolitan communities - there are many who disclaim a desire to live long. They wilfully curtai l -life .by indulgence. But to those who care, to prolong life t h e ingredients are available. They,, a re hand-labor; conjugal for­bearance, ' . the open, sky, plain "no-rir-isfrment anfl^Ted' wine, -regularity, physidai fatigue and adequate re^ pose.

" T o i h e gentle old. people who will h e fe ted next week we extend, our haiids.. in- undisgtJlsed. felicitation. Perhaps without realizing- it they have discovered the philosopher's stone. They r e v u e the era of our pioneer. American grandparents . In the confusion and chaos that seems to gr ip our world they recall us to sanity and vhotesomeness. They typify the soil and those who live close—iipon tt. ^With all our para­phernalia of̂ modernity t'h'pymay yet be our superiors both io wisdom1 and in happiness" '

New to Him It t akes a stranger to find an old

town's beauties. • • •- •

F r e a k T l i u i i d e r S t p n n ,

M a d e W e i r d S p e c t a c l e . - ' ta the log'of "the British steamer Moravian, Cap t A. Simpson d*>s<-r%'ed a", thunder s t o r a on December SO, 1902, j u s t within range of t ' ape Ferde lighthouse. A t 1 :30 a,. vcL a warm .puff of dast-iaden wtod came "off the African shore, Ught'nins. at hrst distant en. the northeast horizon, became almost continuous, with loud thunder.

: • -All" the s t a r s were visible; only upper clouds, no "cumulus, in the sky. Captain Simpson had never before experienced a severe thunder s torm without cloud, Charles FitKkugh Talman, who describes -this freak thunder storm in his Se te t ro .Service feature "Why the W-enta-erT goes on :

"For .fully an. bmir - the sky^was one blaze of lighiai'mg, andVwire ropes, mast-treads, yardarms, derrick ettds, e tc ' were lighted up. All, the stays seemed to have glow lamps three' to 'four feet apart , .'and the mastheads and 'yardarms a bright fight a t tfeeir extremities.

"Tire most remarkable part of t he phenomenon was the extraordinary sound emitted throughout. It was, says the- h>g, exactly. like the m^se ' of the s p a r k s ' f r o m ' t h e carbons of

"Tin 'are l amp; or a s if several tliou--sandarof cicadas had- taken op their quar ters in the r i sg ing; or the crack­ling of buruing grass or: twigs. • "This noise was not local npar the bridge, but the officers reported i t all orer the" ship, even in the neigh­borhood of the noisy steering sear ." —l i t e r a ry Digest.

E v e r y F i b e r I n E v e r y C o r d I n E v e r y P l y

I n E v e r y F i r e s f o n e T i r e U .

BLOWOUr PROTECTED

E R F O R M A N < ; E C O U N T S ' . F l i w s t o n t ^ H i g l i Speed . G u m - D i p p e d T i r e s h o t i J a l l Avorltl r e c o r d s o i i Toa*l a n d t r a c k f o r Safety* Speed, Mileage-im& EnduranJce* T h e y a r e f i r s t c h o i c e o f r a c e d r i v e r s — r a i e i i w h o "will n o t t a k e c h a n c e s o r r i s k t h e i r l i v e s o n a i t y o t h e r t i r e .

F i r e s t o n e T i r e s a r e t h e o n l y tir«*s m a d e •wi th high stretch cords a n d t h e E x t o a P r o c e s s o f G r M - D I P P I N G V k i c h g i v e s 5 8 % l o n s e r flexin- l i f e — G R E A T E R . S A F E T y ^ N D M O R E B L O W O I T ? P R O T E C T I O N .

T h e F i r e s t o n e D e a l e r I n Y o u r C o m m u n i t y Wi l l G i v e Y o u a L i b e r a l A l l o w a n c e , F o r Y o u r W o r n T i r e s T o A p p l y , O n N e w F i r e s t o n e H i g h S p e e d T i r e s

P r o t e c t y o u r S a f e t y h y e q u i p p i u u y o u r c a r T O D A Y — T i r e p r i c e s a r e s t i l l t o o l o w — B u y n o w h e f o r e t h e v a d v a n c e a g a i n .

THE MASTERPIECE OF TIRE CONSTRUCTION

1 -""̂ ^> i | ,, j-t.75-19 - _

i 5.S0-1T — j 5.50-19

!6.W)-t8 -

HIGH SPEED TYPE :„..$8.4o „...xo.oo ^„,io.9S .„...*1.50 „, , ia.4S . .13.70

6.00-l£51U) 6.<K)A9 H D _ 1 _ fuSMSllD, 6«5<W9Hi)'- ... t.OO-W III).: 7.50-tanu

j Other Sisea Proportionately £ou

i $ 1 5 . i o

X7.40! 1 7 . 9 0 , 2 0 . 8 0 : X9-«0

SUPER-OLDHELD r f P E

E q u a l to All First Line , S t a n d a r d B r a n d Tires i n Qua l i ty , Construc­

t i o n a n d A p ­p e a r a n c e , Yef

S o l d a t a Price Tha t

j W ' W M M g ^ Affords

f/l-f-AMPiRilm.- You Real Sav­ings

UNES of TIRES

Tirestone NAME a n d

G U A R A N T E E

SUPERIOR JW Q U A L I T Y Y ? t P r i c e d - | a s L O W a t '.

Specia l 8 t a n d i

a n d Mai l O"^* ' Ttfet

cw*ut V $ 7 . 1 0 4.SO.S1A '

1 4.75:19 '

Btiitik..,.. OhrVJt 1 Ford \r~ jfcA Nash > $ 9 . 0 0 Plytn*hl 5.S5-18 .

5.50-181-. Other Sixes froportlonotflv tote

— u - ;. f ••-• -f - — — 1

. Fortl . \ ~~ I c .hw v -fc. i n

Plvm"h.{ " • * V

4.>5rt9 *-

Ti re ̂ f ond Ti f e ̂ f one |Ftre*f on t OLDnELDTYPE '

Fort l

4.50-41 ^ I $ 6 , 3 0

5.00-SO S Buick 1

Ford >

S'.SS-tS^-i 8.10

" V w b a m ) S'ttidfVj-5.50-1 S \ .

9 .00 6l*>4r S,ras F»»«t»sB*ai!t lc«

SENTINEL TYPE

F o r d „ Ch«-rr 4.50-21

1^5.-65 F o r d . \ Ch<f-rt . \ Plj-Trt'h t 4.75-19 l

6 .05

ffrT*A *-7© 5.0O-S0 » ' *

Bt l tck . C W y r . Fftrd. -Xrts-h'

5.25-tS '

TT. —I

I, V 7-30

Pt̂ ej- S«* Prw<5r'«,-a"j*f S.w

COURIER TYPE

30*3 «*

OkM-vr-,- 3 » 0 > U 4.40-2t. ' •

F o t d j

4.50-S.t »

Ford...I

4 . 7 5 - t 9 l . •

A / # A i t . SPARK

c$tone f LUGS. J t o t t e r ' s p a r k , i n c r e a s e d

powfcr taut' longer l ife. Sealed aga ins t pt)M'e* leakage. £>l<i t vom p lugs v a s t c gasolme. \To t e s t y6u r Sparlc H u g s F R E E . EochlnS«B

BR A K %L Tire*tone EiUmo

T h e n e w Fires tone Aquapruf Brake LimtiR i s moist t i re-proof giving s m o o t h e r b r a k i n g a e t i o a a n d m o t e positive .-braking c o n ­t ro l , ^ e t e s t y o u r Brake* F R E E .

Qiarxes JEs-nm

ftreifotie BATTERIES A uew h igh s tandard:

^of Power, TJependa-hlli ty a n d Lohg Life. "Wc w i l l t e s t a n y t t i a k e o f B a t t e r y F R E E . - •'

A$ L o v A s

*

6^ •sad. yowr old

• Sec i"ire*toii» G u m - D i p p e d Tire* made in thti'Fir&t&iteTaGtdry and SchiMtion Building »* *'JL Cffrttttry *>f Progm**** ChScmgo. •

Firestone Service Dealers and Firestone Service Stores Save You Money and Serve You Better

"-C

J. .NORTH CREEK ENTBRpmtSE

Events in the Lives of Little

Wffirfm •mm

'. Tbe slwp-assbtiuxt wrapped up tl\e eiistomei-*s pajeel sind deftly banded i t to hm\ "

I "Tbvre j-oa are, sir,*' he said, "and I i t tb-e Ko»->ds.ape-^at just to_your'iik> ! insi we .trill cheerfully refund the '• -cas l i ; " • '•:"

!• FarnvC'T Giles sniffed;. '. - :,. 'f "Dun*t T^elf'me seeb ft yarn, young ' • man.*' he replied. [ "Kh? \VliatV exi-'lalnxetl • the - as-1 fiistanh m^meatnrily ttdv^n oSS his ; . g i inn l . - " -: . " Y P hiisht pi*o me nw- m«ni«*j hack," *" Sftl4 ilvp. farmer, ""hut "tain/t hanmnt

iiamn* to lw» c-heerf'n) .ahont it.-—t.ou-; (lt»n -Answers. - '.

» — 1 —

ALL FOR NOTHING,

S % j s a t c h e d tfie door of Jier new establishment open to adroit "h&t first c l ien t ' Business.--.-had 'startedI. •& good In-jpresstan mus t be- created upon hisaj -l

" Hnrriedty she grasped tlie tele­phone, r e se t t e r and became engaged 1B- a n aninmted conver-sation.' 3?hen» an appointment having been 'ar­ranged, she replaced the receiver, and, beaming on her customer asfted: "AVbafean I do t o t j tm, gir l"

A moHjent'g panse, and t h e n : **tt yo\T_please, ma'am, X%-e- come

to connect ffie - telephone P^-London Tit-Bfts.

Adapta t ion Kew Uesident-r—I stopped over - in

San Juan aiul—* . Old -Resident—Pardon me . b n t yon

shonfd sfiy ^an Hnan. In California •we- pronounce our .T4& like i3's.

New Resident—-Welt, yotf 11 have to give xne.time. Y o i v ^ e , It.ve been in the s ta te only throngh Htjn-e^—El • f ad r e , San 3fose, .Calif.

SAVING THAT, ANYWAY

..fs'g-1"' of Busyness The busy h<»usmvilV whs nutkins a

hurripd trip .lf>.wnpnvn iuid at the last mir.uie .dtv'altnl u* sow a rip in tier.&ro**. .

On -tin* car sho tintioed swera l yoima"-!',r^ i u o k t u at ln«r and _ lajiffb-JBS. and on l«*t.km^ d>>\\n -xho found tbut.^ho lud iu-r-hiixij< fi»HlA*i! nicety .in her lap and en i»ito tln^t-r was IHT th.smble.

H a p p y End ' s ig •'Ft-r flu- i .^i . ti'.uo ] u^k ,\<»n for

that -jiwtm. k \.»!j .>«o uii>." "Timi'lv' iiiHMhi.'--. 1 bat 's tb<» i"i»l «>f

. t h a t s i l l y *(tti>!;«»!!," • '*

THE FEATHERHEADS » ' M " i i i ' •' 1

Snperservic6 for Her k-vWV & ^ S ' 5 U S T

•WANteD "To FLAV

U t - f u F € l R C AM ORAMCs-e

Unpeeessary

Mf>id he lock ti»o door. after the horse was stolen?*

"Certainly; he \v:mtfd to keep the automobile safe."

.. ' * Avoiding:"Zero Fresimiun — What I* tbe date,

pleasoV Professor—Nevt;r mind the date,

the exattiipation is mure important, • Freshman—-Weil, sir, I wanted to

have si>meihins; r i^ht .

T i n t i n g t h e B a l 4 S p o t ."My (h*ttt", J-vby luis yuur bnsband

" Prnf, —\Yli> don't vi.11- take rioter . bren silt ins on the l>ea«-h In the broil-in my oimrM-"' . itisr sun bareheudi'iiv1 ' ••-

I'm'mh %:v, -i't,.;iv». vir, my father! "I've j iM i».»uulst a new uowu apd took tlii* t-our-.e and X have his m»t'e«.','John'M bald spot clashes di-endfttlly."

* --Exchanging Compiimettts Mr. Erstahout—•! like t<"» k ? one eat

appropriate f>-->L Mr»y I "off^r yoT5 s»MDe of" this dt-licb-.tis a n ^ ' t t o M ?

Mrs. -Donetodeath—-I »j-.;it(? se ree wi th ' y . a . SuF>r<A>'e yW t*j ssnae of t h e sp:-r»ce cake.

"l ' "*ft^flt<rtzed Que ' • . t *T>en't trorry any ny.re nV«nf him. 1

dear . I b e r e are plenty m<>r* tis-U in J t he sea ." . i

"1 &n**\rt• said tbe iHifi-,>tivl^-bw ;

h e was a goldfish."' . *' ,

i _ i i _ 2 j w . . ' 1

When Vir tue Tr iumphed Judge (dnr ins an inquiry in'«j a case

of alleged -bribery)^*-You sa^-yott re­ceived, £-."} \n -sutp: Conservative and ah*o received the feaiae -atnoynt to vote' Liberal?' ' . __^ •- -- Witness—Ye.*, tny^lor4 "Judge—And i«r- whom did yoa vote

a t the finish -. • • . • -'\v;trsr:-4s ( iDdl^ant ly)—1 voted, my

-!<->rd, acc>-irding to my'ctfascience,.

I ) H « r r M tin Mrxlct* Ilan«ttp4 Kfltcl^ntty tn Bt , r . .Ht . , t , " . , . , , , . - .-.-. v.-.r.1 |.r.t. ti.-i • Jr.f , ' ! . >n- .1 ;/•• Hi»r«lir l*m OHitp. 4.U Fi rs t NnU «imU « W g . , F.l l*fts«, Texu*.

f j u i ', -•.<',< • ' , - . 1 T . i » - , , 1 1 . 4 ".'».- .'. i t r» i i r -iiir, .)•?•' ; . n - •• .'• < •>• ••ft- -S. rr<'. fsd '1 M c j r r * sal«>s . C« , H.u»Ji'«i*}> < «'«a.

t * U F > — H \ M S l i r . I > with p-<- -1 r. t-ivi *u,sr i«.-ini.A B I«M-1t • ,,? -I i.,t, -.t !if ,• t) j-.-*|-«M M"»i«-v b t r J i If !••..-< M. - t : *+- - t«^J*ruU, Afdi tmw, Pt»*u>a.

^Agentt \%t t - 1 . - ' }r>r'> •-»*.! avr« *> r\* •". ».7)"-"|.'.T.«' . » " •>-- »--~ . f'.|l.»>.> ,-f...U-t-. hi.I.t T . - i - •* • Wi '- f--r »!•!.<,!• RvlJnWr SttJfs C«.. 2St Vt «<*h<n«:fmi Si., Np\%urU,N..J»

MKive Bett^-r, s a v e Uewwjr, 10 SePotiil*, *lm-pl» t-j.tfiuif-ri i »unn: r l:i» .-«rl '" i l l n v . A , C-'i J-htTj-fj-i'-. <;iiivtt . fj.t-.1i-:-, l-:>.(ii rli.<m pharf. $t "ri";U Ti.. <•• -: :-» r<-t TTM n«;. fir if, -r. I )a\»« (,itt shi»(t, tVfl Chrs t i i a t ,st„ I'liU-iMivlpWn, P a . <

Ugly, Disfiguring Pimples

Covered F a c e Cuticura Heated

CONSULTATION

""."Junius' 1^ a dead came sport." . 1 '"'Y«-sj_ I Dotk-ed t!*e. ] ' t« time he

went 'hunting he bougtit the -birds fit the delicatessen.'" ' • ' ' • ' . t

HIPPITY-HOP

Especially Going Out .FSther—^yott d>«n*t Jtnow r. hot t lus

iBStniment i". eh ' ' j .»uu^hter—$r, ; js-bat is It? Fa t te r—A time' eb.ck b bronchi

home fr«-'in. the oiT.ee. Muke that y.-.tm= man of 5-«->«.ts punch it,rr*tniog in and going out—Brooklj t> -Eagle,

Defective CotabinELticm wWhat:-s,. t he ' m a t t e r vs-lth my.

F i r s t .Dect-or—Did tStat last case get j speechesl-*' inquired the orator, . well? ' . ' 'i **Th-e s-easonisg i s vsrong'," replied _

Second Doctor—Net y e t He's well \ Senator .S*rghum, "'HYou try to p a t go. ', oS and I believe to letting well enough I 'much, gicger i n them tha t they b a r e ' alo-ae. " "] t o - b e taken frith.a grain of galt'M |

Tur t le—Were y\m is«ad? Frog—•!• w a s hopping.

Soaks U p Touches •"Bill-has an absorbintr oretipatlonc*1

• t f b a t is Ms -occnpationY* " **-SeV-ar sjponge."

"My entire fac«* was covered with ojdy, disflgurjBs; pbi's-pl^s- and" they •were very painful. They "Were very

-jbard, lat-Re and r ed ' and-- they 'cave • m e such pit in by i tchins tha t I

scratched and., made them worse. For - ' four months thoy w e r e ' m bad I

coiild hardly rest . . '< "Everyone sug-jr^sted remedies ba t

t o no avail, and 1 became so disfig-' t tred I •would not ?*> o u t Finally I

trJedi 'ctitictifa Strap- and Ointment and they made .my face feel re­freshed, and after using three- cakes

. of Cntb-ura Soap -anxt four box-es of 1 . C n t k u r a (tlntment I wag_healed." ; '•(Signed) Miss Bernice.- "Wbltaker,-; i t C Z; Hamlin, Texas. r Soap" 26c. Ointment 25c and 50c. ! t a l c u m 2Se. - Propr ie tors r Po t te r | B r a g & Chemical Corp.,. Maiden, j iMkss.—Adv.

WKTJ—S 32—83-

T o u w i l l b e d e l i g h t e d

wi th t h e c o n v e n i e n t loca?

t i o n t t h e o l d f a s h i o n e d

comfor t , a n d t h e e c o n o m ­

ical r a t e s at--this- f a m o u s

$u p t o w n ho teL

tll:Klfl/%nl HOTEL

7 0 4 S t BROADWAY 71*t&_

Dei er-tiTi'H. )n\ < VU-SJMJIA.* «v».'r>"-whcre, .cl\.lli_ rrimiiKtl *.-.-u$1 n(-.-> -ai'iiri-'l,. m i - ' l n g j,cfeoh«t. r.tliiT yt-r.1...,. A.H'.f- {r>»-. Wrifi? Ht'wrt. H«rv»re, « Joa«iial s « . , J ? » e y a t y . , 3S. a.

HIGH GRADE CIGARS $ ^ 5 0 Bo* « f 100. Pwp*ild, C . O , B . » • ' " Cuban-Amer i can Co . , Box 3 6 1 , Quincy, FW.

S p r k t k k A p t Food along xvift. dow giiliTffoors"atSTiopeixto^f tbrougtb wtuch an ts tomeaiidt

\ go. Guaranteed toridt qaic^ty. Used i n a mi l l ion hpnieS* l a * eac^ettsive. At y < w druggist's.

A N T FOOD

V-

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