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^uraotous Department! j ^ Demand- fbf Orushos. ?A' young Englishmari'<iii-bposecL to a girl, -and her. father said" to hitn: '*You heed not come back HfntiJVyou are prepared^to settlfe $i0,00(T-tdfti"my daughter.' I/fim not golngto-iet-you-marry without a proper. settfemedfc."-' i?'-it' The, ardent .Tvpoer, ,weht away in a despondent frame ,of mind, .for, though ho-had a fair,Income he hiid no money to .settle^apf hiirflancfee^;< ' ... r ^ Next'- day^he;?toJd;. his story to a friend In; thft-city,../who. said: "Suppose you. try a dlttlevn|>eculaii<iu I'll bUX a thousand-ABmshesv^Tr-meaning. shares in:,the Brush EUeptric xpinpany. ti ;;Ten. .days, jateg^ thp...friend, handed U7.000?the, profits: of the transaction ?to. the .voting-- ;jnan,r who, '.w?nt * straight f, to. his future , father-in-law with,,a check .forrjJ10^100-_. fi . j The latter , abked^how the money had been found go quickly. .. ., "Oh, it's all right," the lover replied., "A friend of mine bought me some brushes on the . stock.exchange and , they went up in a wonderful way*.'. I don't know if they Were .halt;', brushes or nail .brushes or tooth brushes,, but there was' a wonderful demand. ,for them." *'vV ' . *r:'v Worried About Doctof.?rAmong the patients of a, , certain h ospital there was a man who was disposed to take , a dark view of hltf recovery.- - '' "Cheer up, old'" nian,"''''admonished the/youthful'' medleo attaohed to'- the Ward In which the patient lay. "Hour symptoms are identical' with those''of my oWn case four-years ago. I was just'as ill as'you are and look at:;me now."' ^ dri -.The patient ran his eyes over the physician's stalwart frame, then shook his. head feebly and said: Vn*v . . "Yes, but- what " doctor did you bave?V . / : . . . Different.?The" darUng Utile baby had reached the age when he could coo, art: accompusnment. .in wnicn, wk indulged'most of the time. And proudly his mother was telling the tale of his accomplishments. "He is the most' welcome visitor I ever had," she.said,. giving him j/a smacking kiss. "He Just lies and tal^s to,me by the hour. Don't you,;baby? Don't 'oo tell rriotiie'r everything?" , The baby cooed obligingly, and mothers -friend; replied: ; \ . "Isn't,- that nicfe! So unlike father visitors?they Just'talk and-lie tb you by. tiifa faoiifi", \''f . - ? . v ' ? v+y^"" ? T / . Sl^ri flfaant'.?Kihb-ye&rioi4 .. fcharles carried letters fijom; thp : lakryer r next door to his. best- girl.. 'Every" time he took one the lawyer gave him a dime. But'one. "day.be- decided to reward hto-iwlittle better.. He sart'ed to - fish two .dimes put. of his picket. : " 7 guess these Ibttdrs are '" about worth twenty cents/' he remarked facetiously. *< ' - t,"' "Yes,-, sir,"' Charles agreed,., ftdberly "that'# tfhiit I "get?a dime ifbtn/you and onfe from Her." . *' . ^ But he didn't'krip-rt' what there was about his dheech to mdke'tfae fehow grin so hafaplly'.?Indianapolis News. Not From Hei*.?Charles looked very grlum. _ "Matilda h?is broken our engagement." he confessed.^ his chum. . "Sorry to.hear. /that," replied his friend. Hal. "Why did she break it?" "Because I stole a kiss." "What!" cried pal. "Do you mean to say she objected, "to the1fellow -to whom she is engaged stealing a kiss from her?" . . CharHs stammered and stuttered. "It w/iBn'-t. exactly that," he admitted. "You see, the kiss I stole I didn't steal frcm her." Wow!? 'I want you- to put 'up $drae wall pajfer; 1. have bought," 'said the clergyman to the-'looai- decorator. "Whenfcdp yqu do>it?" "Well :I'm rather>1 busy jJUBt now\" said tho 'ptaperhanger- "Hung M-r. .Smith yesterday,Jiangln^ ypuc deacon tomorrow, but if it's convenient I'll run around and- hang you on Wednesday." . * . ? . ?o? Learning Quickly.?"I'm not at all sure." said the., profiteer's wife to the he.?.d master of the fashionable preparatory school, "how your school is going to suit my dear boy.'* : The head master smiled confidently. "You need not worry about that. mada,m," he said; "we've taught him how to hold his' knife already." His Preference.?A Boston artist relates that while he was painting in an open field one day a rustic came up and stood watching him. Presently the fellow- remarked: "I'urty clever . you be. mister, apaintin' two picters at wunst. But, 1 like the one you got your thuml through best."?Exchange. Trying to Get.Out.?Jimmy's mother was giving him u sound scoldinj about his .unwpshptV neck. "You know you . iKivenft iw&shed your neck," saic his .mother. "Wee whiz!" said Jimmy a note of desperation creeping int< his voice, "ain't 1 goin' to wear a col lar?" Right O!?The roughneck politiciai burst into the lawyer's office and ii an excited manner asked: What would you do if a pape should call you a thief and a liar?" . "Well." said the lawyer, "if I wer you I'd topa^ypia nickel to see whethe I'd reform or pay no attention to th statement"'": ..... A Rare Girt?'"Jack said I was dream." -"Whn t -fiin-ymi-s.Tj-?"^?-? "I told hira. to wake up."?ExcFian^ American magician. And speaking of Americans, Mr. Keller was asked who were the best exponents of his art, i He answered, "Americans." i Further questioning elicited the fact that practically all the present topr notch illusionists are American born and bred. The foreign-sounding e names of most of them are assumed r for advertising purposes. Even the e Hindoos, famed as fakirs, he says, are children compared with an American magician, their tricks being so simple a that they are regarded as only in the primary stage of the art. Tvn?-T7am-fti"Ert c, "PcinTs'yfcr2. Dia, shortly before the stirring days ol geles is second only to New York as a theatrical center and few are the stare of stage and screen who fail to renew their acquaintance with litis well-beloved comrade. Best Illusionists Are Americans. Not only has Mr. Keller known every prominent member of the theatrical .world . but. his acquaintanceship ' embraces statesmen, diplomats, finan1 ciers, sportsmen, authors, editors, musicians and ministers. It is difficult to mention a great man of the past sixty years whom Keller has not met. .The walls of his home are lined with autOr graphed photographs . of celebrities 1 ranging from: Theodore Roosevelt, Queen Victoria, Mark Twain, Lillian Russell to Lilly Sunday and Raymond Hitchcock., Has library is filled-with : scrapbooks. containing clippings from nearly every, city and town, in bqth the 5 civilized,apd uncivilized world. Hand* bills in every tong.q^, some printed on 3 ?iiw tostifv to the wanderings of this 4 fiarry n.euer, or jtvenar us uc y??s known on the stage, is now in his seventies. Ten years ago he retired from the stage and purchased the beautiful home in Los.Angeles where he now resides.. He had well earned his retirement after forty-seven years of active service as a magician and illusionist, during which time he had appeared in every country on the globe. But the old master three years ago proved that he had lost none - of the cleverness whibh entitled him to be called "Kellar j the Great" when he appeared at a benefit performance for the Antilles sufferers at the Hippodrome in New York. The ovation he received on t^at pccasion is still the talk of theatrical circles.; .. < Although retired, Mr. Keller is far from being a reoluse. He still retains that quickness of intellect and vigorous ..energy that kept him for years in the forefront of entertainers. Los An afce "Is, in- the fact ihat hfe'seldom has to Lfdp}^e>?ome audience many times 111 V-The^ mjMt . clever mam$?tfcqdu!?l hot! hope to/face the same da^ytor day with the same 'trljpjjts;>atj<i ijotr .hp. detected by some Smew***' "*."V**" ' , - >. Keller Now in the Seventies. '" The* art of magic or illusion is one that-ts constantly growing in possibili:ies. Cdn>pare the" paraphernalia that 'he ojd-tlme performers had to work with and that'of the modern illusionist. Jt is' like ,comparing the stage of Shakespearp'stime. .with, the specUic^ uiar productions of today. - With ali the devices .of electricity and other inventions. qf, modern science at hand it Is smajl \^pj)der that the illusionist can baffle his audience. But in the old days -it--took'something more than ingenious appliances, s t .... ^There is a man .who has bridged the gap hetween the days when a magician was but a sort of sublimate juggler,' depending entirely upon his elfelght-of-hand and his quick wit and the illusionist of today with his elaborate apparatus and mechanical paraphernalia. WAS GREATEST TRICKSTER Harry Keller Once Held That DIs. tinctlon. ALWAYS POPULAR WITH THE PUBLIC Sciys .Spiritualism andtheLike are . Only Tricks. That .Can,. Easily, Be j .Understood By Those. Who Have the ..Capacityto-, Undarstand?Scientists ;/Vre.^,.Easily...Deceiyed Because... of /iTheir.i.-Seripiisneea. Dearborn. Independent. ' . .Although Jt.was.an American sho.wrp^ttjln. the. last century who enunciated celebrated dictum, "The,public tykea to be humbugged," that principle has been, known and acted upon since the;,<lawn- of. histpry,. Under such various names as magic, black art,.,necromacy, illusion, medicine-making, faklngi .sleight-of-hand, wizardry and spiritualism, the art of the trickster has been practiced in every age and in every clime. The ancient priests used it as an aid. to .religion, primitive people/of all lands have had their superstitious instincts quickened by their moti a nrl . ovbn {n thnan m r\A _ ern times we find clever fakirs taking; advantage of our awe of the unknown world thj-ough what is known as spiritualism. . .' ..Truly an ., ancient art . compounded one-half;-of natural... quickness of wit, manual .dexterity, and. Inventive ihgeFnuity.,' and the other half pure nerve and assurance The magician pits his wits against the public and wins invariably fpr;several reasons. His audience , is prepared to be fooled and he is prepared, to fopl. them. He is in the advantageous position of a sa'esman whose customers want his goods. He knows perfectly every move that he is going to. make while his audience is placed at the disadvantage of the unexpected. In addition to the native quicknfess.of wit which he must posr sess to be a-success in his profession, he is constantly making it sharper and keener by dally brushes with the public, rLike a trained athlete he attacks end defend by instinct and He has the same advantage that a trained athlete has over a man of equal strength who is-not irt condition. #A fourth advant the War Between-the States. He attended school and during vacations worked in a drug store as a sort of general roustabout. When he was in his tenth year he. heard that the Fakir Ava, a noted magician of that day, whose real name was Henry Hughes, wanted a boy to assist him in his performances. The boy Keller walked to Hughes's farm just outside of Buffalo, to apply for the job. ... "As I walked up to the house a black and tan.dog ran out and escorted me to the front porch;' Keller said "Hughes met me .at the door. He,noticed the dog jumping up on me and linking, -my hands. 'That is a good omen,', he said, 'that pup has chased off about two .dozen kids, who. came -here | fop. that Job... . I. guess he has .elected y.OPj,'." : Si . . . .gihus Keller started on the career that; was to .take.Jiim a dozen times or more around the world. Under Hughes he learned all the tricks of the trade and.he proved to be an apt pupil. Keller. was always blessed with a remarkmemory. One glance at a number, no matter if it runs into the mil- . lions, and he can repeat it to you 20 years after. Fools His Partner. He gave an instance of this power in an incident concerning Bill Fay, a orme.r partner of his years *before. He had ) eft Flay in London and had not seep him for thirty-five years. Fay, who. had quit the stage and settled in Australia, while on a. tour of the United tS^at^2s was a gerst of. the Kellers in (Los Angeles.. One evening Keller, who Is full of 61y humor, said to him: '. . "Bill, do you know my wife Is a clairvoyant?" . .. . ... Fay, who had been in tjie'game too long to have any illustyns about such things, laughed. . ;J "What's the joke,'Harry?" he.asked. "I'm not joking. I'll prove it to you. What is your watch number?" Fay confessed, he did not know and started to pull the timepiece from nis pocket. Keller stopped him. "No, this is clairvoyance, not mind reading. What Is the number of your wife's watch?" Fay did not know that either. Turning to his wife Keller said, "Tell them the numbers, my dear." Mrs. Keller promptly gave the correct numbers. Fay was dumbfounded. Experienced as he was in the game this was something new to him. "But how did. you do it?" Keller was asked. : "Simple enough," he replied. 'I remembered the numbers and had given them to Mrs. Keller." ! "Suppose Fay had bought a new watch since you last saw him," I obiected. "I would ' have been stuck," Keller confessed. "But then you sec I knew Bill Fay." Keller has a system foj- remembering numbers. It is based on the phonetic system each figure having a certain 'sound. These sounds are associated In a sentence like the key sentences that medical students have for remembering the names of nerves or bones. Keller also knows all the arithmetical shortcuts and tricks. He can cube any number that you give him under 100 Just as fast as he can write the number down. His mind works like chain lightning' and after spending a few hours with him you little wonder that he can fool some of the most intelligent men of the world. "How is it," he was asked, "that spiritualists can deceive smart men and scientists like Sir Conan Doyle and Sir Oliver Lodge?" "The more intelligent the man and especially the more imagination he has the easier he is to trick," he told me. "Such men are always trying to figure out our tricks on a scientific basis and when they cannot do it they are stumped. Their egotism leads them then to believe that it must be super"Such men arc always trying to lgure ceivc are unimaginative clods or children, especially the street gamin or newsbpy. These shap-witted kids are the bane of every magician.' The story of Keller's adventures ,^'ould- fill the pages of a large book, hewsbov. These sharp-witted kids are fljre.' Ha has been stranded in a dozen countries. He can sit for hours and tell tales of his adventures in different sections of the globe. And he can tell these stories with every name and date. His mind is IiJce a page in which every event of his life is recorded verbatim. . Branded Agent of Devil. He told how he was stranded in Indiana in the early seventies; how he l^alkqd to Chicago, tried to steal a ride.on a train and was put off in a cemetery, how ha walked to Waukegan, Illinois, and was staked to a bed by a good-hearted bartender who also went good for the town hall the next evening where Keller gave a show without a single prop except what he himself, was able to make during the day..; He packed ..the hall for. three nights in succession and was able to make enough to start him out again on the road. He told of another time when he was broke in Brazil and by enlisting the aid of the king,. Don Pedro, he was able to fill the largest theater in Rio and took away more than $5,000 for the engagement. Another time when he was landed in a city without any props he had to substitute a kitten for a pig in one of his tricks. The kitten began to mew before it was time for the denouement and to drown out its wails Keller was ; compelled to mew with it. He played in Mexico City in lST-t i when Mexico was even a wilder coun? try than it is today. The church issued i a warning to its members that Kellei > was an agent of the devil sent on earth i to trick insult was that, the superstition^' natives packed 'the- tfieater at-eveny- ponftMinawoe-aml -although ! ever)' stagecoach that left the city was ' ' ' S. L. CITY M DICE FARMERS HARI FEINST] W. E. G. \ HART JOH HOTE KIRKPAI n 1 LINDSAY IN 1 LOAN & LOGAN ; - v = ? . ? LOWS :( MACKO ai==j=EEEE; First Re-Un Good Speai of Gooi w I ' We are joining ir want every soldi acquaintance to < Come to Yorl W. V BONEY IN* J. M. J. CALHOl CAR! J. H J. F, THE CASH 4 "There is noining a. do," he says, "that I cannot do and show how'It is'done. It is all tricks. Like puzzles they are difficult until you understand them and then you wonder how you could have been so dense. Even an amateur magician can fool me with a new trick for a little while but I will eventually solve it by the process of elimination or figuring out the ways it couldn't have been done." , V. , , , Really He Is.?"I wonder if Griggshy really does come from such a good family. He's always bragging about it.? 'Oh, yes, he's'very well connected, indeed, but I've never heard any other member of the family brag about him."?Tfew York~Sun. ? Ruhbing tfi* meat of a pecan nut into a scnffcWTtr a polished table will successfully cancenl the scratch. hi i ,1 E?' =1== COIV ! " i regularly robbed Keller never had to elevate his hands once while he was in the country. He took more than five thousand dollars in gold doubloons out of the country packed in asphaltum and after nerve-racking experiences succeeded in evading both the robbers and the government officials. Keller has played before Queen Victoria, Czar Nicholas of Russia, nearly all the principal rulers of Europe, the rajahs of Indja, the nobles of China and Japan as..well as the big- men of South Africa/ Australia arid South America. He has been staked w?en financially embarrassed by. some of the greatest financiers ot tne worm including the grandfather of the * present Pierpont Morgan. ?. Successor Works With Inventions. Keller was never especially . clever with his hands. His hands are large and his fingers thick like a coal heaver's as he described them to me. Because of this physical handicap he was driven to Invent mechanical devices for most of his illusions. And as a result Keller is today the inventor of the greater part of the modern magician's paraphernalia. ' Most of these inventions he has sold of bequeathed to his successor. Keller was the inventor of the famous levitatfon trick where a body is apparently suspended in the air. This trick while widely imitated has never been done the way Kellep'iioes it but by one person to whom the old master told the secret. X'.i'SJ. ?.. ' f t-, ' Although retired, Keller, true to the ethics of his'profession, refuses to explain the- thousand and one stunts of the illutionist. .He makes one exception. He' will expose any person who claims to do his tricks through supernatural aid. He has no use for anyone who uses his art to play upon superstition. "For years he exposed the tricks of so-called spiritualists and other noted fakirs. OLD CLOWN RETIRES. (Continued From Page One.) mcmbcrod and they laughed together. "And do you remember how Juliana Booth used to carry a lantern around the lighted streets of New Orleans?" asked Laura. The old man nodded his head. "Yes, but all the Booths were touched a little," he said. "I remember my brother Steve and I met Wilkes Booth in a restaurant a "few nights before he shot 1 Lincoln. 'Hello, Wilkes," I 'said to him, 'what are you doing now?' He looked at us with a wild light in his eyes. 'I'm + K a otoffo 9 Y\c% eo 1/1 'a nr? whAn icuvnife biiw i?w ouiw, I leave the stage all the world will know about'it.' We thought it was just some mote 'of the crazy Booth talk, but," and A1 shook his head, "all the world did hear about it." "'Eighteen 'hundred and eightytwo. Erom Tony Denier, King of Clowns, to an apt pupil, Alfred Frizbe Miaco, the Czar of Stilts. This man has sense enough to play the Fool.'" .J' 'Sense enough to play the Fool," he repeated. "And I've worked hard to play the Fool." ?* GERMANS HATE FRENCH Occupation Forces in Rhenish Prussia Have Rubbed It In. The anti-occupation sentiment is much stronger in Dusseldorf, Ruhrort and Duisburg, the cities of Rhenish Prussia.' recently occupied by the French,, than in Mayence, Coblenz and Cologne, which also have been under foreign occupation for more than two years by the French, Americans and British. As one crosses from yie left bank of the Rhine and enters recently occupied, territory the mood, of the population' becomes more sullen, their behavior more aloof and their hatred much, more pronounced. . /The reason may be that the French are occupying" that part o'f the right bank of the Rhine that they hold near the Ruhr in real military fashion and the occupation is much more severe than that on the left bank. The hatred of the population is directed more especially, against the French and children are being brought up in a constant terror and, undisguised scorn of the occupying forces which gives but little promise that the real brotherly'love between French and Germans will be achieved with the coming generation. Occupations bring out the witty sides of the occupied populations and books have been written about the Igood jokes which the Belgians perpetrated on the Germans while the latter were ruling their country' by force of arms. The Germans are now in the same position toward the French as the Belgians were toward IE TO JULY ion of York Con cers, Big Parade, d Music, Plenty < ill be in the han Legion fo i with Moech Stewart P< er and every relative come here. i, the Hospitable ,T Y BARRON 3URANCE OFFICE BRIAN CO. S. BRICE [JN DRUG CO. fcOLL BROS. . CARROLL CARROLL lND CARRY STORE COURTNEY EAT MARKET [SON BROS. )WARE & SUPPLY CO. E3IN & KRIVIS FERGUSON V. S. HART GROCERY CO. N R. HART L SHANDON .'RICK-BELK CO. J. LEVY SURANCE AGENCY SAVINGS BANK ' LUMBER YARD Y & MOORE RELLDRUG CO. ' LOUIS SANITARY MI SHERER C. E. SP s THE STAR J. M. S' L. G. TH< J. C. WI GEO. W. V WILLIAM YORKVILLE COTT1 YORK DRI YORK FUR1 YORK HAR3 YORK WHOLES IMH mty Veterans of , Big Baseball C of Everything, T ds of the Ameri r the Day. >st of the American Legi of a soldier and every own on July 4-Set - mackorell-f: J. A. M MARSHAL] * McCONNELL D] THOS. F. PAUL N. NIVENS ] 0. K. BAR PEOPLES BANI PEOPLES' BUILDI* PEOPLES FU] them and they have not failed to take advantage of the situation and a sense of humor has been developed among the Germans as an occupied country which they totally lacked when they were the occupying forces. The absolute refusal to speak French even by persons well acquainted >vith the language is one of the most common ways .in which Germans show their dislike of the French military men. The correspondent walked into a cigar store, the other day, while a French officer was attempting to make the woman in cha. ge understand the brand of cigarettes he wanted. She seemed absolutely at a loss to understand him when - the corresp<?ndent translated'the officer's request in English. After the officer had departed sh/ told the correspondent in purest, French: "I understood him the first i'me but I would not give him the satisfaction." Many shopkeepers have forsaken good sales by the same reluctance to speak French. Few women in Dusseldorf, Ruhrort or Duisburg will be seen in the company of a uniformed French soldier or officer in the streets. The few who transgress the unwritten law are promptly catalogued at the German city headquarters and are marked for reprisals. In some .cases the difficulty is avoided by the occupying swain adopting civilian clothes, which seems to be satisfactory all around. In the wine cellars of the most fashionable restaurants of Dusseldorf, there is a. corner called "the occupation corner?'" There are deposited all the bojttles.of wines which have been refused by the German customers as having soured owing to defective corks. When a party of French officers puts in an appearance they are always served with twe or three bottles, of the special wine which they promptly p reject, as a Frenchman's taste for wine is infallible, but by the time a real good bottle of wine Is reached "the French cannot taste the good of it" as one hea^waiter put it. The entrance of a party of French officers in a- beer garden causes th^ temperature to descend to the freezing point and surrounding tables to be vacated as promptly as they were by Belgians in their cafes when German officers came marching in. Overt insults are avoided as carefully as they were in Belgium but acts in contravention with the decrees of the occupying forces are treated- by the French as they were-by the Germans in Belgium.-. Fines, are imposed in marks. ' ' The Belgians and the French suffered occupation ."of territory more stoically than the Germans and with less .self ..pity.-. The' owner of the palatiaL' home recently requisitioned in-Dusseldorf for the general staff of General Degoutte, the French commander. wept' bitter tears afe he departed from his house. YORI c DOWN ON Xf?E DANCE Southern Baptist" Convention Vigorously Opposed. The Southern Baptist convention at its ^recent meeting1 in Chattanooga gave.its following unequivocal deliverance on the modern^dance: "Another1 gross and growing evil must he mentioned. It is the modem dance. One of the most serious anil menacing by-products of the World, war is the great increase in titTe dance evil and the extravagant extremes to which it has gone. Accompanied, a;s; - - u? _l-d.KC it is, by the immodest areas, oy physical contact of the sexes, by its> lack of restraint, it is undoubtedly' doing: much ..to undermine the moraOfi; of bur young people." it is beyond' question thkt in many cases it leadSi to moral wreck and ruin. The tim&? has come when, from every pulpit-' strong and persistent protest much be rria'de arid'wise'and faithful teachings x must be given. The time has come' when our churclTes, as such, must take a positive position against this cofrup( and corrupting evil. Undoubtedly the parents are largely responsible. Your commission would appeal, with all possible emphasis, to all our. peor "* pie, especially'to the pastors and parents, that this growing menace shall be checked and abolished." i k Appreciative.?"You know, Henry, I speak as I think." . "Yes, darling) only ofteijer."?Cape; Town Argus. , : Rare Talent.?Mrs: Parvenu (to caller): 'Improvise? Why, my daughter can improvise any piece of music you put before her.'r? Exchange. - ' ? Busy men and ennui are not on. speaking terms. . " * ?. v* See, Phone or Write to . THOS. C. O'FARRELL FOR High Grade Monuments In Marble and Granite Plant on East Liberty Street, Adjoin*; \ ing Rose Hill Cemetery. . \ Phone 211 YORK, S. C. 666 cures Malaria, Chills arid ! Fever, Bilious Fever, Colds and I LaGrippe;~or mertfcy-.refunded. =='=="si r 1 4TH1 World War jame, Plenty he town * ' /. can / / on for the day. We soldier's friend and S #7 ire Men's f)nv III I/IVC V *r*y III ERGUSON CO. , 11 ARION , HI j OIL CO. JY GOODS CO. McDOW MOORE > BROTHERS BERSHOP ? & TRUST CO. fG & LOAN ASS'N. JNITURE CO. ROTH i ]at market & QUINN ' I ENCER I THEATRE TROUP OMPSON LBORN WILLIAMS. HI [S & CO., _i 3N OIL COMPANY M JG STORE JITURE CO. DWARE CO. ALE GROCERY, . | 1 i ^