The monitor. (Omaha, Neb.) 1915-1928, December 11, 1919, Page 8, Image 8

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    Very extensive lobster catches are
reported ofT the eastern coast of Cat)
adn. Recently the boats were taking
these taster than l lie factories could
pack them. The catch was divided
over the various canning factories, one
boat, belonging to a well-known fleet,
took as many as 4,400 fish. A resident
of Escuniinac reports that lie put
9,01X1 live lobsters, which lie was un
able to pack at the lime, into a boat
which he had transformed into a cage,
and sunk it in order to keep the fish
alive until such time as lie could use
them.
j Classified
Advertising
RATES—2 cents a word for single In
sertions; 1V4 cent a word for two or more
insertions. No advertisement taken for
less than 25 cents. Cash should accom
pany advertisement.
DRUG STORES
ADAMS HAIGHT DRUG CO..
24th and Lake; 24th and Fort,
Omaha, Neb.
FOR SALE—5 rooms, hot water
heat, paved street, garage. 2628 Ma
ple. Inquire Douglas 2842 or Web
ster 5519.
FOR SALE—5 rooms, modern ex
cept heat, 2602 Grant; $100 cash. $20
monthly. Inquire Douglas 2842 or
Webster 5519.
FOR RENT — Comfortable, nicely
furnished rooms. Call Webster 1256.
Large, comfortable looms for gen
tlemen, 933 No. 27th St. Call Harney
5737.
WANTED—A competent operator
for hairdressing, facial massage and
manicuring; good salary and perma
nent position; railroad fain refunded
after six months’ service. Address
Mrs. Thompson’s Beauty Shop, Laurel
Bldg.. Muscatine, Iowa.
First class rooming house, steam
heat, bath, electric lights on Dodge
and 24th street car line. Mrs. Anna
Banks, 924 North 20th. Douglas 4379.
First-class modern furnished room»
Mr*. L. M. Bentley Webster, ilw*
North Twenty-»ixth street. Chon*
Web*ter 4769.
LODGE DIRECTORY
—
-- -
__ —
G. U O. of O- F., South Omaha Lodge
No. 9374. Meetings first and third Fri
days; College Dept., second and fourth
Fridays;. ?s*'i and N Sts., South Side.
Past Grand Masters Council No. 442.
first and third Tuesdays, 24th and Charles
Streets.
WM. R. SHAFROTH. N. G.
E. E. BRYANT, G. M. and P. S.
S'iVjV.V/iV/.W.V.VpV.V.^'
% Res 3424 Calumet Ave. Doug 6196 J
:i Willis V. Jefferson ■:
S LAWYER \
5 Assistant Attorney Sanitary Dist. •"
S’ of Chicago. 700 Karpen Bldg \
Phone Wabash 1320 *■
5 910 So. Michigan Ave. Chicago ^
WwAWW.V/.V.V/AV.I
*dK~x~X“X~x**x~X“X"X~X“X"X~>
| Friedman’s Place f
A Fine Watch Repairing. Red 7914
A We Buy and Sell
y Jewelry. Clothing, Shoes, Trunks y
y Suit Cases. Etc. y
y MUSICAL INSTRUMENTS
':--;-X”X~x--X"X**x--:~x~>*X"X“X»^*
I j| JgywfSTSS
X MINKIN'S |
GROCERY CO. I
v x
x We solicit your patronage. X
2114-16 North 24th St. j
c»x~x~x~x~x-x--:~x“x~>*-x-x~x*
MRS. A. HAULER
Hres»-niiikiuir and Plain Sewinir
Neatly and Reasonably Done
Call WebBter 1487
2810 Grant St.
.X-XnX~X-X--X-X"X»X-X“X«X~X*
% Res Colfax 3831. Office Doug. 7812 X
f AMOS P. SCRUGGS %
X LAWYER A
A Real Estate, Insurance, Loans, •>
A Notary Public V
A 220 South 13th Street. y
« (Over Pope’s Drug Store)
4*X~X-X"X"X"X"X’*X-‘X"X--X"X4
^.X-X-vd-X-d-X-t-X-t-t-X-t-t-X-X-;.’;
X We Sell Kashmir Goods \
| STARK’S PHARMACY |
X 30th and Pinkney Streets X
Phone Webster 4225. |
%**><• v vn*'.' .**>•• v •.* % <“
| H. LAZARUS
!SHOE REPAIRING
2420‘/z Cuming Street ;i;
•»X-X“X~X>*X"XeX~X*'><X*'»X>->
(Copyright. 1*19, by ihi McClure News
paper Syndicate.)
I
When Elise Dunne felt anything
very deeply she Invariably wrote a
poem—and sold it. Her verses ap
peared infrequently in a certain popu- .
lar weekly. Always they attracted
notice and oftimes she was asked the
Inevitable question: Why didn’t she
devote all her rime to verse? If she
could write like that, her path to at
least moderate success was assured. |
and surely it must be less laborious [
than photography. To this question
Elise always made the same answer:
“But I can’t write that way except
when I feel a thing intensely, and I
don’t—often."
Buck at the beginning of the war,
when the first contingent, a battalion
of National Guard troops, left her
home town for camp, Mrs. Duane. ac-!
companied bv her small daughter,
Aliee, was wedged in the wildly en
thusiastic. though somewhat tearful,
crowd that bade them Godspeed.
A few weeks later a poem, signed
with her name, was published in the
periodical which had printed all her
verses and which had a national dr
culni ion. It was a simple lament that
she had none “near and dear" to offer
to her country.
Mrs. Duane received many letters
mostly from women who wished to
thank the author of the poem for
putting into words thoughts which
they had not the gift to define. One.
however, was from a man.
He did not praise the poem—simply
stated lie had read it. and in plain
phraseology offered himself ns a sub
stitute for a “near and dear” one. "1
have a premonition." the man wrote,
“that I never will come hack, and I !
am a firm believer in ‘hunches.’ I have
no family to represent. My name Is
an honorable one and I have kept It
clean. If you will take It, madam, and
w-yi allow me to make over to you
my insurance I ask nothing In return
I * I 'I . I II I h
Pondered Many Hour* over the
Letter.
hut that 1 I*t* not the only out* left out
when the mail arrives from </Oil's
country. We start Hast next week,"
It was signet] "Private John B. Pen
dleton.”
Mrs. Duane pondered many hours
over the simple, straightforward let
ter before site answered. Finally she
wrote Hint she could not accept the
name of a man who was an Utter
stranger to le*r. Neither would she
feel that she had any right to his
Insurance, if the premonition should
come true.
However, if Mr. Pendleton would
permit, she and her small daughter
would adopt him as their special
charge during the war. If he could
obtain leave before his regiment left
for “over there” would lie come and
see them? She signed the leiter "El
ise ami Alice Duane."
The next letter that Mrs. Duane re
ceived from Private Pendleton was
dated at n nearby training camp. He
would have a few hours’ leave the fol
lowing Saturday. Might he come and
sec them then?
Alice, aged twelve, was delighted
when she heard that their soldier was
coming to them Saturday.
Saturday noon he came. The little
Duane flat was in Immaculate order.
Alice had helped make It so and from
her post by the window called : "Here
he conies, mother!” She ran headlong
down the stairs at the sound of*the
hell and reappeared holding by the
hand a tall soldier.
John Pendleton was not handsome,
Ellse decided ul the first glance, hut
Ids face was one to he trusted. Some
how, she did not feel at all embar
rassed. as she had expected to. After
I lunch they sal anti talked considerably
; about his past, but more about the
future. Ami the time passed quickly.
When Pendleton left he stooped anti
glased Alice, then shaking hands with
I her mother and looking straight into
i her eyes, loltl her that he had spent
I the most enjoyable hours of his life.
“I surely will have onr more leave,
and I’m coming again -may I?’
Anti -i- answered: “Of course."
Two days later Eiisc Duane re
eelved ahoYIt^r letter from Private
Pendleton. He tiad made his life In
surance over to Alice. Surely she
could not object to that. Then, too,
he had a tiny income. It wasn’t
much, but It might help out In the
days to come, when her business
would be sure to suffer.
He had arranged that it be paid to
her during his absence, for Mrs.
Duane was to remember that even if
she refused to bear his name they
were still his adopted family, and, in
view of the premonition, he would
feel more comfortable about leaving
them. The following Saturday, the
letter stated, he was coming again—
and it would probably be good-by.
And over this letter Ellse pondered
during the intervening days. Had site
any right to take this big-hearted
man's money? No; not for herself,
surely. But for Alice? Even a “tiny"
income would smooth their pathway.
And in the event his foreboding proved
to be Justified—but here, rather to
her own surprise, she found herself in
tears.
That big, fine-natured man would
have no one of Ills own name in the
whole world to mourn hint—no one
who had a right to hang a service
flag in the window in his honor!
Perhaps it was Alice's remark when
her mother told her their soldier was
coming to say farewell—"Oh, mother,
I like him so! I w-isfi lie could be my
really daddy!"—that brought Mrs.
Duane to her decision; for it trans
pired that on that lust visit she
listened to the soldier’s plea and be
came Mrs. John Pendleton.
Immediately after the ceremony the
big soldier bade his "really” family
good-by. and this time he kissed them
both.
Then followed the anxious times
that no one ha.- forgotten. Some
times letters came regularly. Then
there were apprehensive weeks when
no word came from France. The
business fell off and the small income
helped considerably. Daily Alice
planned for the time when her daddy
should return—and at the thought
Elise’s heart would beat faster. But
it was not until the letters ceased to
arrive altogether that the wife owned,
even to herself, that she dearly loved
her big, generous soldier husband.
Then one day. when Elise was busy in
her workshop and the doorbell rang,
she sent Alice to answer It. It might
be the fateful bit of paper that haunt
ed her dreams, hearing the tragic
message that John's “hunch" had
come true.
But this could be no telegram,
for Indistinguishable voices sounded
from below. Alice was talking to a
man. Did she call him “Daddy?"
No. It couldn't be. Mrs. Pendleton
trembled, however, as site arose und
passed into tin* hall. Alice was com
ing up the stairs, holding by the left
hand a tall soldier.
“Elise—my wife!" he cried. Then
somehow that left arm was around
her. Feeling iter hand on his empty
sleeve, he said; "You see, only part
of my hunch was true, dear. Are you
glad that the rest of me escaped to
come home to my ‘really’ family?
Alice Is. site lias told me so."
Stroking the useless sleeve Ellse r«*
plied: ‘‘Somehow. I ran"! tell you.
John, how I feel. I will write it. And
none hut you shall see the poem,"
RELICS OF INDIAN VILLAGE
Accidental Discovery Made in New
York Is Considered to Be of
High Importance.
Digging for woodchuck on the out
skirts of a virgin forest near t'alo led
lo the discovery by Maynard A.
Cramer. Auburn's city forester, of a
buried pre-l> storic Indian village,
largest of tin- several which have
been excavated during tin- past half
century in the Finger Lukes region of
central New York, once the most
heavily populated by Indians of any
equal area in North America, says a
dispatch front Auburn. N. Y.. to the
New York Evening World.
Bones were found a few Inches be
low the surface of the ground and
beneath tlic-e lay two skeletons of In
dians. so determined by the shape of
the skull. Led on. Mr. Cramer, who
is a member of the State Archeolog
ical association, excavated a large
area, finding a mass of ran Indian
relics in many "dumps."
For the first time in history It is
believed, relics unearthed disclosed
both Algonquin and Iroquois occupan
cy of the same camp site. Hundred*
of arrow heads.^vlth hone awls, heads,
knives, hammers, mortar- or mealing
stones, notched sinkers, tisli hooka,
picks, cylindrical pestles, pipes and
broken pottery were mingled in the
masses of debris which lay beneath
the moss of the forest
Beside one skeleton was charcoal,
believed to have been used In ttiaw
Ing out the ground In winter, that the
Indian might tie buried. It is esti
■tnated that the village was occupied
about five centuries ago.
For Those Born in January.
People born in January ure favored
so far a- strength, Intelligence, and
health are concerned. That is the con
clusion arrived at by Dr. c ip,
Boldlmi, one of Italy’s greate-;
lists, who. as a result of
thins, lias discovered thi.t m- t
between January 1st and Mat-. ,
are stronger, taller, anil super or to in
telligence lo those whose birthdays fall
in other months. This view is borne
out by the rescan lies of another Ital
ian scientist. Deela ilovere. who found
the proportion of children of Inferior
intelligence lowest among those born
in January and February, and highest
in August and September.
I
ETHICS.
A tangled web—this life, and weak
lings we
Strive to surmount this low estate
—our tears
Unheeded fall, and cold relentless
Fate
Pursued his prey thro’ countless,
unknown spheres.
He rot too swift to judge the erring
one,
You know r.ot what conditions held
control;
Long ages past ancestral sins begun
Decreed his destiny ere he became
a soul.
But in each man is born a part of God
No matter what his base and carnal
state,
Some early find this glory of the soul
And use, others wait too late!
There are sweet depths beneath the
surface dross,
And you can sound them if you only
would;
The inner longing of the heart of Man
Is for the Right and for the final
Good.
But what is "Wrong,” and what, alas!
is “Right?”
What mind ran find the line be
tween the two?
Is God or law or inner man the light
LTpon the just and proper thing
to do?
Oh, come with me afar from haunts
of men,
Come to the sea,, roam thro’ the
woody glen.
Pluck lovely flowers, sport with the
fragrant breeze,
Loll on the heather 'neath majestic
trees;
Commune with children, join their
bubbling jest;
Play freely, labor with an equal zest.
And ere you perceive it, the question
of Right
Fades away like the whispering
shadows of night.
—Eva Alberta Jessye, Morgan Col
lege.
To Platiniz* Silver.
Place some platinum In a small
quantity of aqua regia or nllro-rnu
rinttc acid, and keep it in a warn:
place a few days; it will dissolve. As
soon us it has dissolved, evaporate tin
liquid at a gentle heat until it is- as
thick as honey, so as to get nd o.
the excess of the nitric and muriatic
• elds. Add a little water, and It Is
ready for use. A dozen drops of this
solution goes a long way in platiniz
ing silver. The operation is performed
in a small glass or beaker, covered with
a watehglass to keep in the fumes,
Mid placed in a little sand in u saucer,
to equalize the heat.
Talk happiness; the world is sad
enough without your woes.
PROBATE NOTICE
In the Mattel of flit- Butate of Mr*.
Augustus C. Parker. I »c< eased.
Notice is hereby given: That the cred
itor,- of .said deceased will meet the ad -
rnlnihtrator of said estate, before me,
County Judge of Dought* County, Ne
braska, at the County Court Hoorn, in
an id county, on the 29th day of January,
192a. and on the Slut day of March. 192U.
at 9 o’clock a. in., each day. for the pur
pose of presenting their claim* for ex
amination. adjustment and allowance.
Three months are allowed for the cred
itors to present their claims, from the
2*>th day of Dec*»ml»er. 191!*.
BRYCE CRAWFORD.
ll-27-4t-12-lS-19 County Judge
ARTICLES OF INCORPORATION
OF THE CO-OPERATIVE
WORKERS OF AMERICA
Know All Men by These Presents:
That wre, John W. Gordon. William M.
Hall, Zackarhi C. Snowden, .Samuel W.
Mills and John It. Lfinma, all of the city
of Omaha, Douglas county, Nebraska, do
hereb.v associate ourselves together for
the purpose of forming and becoming a
body corporate pursuant to the laws of
the state of Nebraska, arid do hereby
adopt the following Articles of Incorpora
tion.
1
The name of this corporation shall he
the CO-OPERATIVE WORKERS OF
AM ERICA.
11
The jwdneipa! place for transacting the
business of this corporation shall be in
the city of Omaha, Douglas County. Ne
braska, but it may do business in any
other state or county under the direction
of Its Board of Directors.
Ill
The general nature of the business
to be transacted shall be a general mer
I chandising, buying and selling business
of all of the necessities of life in their
broadest sense. It shall lie especially au
thorised to buy and sell dry goods, cloth
ing, hardware, shoes, furniture, musical
instruments, groceries and foods of ev
ery kind and nature, clean window
shades, window;-, walls and fabrics of
all kinds, and to decorate all kinds of
i buildings; to buy, sell, own and gener
ally deal in patents and patented articles,
and to buy. sell, own and control stocks
and bonds in other corporations, and gen
erally to deal in stocks and bonds and
all forms of commercial paper; and to
buy. sell. own. control, lease and deal In
real estate, and to execute Its evidence
of indebtedness in any form, with power
to make notes, mortgages, deeds of trust;
to buy and sell automobile accessories,
lighting fixtures of every kind and na
ture. apd such real estate as shall he
necessary for its own use and operation,
and generally to do any and everything
| that a corporation under the law's of the
i state of Nebraska may do, it being the
intention to appropriate to itself full pow
| er under the statutes to do any and
every kind of lawful business which Is
' not specifically prohibited by law' to a
corporation of this character.
IV
The amount of capital stock of this
corporation shall be On*1 Hundred Thou
sand Dollars ($100,000), consisting of One
Thousand (1,000) shares of common stock
of the par value of One Hundred Dollars
($100) each.. All stock to be issued pur
suant to direction of the Hoard of Direc
tors, but no stock shall he Issued until
fully paid, and the corporation shall be
authorized to commence business when
not less than Twenty Thousand Dollars
($20,000 > of its capital stock shall have
been subscribed and issued. The Board
of Directors are authorized to make suit
able by-laws providing for the transfer
of stock so that the stockholders of the
Company shall have the first option to
purchase from any member desiring to
dispose of his stock.
V
The commencement of the life of this
corporation shall be the 15th day of No
vember. 1919. and shall terminate on the
15th day of November, 2019.
VI
The highest amount of indebtedness
or liability to which the corporation mnv
at any time subject itself shall not ex
ceed two-thirds of its capital stock ac
tually issued.
VIII
The affairs of the corporation shall be
conducted by a hoard of not less than
five (5), nor more than fifteen 05) direc
tors elected by the stockholders, who
shall hold office for the term of one year,
or until their successors are elected and
qualified and assume the duties of their
respective offices. The officers of the cor
poration shall he a president, vice presi
dent, secretary and treasurer, who shall
be elected from the Board of Directors
for the term of one year, or until their
successors are elected and qualified. In
case of vacancy the remaining director
or directors are empowered to fill any
vacancy in the officers or on the Hoard
of Directors at any time when vacancies
exist. The Board of Directors shall have
full power to delegate any administra
tive pow'ers to the officers of the Com
pany, and the officers shall have full
power to appoint any subordinate offi
cers or agents that they may deem wise
or expedient under rules prescribed by
the Board of Directors.
The Board of Directors and officers who
are to serve until the first annual meet
ing on the second Wednesday In Jan
uary, 1920, and until their successors are
elected and qualified, shall be John W.
Gordon, president. Wiliiam M. Hall, vice
president; Zackarh! C. Snowden, secre
tary; Samuel W. Mills, treasurer; Har
rison J. Dinkett, John U. I^emma, Henry
Wilson, Kdward Hill, Mabel K. Mills,
Benjamin W. Harris, James H. Mills,
Mary Gordon, Jackson Davis, (’ora Wll
. on and Dozier Oliver,
VIII
The regular annual meeting of stock
holders of the corporation shall be held
nn the second Wednesday of January of
each year at such time and place as
may be designated in the notice sent out
by the Board of Directors. At such meet
ing. or any adjournment thereof, a Board
of Directors shall be elected for the en
suing year, and such other business
transacted as may properly come before
the stockholders. Special and call meet
ings may he held at such time and place
and with such notice as shall be provided
by the by-laws.
IX
The Board of Directors shall have pow
er to adopt suitsh> by-laws for tin* Com
pany, and may amend the same in such
manner, and at such time, and with
such notice as shall be provided in the
by-laws.
X
These Articles of Incorporation may
be altered or amended in any manner at
any regular meeting of the stockhold
ers, or any special meeting of the stock
holders called for that purpose, or art af
firmative vote in favor of such altera
tion or amendment by a majority of the
outstanding stock, or at any time with
out a meeting of stockholders, provided
such alteration or amendment is sub
mltted to all stockholders and approved
bv the holders of not less than two-thirds
of all outstanding stock.
in testimony whereof we have here
unto set our hands as incorporators this
30th day of October, A. D. 1919
JOHN W. GORDON.
WILLIAM M. HALL,
ZACKARHI C. SNOWDEN
SAMUEL W. MILLS.
JOHN It. LEMMA.
In Presence of H. J. IMnkett.
1t-27-4t-l2-18-19
WAYNE E. KAWTELL, Atty.
Omaha National Hunk Bldg.
AMENDMENT TO ARTICLES OF IN
CORPORATION OF KAFFIR CHEM
ICAL LABORATORIES
know ALL MEN BY THESE PRES
ENTS; that at a special called meeting
of all of the stockholders of the Kaffir
i 'hernicnl Laboratories held on the 1st
day or December. 1919, at the office of
tile principal place of business in Oma
ha. Nebraska, all of the stock being pres
ent. and notice as required by the Ar
ticles of Incorporation by By-Laws hav
ing been given. Article 3, Article 4 and
Article 10 of the Articles of Incorpora
tion of said Kaffir Chemical Labora
tories were amended so that hereafter
the same shall read as follows, to-wit,
ARTICLE III
The general nature of the business to
be transacted by this corporation, shall
be the manufacturing and dealing in
pharmaceuticals, chemicals, drug prepa
rations, medicines and all other things
incidental to or connected therewith. The
corporation may also purchase, own and
sell trade marks, trade names, copyrights,
patents and formulas and protect the
same under the laws of the several states
and of the United States and all for
eign countries. The corporation may also
purchase, own and sell stock In other
corporations transacting business sim
ilar to that of tlds corporation.
The corporation may also purchase,
own and encumber and sell all kinds of
real and personal property necessary or
convenient In the execution of the main
business of the corporation, and may do
all other things Incidental to or connected
with the business of a wholesale or re
tail manufacturing druggist as well as the
other rights herein enumerated.
ARTICLE IV
The authorized capital stock of this
corporation shall be the sum of Five Hun
dred Thousand Dollars $500,000.00) and
shall be divided Into shares of Ten Dol
lars ($10.00) each and. when Issued, shall
lie fully paid ami non-assessablc.
Two Hundred Thousand Dollars ($200,
000.00) of said capital stock shall be com
mon stock with full voting rights. The
common stock may lie paid for In cash,
bankable notes or such property as the
company may need or lie aide to use In
the conduct of Its business or in such
service as the company may require in
the conduct of Its business.
Three Hundred Thousand Dollars
($300,000.00) of said capital stock shall
be of seven per cent (7%) cumulative,
preferred and voting, which shall take
priority over all other stock as to assets
and dividends, and on Increased mortgage
shall hereafter he placed on any of the
property of the company without the
written consent of the owners of not less
than two-thirds of the outstanding capl
tal stock of this class and issue. This
stork shall receive seven per cent (7%)
annual dividends payable annually, to
wit June 1st of each year, and In the
event of the liquidation of ttie company,
this stock shall he paid at par plus an\
accumulated dividends before any oilier
payment Is made upon any Other class
of stock. This stock may lie paid for 111
rash, bankable notes, or such property
as the company may need or be able to
use In the conduct of its business, or in
such services as the company may re
quire In the conduct of its business. And
said stock shall he redeemable at ten per
cent (10%) above par per share, plus anv
unpaid guaranteed dividends to which t
may lie entitled, on thirty days written
notice given by the company on oi after
five years from date said stock is issued.
ARTICLE X
The shares of stock of said corporation
shall be transferable on the books of said
corporation, in accordance with such
rules and regulations ns may lie adopted
by the hoard of directors, but any stock
holder who Is about to sell, dispose of or
transfer ids share or shares of stock, or
anv of them, in said corporation, must
offer the same to the board of directors
at the same price for which he is about
to dispose of or sell said share or shares, J
and said board of directors may purchase J
such share or shares at such figures or
price; said purchase to in* for the benefit .
of the remaining stockholders. I
MADREE PENN, President. |
! Attested by 1
ELEANOR (!. HAYNES, Secretary.
1 11-11-19-1-1-20 |
i
CHICAGO LAUNDRY
UNDER NEW MANAGEMENT
Desires Your Patronage
1509 CAPITOL AVENUE 1
IPhone Douglas 2972 and YVa^on Will Call.
J. G. LOHLEIN.
—enHwu>i ir ii niimi'iiawM——ii^—
X'vv*>vvvvvvv,/vv,Xm!mXm1m!,v,XmX,v,!,vv,I,,!m!*vvv*ImW,,XmXmW,v,XmXmX'
I Overshoes and Rubbers j
•|< Ladles rubbers. .'die Fleeced rubbers .!>Sc t
A Men's rubbers .. 9*c Jersey overshoes.• $1.9K
y Overshoes .#1.75 Overgaiters .75c £
1-buckle Overshoes ..$3.15 Legging on sale.98c
'£ $U.OO Heavy Wool Sweaters.$6.50 y
fJ. Uetpiiand Clothing Co. i
314 North 16th Street. X
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15? & HARNEY I
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