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Fulton County tribune. (Wauseon, Ohio) 1883-1925, October 06, 1921, Image 4

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Persistent link: https://chroniclingamerica.loc.gov/lccn/sn87076552/1921-10-06/ed-1/seq-4/

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FULTON GGUHTY TRIBUNE
ESTABLISHED IN. 1M1
CNYOM BISSONNimlf, PUBLISH2US
Kntmd tti F Office I Wawon. Ohio
M CUm Mat tar
BATES OF fltlBSCRTPTION
OtM fan .... $1.M
Bli Month -1
Ihrw Month . - .4
Sntaarlbara w to hint th vapar discontinued
honid writ as ta that effect and pay op all
th.tr arraaxara. If thto la not dona. It la
ammal that tha aufcaeribar whhaa tha paper
o-attnacd and tntanda to pay whan aoavaniant
SHORTS AND
MIDDLINGS
CORRESPONDENCE
Cull hens re worth more now than
they will bring 30 days Irom now.
Says Sam: Farming's uncertain,
but I'd just as soon be subject to the
whims of Nature as of Human Na
ture. The weather can ruin your
crops, maybe, but it won't fire you
just Decause a n a ucnuaure.
The equivaent of six Ohio counties
has already gone out of cultivation
because of insufficient liming.
Where's your farm beaded? '
Estimates are for an American
apple crop of about 18,000,000 bar
rels. Last year, 36,000,000 barrels
were grown.
ROUTE SIX
Ada Lovelands built a fine new
garage last week.
Paul Funk of Norwalk is visiting
his father and other friends here be
fore leaving lor Angola college.
Frank Gasche and wife and Mrs.
Fern Sharpe were Saturday guests of
Clifford Northups in Toledo.
Elis Sowers is sawing timber for
a large barn on the I'hihp Garman
farm.
John and Mabel Ragan and Hazel
Pfund of Tedrow were Sunday guests
of Elmer Beebes.
John Plettner and wife spent Tues
day in Tecumseh, Mich.
Sam Sowers and wife were Sunday
evening guests of Reed Harpers.
Holland Baumgartner's have moved
to the Loveland farm on the State
road.
Jim Reese and family and friends
of Saginaw, Mich., spent a few days
with Mary Koth last week.
Wm. Campbell and wife, Frank
Gasche and wife- Harmon Gasche
and wife were Sunday
Russell Gasches near Pettisville.
SEVEN GOOD WAYS MAIL SERVICE VERY
UNSATISFACTORY
g , . - ...
For the benefit of Wauseon people;
who want to help the editor and dn't,
know how, we are submitting the. This week
r.llivino- seven food wars: east bouiid h
The man or woman behind the desk
at the little red schoolhouse has a lot
to do with the kind of men and
women your boys and girls will grow
up to be.
Poultry Inbred 10 years at the
Minnesota Station showed no sign of
diminished vigor. Your own cocker
els are probably the best flock sires
provided you pick out the strong
ones. -
"Rightly organized country life
offers more in the way of intelectipl
enjoyment and satisfying social life
than is possible in any other sur
roundings." Vivian
OAK SHADE
Milan Johnston had the pleasure
of ' riding in an aeroplane which sail
ed around over Tedrow last Tuesday.
Mrs. Ellen Butler and Pirl Punches
and family attended the first M. E.
quarterly meeting held at Tedrow
Sunday afternoon.
Alfred Smith and family and Mrs.
Eliza Punches and son Lweis spent
Sunday with her son Elvin Punches
and family near Medina.
Bret Johnston and wife spent Sun
day witn her brother Orville Markley
and family.
Will Cone and family were Sunday
visitors at the home of relatives,
Simon Reufenache and family of
Henry Co.
HarleySnow returned home Satur
day night from his fishing trip to
Horten Lake.
Arthur Phillips, wife .and baby
spent Sunday with her parents
Emmet Riddle and wife.
The M. E. Ladies Aid Society will
serve pot luck supper in the base
ment of the church Wednesday even
ing Oct. 12th.. Everyone invited to
come. n
Tiain No. 2 N. Y. C.
discontinued slonninir
First of all, give him the news, he m Wauseon and other places along
wants it. Give to him, even tnoi'pn the line irom above sryan to loledo.
sometimes it does not get into. the; This leaves Wauseon without any
paper. He hasn't time always to mail train in the afternoon that stops
tell you why some pieces of news are here.
not used; but ten times to one he has Parcel Post, newspapers of Wau-
a perfectly good and impersonal rta-.seon and isc i.iass iviau win no longer
son. Give him the news, even be carried out at this time and we
though you may not be especially in- : will also not receive mail,
terested in it. Some folks never' This is indeed very unsatisfactory
think to give the editor news except to the business men of the town and
when they are concerned in it one is very inconvenient to the news
way or another. I papers of Wauseon.
Second, don't give him a piece of; We ca.mot see why we should be
news and tell him you want it print-: deprived of this service when it means
ed just as it is .written. There's aso much to the town. Not alone is
right and a wrong way to do even i Wauseon put to an inconvenience but
such a simple thing as writing an! also the surrounding vicinity,
article for a country paper. Onei Stop and tinnk ot it. We have
editor had to leave town because he i only one train east bound a day that
printtd-every piece of news just as ! carries parcel pe st and that is a local
,. uar.AcA in crllinc nnnetua- i train that stops here at 9:00 a. m.
callers attion an(j ali an(j printed it with the, and that only goes to Toledo. We
name of the person wno gave H to i now nave uuiy uue ist ciass man east
liim. I and that is not sure. No.
Third, don't try play a joke thru ; 10 picks up mail nere some time
the paper unless you explain it to the in the afternoon, but they do not al
editor. A thing in cold type looks : ways cat?h the pouch and it there
a lot different and sounds different '.. fore has to wait until morning. Are
from a thing repeated by word or i we to be placed in this kind of service
mouth, when the voice, a facial ex-' indefinitely ? Something must be
pression and a gesture, perhaps, help done.
to show its meannig. i : -
Fourth, don't worry for fear the TRIBUNE ONE DAY LATER
editor is making too much money;,
viin should want him to be prosperous The Tribune will not reach its sub-
EVERYBODY'S
COLUMN ,
FOR RENT One sleeping room j
with steam heat. Phone B. oGl. !
FOR SALE A modern nine room '
house on East Chestnut Street. In-;
quire of W. A. Richardson. 2(-2-p i
FOR SALE Modern 9 room
house 123 East Leggett St. Call
Black 5C. 20-tf
FOR SALE Household goods,
call forenoons. H. S. Lyon, East
Elm St. 27-1-p
rrT o 4 t f iu:u u:4-n l-,A H
rUft OALi UHUS WI11LC l J '"I Lieu
and mattress, size 3x5, just like new.
Phone 585.
I
FOR SALE Gas range in good I
condition, also small oven. Very
reasonable it' taken at once. Call
phone 315.
Carpentering, repairing paint
ing and concrete work. Reasonable
charge, E. G. Waited and Son, Lyons
phone 1219. 13tf
"an investment in good appearance"
Fall and Winter Styles For Men
Fine Suits and Overcoats from
The House of
MS
i
Long distance and local tracking,
reasonable prices. We buy junk,
Harry Kaufman, 262 West Chestnut
Street, phone 640. a 46-tf
You showed'at the Fair to support
a community institution and to ad
vertise your products. Now for an
ad to your home paper, and for the
same two reasons.
LATE SELECTED SEED
A GOOD SECOND-BEST
Corn PScked Before Husking Beats
Ears Chosen Afterwards
NORTH PIKE
Why not take a good county paper,
the Tribune is all that, better every
day.
Mrs. Sam Kling and Hazel visited
at the home of Price Beach Thurs
day. The old and the young were enter
tained at the home of Gilmore
IMcCance last Saturday night, it be
ing his htty-eighth birthday. A
bounteous supper was served and all
went home rejoicing.
Frand LaSalle returned home
Tuesday from Michigan where he had
New findings on seed corn selection ; been spending a few weeks,
emphasize the importance of planting The Winameg Church Aid will be
from a strong stalk as well as from held at the home of Mrs. Will Barker
a good ear. I Thursday October 13th, everybody in-
For thia reason, snecialists in farm vited. .Work furnished.
croDS at the Ohio State University
have withdrawn sanction from crib
selection ti corn seed, and have em
phasized the value of selection from
standing corn.
"When the frost is on the pump
kin and the fodder's in the shock"
this season marks an end to . tne
farmers best chances for
strong seed. But so long as the ear
is on tne stalk, even in snock, tney
add, he has his opportunity to make
up for tardiness, and to pick on the
basis of both stalk and ear.
Vigor of stalk and maturity of ear,
they state, are most important.
Mature ears on green stalks gener
ally have most power to resist molds
in storage, and to make good corn.
Early maturity is so important that
one may almost make first selection
on this basis, picking out twice as
many ears as needed, storing them
so as they will dry properly; and
making final selection later.
Extreme earliness . this season
brought, much' corn to shock before
farmers got around to seed selection
these scientists assert and urge that!
ail sucn larmers select seed, Deiore
ears become separated from stalks in
process of husking.
Mrs., Will Lonson visited her
daughter, Mrs. Albert Nash Sunday.
SOUTHEAST CLINTON
Mrs. Clive Ruppert spent Wednes
day afternoon with Mrs. Clare Baker
Mary Ditto spent Saturday night
with her parents, returning to her
.i..: I school wor Sunday afternoon
seieciingi . . , .
j Mr. Owen Viers has been pronounc
: ed a victim of typhoid fever.
He can and will give you a better , scribeis outside of the county until
paper. He will, be less likely to one day later on account ot Mail
have to "compromise with his con- Train No. 2 N. Y. C. having dis
science over certain kinds of adver-; continued to stop here. There is
tising. And, anyhow, he can't make no other way than to wait for the
a big fortune out of his naper he morning mail on Thursday morning,
will be lucky if he keeps going. j Fulton County Tribune
Fifth, be readv to tell your editor tiy k. j. rsissonnette, traitor
when something in the paper pleases!
you. Once in a while you tell yours The Dixsons of Denson were dinner
preacher he has a good sermon, so guests of C. H. Stutesmans.
tell the editor sometnmg auoui nis
oaner.
Kwth trot imnr "Vnnu T.n nimt
i . -j - i ... j
earlv. Take it to him for the next
week the day after the previous pub-jwas here for his brother's funeral
hcation, if you can. x It takes time an(j caned on friends.
to set tvne and make a paper. Did, . :
vou ever wonder what the editor did Mr. Allen Shadle returned from
all the time between publication , the encampment at Indianapolis, the
days ? You would know if you were i latter part of the week.
publishing a newspaper yourself. 7
Lastly, go in some day when the Mr. J. A. Biery and wife accom
paper is being printed. Go in sev- panied by Mr. Holt oi Blisslield spent
eral times during the day, and you! Thursday night in Wauseon.
wm nave ...mc ' Mrs. W. H. Mercer attended
wnai a juu n. k. lo ...c . 1 funeral of her aunt,
1
W. H. Mercer attended the
Mrs. Althea
Pratt near Weston last Thursday.
OHIO LEADS
Ohio, ranks first in the United
States in the number of farms that
have gas or electric light service, ac
cording to the 1920 census of agri
culture. Gas or electric light was reported
on 452,809 farms, or 7 per cent of all
farms in the United States. In seven
states more than 20,000 farms were
reported as having gas or elcetric
light, as follows:
Ohio, 37,745; Iowa, 32.552; Penn
sylvania, 30,669; California, 30,519;
New York, 24,882; Illinois, 23,273
and Indiana 20,584.
Mrs. Catherine Kennedy of Jackson
Mich., spen; tha ',?ast week i;h
Emerson Baker and family.
Emerson Baker and wife. Miss
Catherine Stevens and Mrs. Kennedy
spent bunday in Jfettisville at the
home of Ed Taylor.
Mr. and Mrs. C. B. McClain. Mr.
and Mrs. Lewis Krutsch and daught
er Florence spent Sunday with Glad
Dennis and famliy.
Fred Gilson and wife, Clare Baker
and wife motored to Toledo Sunday
ana spent tne day.
, DENSON
The Dixson family were after
church guests of Mr. and Mrs. C. H.
Stutesman of Wauseon.
Mr. and Mrs. Earl Stong visited
her parental home Sunday.
Mr. and Mrs. Herman Knoblauch
and son, Herbert Marks of Blissfield
visited at the Marks home Wednes
day night. ,-
Hearing of the arrival of a girl in
the home of Mr. and Mrs. Harold
Ingall of Newark, Mr. and Mrs. L.
H. Ham and daughter Vera left for a
short stay.
The L. A. S. will meet Wednesday
Oct. 12th at the home of Mrs. Edith
Stong. Every body welcome.
The young people of the township
gave a box and pie social Wednesday
evening at the school house.
Mrs. Ackerman was a Toledo visit
or Wednesday.
Mr. and Mrs. John Bell and son
and Cornelius Ackerman were six
o'clock dinner guest3 at the home of
Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Ackerman Tues
day evening.
WE ARE SEVEN
I met a little cottage girl;
She was eight years old she said;
Her hair was thick with many a curl,
That clustered round her head.
She had a rustic, woodland air,
And she was wildly clad;
Her face was fair, yea very fair;
Her beauty made her glad.
"Sisters and brothers, little maid,
How many may you be,"
"How many? seven in all," she said,
And wondering, looked at me.
"And where are they? I pray you
tell."
She answered, "Seven are we;
And two of us in Conway dwell,
And two are gone to sea.
"Two of us in the church-yard lie,
My sister and my brother;
And in the church-yard cottage, I
Dwell near them with my mother."
"You say that two at Conway dwell,
And two are gone to sea,
Yet ye are seven. I pray you tell,
Sweet maid, how this may be?"
Then did the littje maid reply,
"Seven boys and girls are we;
Two of us in the church-yard lie,
Beneath the church-yard tree.
"You run about, my little maid,
Your limbs, they are alive; .
If two are in the church-yard laid,
Then ye are only five."
"Their graves are green, they may
be seen," i
I "Twelve steps or more from mother's;
aoor,
The little maid replied,
And they are side by side.
"My stockings there I often knit,
My kerchief there I hem;
And there upon the ground I sit;
And sing a song to them.
"And often after sunset, sir,
When it is light and fair,
I take my little porringer,
And eat my supper there.
"The first that died was little Jane;
In bed she moaning lay,
Till God released her from her pain;
And then she went away.
LORADO TAFT.
Lorado Taft. one of America's
greatest sculptors, presents a lecture
that is unexcelled In fascinating inter
est and educational value. ' Travel and
study In Europe and thirty-five years
of remarkable achievements, of which
u recent one was the completion of
the vast "Fountain of Time" in Chi
cago, have supplied Mr. Taft with an
HStonishinjrly rich store of experience
and information from which to draw
his lecture material.
With ease of manner, spontaneous
humor and an intense Interest in his
subject, Mr. Taft instantly commands
the attention of every audience, and
Illustrates his lecture either by the
actual process of modeling or by
numerous stereopticon slides.
Mr. Taft has been connected with
the Art Institute of Chicago for more
than thirty years, as instructor in
modeling and as lecturer. He is pro
fessorial lecturer oh the history ofwt
at the University of Chicago and non
resident professor of art at the Uni
versity of Illinois. He Is a member
WANTED Pullets. If you
have any to dispose of please let :ne
know as I can use pullets of any kind
and in any number. Samuel Eicher
Archbold phone 7140.
FOR RENT 80 acres of good
land, well tiled and improved, located
1 mile south and 2 miles east of
Wauseon. Mrs. Henry Yeager,
phone 14. 26-3--p
FOR RENT 80 acres of good
land, well tiled and improved, located
1 mile south and 2 miles east of
Wauseon. . Mrs. Henry xYeager,
phone 14. 26-3-p
WANTED To buy veal calves
and! beef cattle. Can get them any
day but Saturday.. Highest prices
paid. Woodward & Schwagner, phone
White 365 or 533. 19-tf
FOR SALE SO acre Dairy Farm
on main traveled road Va mile from
Rome Center, 9 miles from Adrian
and k mile from school. Inquire
at 816 Treat St., Adrian, Mich. 24-6-p
f tf...H.4i-Hi-H--H"H'"H--H--H-M-f
PRINCESS THEATRE
2 days - Vaudeville - 2 days
Friday and Saturday, Oct. 7th - 8th
The Giangio
Duo
Accordianists
SHERWOOD
The
Musical King
. Feature Photo Plays.
Alice Brady in "The Land of Hope,,
. "For Sale" - A Century Comedy
Sunday, Oct. 9th
Bebe Daniels -
in
Ducks and Drakes
Monday, Oct. 10th
"Going Some"
Story by Rex Beach
A Goldwyn Production
Special Attraction for Two Days.
Tuesday and Wednesday, Oct. 11th and 12th
, First National Presents David Butler in the
Comedy Drama
"Making The Grade"
An adaption of the Saturday Evening Post story
"Sophie Senenoif"
) Thursday, Oct ,13th Vaudeville
Harry Carry ' Friday and Saturday
in ' Evening.
The Freeze Out Don't Miss It.
"So in the church-yard she was laid;
And all the summer day,
Together round her grave we played
My brother John and I. -
"And when the ground was white
with snow,
AjmI I could run and slide,
My brother John was forced to go,
And he lies by her sidel"
"TTnw mjiTlw urn vnn tVi.in V
-. . . . - ...
"If they two are in heaven?"
The little maiden dia reply,
"O master! we are seven."
4
jr.
I
LORADO TAFT.
I
"But they are dead; those two are
. dead!
Their spirits are in heaven!"
'Twas throwing-words away; for still
The litte maid woud have her will,
And said, "Nay, we are seven."
S. S. Rally Day at Inlet Oct. 9th,
preceded by 15 minutes song ser
vice followed by special program.
Everybody come.
Everybody come. C. E. Rostofer of
the Christian church of Wauseon will
begin revival meetings Monday night
October 10th.
of the National Sculpture society, of
the National Academy, of the Ameri
can Institute of Arts and Letters, an
honorary member of the American In
stitute of Architects and is one of the
board of art advisors for the state of
Illinois,
Mr. Taft's recent professional works
include: "The Blind," a group in
spired by Maeterlinck's drama of the
same name; the "Columbus Memorial
said I,! Fountain," at Washington, D. C. ;-the
Solitude of the soul," at tne Art in
stitute of Chicago, and the "fountain
of the Great Lakes," adjoining ; the
"Washington Monument," at Seattle,
Wash.; "P.lackhawk" and "Ogle Coun
ty Soldiers' Memorial," at Oregon, 111.;
the "Thatcher Memorial Fountain," at
Denver, Colo., and "The Fountain of
Time," on the Midway I'laisance, Chi
cago. As an author,. Mr. Taft has pub
lished a "History of American Sculp
ture," and another work, six lectures
on "Recent Tendencies in Sculpture,"
is ready for the press. Also, in 1919,
he lectured for six months to members
of the A. E. F. at Beaune and Bellevue,
France.
FOR SALE Farms ai real bar
gains. Sell your high priced land
and come to Ashtabula County
where S40 to $80 per acre will buy
good farms. Write me your wants
I can please you. F. M. McCollum
Andover, Ohio. 47-tf
Blacksmith and General Repair
Shoo on Jefferson Street just west
of Fulton Street. N. J. Dominique,
successor to John Wmzeler, prices
right. 25-3-p
HOW inooTS UP
Reading in an eastern paper that a
dentist charged a man $230 for ex
tracting a wisdom tooth, a Wauseon
friend has puzzled over the bill and
nnallv handed in this itemized state
ment, which he thinks must be about
the way the dentist ngures it out. io
shaking hands with patient, $10; to
making observation about the wea
ther, $7.50; to asking which tooth it
is, $2.50; to promising not to hurt,
$25; to breaking promise, 75c; to
stransrline patient with towel,. $8.75;
to getting out set of tools and look-
lnir them over, $11; to noticing they
were the wrong tools, $8; to stepping
out of the room and usme the tele
phone, $7.0; to washing hands and
telling funny story, $5.25; to admin
istering anaesthetic, $1U; to extract
ine wrone tooth, $5. And our
friend says that he merely figured it
up to show that there is profiteering
in every kind of business except the
kind of business in whom you your
self happen to be engaged.
Do you read The Tribune
Subscribe Now
uppenneimer
Same High Values
Prices One- Third Lower
The new trend in fashion for loose, sensible
lines accurately designed into wonderful
fabrics of Herringbone, Pencil Stripe and
7Plaid Patterns.
MATHEWS & WINZEiER
the house of Kuppenheimer good clothes
ti
a
i
o
o
a
a
A" V "i "A F 1" 1 A 4 T I "I" V 'V
Don't Let Your Buildings
p to Ruin for Want
of a New Roof.
See us now our roofing stock is complete. Includes the at
tractive quad & individual shingles in red and green for the home.
Sturdy roll roofing for other buildings. 1 Reduced 'prices that
mean re'al saving for-you.
J. C. SAUNDERS
BuildersSupplies
.j.
t
"
X
t
IT
H"H"H"H"M-HmIiH 1 j M il..:..l.il..i..n..n..t..Hi.M..i..n..M...n..nMHH.
Bring in Your Old Records
59c and one old record
any make for
One of Our
NEW 85c RECORDS
No Matter How Old The Record is that you
bring to us.
i For One Week Commencing Oct. 8th
TURNBULL BROS.
i
Arcade Bldg. Wauseon, Ohio
HI ll l i Ki lH I
I am the Light
Hand Perfection
Oil Heater
Fill me with oil and I
will fill your room with
nice radiant summer
heat for 10 hours. So
you see I am so useful
and economical that you
just can't afford to do
without me. Better
come quick, there are
many of us left.
Schlatter, Howards
& Hoy
Lesson in
OPTOMETRY
COLLEGE ISSUES PLANS
OF NEW
POULTRY HOUSE
Built To Keep Combs From Freezing
and Hens From Going on Strike
"It's not so much the cold as the
humidity," say poultry workers of
the Ohio State University, giving
reasons why chickens' combs freeze
and why the farm flock housed in an
old-time type of chicken-house is
likely to resent the discomfort and go
on a winter laying strike.
Combs won't freeze and the hens
will be contented to live and lay in
the new Ohio poultry house, plans f'-r
which have just been drawn up by the
Department of Agricultural tn
giueering of the University, and in
corporated in a 12-page bulletin for
free distribution to residents of Ohio.
Proper ventilation, the keynote of
success iul poultry housing, is fully
provided for in these plans.
The model plans show a house 20
by 30 feet, built to accomodate 150
oirds. It has a concrete floor, ' and
all furnishings are removable. Four
square feet of floor space and 8 inches
of roost length are allowed for each
hen. The plans also provide a
square foot of window for every 18
square feet of floor space.
These features are considered ab
solutely essential in housing poultry
today. Certain farmers may still
have the previous poultry building
bulletin, issued by the University
some 10 years ago. In such case,
they are advised to destroy it at once
and to obtain the new bulletin thru
their county agent.
The Raven in Legend.
As he perches on the marble Pallas
In Poe's poem with his dolorous repe
tition of "nevermore" the raven Is a
"thiog of evil." In the legend of the
long sleep of Frederick of the Red-i
beard ravens await the time when the
emperor shall come to life and appear
on the battlefield. It H their In- ;
tention to fly thrice around the moun
tain when the proper moment arrives.
j English Humor. Chinese Eat Lots of Dogs.
j A Juvenile club advertises : "You fur-1 rphe number of edible dogs eaten an-
nlsh the job, we furnish the boy." Ai nuaiiv in China is estimated at five
correspondent stated that he saw in an . minions. The dogs are of a specii.l
English saloon an amusing variation; racei raiSed wholly for food purposes,
of the above, as follows: "You fur-i
ulsh the bob, we furnish the joy."
Boston Transcript.
Has Various Pronunciations.
There are ten ways of pronouncing
"ough." These are. written phonetic
ally, as In bow, coff, cauf (each is al
lowable), enuff, thaut, tho, throo, hic
cup, the Irish lough and the Scot's
pronunciation of sough, "such."
Why Not?
An auto concern advertises "The
car with a conscience." Correspond
ent suggests also. "The motor with
a mind," "The vehicle with vim,"
"The truck that tWnks." Boston
Transcript,
To Be, There Is No Question.
When an eligible man proposes to
maid of thirty summers, there Isn't
apt to be any Hamlet's soliloquy
business.
How About Mendacity? i
Cynlcus remarks that all a mai
needs to win a woman are audacity
and pertinacity. Boston Transcript
For Silver. '
A lump of camphor put in the silver
chest will prevent the silver from tar-nsling.
What Is Important.
It does not matter how many, bnt
bow good, books you have. Seneca.
If You Buy Your
-GOAL-
FROM US ITS GOOD
The Guillotine.
' The guillotine was mimed after Dr.
Joseph Guillotin, on whose sugjrestlon
It wits Introduced into France during
the revolution in 1702. The instru- j
ment consists of two upright posts,
with a crossbeam at the top, the posts
bflng so grooved as to allow the fail
ing of a heavy steel knife, with a
slanting edye, upon the neck of the
victim, as soon as the cord holding It
in place is released by the executioner.
WHAT OPTOMETRY IS
It is the science of measuring the
various errors of vision and of sup
Dlvintr classes for their correction.
Optometry is steadily enlarging in i end to hold scissors and a paper cut-
scope, and its importance is being j ter. Another book end when closed
more and more recognized by the j fr an ti,e world like a cream
public. Just here we desire to state coloro(, flower plt fuU of gay blooms,
thrft we strive to keep abreast of the j d , h , Jugt
advances in Optometry in theory and: , , ... ..
practice. We invite you un that : P"11
Pretty Book Ends.
A useful pair of book ends, made of
rich colored tapestry and gold braid
ed, has a strap on the outside of one
showing only one side of tha
basis.
WILL WEBER
Optonretrist, Optician and Jeweler
205 N. Fulton St., Wauseon, Ohio
flower pot.
Flannel Shirts in a large variety
all grades.
Harrison and Funkhouser Bros.
Don't forget the big dance at the
Firemen's Hall Friday night.
That's Why
Our business is increasing daily. Thanks to Mr.
Harper's old customers, as well as the new ones who are
favoring us with at least part of their coal requirements.
We appreciate every order, large or small, and will
endeavor, at all times, to furnish the highest grade coals
obtainable, together with prompt, courteous office and
delivery service.
Leave your orders for our "GENUINE POCAHON
TAS" No. 3 and get this high grade coal delivered. Clean,
off the cars, thus eliminating breakage. Our prices are
reasonable, quality considered.
CHESNUT AND EGG ANTHRACITE
t OUR "FAMOUS YELLOW JACKET"
BLUE DIAMOND LUMP
i WEST VA. WHITE ASH AND CARMEL
i HIGH GRADE COOK STOVE COALS
A
i
WHOLESALE COAL RETAIL
WE DELIVER ANYWHERE
Consumers Coal Service Co.
Wauseon, Nhio
,
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Successor to
W. J. HARPER
Phone 400.
R. V. GLAZE, Mgr.

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