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m;m (a nmM wavskq?!. i?av, iik 0. b. JOHNSON Attorney at Law Over Corner Drug Store Wauseon, Ohio Practice in all Courta. Attention to Probate Matter and Abstracting 23-tf 3 After jrouaat lwajni Uka ATONIC blatantly rallaTM H rtbwns. Bloat. J Gasar Fxlms. Stop iadisMttoo. food souring, r atim. aad all tha many mlaariaa hum b Acid-Stomach ATONIC la tlM bast NroadT. Tana of tboo aandf wondarfully banafitsd. Poaitlvalr ruar awtaad to plaaaa or wa will rafund monar. Gall aad aat a Mc boa today. Ton will aaa. bead. Wager and gorsuch F. S. and J. M. HAM ATTORNEYS AT LAW Arcade . . . Wauseon, Ohh Practice in All Courts Attention to Probate Matters, Ab atracta and Opinions of Title. References Any Bank in (be Count' PEOPLE FOR WHOM THE BEST IS NONE TO GOOD Are always the most enthusiastic concerning the excellence of our DRY CLEANING AND DYEING We have one of the most efficient REMODELING DEPARTMENTS in the country. Furs transform ed into the mode very quickly. Men's and women's garments altered in any way desired.-. We dye fur skins and re model them in any way We .tailor make men's or Sadies' suits, $50.00 up. Latest styles. We pay $250 railroad fare on every custom-made suit ordered from us. Send gobds parcel post. We have no agents THE TEASDALE CO. 625-627 Walnut Street 34-4-c Cincinnati, Ohio Putting Houses on the Market. In an attempt to stop landlords from refusing to rent houses In order that they may be sold at Inflated prices Brit ish" government officials hare Intro duced a bill In parliament which would authorize local authorities to rent these bouses. If a house has remained unoccupied for three months, according to the bill, local authorities may make an order for compnlsory hiring. The building must be suitable for letting without recon struction and, apart from the rent pay able, no landlords will be entitled to any compensation for the houses that are compulsortly hired. PHONE NEWS TO THE TRIBUNE. Same Quality at Lower Prices The reduction of clothing costs without impairing wear and ap pearance has been accomplished for you this season by the makers of These fine garments are priced one-third less than last year, with" out in any way sacrificing the quality standards observed in their making through half a century. They are a greater investment in good appearance than ever before. Fall Styles - $20 - $25 - $30 - $35 Mathews & Wfcizeler W-4iy . vox., J f O., The Red ... -WWIIUWI .rTfc-fW k A ill jojftfcTrtaT, to help the ex-service man and his famjly ' . ... "tit .! :miual Roll Call 42-L92L J To bring before the country in visual form the vast problem It is helping to solve, the American Red Cross has prepared for its Annual Roll Call, Nov. 11 to 24, a poster showing how rather than diminishing the total of World War veterans entitled to Federal aid continues to grow. Red Cross Service to these men is costing $10,000,000 a year. Ready for the Unexpected. In case of any unusual damage as by reason of an explosion or accident of any kind It Is desirable to get the debris out of the way as soon as pos sible and to remove other evidences of the 'affair. It was thought that In the United States this work was us ually done with great promptitude. In the case of railroad collisions It Is quite common for every evidence of the nffalr to be removed In a few hours so completely that It Is a diffi cult thing to locate the scene. In the case of the bomb planting on Wall street, In two hours a great deal of the damage had been repaired and at 4 o'clock the same afternoon a few boarded up windows was about all to he seen of the fearful damage that had been done. But In Paris these In cidents are more common and the au thorities are on the alert to meet them. There are maintained a reg ularly organized department for such emergencies and It Is always on the job with the same promptness that an American fire company answers the alarm. The work Is subdivided among trained squads and every part of It Is attacked at once. Even a torn up street Is repaired in a few hours. IS YOUR SUBSCRIPTION DUE ? Copyrighted B. K. & Co. Good Clothes ytttf !?tfy 3 ik Jit tttttttttTttXititttTttttfLi I Cross Is spending Slink - - v 1 -MV - "l"l"H'"r"l"l"H"H"l'"l"l" I AUTOMOBILE AUCTION At the I Ford Service Station ! Archbold, Ohio I Sat., Bee. 3, 1921 f 4 j A112:0p. m. t About 20 used cars and i t trucksof various make-s '1 i ? 5 Some almost as g od as new i t S. C. NOFZINGER AUTO CO. f Archbold, Ohio 4 34-2 -p $ r 4 a V F i " 4 Figure it any wav vou wish, friend- ship and battleship won't mix. 850 DISASTER DEATH i TOLL FOR ONE YEAR Red Cross Gives $1,871,000 Re lief When 65,000 Families s Are Made Homeless. Forty-three disasters, resulting In i the death in the United States of 8."0 '. persons and the Injury of 2,500 called ; for emergency relief measures ami i the expenditure of $1,871,000 by the S American Ked Cross during the fiscal ! yeiir ending June ISO, 1021, says an j announcement based upon the forth coming annual reiiort of the Ked Cross. These disasters caused property dam axe estimated at $:) 000,000, affected sixty-seven communities and rendered j 63,000 families homeless. ' 1 The year's disasters were of vary ing types, including several which pre viously had never been thought of as falling within that classifica tion. The Red Cross furnished relief In seventeen fires of magnitude, five floods, seven tornadoes or cy clones, one devastating storm, three explosions, including the one in Wall street: one building accident, twj typhoid epidemics, the most serious be ing that at Salem, Ohio, which af fected 9 per cent. of the population; one smallpox epidemic. In the republic of Haiti ; one train wreck, the race riot ! at Tulsa, Okla. ; the famine in China, ! emergency-relief in famine among the Indians of Alaska, the grasshopper plague in North Dakota and an earth quake In Italy. Pueblo Most Serious By far the most severe of the dis asters in the United States during the period covered by the Ked Cress re iiort was the Pueblo flood early in June, 1921.' The rehabilitation prob lem confronting the Ited Cross In Pueblo was one of the most difficult In recent years. When the first news of the horror was flashed throughout the country, the American Red Cross National Headquarters responded with a grant of $105,000 for relief work. Governor Shoup of Colorado, appre ciating the long and successful experi ence of the Red Cross in organizing disaster relief work, placed the en tire responsibility for the administra tion of relief in Its hands. In response to appeals from Presi dent Harding, Governor Shoup and other governors of western states and through local chapters of the Red Cross and other community organiza tions, public-spirited citizens brought the total contributed for Pueblo's re habilitation to more than $.125,000. The terrible havoc wrought by the flood waters Is a matter of record. More than 2,300 homes were affected and 7,351 persons were left homeless. Estimates of $500,000 as an absolute minimum for rehabilitation were made by Red Cross officials in charge of th? relief work. Fast Work in Wall Street The Wall street explosion was nota ble In that relief workers of the Red Cross were on the scene twenty min utes after the disaster occurred. The race riot at Tulsa also was unique In disaster relief annals In that outside of a small emergency relief fund con tributed by the Red Cross, the only relief measures outside the city con sisted of the service of social work ers, nurses and a trained executive whose object was to assist local forces In directing their own efforts. In decided contrast with the pre vious year, only one tornaijo assumed the proportions of a major disaster. This occurred on April 15, In the bor der sections of Texas and Arkansas with the city of Texarkana as the center. The significant feature of this disaster relief work was the fact that It covered so much rural territory as to make necessary a large number of relief workers. The famine In China, necessitating relief expenditures totalling more than $1,000,000 by the American Red Cross was by far the most serious of the foreign disasters In which the Red Cross gave aid. Builds Up Its Machinery In connection with the administra tion of disaster relief measures, an In creasing effectiveness on the part of the Red Cross to deal with emergen cies was manifested . during the past year. In 328 Chapters of the Ameri can Red Cross there have been formed special committees to survey the re sources of their respective communi ties and to be prepared In case of disaster. In others of the 3,402 active Chapters, a network of communication has been formed through which instan taneous relief may be dispatched to any part of the United States. That Its work in this field may be continued with ever greater effective ness, the American Red Cross Is ap pealing for widespread renewal of membership during Its Annual Roll Call, to be conducted this year from November 11 to 24. LIFE SAVING CORPS ENROLLMENT 10,000 Growth of Red Cross Life Saving Corps throughout the country con tinued unabated during the last fiscal year, a summary of the year's achievements by that Red Cross Serv ice shows. There are now 160 Corps with a total membership of more than 10,000 members, of which 1,276 are sufficiently skilled In the work to act as examiners. Among the outstanding achievements of the Red Cross In this field during the last year was the or ganization at the United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, of what Is per haps the largest life saving corpa In the world. HELPED HER LITTLE GIRL Children need all their strength for growing. A lingering cold weakens them so that the system is open to attack by more serious sickness. Mrs. Amanda Flint, Route 4, New Phila delphia, O., writes: "Foley's Honey and Tar cured my little girl of the worst tickling cough. I had tried many things and found nothing to help until I got Foley's Honfy and Tar." Gives immediate relief from distressing, racking, tearing coughs; soothes and heals. Good for colds, croup and whooping-cough. FINK & HAUMESSER Sleep Is Hard to Make Up. It takes 15 diiys fur the average hu man body to recover fully from the less of two consecutive nights' sleep. To Remove Insect From Ear. Tohacco smoke blown into the ear will dislodge a bug. Medical Sum mary. Daily Thought Nature fits all her children with something to do. Lowell. AUNTIE'S WISH By GRACE CANFIELD. by McClura NW4UM.ur byudicata.) "Wish I may, j Wish I might ! Have the wish I wish tonight." The slender, hite-haired figure was very still us she fervently repeat- ed the old incantation, and after it the wish, "I wunt a young man 1" Aunt Emmy had not Intended to speak : aloud, nor was she even aware that i she had done so. And so intent was i she that she did not hear the g:isp of amazement from the other side of the room. Niece Marjorie retreated hastily to her own room to consider the amaz ing situation. Aunt Emmy, sixty if she was a day (thus Marjorie, with tile unconscious cruelty of youth), and wanting a man! Why, she hated men ! It was only with the greatest difficulty tjiat Marjorie could secure her permission to go anywhere with a male escort. "The old ducky dear," sighed Mar jorie to herself. "She has been every thing in the world to me for years, and I have been only a selfish brute in return. If she wants a young man she shall certainly have one !" In the early twilight of the next evening Marjorie again saw her aunt standing in the western window, re peating her wish to Venus. The north window by which Marjorie stood (pened on a porch, and as she paused, wondering what to do, she heard a soft whisper from outside the window. "Marge, can't yon come out for a walk?" The girl sllpiied out of the room and met Eaton at the door. "You musn't ask me again," she said. "You know auntie doesn't like to have me go out with men." Marjorie suddenly Interrupted his half-uttered complaint. "Eaton, did you hear what auntie was saying to the star?" He flushed. "Yes. ' I'm sorry. I didn't Intend to." "I'm glad you did," she said quick ly. "Eaton, I love my Aunt Emmy, and if she wants a young man, she must have one." Dimly Eaton perceived that he was about to be sacrificed on the altar of Marjorie's love, and felt still more sorry that he had overheard. "The only way you can be my friend," she was saying, "is by being nice to Aunt Emmy." "I'll be nice, but I won't make love," said the lad, rebelliousiy. "Silly!" Marjorie flared up. "Of course you wouldn't act as you would with " "You," he supplied. "A girl your own age," she contin ued with heightened color. "Rut you can pay her a lot of attention, and make her feel that you care a lot for her." "Say !" he leaned forward eagerly. "Would I have a better chance with you if " "Silly," she scolded again. "You must do it just for Aunt Emmy's sake." It Is just possible that the young man saw more in Marjorie's eyes than she cared to say, for his opposition was not so strong from this point on. Final ly, though with some reluctance still, he yielded, and went away. The next day, to Aunt Emmy's un bounded amazement, she received a box of American beauties by the early post. "Who on earth the lovely things Eaton C." She read the card, her breath coming in soft gasps. This was the first of her surprises, but it was by no means the last. Eaton had determined from the start that If he did this thing he would do It well, and Marjorie was obliged to admit that he responded nobly to her plea. Candy followed flowers, and calls followed the candy, until Aunt Emmy was overwhelmed. She treated Eaton at first with a very stiff cour tesy, for she had not approved of him. However, as the young man continued his attentions, completely Ignoring Marjorie, the old lady visibly changed her mind, and took him Into favor. Eaton's utter neglect of Marjorie was so marked that finally she began to feel a little piqued. Of course, ev eryone who knew Aunt Emmy, loved her to death, but he might admit that she had a niece! It was Aunt Emmy who finally opened the subject. "Marjorie," she said, "I have a con fession to make, and I want your ad vice." Her niece was a little startled; she had thought confession her own prerogative. "Do you believe In wishing on stars?" Aunt Emmy's tone was slight ly abashed. "Yes," promptly. "Well, do you think a wish could ever go wrong?" Aunt Emmy was flushing painfully. Marjorie was puz zled. "I don't understand." The reply came with a rush. "I didn't like your friends but I wanted you to have a young man so I wished on the stars for you." "For me!" "Yes. But something Is wrong. Eaton C. Is just the one for you and why he Is paying attention to me at my age!" Aunt Emmy wrung her hands In deep distress. "Oh, what shall I doT' Marjorie laughed aloud. "Dear Aunt Emmy," she said gently, "are you sure the stars were wrong?" "Wh-what do you mean?" "Supposing," Marjorie's voice was almost a whisper, "supposing you leave me alone with Eaton the next time he calls. Perhaps you will find that he was meant for me, after all." Caught Handle Scratched. Roberta lives with her parents In the St. James apartments. One night she was with her parents visiting the Youngs In the northern part of the fit y. While they were discussing the lat est dances and the probability of a big mosquilo crop this year, Roberta wandered through the house in search of adventure. Espying the family kitten she gave chase, which ended when the kitten started to crawl un der the buffet. Roberta made a grab for the dis appearing tail and connected with It. The owner promptly turned around and administered scratches sutiieient to cause the child to let go. Roberta run wailing to her mother. "What's the matter, dear?" "Well, the kitten crawled under the box and left its handle sticking out and I took hold of It and it scratched me." Indianapolis News. PHONE N5WS TO THE TRI BUNE. li.li ilMkii iS UAfK "My friendH hnl all civen Uii fai'd iiever ep"cted to iee me around again. 1 had given up hoping my- stlf, as no medicine touched my case. The doctois had tried everything. My food did not di-vst and filled mc with yas. !y lnother in Philadelphia wrote me t.i try Mayr's Wonderful Remedy. The lirst dose gave me wonderful relief and I am now as well as I ever was and feel thirty years younger." It is a simple, harmless preparation that removes the catarrh al mucus from the intestinal tract and allays the inflamation which causes practically all stomach, liver and intestinal ailments, including ap pendicitis. One dose will convince or money refunded. All inuggists. A. C. miXTER Graduate Auctioneer General Farm, Real Estate and Live Stock Sales Try me once you will try me again iO-26-p Delta, Ohioi CHIROPRACTOR S. ANNA BEVIER, D. C. Peoples State Bank Building Fayette Hotel Central -Monday and Friday Phone 79 $ - Winter Eggs - $ Roost Your Hens On Allion Lice-Kiiling Roosts Keep hens in healthy laying condition Get DOZENS MORE EGGS from every hen. its DOLLARS. G. B. ALLIUM & feON, Mfgrs. (The Vermin Proof Perch In venters. Phone 589 WAUSEON, OHIf Don't buy infringements 32-4 lilliam Reichhardt Live Stock and Farm Sales Auctioneer Will cry a number of Sales Free of Charge. A m prepared to cry sales. Have taken a home course f auctioneering from the Missouri Auction School. Sales never too large for my ability or too small to receive my attention. Write or wire for dates. Delta R. 29. Delta Phone. Satisfaction Guaranteed 9.2-tf. IS YOUR SUBSCRIPTION DUE? A f v y jt V fin Do Your Christmas Shopping Early Scarfs and Gloves Neckties Night Shirts Pajamas, Socks and Underwear Campus Togs and Gold Bond Suits and . i - Overcoats Sold And Fitted By Samuel Ruppert POULTRY PEOPLE G. B. Allion has received notice from Washnigton that on October 22nd, patent was allowed him on his new Claim 2, Allion VERMIN PROOF POULTRY PERCH, (his new lice killing hen Roost,) the old perch patent does not bear the name Allion, VERMIN-PROOF POULTRY PERCH, hence it is given to his new perch, Mr. Allion says this new perch takes care of all of the improvements! that were not patented with his old anti-vermin perch, such as the cone shape so tank poultry cannot roost! on it, dams to keep fluid distributed properly, filling holes on top of l perches (not in the ends as old anti-j vermin patent shows) so perches are easily filled or to set self-fillers to. These items etc., and other valuable improvements are now included with his new perch and must not be in-1 fringed on as infringing is a severe1, penalty, and royalty can be collected where ever found. I Mr. Allion says since filing his new patent some months ago he has sold ; HUNDREDS of the new perches and satisfaction as the new -perches are I that they are giving much better, larger and hold nearly three times as: much oil or dip, lice killer, and after perches become soaked you fill about, twice in winter and a little more, often in summer. Mr. Allion alsoi says that he sold more than 1000; feet of perches during the week ofi this November. Surely these im-1 proved perches are a good thing for the poultry folks. Editor. WARNING, buy perches only from persons that can show you the patent reading ALLION VERMIN PROOF POULTRY PERCH, and save paying royalty latewo&; G. B. Allion invent- Fori Kidneys and Bladder FINK & HAUMSbK CHRISTMAS SALE Mrs. Biddle will hold her annual Christmas sale of art needle work on December 9 and 10th at Miss Grubb's Hat Shop. tf Call on Chas. F. Stotzer if in need of blankets or robes. 29-13-c DR. ARGADINE 607 Summit Street, Toledo, Ohio Special attention to Blood, Skin and Chronic Diseases. Hours 10:00 to 12:00, 2:00 to 4:00, 6:00 to 8:00. Sundays 10:00 to Vim. 34-52 LUMP or. pFor Backache, Rheumatism Kidneys and Bladder Quk h rhHtJ Cannot be Trade Marked With the majority of things you buy, you you can make sure of quality by looking for thename on the article. Your best guide and greatest protection is that trade mark. For example, the name Libby on glass. Conklin on fountain pens and Champion on spark plugs. . With coal your "trade-mark protection'' must be the name of the firm from whom you purchase it. Behind our coal and our coal prices stands a reputation made during the twenty six years we have been in business in this corn-unity. arrison Goal Phone 453 Shirts, Collars Sweaters, Jewel ry, Umbrellas Suit cases Travelling bags and Trunks PHAHBERUIflfJ I COUGH jHEKEOr i roil tmc ftcucr or If Coufc Colds CROUP. WHOOPINQ COUCH, HOARSENESS, BRONCHITIS. -TM HCMCOV CONTAINS NO NARCOTIC Mtnufadtured by CMeriaioMetteGiL Maauhsturtac Pharmacists, Do Motnea. Iowa. V. S. A. Ifjfgfr PRICE. THIRTY FIVE CENTS& ICopjrrlfBttd tf Oaamterlala fe Oa ! Motor Truck Service Lo -al and T-ong Distance Hauling Phone No. 629 C. H, Iserman yrtabliahed January, 1S8B Oldest 'Business College Adams and 15th BU TOLEDO, OHIO Prepare (or a good position at tKis old reliable school, located in a city where the positions are. You may enter any time. Students may earn board nd room. Write for catalogue. S) THUUIEB. I'. DAVIS, PliiKpai SUBSCRIBE FOR THE TRIBUNE OF mm I Yards