The Patton courier. (Patton, Cambria Co., Pa.) 1893-1936, May 26, 1927, Image 8

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    A moving picture of the Buzz Family
LIT spray clears your home of flies and mos-
quitoes. Italso kills bed bugs, roaches, ants,
and their eggs. Fatal to insects but harmless to
mankind. Will not stain. Get Flit today.
DESTROYS
Flies Mosquitoes Moths “
Ants Bed Bugs Roaches
low can
The ye
with the ogi band”
LD) 1027 arannans ent se. (00.)
"National Hall of Health
The National Hall of Health is lo-
cated in the southeast court gallery
of the Arts and Industries building of
the Smithsonian institution, at Wash-
ington.
| First G atherings of
Colonists in America
There were three congresses held in
America before the first Continental
| congress of 1774. The first of these
met at New York on May 1, 1690, in
response to a call Issued by the Gen-
eral Court of Massachusetts—“the first
call for a general congress in Amer-
fea.” The purpose was to confer on
“suitable methods for assisting each
other for the safety of the whole
| land.” Seven colonfes were Invited,
| of which four attended the congress.
| The congress of 1754 met at Albany on
June 19, for the purpose of negotiating
a treaty with the Indians, and also to
form a plan of union among the col-
onies. The “Albany plan,” sometimes
Quick, safe, sure relief from
painful callouses on the feet.
Atall drug and shoe stores
choll’s
Zino-pads "iii
USED AUTO PARTS
For Almost
Any Make of Car
Very Reasonable
Parts Shipped Anywhere C. O. D.
Satisfaction or Money Refunded
ted to the assemblies of the several
colonies through their governors, and
to the king through the agency of the
| lords of trade, but failed of adoption
both in the colonies and in England.
| The congress of 1765, better known as
| the “Stamp Act Congress,” was held
B. Leff Iron & Metal Co. | in New York city, opening on October
AUTOMOBILE WRECKING DEPT. 7, 1765.
Braddock, Pa. i Braddock 1684 | Spec fal 0 flor -
RU RNSandSCALDS to Victims of
Stop the throbbing and smaning
Indigestion
z t once with a soothing touch o
Your Drugsise Savsl Pleasant to Take,
Resinol | a dn
i BUY Must) Jot A hove? Gladly
BURSAL ENLARGEMENTS
Refunded.
Absorbine reduces thickened, You can be so distressed with gas
swollen tissues, curbs, filled ten-
and fullness from poor digestion or
dons, soreness from bruises or] dyspepsia that you think your heart
strains, Stops spavin lameness.| 18 going to stop beating.
Does not blister, remove hair or Your stomach may be so distended
lay up horse. $2.50 at druggists, jj | that your breathing is short and gaspy.
or postpaid, Valuable horse book
1-S free, Write for it today.
Read this: “Horse had large swelling
just below knee, Now gone; has not re-
appeared. Horse goodas ever. Have used
Absorbineforyearswithgreat success.”
ELLY
TRADE MARK RF G'U SPAT. Raele. Moss.
oil
BARGAINS
Ne have a fine selection of rebuilt
used motorcycles at bargain prices. Ma-
chines sold on payment plan and are
guaranteed same as new models. Have | ; y
a few Henderson and Indian used ma- Clothespin King Now 102
chines at very low prices. Come in and | Valentine Smith, a gypsy, famous
look tiem Overy We Will hold any ma- | throughout the midlands of Ireland for
*hine you s et. NY t ‘ ‘
; Hi "HARLEY ¢ 50 | his skill in nraking clothespins, recent-
2 celebrated his one-hundred-second
1924 HARLEY ................5. 100 | ly
1925 HARLEY 150 | pirthday. Living in a wigwam near
he retains all
1926 HARLEY 200 |
1925 HARLEY AND SIDE CAR.. 175 | Coseley,
teense 110 | and says he is “good for some years
==. 178 L'votn He has never smoked. His
1928 SINGLE HARLEY
1927 SINGLE HARLEY
| cooking is done by a daughter, aged
seventy.
All overhauled and guaranteed.
Harley-Davidson Exchange
Named by Raleigh
ventions. HARTLEY, 85 St. Bangor, = Surinam is perhaps better known as
14 Federal St, N. 8S. Pittsburah. Pa.
a — | Dutch Guiana. It was discovered by
8% on Savings. Account e Lomp sums or jo BC 2
monthly deposits, Safety-homes; first mort- Sir Walter Raleig bh in 1595. He gave
gages, State protected. Fixed Interest. With- | the name El Dorado to the territory.
draw money any time. Dixle Building-Loan
Ass'n. (Capital, $20,000,000) Houston, Texas. f oe
MONEY—MONEY Keep Stomach and Bowels Right
Without obligation, let me show you an in- | By giving baby the harmless, purely
vestment, safe, legitimate, will pay more | vegetable, infants’ and children’s regulator.
than ordinary interest. Write Mr, Starr, 133 | SYRUP
E. 47th, Chicago, m.
brings astonishing, gratifying results
= mal'ng baby's stomach digest
food and bowels move as
they should at teething
time. Guaranteed free
jEaks from narcotics, opi-
Ng] ates, alcoholand all
harmful ingredi.
i nts. Safeand
relief—what’s to be done.
Mentha Pepsin and speedily the gas
disappears, the pressing on the heart
ceases and you can breathe deep and
naturally.
\E Oh! What blessed relief; but why
| not get rid of such attacks altogether?
| Why have them at all?
where guarantees Dare’s Mentha Pep-
sin, a pleasant elixir, to help you or
money back,
I Am in Touch With Hundreds |
of men and manufacturers who buy good In-
Wanted—A representative in every county.
Young men retired or small farmers, Barn |
as much as $5 to $50 a day; exclusive terri-
tory, Our products are sold on a money |
back guarantee, Write for particulars. Give
age. ARCO, Box 33, Greencastle, Pa. |
RAISE GUINEA PIGS |
I buy all you raise. No experience
Big profits. Pay better than ohick- |
ens Write for particulars and contract,
C. CORFANTY, Box 3-B, Tenafly, N. J.
AGENTS WANTED
and women to sell i
JEL-E-MAKE |
a new fruit concentration for making jelly.
Great seller and repeater. A 60c bottle with |
2 pounds of sugar makes 8 large glasses,
Always jells. Write for territory and gos
trial bottle, MARY: HARTE JELLY CO
Jacksonville, Fla.
BUSINESS PLACES
for me.
needed
"NEW and USED
TIRES and TUBES
> AT HALF FACTORY PRICES
Fisk, Goodyear, Kelly, Firestone, Goodrich, {
| Phelps, etc,
FOR SALE | of care free service,
Le ocated in goc 4 Penn sities and Investigated | Tubes
y k .
FIXTU RE-SU PPLY STORE $1.85
wiring bus, Rent $50 $2.00
rice $4,600. File 1147. | $2.50
KNITTING MILL |
antire output sold in | $1.75
Rent $35. Profi $2.25
te $19,000, hurry! | 8 $2.50
$2.75
PRINTING FLANT— PITTSBURGH | ALL TUBES GUARANTEED NEW
the minute Rew nt $11 50; | we ‘guarantee workmanship and material
Wilk sacrifi ©. Price | on repaired parts; will replace at half pur-
, chase price if not satisfactory, Send only
‘ston ITH PROPERTY 3 $1 Deposit for each tire and pay postman
4 1-Eis Jr Xe lusive | ance on delivery.
agency cman, Stewart | RHAREE o Batteries $2.50 up. Rebuilt with
Warner; des 8 living rooms;
real money
THE
1002 Transportation
rice $26,500, File 913s. | ACME ELECTROLITE, Restores Lite to
2 iE ede Old Sulphated, Weak or Dead Automobile
P PL E- COLE COMPANY and Radlo Batteries,
Bldg., Detroit, Mich. DUQUESNE TIRE SERVICE
W.N. U, PITTSBURGH, NO. 22-1927. | 5714 Penn Ave., Pittsburgh, Pa.
gs are diz and pray for quick |
Yon a ey pray q | had shrugged
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
called “Franklin's plan,” was submit- |
| opened the New York directory.
CIC A a Za A ZA a A A ON IO JET
BY
(
pl
J
STORY FRQM THE START
From the comfortable financial
situation to which he had been
born, Peter Milman, American
gentleman of the old school, and
last of his family, is practically
reduced to penury through the
misfortune of a friend, Haze:
Brewer, whom he had unwisely
trugted. Learning of Brewer's sui-
cide, which means the destruction
of his last hope, Milman engages a
French butler, Achille Lutry,
who speaks no English, and is to
replace Sneed, servant of long
standing. By Lutry, Milman
sends letters to Prof. Fleming
Bradney, Floyd Malet and Nee-
whom the
failures,
land Bavpes, men
world bas classed as
- once of high position.
CHAPTER II—Continued
—_—3
“Beside yourself there will be, 1
trust, Neetand Barnes, formerly an in-
ternational polo player and owner of
race horses, and Floyd Malet, who,
when he seemed about to take his
place in the world as a great sculptor,
suffered an unfortunate eclipse.”
Bradney went to the library and
Sure
entugh, Peter Milman was recorded as
living on Lower Fifth avenue, The
thing, then, was not a foolish prac-
tical joke.
Puffing at a big pipe, Fleming Brad- |.
| ney sat on his little balcony and gazed
at Manhattan lights. This strange
| letter had awakened old hopes and
| ambitions that he had thought for ever
| til this letter came Bradney
| Heved his career finished.
Just one tablespoonful of Dare's |
| » Especially when any druggist any- |
dead. Of course, there could be no
practical joke which expended a hun-
dred dollars on its fulfillment. Brad-
ney read the letter again. The phrase,
“Perhaps at this dinner you may be
offered the opportunity,” took his
fancy strangely. Opportunity! Did
| any exist for a man who had been dis-
graced and was now forgotten? Un-
had be-
He went
Into” his bedroom and disinterred a
suit of full evening dress from its
mothball tomb. He had not worn it
for a dozen years.
’ . . . - . .
Peter Milman’s letter reached Nee-
land Barnes at a moment when that
eminent sportsman was engaged in
staving off his most persistent cred-
itor, the landlord Lippsky.
Barnes was a tall, finely made man
who had run through several fortunes
by his love for horses and his inabil-
ity to judge of their chances in races.
After his wife had died, his relatives
their shoulders and
abandoned him. The many schemes
for his rehabilitation had failed. He
disappeared from fashionable resorts.
His only daughter was being brought
up in England by rich relations. He
had drifted about the world until, at
the end of all resources, he had taken
a little house on the outskirts of
| Peekskill,
Here he was engaged in what he
explained as an attempt “to stage a
comeback.” He was trying to become
| physically fit, and he was succeeding.
But mountain hikes and sculling up
the noble stream brought no grist to
the mill.
“Mr.
Barnes, you are a loafer,”
: Lippsky cried when the sportsman had
his faculties
announced his inability to pay rent
long overdue. This seemed cruelly un-
Just to a man who had just returned
! from a twenty-mile walk.
| me,” said
if you keep on annqying
“I shall
“Some day,
Neeland Barnes,
| kill you.”
“You don’t have to kill me,” Lippsky
cried shrilly. “You just pay my rent.
Sell your swell clothes and get over-
ells.” He waved Peter Milman’s let-
ter. “Get some of your swell friends
to lend you money.”
Neeland Barnes looked at the letter,
puzzled. He did not recognize the
writing, but the stationery was reas-
suring.
“When what you term my swell
| friends know I am living in a hovel
|
Finest quality Tires and Tubes |
that will give you many thousands of miles |
| man to
|
|
|
|
{ lke this, they will advance me the
money. I shall not ask them until I
have finished my training. I am about
to begin. If I hit you, it’s your look-
out.”
Barnes began his. shadow-boxing
exercises. Dimly Lippsky perceived
that his debtor was getting nearer and
nearer. He went out muttering
“Loafer.” It was a word which did
much to appease him,
Barnes boxed no more when his
landlord had disappeared. He read
the astonishing letter a dozen times
and secreted the money-order at once.
Alone of the three who had received
scmewhat similar communications, he
knew of Milman and his family. Very
flistantly they were connected by mar-
riage. Jarnes had no idea that the
Jrewer failure had brought Peter Mil-
penury. One sentence he
found strangely intriguing: “If, as I
believe, you feel yourself unfairly
treated by the world that was yours,
I may be able to offer you the oppor-
tunity to take your place again in
egociety.”
Neeland Barnes longed above all
comfortable life that
had once been his. He had never per-
mitted himself to become shabby.
Never had he sunk to s a state
hat former friends woulu itate to
things for the
THE PATTON COURIER
| The Recluse of 4
F ifth Avenue —— :
recognize him. He clung to the idea
that when once he ceased to shave and
wear clean linen the descent to hell
would have begun.
He rolled a cigarette and indulged
In pleasing reveries. Good dinners
were not given idly nor were hundred-
dollar bills expended for nothing.
Peter Milman wanted him to do some-
thing. Well, Neeland Barnes was his
man, Perhaps after all these years
the man who had run away with Mrs.
Milman was back in America. Per-
haps Peter Milman desired him to be
chastised publicly. He would find
Neeland Barnes devoid of fear and in
better physical trim than he-had been
for a dozen years. Barnes always saw
himself in a heroic light. He hoped
the thing would be staged so that his
old cronies might see it. They would
never believe that he could keep so fit
after the scandalous rumors that had
been spread about him.
Naturally there would be expense
money. It would be a delightful ex-
perience to pay Lippsky his deferred
rent in nickels and cents and watch
him scrambling feverishly for the
coins among poison ivy. And he would
be able to send his daughter a decent
present at last. Poor Nita, whom he
had not seen for years, brought up by
jealous relatives far from his care.
The adventure might lead to amazing
things.
Presently these brilliant prospects
faded. He was consclous that his only
home was in Lippsky’s grotesquely
furnished house, Adventures with
glorious endings offered themselves
only to youth. He sighed a little.
Then he smiled. After all, he had the
hundred dollars and the prospect of
a good dinner,
- * * * » - *
Floyd Malet, under the name of
M. Floyd, was earning a poor living
by teaching drawing in Philadelphia
private schools. The man who had
hoped to see his name associated with
Rodin and Meunier was forgotten by
all save the few who had seen in him
the signs of genius. Malet was a man
of middle size, thin and haggard.
Once or twice fastidious pupils had
complained that he paid too little at-
tention to his personal appearance.
Milman’s letter came by late mail. At
first the sculptor was inclined to think
it an advertising scheme of some sort.
The Lower Fifth avenue address was
thick with loft and office buildings.
Like Bradney, he went to a library
and looked up Milman. The genealog-
fcal department gave him ample data.
The stranger's letter held out the
promise of temporary relief from an
intolerable life. There was money
for the trip and enough over to live
for many weeks as he had lately
learned to live. He packed his grip,
thankful he had saved a suit of eve-
ning clothes.
There is something vivifying ahout
the air of Manhattan. It had its ef-
fect on the three men bound for Peter
Milman’s house. Bradney held up his
head again and Malet lost his droop
of depression. Neeland Barnes, walk-
Ing briskly down the avenue, passed
clubs which had dropped him on ac.
count of nonpayment of dues and felt
himself within measurable distance of
re-election, His military mustache
and fine carrlage made him a marked
figure, and he liked the limelight.
As he neared the Milman house he
wondered what his fellow guests
would be like. In other years no phys-
icists had been numbered among his
acquaintances. He was not quite cer-
tain what a physicist was. As to
sculptors, he had met one in Rome,
but he was a marquis. Sculptors were
probably all right. He was reassured
by remembering that the wife of a»
former polo pal had her own studio.
But he would probably have to domi-
nate the conversation with Peter Mil-
man and talk of old New York society.
He must be careful not to mention the
Daynes. The runaway wife had been
a Dayne.
Wedged in betwecn tall buildings,
+ the Milman house looked squat and
Yet Barnes gazed at
it with respect. To be able to retain
it spelled wealth. LesSer men would
have sold at a profit and moved up-
town. What this millionaire might
want with Neeland Barnes was a de-
unimpressive.
masts
A a a a ZA ME A SOTO TT 3
WYNDHAM
MARTYN
=
Ke
0
NU Service iS
D
i
lightful mystery. He rapped loudly
with the brass knocker,
A few minutes earlier Floyd Met
had stood appalled at the smug ugli-
ness of the building. He did not think
with any sympathy of that generation,
represented by the builder, hich had
distrusted elegance and loved what
was solid and lasting. To the sculp-
tor It seemed the Milman home was
modeled on the old Astor house. But
he liked the door and the brass
knocker, which was a copy of that
decorating an Oxford college.
The last to come was Fleming
Bradney, whom the subway had de-
layed. He rather liked the house. It
had strength and the ale of studied
isolation. None could look through
its windows to disturb the Inwates.
It lay fifteen feet back from the side-
walk. Bradney had that imagination
without which mathematicians ean
never be great. Whom and what was
he to see behind the tall door?
CHAPTER I11
Neeland Barnes disapproved of
Achille, who admitted him with lavish
gestures, This was not the sort of
butler a Milman should employ. He
followed him to a library, where he
found his host speaking to Floyd
Malet. It was as Barnes thought.
Sculptors were not quite up to his so-
clal standard. This stranger was
physically inconspicuous, and his
clothes should have been more recent-
ly pressed,
Neeland Barnes held out his hand
to Peter Milman, as one could to a
man of his distinguished ancestry,
with a smile which said plainly, “I,
at least, belong here.”
“It is very kind of you to come,”
said Peter Milman. He turned to
Floyd Malet: “Mr. Malet, this is Mr.
Neeland Barnes.”
Barnes nodded a little coldly. Curi-
ous, he thought, that Peter Milman
should have introduced Malet to him.
Then Fleming Bradney came in. Al-
though his clothes were of another
era, there was an air of power about
him. His was a carelessness due less
to ignorance than to lack of concern
with other people’s modes of life an
thought, In an age when beards were
unpopular he wore one, and little chil-
dren hissed “Beaver” to him at every
street corner.
Peter Milman, so Barnes thought,
treated him with extreme respect. It
was not until Achille brought in the
cocktails that Barnes’ frown left him.
It was easy to see that of the three
Peter Milman considered him the least
important. Why, he wondered, did
Milman esteem it an honor to have a
physicist to dinner? The word re-
curred many times. This must be
some new way of ‘describing a phy-
sician. That was it. Physicians were
not so bad. One had married a Van-
derbilt in America and another a duke
of Norfolk's daughter in England.
The second cocktail found Neeland
Barnes more amiable. He looked
keenly at his host, but discovered no
trace of nervousness about him, no
wildness of eye which might confirm
the world’s opinion that he was men-
tally unfit, Perfectly dressed, as
usual, but no better turned-out than
Neeland Barnes.
The dining room was beautifully
furnished.
“Ha, ha,” said Barnes,
Chippendale !”
“Sheraton,” the sculptor corrected
gently.
“Just as you like,” Barnes said gen-
fally. There were certain bottles in
plain view which banished any {li-
humor he might have felt. Not for
years had he sat down to a really well-
chosen and well-cooked dinner. Every-
thing about him spoke of lavish ex-
penditures. To Floyd Malet every-
thing spoke of exquisite taste. The
relief, after years of furnished dis-
sonance, was grateful. He felt cheer-
ful after a decade of gloom.
The bearded Bradney noticed only
that he was sitting at a bountiful ta-
ble and invited to sip excellent vint-
age wines, What was the reason?
He was impatient to know. What op-
portunity was he to be offered to re-
gain the rank in science that disgrace
had bereft him?
(TO BE CONTINUED.)
“good old
REI CIR VD V RRB EID
One Eye Her Oculist
Son Could Not Help
The oculist had a joke the other
morning. Every now and then he
smiled quietly to himself, “You know,”
he said finally to the Woman, “moth-
ers are wonderful people. They always
believe there is nobody quite so clever
as their own children.
“Now, my mother, for instance,
thinks I know everything about eyes.
She doesn’t confine her boasting to the
neighbors, either. She is just as like-
ly as not to walk up to a nearsighted
or crosseyed passenger in the subway
and tell him his eyes need attention
and that her son is the best oculist in
New York. She says that isn’t hunt-
ing business for me; it's helping
people who don’t know enough to look
after their sight. But the joke is on
her,
“Yesterday she met a man who is
distinctly and painfully ‘wall-eyed.’
‘You mustn't let your eyes go like
that,’ she told him immediately the in-
troductions were made. ‘My son can
do anything with eyes. Why don't
you go to see him? ‘I'm afraid he
can't do anything with this eye, mad-
am,’ answered the object of her so-
licitude; ‘you see, it's a glass one.’ "=
New York Sun.
Aztec Religious Beliet
The Aztecs believed In special gods
who brought diseases and in other
gods who knew healing secrets,
The bark of several species of the
eucalyptus tree yields a rosin, hence
the tree is called the “gum tree.”
(Copy for This Department Supplied by the
American Legion News Service.)
FROM PRIVATE TO
SURGEON-GENERAL
One of the flve national vice com-
manders of the American Legion this
year Is a doctor of medicine who en-
listed in the National Guard of his
state as a private In the medical
corps, was commissioned the first
year and in a short time arose to the
position of chief surgeon of the state
and a member of the governor's staff
as surgeon-general. He is Dr, John G.
Towne of Waterville, Maine, born May
26, 1877, a graduate of Baltimore uni-
versity and a leader in the medical
profession.
Both Mrs. Towne and their daugh-
ter Elizabeth are much Interested In
Legion affairs. Mrs. Towne helped
form the Bourque unit of the Amer-
fecan Legion auxiliary, has served as
its president, was the first president
of the state auxiliary and has served
as national committeewoman from
Maine for a number of years. Eliza-
beth was the youngest member en-
rolled as a charter member of the
Bourque unit.
Doctor Towne enlisted in the medi-
cal corps of the Second Maine regi-
ment In March 1908, and was pro-
moted in rapid order to the position of
surgeon-general on the governor's
staff.
out April 13, 1917,
a little more than
When the regiment was called |
Taxi Driver
If there is one thing
that counts most in
getting away fast to
beat traffic and for
speed in fast runs it's
spark plugs. I use
Championseverytime.
Champion is the better
elt ry ne of ta
ite core— its
i
i
ontentment is a pearl of price.
a week after the United States de- |
clared war, Major Towne went into |
the service and when (en. Clarence
Dr. John G. Towne.
R. Edwards arrived in Boston to take
command of the Northeastern depart-
ment, he summoned Major Towne to
headquarters and made him director
of the hospitals of the Twenty-sixth
division, then in process of formation.
He was sent to France in advance
of the division and established hos-
pitals in the training area around
Neuf Chateau. When the division ar-
rived they found splendid hospital fa-
cilities already established and these
were used by many other outfits which
served in that area. During the win-
ter he was placed on detached service
at the British field school on the West-
ern front. He served there for three
months and later as sent to the first
army training school at Longres. He
was near Cambrai when the Germans
wiped out the British force there, be-
ing in the town for two hours before
the Germans broke through and prac-
tically every man that he was asso-
ciated with was either killed or cap-
tured.
Major Towne returned to the divi-
sfon in time for service on the Sois- |
sons front and again on the Toul
front, supervising the moving of hos-
pitals from one sector to the other.
After he had established hospitals on
the Chateau Thierry front he received
orders which made him commander of
camp hospital No. 29 about forty-two
miles from Bordeaux and there he
stayed for ten months, leaving the hos-
pital after the armistice to be attend-
ing surgeon at Bordeaux. He re-
ceived his promotion as lieutenant
colonel May 2, 1919, for his efficient
work ‘In the base section area. Upon
his return to this country Colonel
Towne went into the reserves.
He became the first commander of
the George N. Bourque post No. 5,
serving two years. Among other Le-
gion positions _he has held, is that of
state commander in 1923.
Presents Land to Post
The El Monte (Calif.) post of the !
American Legion has been presented |
title to a half-acre of land near the
city by Francis Marion Guess in honor
of his brother Sergt. John Guess, who
was killed in France in 1918. The
land, which 1s beautifully wooded,
will be used as a building site for a
Legion clubhouse and for a boy scout
camping ground. It will be called
Camp John Guess.
Ohio Woman Post Commander |
who served as |
a nurse during the World war and re- |
French |
Mrs. Maude Ramsey,
ceived a citation from the
government for bravery under fire,
has been elected commander of Wil-
lard Stour Post of The American
Legion at Kenton, Ohio, Mrs. Ramsey
is believed to be the first woman in
| Ohio to command a Legion post.
ATWATER
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| IGNITION
| for Fords
TYPE LA
Price
$1080
Including
Cable and
Fittings
|
|
The name assures its performance
For twenty-seven years “Atwater Kent” has
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and absolute precision of manufacture, These
qualities, which have won leadership in Radio,
explain thesensational performance of Atwater
Kent Ignition for Fords. Thisremarkable
scientific ignition system will literally make a
new car of your Ford —smoother, snappier
power, easier starting, amazing hill climbing.
Installed in an hour. The low price of $10.80
includes cable and fittings. Get facts from
your service station or write to
ATWATER KENT MFG. COMPANY
A. Atwater Kont, Pres.
4859 Wissahickon Ave. Philadelphia, Pa.
Makers of
ATWATER
KENT
RADIO
Dr. Thomas H. Martin
OPTOMETRIST
Formerly of D. T. Reed & Co.
ceAnnounces
Opening New Offices for
Examination of Eyes and
Fitting Glasses
Suite 206 Professional Bldg.
429 Penn Ave. Pittsburgh, Pa.
Tel. Atlantic 2746
ESTABLISHED 15 1912
We Buy We Sell
New and Used
Motors, Generators, Transformers,
Meters, Turbines, Steam, Gas and Oil
| Engines, Boilers, Heaters, Pumps, etc.
| Railway, Mine and Factory
Equipment
Entire Plants Bought and Sold
Ww. A. Carrell & Company
Bell Phone Atlantic 1620
| sot Lyceum Bldg. Pittsburgy, Pa.
10x Fon
WRITTEN BY MICK
“I LIKE MY NE
DOGGIE
HE'S SO NICE £
ROUGH
AND IF 1 DON
TEASE HIM
HE'LL NEVER
GIT TOU
AR
ANN
(Copyright,
Cs—
\i
—
PERC
© by the MM