The Seattle Star Newspaper, December 11, 1920, Page 7

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BATURDAY, DECEMBER 11, 1920, AUT Lal ES, TRUCK Motor Transportation Occupies Assured Place in American Motor transportation now occuples 2 - assured place among American ‘Systems for the carriage of freight and passengers, the Ne al Bank of Commerce in New York says in the December number of its maga zine, Commerce Monthly The okfer transportation systems will event- wally adjust their facilities to ao commodate the traffic for which they @re best adapted, the bank believes, #0 that the motor truck must bid for business on the basis of ef ficiency alone. That it will meet this test, the bank declares, there is no doubt. “Trucks are still carrying & con) Sideradic amount of freight which forsnerty went by rail,” says Com: merce Monthly, “and it is ‘probable} that they will take more of thm Dusiness in the future, but it ts no longer to be feared that the rail-| Toads will be injured by this diver-| sion of traffic As the railroads) adapt themselves to the increased! Edsel B. Ford, president of the Post-war traffic, the use of motor| Ford Motor Co, Detroit, bas an trucks will be confined to the field) nounced that the regular cash bonus in which their superiority can be| established December 31, 1919, will) demonstrated. Manufacturers who) be continued on the same basis this} @ deliveries by both truck and) year, Bonus checks are now being rail find that beyond a certain limit| made out and distribution of them of distance the advantage of the will start the first of January, These railroad is decisive, This limit t#| bonuses are in excess of $7,000,000, Proportionate to the railway terminal | and will be shared by approximately costs of the locality. In a region of | 75,000 mer Yery high terminal costs, it has been| In addition, the Ford Moto® Co estimated at about 125 miles. With Motor truck operates with success tn! districts formerly handicapped by in- adequate transportation facilities and here performs a valuable service tn creating new Ddusiness Motor ex Press lines, privately owned and op erated as public carriers ate from nearly all metropolitan centers, Thru these truck lines the farmer can sell his prod without loss of time and at a minimum of expense, and often ts enabled rad large Seven Million Goes to Ford Workers as Cash ‘Bonuses for Year 1920 announces an extra 3 per cent for the exception of shipments of goods the six months ending December 31 on Ford investment certificates. This is In addition to the guaranteed 6 per cont (8 per cent having been paid July 31, 192%, making a total of 15 for unusually fast delivery, it does/ not pay to ship by truck beyond this distance when railroad operation ts normal. On the other hand, for shtp- ments of 50 miles or leas, the advan tage is all with the truck, except for the heaviest type of loose freight, and the recent railroad rate in- creases will accentuate this advan- per cent for the year 192 1 Every one in the employ of the company prior to October 1, this | | Year, and on the payroll December | | 31, receives a bonus, The bonus gues | to the employe free and clear, How “Raftroad rates for short hauls are| ever, if be wishes, he may invest hi inadequate to meet the high pro money in Ford investment certifi- Pportionate terminal expense involved. | Short haul freight tn less than car. load lots contributes nothing toward | overhead expenses or profit and may even cause serious losses by increas j ing terminal corigestion. Motor truck | competition relieves this congestion and ceases to be effective at just, With all sorts of stories of agent about the point where the realty be and —, —. ie | Drofitable railroad business =e -° note that an automobile show was «Motor trucks are valnable supple |Deld in July in Czecho-Slovakia. ments to railroad systems when oper- | Somebody 1s prospering there ating as feeder lines, and tn that capacity may replace the expensive) Road Dufiding tn the South pos Night branch lines formerly founa been held up considerably due to the necessary .to supply main line “hortage of gondolas and fiat cars business from outlying territory. The °® the railroads, for bringing in moment —_. |gravel, sand and shella, Gondola cars have been sent to coal mines to FAMOUS MOTORCYCLE [avert cont shortage this winter. Local motorcycle fans and race en- “ry for cultivation of the crope in fenusiaste who were unable to actual.|the Philippines bas caused an in- ly witness the big international 200.| creased demand from the islands for ile road race held at Mgrion, Indi-| American tractors, During the last not be robbed entirely of! 12 months more than 800 tractors of of seeing this motorcycie| various types were sent to the) n intensely interesting mo- | !slanda, of the event was obtain- aides by the Harley Davidson Motor! There will be nearly 400 exhibitors . of Milwaukee, and will be|0f motor cars and motor accessories shown free of charge in this gity at | At the 2ist annual auto show in New | Knights of Pythiag hail, 1929 Third | York. January § to 15. Of those, | ‘ave., December 13, at $ p. m. | there will be 87 makes of automobiles, | ~|each displaying several models, At the first New York auto show, November 3, 1900, there were in all | 66 exhibitors. eee Carrying a weapon tm the aide pockets, under the seat or any other! place of concealment in automobtles | |or other vehicles is a violation of | the law against carrying concealed | weapons. So ruled the Missourt #u | preme court in a recent case, . | ‘Tests made by the U. 8. burean of |mines show that most carburetors were improperly adjusted and that | on most cars too rich a mixture is used. The result is that 30 per cent lof the fuel beat goes into the ex- haust in the form of unburned gases. eee | A new law in Peru requires all! males from 18 to 60 to work on the| highways three days @ year or pay | for labor hire for the three days. From this law, it is estimated some | $2,500,000 will be raixed annually, and g00d roads will result. cee If you draw flush against the curb, you might find difficulty to turn the front wheel in starting. In such a case the best way to get out is to place the Jack under the mid dle of the front axle, jack up the car a few inches and push ft off away from the curb. This will not harm the auto and will send the wheel far enough from the curb to permit starting. Registrations of motor vehicles for the first two months of 1920 in Pennsylvania were 323,473. Price $5.75 Other Models at $7.75 and $15.25 Your Dealer or Stewart Products Service Station 910 E. Pike St. Phone East 629 (Dealers, Phone Us Your Orders) Free adjustment on any make of carburetor by two expert carburetor men De- cember 13 to December 18. Sunset Electric Co. East 160 1507 Broadway Systems serve markets heretofore quite out! of teach, Such marketing methods | appear as the best solution of the difficult problem of supplying great! cities with perinhable foodstuffs, aa/ it gives the city ean to productng | areas within a wider radius, many of whieh enjoy no other means of trans-| portation, or at best slow and expen: sive facilities which discourage the daily shipment of perishable freight. cates .which carry & guaranteed In torent of 6 per cent and also two special payments decided on by the directors of the company. The bonus affects Ford employes at work in the Ford factory, Detroit Ford blast furnaces and tractor plant, Rouge, Mich; all United States branches, besides foreign branches | at Copenhagen, Denmark; Bordeaux, France: Cadiz, Spain; Buenos Aires, | Argentina; Sao Paulo, Brasil; Monte video, Uruguay, and Cork. Jretand. 7% PREPARED BY SAMURL J. HUMES GRAVEL ROADS Kent Dee Moines Good. Dee Moines-Tacoma HMighliine—Fatr to King county line. Renton Jenction— Fair; ing at Menton. Maple Valley—Impansadte at ©: dar moyntain, regradiny to reach M ple Valley go via Imeaquab aod Hobart | or via Hwan lake via Pipe Line read. Maple Valley Niack ~ Good Kent-Maple Valley New road open from Kent east; fair shape; balance of road foot Woertiavitie Deval Good Pall CityGeod. Redmond Nellywort Close’ for paving: open December 2 Remton-Ismquah New concrete pave- % miles from Renton, open: gravel svction goed Teeaqueh-Fall City-Nerth Bend—Good. Inmeqnah Kelmond, vie lake Sammemish reerad- Good. Enamciaw-Frankiin—New conerete two miles from Eaumelaw: good gravel be- youd. Aubarn-Mack Dinmend—New concrete read two miles beyond Auburn; goed | gravel beyond; also oreek. Sunes Highway Snow on mount chances In cronsin Green Water river)—Gravel beyon4 Enume geod; atl rou umelaw exesiient ALL FAVED ROADS IN GOOD CONNDITION Reach Head Closed one weet of North Trunk read, paving w wer way. detour Vashon Heattie- Vashon Heights Unved. Dee Moines. Portage read from Vashon south closed for paving; other rem teland good to fair. Resten-Kent (rast side) New concrete, pavement open for travel: continnous | concrete road from Renton to Agburn. BRIDGES UNDER CONSTRUCTION Novelty Brtdge (ever Smequaimie)—Open. | Lee Bridge (over Grom river, near | Auburn) — Open. For further information regarding King county reads call Main 6900, oral 22. | Appres. THE SEATTLE STAR ACCESSORIES UTOMOBILE. Roads Crumble to Ruins Under Grinding of Heavy Trucks, Assert Experts Machine for testing pavements. Each wheel weighs 1,000 pounds, and is two inches wide. They are run back and forth} over a road until the surface fails, or stands the test. BY GEORGE B. WATERS WASHLINGTON, Deo, 11-—The ef fect of different kinds of tires and weights of care on good roads In| | being worked out py the bureau of public roads, department of agricul ture, Experts in the burean have invented a number of machinen to test how hard certain kinds of truck tires hit a road surface when they strike a rough place in the pavement. To show the importance of pro |nertbing the kind of tires that shall travel over certain roads, recent testa were made with a threeton truck, carrying a 4%-ton load #o that the total weight on each rear wheel Was 7,000 pounds, the unsprung por tion being 1,700 pounds and the sprung portion 5,300 pounds. The truck was equipped first with an old solid tire that had been worn down to a thickness of one inch. Then, with exactly the mre load on the truck, a wheel was fitted with a new rolid tire 2% Inches in thick teas, Next pneumatic tires 42 by * inches, Inflated to a pressure of 142 pounds per square inch, were used. The following table shows very clear. ly the bad effects an old tire ia ike ly to have on a road surface and the comparative lack of demtructive im- pact when cart are equipped with pneumatic tires: Impact Speed Old TI aT 4 103 1 toa. 146 24.600 Ibe. In addition to truck compact testa, the bureag is making compact teats of actual rond abs, wear tests of paving, subgrade and drainage expe riences and is examining subgrade samplew taken from places where road surfaces have actually failed And to the levying of taxes against vehicles, to make them pay for the roads tn proportion to the amount of wear and tear they cause, xperts my that for heavy trucks the axle load and effect of tires should be considered; for ordinary automobiles the horsepower of the engine would be the measure of trac Uce effort the machine exerts on the surface. There are so few steel tires that they are hardly considered im the bureau's investigation. E we in bad shape and cause ft to go to pieces under lighter trafic, ‘The best policy is to bar the heavy grucks ‘The actual wearing off of the mur- face of & road has been little con: | sidered, as all rubber-tired vehicles act about the mime on it. Lower Prices Seen in High Fuel Supply Motorists are expecting a nation- | Wide reduction in gasoline prices to follow the action of the Standard Oli | companies of New Jersey and Louls- | | tana, which announced a drop of 1) | per comt per gallon recently. Official government reports and figures of the oll authorities show | | that fuel production will break all | records in 1920, The American Pe- trolaum Institute predicta a domestic i) output of 450,000,000 barrels, be [aides a Mexican production of 125,- | 000,000 barrela, This means a gain lof 19 per cent tn the United States fieldn. In addition to the gain tn produc- tion, much of the fuel formerly wast- ed can be saved, The bureau of mines has pointed out how 200,000,000 gai- | lons of gasoline can be raved annu ally by reducing evaporation of the} fuel that is delivered thru pipe lines to refineries, Refining companies have augment od the general production due to greater oll output by introducing bet ter “crackling” processes to get gas oline trom petroleum. As « renult, im somo fields the gasoline output from the same amount of ol] ip now doubled. Heavy investments are being made by the ofl not only In new machinery, but also in exploration, drilling and research, Faced by 4& ponsibie serious whortage early In the | present year, the petroleum has | achieved a degree of growth never before experienced within so short a period, One of the largest of! contracts on record haa been closed between the the PARTMENT DLTRAILERS AND TRACTORS Ti |An 0.HENRY Story aDay We Celebrate | Copyright, 1920, by Doubleday, Page @ Co.; published by special ar rangement with the Wheeler Byn- dicate, Ino, “In the tropter,” Bibb, the bird fancier, was saying to! me), “the seasons, months, fort nights, week-ends, holidaym, dog days Sundays and yésterdays get so jum bled together in the shuffle that you never know when a year has gone! by until you're in the middle of the next one,” “Hopaiong” Bibb kept his bird store on lower Fourth Avenue. Hoe was an ex-seaman and beach-comber who made regular voyages to south ern ports and imported personally conducted invoices of talking parrots and dialectic paroquets, He had a miff knee, ek, and nerve. I bad gone to him to buy a parrot to pre sent, at Christmas, to my Aunt Joanna, | “This one,” eald I, disregarding Ms) homily on the subdivisions of time “thin one that seems all red, white and blue—to What genus of beasts| does he belong? He appeals at once | to my patriotiam and to my love of | discord in color schemes.” “That's a cockatoo from Ecundor, oF mid Bibb, “All he has been taught to way is ‘Merry Christmas.’ A sea sonable bird. He's only seven dol-| lars; and I'll bet many a human has} stuck you for money by making the mame speech to you.” And then Bibb laughed suddenly and loudly. “That bird,” he exptained, “reminds me. He's got bis dates mixed. He) ought to be saying ‘To pluribus | unum,’ to match his feathers, instead | of trying to work the Santa Claus) Hop long” | and shook his glass barra off “All of @ mudden one day me ana Liverpool find the trade of commit ting surgical operations on banana stalke turning to aloes and quinine in our mouths, It’s a selzure that often comes upon white men in Latin and geographical We wanted to be addressed in language and nee the smoke of a steamer and read the real transfers and gents’ outfitting ads in an old news paper, Even Soledad seemed like a center of civilization to us, so thar evening we put our thumbs to our at Don Jaime’s fruit stand ar feet “It was only 12 miles to Soledad but it took me and Liverpool two days to get there, It was banana grove nearly all the way, and we got twisted time and again, It was like paging the palm room of a New York hotel for a man named Smith. "When we saw the houses of Sole dad between the trees all my distin clination toward this Liverpool Sam up in me. I stood him while we were two white men against the banana brindles; but now, when there were prospects of my exchanging even cuss words with an American citizen, | put him back in his proper place, And he was a sight, too, with his rum-painted nose and his red whiskers and elephant feet with leather sandals strapped to them. I suppose I looked about the same. “It looks to me,’ says I, ‘Tike Great Britain ought to be made to keep such gin-willing, scurvy, un becoming mud larks as you at home instead of sending ‘em over here to degrade and taint foreign lands. We kicked you out of America once and we ought to put on rubber boots and do tt again.’ “Oh, you go to ‘ell,’ says Liver- pool, which was about all the repar tee he ever had. “Well, Soledad looked fine to me after Don Jaime'’s plantation, Liv. countries estate nose rome graft. It reminds me of the time me | erpool and me walked into it side by |after wo got there, for lack of evi anfi Liverpool Sam got our ideas of | things tangled up on the coast of! Costa Rica on account of the weather and other phenomena to be met with im the tropics, “We were, as ft were, stranded on\ that «ection of the Spanish main with no money to speak of and no friends that should be talked about either. We had stoked and second cooked ourselves down there on a fruit steamer from New Orleans to try our luck, which was discharged, dence. There was no work suitable to our Instincts; #0 me and Liverpoo! began to subsist on the red rum of | the country and such fruit as we could reap where we had not sown. | It was an alluvinn town, called Sole- dad, where there was no harbor or future or recoursa. Between steam- ers the town slept and drank ruzm. It only woke up when there were bananas to ship. It war like a man sleeping thru dinner until the des. nert. “When me and Liverpool got so low down that the American consul wouldn't speak to us, we knew we'd struck bed rock. “We boarded with a snuff-brown lady named Chica, who kept a rum- shop and a ladies’ and gente’ restau. rants in @ street called the calle de jos Forty-seven Inconsolable Saints. When our credit played out there, Liverpool, stomach overshadowing his sensations of nobleam oblige, married Chica, This kept us in rice side, from force of habit, past the alibora and the Hotel Grande, down crons the plaza toward Chica’s hut, where we hoped that Liverpool, be ing & husband of hers, might work his luck for a meal. “As we passed the two-story little frame house occupied by the Ameri- can club, we noticed that the balcony had been decorated all around with wreaths of evergreens and flowers, and the flag was flying from the pole on the roof. Stanzey, the consul, and Arkright, a goldmine owner, were smoking on the talcony. Me and Liverpool waved our dirty hands toward ‘em and smiled real society smiles; but they turned their backs to us and went on talking. And we had played whist once with the two of ‘em up to the time when Liverpoot held all thirteen trumps for four hands in succession. It was some holiday, we knew; but we didn't know the day nor the year. “A little further along we saw a reverend man named who had come to Soledad to build a church, standing under a cocoanut palm with his little black alpaca coat and green umbrelia. “"Boys, boys! says he, thrn his blue spectacies, ‘is it as bad as this? Are you #o far reduced? HUMOR PATHOS ROMANCE | “*We're reduced, says I, ‘to very ulgar fractions.’ “It ie indeed sad,’ exys Pender: gant, ‘to see my countrymen tn euch clreurmstances.’ | “‘Cut ‘art of that hout, old party? mys Liverpool ‘Cawn’t you tel @ member of the British upper dasses when you see one” told Liverpool, “‘shut up’ I "You're on foreign soil now, or that n Of it that’s not on you." And on this day, too! goes om Pendergast, grievou»—'on this most glorious day of the year when We should all be celebrating the dawn Christian civilization and the down fall of the wicked.’ “I did notice bunting and bouqneta decorating the town, reverend,” saya I “but I don't know what it was for. We've been so long out of touehl with calendars that we didn’t know whether it was summer time or Bat urday afternoon “ ‘Here is two dollars,’ mys Pen dergast, digging up two Chili silver wheels and banding ‘em to me, “Ge, my men, and observe the rest of the |day in a befitting manner’ ‘Me and Liverpool thanked him: kindly, and walked away. pea! | “Shall we eat?’ I asks. | “Oh, ‘elf says Liverpodl” | ‘What's money for?” “Very well, then,’ I exys, ‘aimee | you insist upon it, we'll drink’ a “So we pull up in a rum shop and get a quart of it and go down on tha” |beach under a cocoanut tree amd crlebrate, “Not having eaten anything E: |oranges in two days, the rum | immediate effect; and once more | |conjure up great repugnance | the British nation, | “Stand up here,’ I exys to Liver pool, ‘you scum of a despot monarchy, and have another dose Bunker Hil. That good man, Pendergast,’ says I, ‘sald we were observe the day in a befitting ner, and Qm not going to see money misapplied.” “Oh, you go to ‘ell? says pool, and I started in with @ left-hander on his right eye. “Liverpool had been a fighter but dissipation and bad company taken the nerve out of him In minutes I had him lying on the waving the white flag. bs “"Get up,’ says I, kicking him the ribs, ‘and come along with me “Liverpool got up and followed hind me becanse it was a habit, wipe ling the red off his face and nose, — led him to Reverend Pender z shack and called him out. “‘Look at this, sir,’ says at this thing that was once @ Britisher. You gave us two \ and told us to celebrate the day. star-spangied banner still Hurrah for the stars and eagles? — “Dear me,’ says Pendergast, ing up bis hands. ‘Fighting on On Christmas “Take him for six dollars,” Hopa-long Bob. “He's got his and colors mixed.” ‘The view the bureau experts take| Mexican Petroleum Co, and of taxing certain kinds of vehicles | Standard Ol Co. of New York, under land tires so that they will have to| which the former is to deliver to the pay for the damage done, in, instead. | Standard of New York 150,000,000 to prevent vehicles from using a road | barrels of gasoline during 1921. that will caune it to break down| Added to the possibilities of the and fried plantain for a month; and then Chica pounded Liverpool one morning sadly and earnestly ‘for fifteen minutes with a casserole hand ed down from the stone age, and we structurally. For instance, there might be 50 miles of road that cont $2,000,000, road capable of accommo- dating three ton trucks, There might be @ dozen five-ton trucks that would want to use the road. It would be impossible to tax them eufficient to pay the damage they would do, for one trip over it would put the road © AFTER A visit DA TRiends House you CRANKED UP Your TUWER — AND AFTEle EVERYTHING WAS SAID You -theew in -TH’ CLUTCH 1 START AND ~ WOULDN'T IT MAKE You MAD?!!! | North American fields are those in South America, Egypt and the East | Indies. Russia iq also & great poten- Ual source of ofl. Leads on motor trucks tn excess of 24,000 pounds are not permitted to operate ever the streets of MN | waukee, Wis. knew that we had outwelcomed our liver. That night we signed an en- fagement with Don Jaime McSpin oma, a hybrid banana fancier of the place, to work on his fruit preserves nine miles out of town, We had to do it or be reduced to sea water and broken doses of feed and slumber, “Now, speaking of Liverpool Sam, I don’t malign or inexculpate him to you any more than I would to his face. But in my opinion, when an Englishman gets as low as he can he's got to dodge so that the dregs of other nations don’t drop ballast on him out of their balloons. And if he's a Liverpool Englishman, why, firedamp is what he's got to look out for. Being a natural American, that’s my personal view. But Liver. pool and me had much tn common. We were without decorous clothes or ways and means of existence, and, as the saying goes, misery certainly does enjoy the society of accom- Plices. “Our job on old McSptnosa’s plan- tation was chopping down bapana stalks and loading the bunches of fruit on the backs of horses. Then @ native dressed up tn an alligator hide belt, a machete, and a pair of AA sheeting pajamas, drives ‘em over to the coast and piles ‘em up on the beach. “You ever been tn a banana grove? It's as solemn as a rathskeller at 7 a.m. It's like being lost behind the scenes at one of these mushroom musical shows. You can't see the sky for the foliage above you, and the ground is knee deep in rotten leaves, and it's wo still that you can hear | the stalks growing again after you) chop ‘em down, “At night me and Liverpool herded in a lot of grass huts on the edge of | lagoon with the red, yellow and| black employes of Don Jaime. There | we lay fighting mosquitoes and lis- tening to the monkeys squalling and! the alligators grunting and splashing | in the lagoon until daylight with | only snatches of asleep between times, | “We soon lost all idea of what time of the year it was, It's just about! 80 degrees there in December and June and on Fridays and at mid night and election day any other old time, Sometimes it rains more than | at others, and that's all the differ. ence you notice. A man is liable to| live along there without noticing any | fugiting of tempus until some day | the undertaker calls:in for him jus' when he's beginning to think about cutting out the gang and saving up| @ little to invest in real estate, | “I don't know how long we work: 4 for Don Jaime, but it was thru| two or three rainy spells, elght or 10 | hair cuts, and the life of three pairs of sailcloth trousers, All the money! we earned went for rum and tobacco, but we ate, and that was something, SKAGIT BAY LAND irgin Soil, Sub-Irrigated, Level. No Stumps. Stones. No Brush. Just Rich Garden Lands and Only $20.00 Per Acre, on Easy Terms for a Short Time Only. You want a tract of good farm land. We have it for you. means will not permit of your improved land, but we have land that is within your 41 . prices asked fi paying the bi Ps that will in @ year or so be just as valuable as the best U anywhere in the State of Wash ment to the state constitution it is up to us to dis ington. der the new of land and get it into the hands of jg! sad who Spatomate it for a home at some future date, or t e state can tal under the Eminent Domain Act and sell it to people for us. refer to select the ands that we must d amount, and have sold since the of our total sales. Your opportunt soon pass, as it will all be from no’ ople Vig vu become th ove of, and for that reason we are some 7,500 acres out of the orl) chased. We have sold a consi to get @ part of this land ts now, sold or we wil owners of the y deat 12,000 acres that we lerable more than half of first of December a large 1 raise the fat ag You can buy now at above price. A fow da: d you cannot buy without paying more. The Tings welt worth $100.00 per acre in its it now for only family and to thi fow es of this land asx It is your right to own to you at a price and on conditions. 00 per acre. Tt costs yon nothing to come to what we are offering you. Present condition, and you ean You owe it to your future, public to make provision for your old me good land, and we are offering terms to meet your present financial our office and Investigat Our firm is well known in this city and no one can charge us with any unfair dealings. W. to meet the public and get acquainted. We can be of nervice te you and you will be glad Wilt ‘bear the closest tasp: the most critical met us, sest inspection. We court the investigation Our offer is legitimate Rverything in connection with our offer is open to you. Come | and get full particulars, Write or phone for information Join our next excursion and see what we are offering you. Buy now. Don’t waft. It will The price ts going up soon, Make yourself a Christm long winter evenings, with money tn the ban from which you produce your own milk, cre: and sweet. Your chickens in the hen house—fres! and vegetables in your cellar and pantr that you ppy and contented state not th: ‘Then compare this s ate, with @ posttion or a job t at any time ‘the man above you woodshed, and healthy, hi all time present a farm © come. We speak of the man above you, meaning your boss, Wh: intendent or the one for whom one above you? Why not elevate yourself to bos independent and your own Many people cannot do this, for they haven't the ng it to you. If you tho author of your own success or but you have and we are offeri: alone are to blame. You are failure. Will you make an effort to h one personally, but you can rea opportunity has passed. be too late in @ very short time your fami) ;. & cow in the am and butter, pure erg ¥ruti plent: eg - . in your know will xeep you in this winter only by eof affairs with your t you may be fired lesires to fire you. ould there be being ‘nlon ie 730, you work. e place of Yourself? We cannot ace every= this ad and see us before your | Do ft now—tomorrow never comes. We are at your service SPARKS & DYE 1220 Second Avenue a Phone Elliott 5015 Open from 8 a. m. to © at Night,

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