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The Coffeyville Daily Journal from Coffeyville, Kansas • Page 2

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Coffeyville, Kansas
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2
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THE COFFEYVIliE DAILY JOURNAL, MONDAY EVENING, DECEMBER 6, 1915. PAGE TWO. 5-a-aj Cash nat 1 1 Market unchanged. No. 2 white, I Cash Data Market unchanged Is It Real Ivory? VO EYES A YOU ET RID OF THAT COUGH Don't try to wear that cough out; it may get the best of you.

In fact, it surely will if permitted to run along. There is absolutely no need of it, for a few it certainly looks like it, feeisNo, it is not real Ivory, but like it, and can ve engraved like the old Tusk Ivory. The newest, most beautiful product employed in the making of Toilet Articles Persian Ivory. than natural woods in wearing handsomer, than silver in appearance. Donot miss seeing our line Parisian or White Ivory.

You will delighted with them. You will be at the price. When the evening "of life comes with its closing shadows when the lights begin to fade then the very best aid that the ingenuity of man has devised, seems none too good for ageing eyes. Christmas eyes should be eyes of enjoyment and good sight. Without good eyes or good help in the "way of good glasses, there can be no Christmas cheer for many.

Then why not give some dear one the help that is craved and the joy that right glasses and good sight will bring. Bear in mind that age is no criterion for the need of glasses. Old eyes may be eyes of the young or middle aged, so in 'considering your Christmas gifts, father, mother, sister, brother, aunts or cousins, may all be glass subjects if you are looking for sensible, useful and real joy-giving presents. BUCKMASTER'S Good Sight Optical Shop 815 Maple St. Kress Bldg.

ile; No. 2 mixed, 42c. Lash Bye. 8990c. Cash Hay.

Market unchanged. Wheat Receipts. Five hundred eighty-seven cars. Close Wheat. Dec, May, Close Corn, Dec, G4c; May, 68V2C I Cattle.

Receipts. 20.000. Market stpndxr rt loc lower. Prime fed staers. 9.5(a) 10; dressed beef steers.

$7 md heifers, $4(5)9: stackers nnd eeders, bulls. 4.S0ffi calves, $6(5)9. Hogs. Receipts. 13,000.

Market 10c to 25c lower. Heavy, packers and butchers, light, Butter. Creamery, 32c; firsts, 30c; seconds, 28c; packing, 19c. Eggs. Firsts, 29c; seconds, 20c.

CHICAGO. 5y The Associated Presa. Chicago, G. Close Wheat ec, May, $1.1934. Close Corn.

Dec, 68c; May, 71c. Close Oats. Dec, 43c; May, 46c. Close Pork. May, $17.97.

Jan. Close Lard. May, $9.77. Cattle. Receipts, 34,000.

Market weak Beeves, calves, 10.2; cows and heifers, $2.608.10 liogs. Receipts, 80,000. Market dull, 15c to 25c lower. Light, mix 2d, heavy, liffR, LOCAL MARKETS Wells Bros. Commercial Co.

quoted the following prices for country products: Hens 9c Springs 9c Broilers Old roosters 4t taggy young roosters 7c Geese Live Turkeys 14c Ducks 9c Pigeons, dozen 60c Eggs, dozen -8c Country lard 1 Retail Prices Quotations furnished by the Square Deal Seed company: Flour Corn Meal 2.15 Bran 1.10 Bran and Shorts 1.15 Shorts 1.30 Chops $1.45 Alfalfa Meal 1.15 Alfalfa Molasses Cotton Seed Meal Linseed Oil Meal Shell Cryseo Grits Kaffir Com Corn, por bu. 1.20 1.711 2.20 l.OO 1.00 1.15 .75 .55 Jats (white) Cream and Cutter Local quotations furnished by th ce Cream Depot: Butter fat .27 Butter, wholesale .30 Grain Quotations furnished by the Patterson Grain company: wheat, new Oats "orn. white (new) Corn, Yellow (new) Kafir Rea- 1.00 .25 .50 .48 .90 to 'their home Garnett, this morning after a three weeks' visit here with their Mrs. Charles Hook, and iamily, West Eighth. G.

H. Logan, who spent several days Jvingxisner last icmiu home Saturday. Fall Music Festival Tonight The promoters of Coffeyville's first fall music festival are certain that people who attend -the event, which vill be at the First M. E. church will be amply repaid for their dme and the small admission charge, besides encouraging bettor music for chis city.

The program which is iven under the auspices of the band and the choir of the First M. E. (a) March, "Semper Fidel is" Sousa b) Intermezzo, "The Wtduing of the Rose" Jessel "Hungarian Coffeyville Concert Band. (a) (b)' "Jerusalem, Turn Cn. Gounod 'O Divine Redeemer" (iounod First M.

E. Church Choir Soprano and baritone, "God Shall Wipe Away All Tears" Cara Roma Miss Jones and Mr. Pfafienberger. (a) March, "America "Serenade Eventide" King (c) Remick's Hits No. Coffeyville Concert Land Soprano solo.

"Ave Miss Muzz "Unfold, Ye Portals" Cii. Gounod Choir, Piano, Organ and Band. "Star Spangled Banner" by entire audience, choir and band. iVIIAT SAVING WILL BO Putting Away Ten Percent of One" learnings ViH Make Man -on Small Salary Independent Kansas City, Dec. C.

Once-up a time there was a young man who started a fairy stery just that way MMTr BEST IF HEADACHY, BILIOUS SICK CONSTIPATED Best for liver and bowels, bad breath, bad colds, sour Got a 10-eent box. Sick headache, biliousness, coated tongue, head and nose clogged up with a cold always trace them to torpid liver: delayed, fermenting food the bowels, or sour, gassy stomach. Poisonous matter clogged trie in testines, instead of being cast out of the system, is re-absorbed into the blood. When this poison reaches the delicate brain tissue it causes congestion and that dull, throbbing, sickening headache. Cascarets immediatelv cleanse the stomach, remove the sour, undigested rood and foul gases, take the excess bile from the liver and carry out all the constipated waste matter and poi- ons in the bowels.

A Cascaret tonight will simply straighten you out by morning. They work while you sleep -a 10-cent box trom your druggist means your head clear, stomach sweet, breath right, complexion rosy and your liver and nver ana nqweis regular lor montns. Don't be. satisfied with less than the best when you buy bread, for it isn't necessary. Bear in mind that NORTH POLE BREAD is the best and tell your jrocer you want it and nothing else.

North Pole Bread costs no more than is asked for inferior bread "and tastes better and lasts longer. In North Pole you have excellence and purity combined. TRY A LOAF It Vill Please You iue Bibbcn Bak6y HOME OF GOOD BREAD Phone 610 912 W. 8th St. i MIRRORS HAIR BRUSHES COMBS POWDER BOXES TRAYS BUFFERS, ETC.

Florea Drug Phone 29. P. B. Florea NEWS IN BRIEF I'Miss Mabel Haynes returned this morning to Winfield after a. week end visit here with Miss Margaret Elinor H.

Codding spent the day yesterday in Osawatomie on the hill. Messrs. L. A. David and 0.

O. Con-don made a business trip to Garnett today. Oysters on the shell, oyster fry, shell roasts, Michigan celery. Hotel Mecca. R.

G. Garden and W. Nowcomb went to Winfield today cn business. W. B.

Bentley made a trip to Garnett today cn business. J. W. Dean, general superintendent of the, Missouri Pacific at Little Rock, was through here today on an inspection trip. It's easy to find him.

Try Mc-Nuity's. G. D. Fointer went to Frcdonia yesterday to visit relatives. John Shawbell and Leslie Scoville went to Edna last night to visit friends.

D. E. Allen spent the day jester- day at Edna visiting fiienris. Roy Long was up from Bartlesville yesterday visiting friends here. 4 Meet rae at McNulty's.

A. I. Wiseheart and familv snent yesterday at Copart visiting his parents, Rev. and Mrs. I.

L. Wiseheart. Charles Carpenter left this morning for New Orleans, where he will stay two weeks ol business mission. Best coffin in Coffeyville, i Narrow Gauge cafe. Mrs.

L. Sakols arrived today from Milwaukee lor a visit here with her brother, L. N. Litman. Mr.

and Mrs. John I. Riggs motored to Bartlesville yesterday. Mrs. O.

E. Mehl returned Saturdav evening from Nowata, where shp han been with her sister, Mrs. W. Sande- ur: vcTin is sift. Lunch with us in Parsons.

Robert Sherman was called to Elk City yesterday by the illness of his mother. O. G. Bloomer visited home folks in Independence yesterday. Dr.

Van Gorder is confined to his reoms in the Kellogg building on ac count of illness. Mrs. William Enos of West Fourth street is reported to be ill. Miss Katherine Whipple is off duty at Strasburger's on account of illness. Miss Caroline Caby is off duty at the Kress store on account of illness.

Miss Lizzie Pruett has resigned her position as saleslady at the Kress Better qualities, of be surprised in of for to Company 120 West Ninth L. A. Florea store. Miss Elizabeth Hudson has taken her place. Mrs.

Elmer Hotton of Chanute was Coffeyville today on business. Mrs. Gus Maison, 1518 South Elm street, has returned home from a six weeks' visit at St. Louis, Mof, and Kansas City, Kan. Her daughter, Mrs.

Frank Wellman, of Kansas City accompanied her home for a week oi ten days' visit. Mrs. R. M. Godfrey of Nowata passed through Coffeyville this morning enroute to Sedalia, where she wil visit her parents until alter the firsi the year.

John Hudson was- up yesterday rorr Bartlesville visiting his parents, Mr and Mrs. Scott Hudson, G14 Easl Sixth. L. B. Chipley, general freight anc ticket agent for the spent today in Coffeyville on company business.

J. L. Epple left yesterday for hi home at Cleveland, Ohio, after being here a few weeks on business. Mrs. Alice Williams, who has been visiting at the home of her daughter, Mrs.

F. M. Fritts, 409 West Eleventh street, returned to her home at Cher-ryvale this morning. Misses Goldie Frost and Ruby Jamison went to Chanute this morning to spend a week's visit with friends. Mrs.

Joe Noyes, 211 East Eleventh left this morning for Keokuk, where she will make her home. Mrs. Loura Scott left this morning Hutchinson after spending a week here on business. Mrs. Lillian Richardson is confined 'her home, 80y East Eighth street, with Daniel Wells returned this morning from a trip to St.

Louis. Enroute hr stopped off for a short time in Kansas City. Mr. and Mrs. II.

A. Brook returned GOOD NEWS Many Coffeyville Readers Have Heard It and Profited Thereby "Good news travels fast," and tho many bad back sufferers in Coffeyville are glad to learn where relief may be found. Many a lame, weak and ach ing back is bad no more, thanks to Dean Kidney Pills. Our. citizens are telling the good news of their experience with this tested remedy.

Here is an example worth reading: J. G. Gilbert, 814 West Eighth street, Coffeyville, says! "We have used Doan's Kidney Pills in the home and they have always given the oest of results. I sunered so from back ache that for two or three days could not stoop. If I did, i.harp twinges darted through the center of my back kidneys.

Coids always settled in my kidneys and made me worse. Doan Kidney Pills have al ways removed these troubles in j-hort order 'and 1 can recommend them to ethers suffering from kidr.ey trouble, Price 50c, at all dealers. Don't simply ask for a kidney remedy get Doan's Kidney Pills the same that Mr. Gilbert recommends. Foster-Mil- bprn Buffalo, N.

Y. PHONE 1607 Scoop (c) on in doses of PENSLAR WHITE PINE SPRUCE BALSAM will relieve the cough and rid you of that very annoying and harmful cold 25c and 50c Bring Us Your Prescriptions THE COLUMBIA DRUG STORE FRANK COUnF.IX, Jl5r. Phones 127 and 4S9 WHEN WE IRON WE DON'T CRUSH Some laundries have ironing machinery that simply crushes the life out of your linen aftef it is laundered a few times. Our ironing is not done that Our process produces a beautiful smooth domestic finish without tho least injury to the goods. If our customers will keep track of the length of time their linen wears they will find that linen laundered by us will outlive work dolie by other laundries several weeks.

All we nsk is a trial. Phone us and we'll send a wagon The Roberts Laundry 709-711 Maple street Telephone 58 Coffeyville Furniture Co, UNDERTAKING Private ambulance service, and have always maintained chapel. Frank N. Skinner Percy C. Matthew Carl V.

Cash. Licensed Embalmeri Kansas and Oklahoma W. n. LAPE, Manager. Day Phone 99.

Night Phone 37 Coffeyville and Vicinity FOR SALE Royal typewriter, cheap. Inquire ut the Jones Plumbing Co. FOR SALE Best Protection In the Biggest Insurance Companies against Fire, Lightning, Windstorm, Tornado, Cyclone, Liability, Accident, Disease and Death. Frank McCIelian, Insurance and Bonds, 820 Walnut street Phone 62C. MISCELLANEOUS FOR INFORMATION about cheap land in Southwestern Arkansas, write W.

L. Perkins, Ashdown, Ark. G-G. MEN Our illustrated catalogue explains how we teach barber trade in shoit time, mailed free. Write MOLER BARBER COLLEGE, Kansas City, Mo.

4-G FARM LOANS DO YOU NEED MONEY? If you need money on an improved farm under cultivation near good markets let us know. Tho Guarantee Mortgage Trust First Natl. Bank Chicago, 111. 4-3. LADIES make shields at home $10 for 100.

Work sent prepaid. No canvassing. Send stamp. Ivankoe Mfg. St.

Louis, Mo. WESTERN UNION MESSENGER SERVICE furnishes messengers for all calls; uniformed messengers, prompt service. Let us deliver youx packages. ATTENTION FARMER AND RENT ER Why buy high priced lands or pay big rents when you pan buy laCJa in Eastern Colorado, at from $12 $20 per acre, on easy terms, that will raise crops of wheat, oats, barlev and corn, equal to Kansas mi yield and quality. For particular wite A E.

ZIEHME, 105 South LaSalle. Chicago. 5-2 THE JOE BOUILLY TRANSFER and Storage company "ia prepared to do all kinds of light and heavy transfer work. -Prompt attention and quick service given all' business en trusted to them. Fire troof storage house at 106 West Twelfth -street Dan Noble, manager.

Phone. 220 72. I LOST AND FOUND I LOST dozen photographs in ool worth store. Reward for re I "once upon a time." He changed the wording, though, to read "one at a time," and set $1,000 as the goal of his endeavors, with the unit renresent- Ied by a silver dollar. He saved his dollars, which incubated from dimes, with the result that he accumulated a fortune now reckoned as oe of the greatest in New York.

He started saving just because he chanced one ilay io dwell -upon the simple phrase, "once upon a time." Along with material goods, he acquired a vast fund of knowledge of economics and thrift, and one of the legacies he bequeathed the world was a foundation whose business it is to encourage people to save money. Tho cardinal rule lor saving as laid down by this authority was to set aside a stipulated sum out of the saver's income to be put into the savings fund whether school kept or not, whether the family went hungry or whether the stars fell. At least 10 per eeut, economists say, should be set aside by the average-salaried man to be placed in the savings fund. From years to year, this fund might be increased hy judicious investments. The American Bankers Association, through its savings bank section, has its experts each year survey the savings lields for new ideas.

One of tho plans recommended in 'die 1915 campaign for more savings takes the rute of the young man with the single purpose to pile up dollars one at a time, one upon another and evolves a systematic campaign through a term of years whereby the man who sets aside $5 weekly can double his income by middle life. Assumed, goes the illustration, that a young man in his twenties is earning a week, a year. In order to equal that income through per cent investments, he would need a capital of about $17,300. Let the young man open a savings account" with a bank that pays 4 per cent interest on savings, compounded semi-annually. In this account he should deposit $5 every week.

Whenever his principal uid interest equals or exceeds $1,000 his tip is to draw out that sum and invest in a first mortgage paying per cent a year, payable semi-annually. The mortgage interest should be deposited in the savings bank, and the performance repeated every time 000 accumulates. In twenty-eight years the principal will amount to $17,779.22, and the income from this sum invested in good 0" per cent mortgages will be upwards of $20 a week. Five dollars a week deposited in bank at 4 per cent per annum compounded semi-annually will amount to $1,123.89 in four years. These estimates allow nothing for taxes and commissions, the question of taxes being considered a liability against the salary income and not against the mortgage interest.

The question of commissions is eliminated when the saver, through the exercis- i ot a little discretion anu occasional conferences with his banker, seeks out his own investments for himself and makes certain that they are safe. In case the saver decides to accept a lower rate of interest than 4 per cent, he can add the difference from his salary income without suffering the slightest inconvenience. Three per cent is an accepted rate in Kansas City. No man is so poor that he cannot pay 1 per cent interest on his own savings. Commission Meeting The city commission met this morning and passed the ordinance calling for a special election to be held Tuesday, December 2S, for the purpose of voting $20,000 in bonds for the purchase of new machinery fo ithe city's light plant.

This additional machinery will double the present capacity of the plant and the bonds are to be paid off from the increased business. The light department is to erect a new building for the housing of the machinery out of surplus funds now oh hand. 1 MARKETS KANSAS CITY. Hy The Associated Press. Kansas City, Dec.

C. Cash Wheat. Market lc to 2j higher. No 2 hard, No. 1.08; No.

2 red, No. 3. $1.12. Cash Corn. Market unchanged to lc nigher.

No 2 mixed, No. G32G5c: No 2 white, Gl1i.c; No. 3, G3c. Sore Throat? Kam-E-Tlsol Will Heal It! Sore throat is not only painful it is dangerous! From sore throat, fatal diseases, such as diphtheria, can easily develop. Heal your sore throat now.

Comfort the irritated mucous linings and tissues of your throat. A little care now will save you serious trouble later. Try this effective, pleasing, simple and harmlesstreatment: gargle several times daily using 2 parts of warm water to one of Kam-E-Thol. Kam-E-Thol is simply a combination of camphor and menthol and other valuable healing ingredients. Kam-E-Thol is a thorough antiseptic and germicide.

It will soothe your sore throat immediately. Try it Many doctors recommend it! And if it doesn't give you quick relief, your money refunded. Most druggists have A large bottle 25c. If your druggist should not have a supply send us his name and 25c and we'll send a bottle to you direct. Insist on Kam-E-Thol.

Nothing else equals it. Try it today! Money back if not satisfied. The Kamethol Laboratories Co. Neodesha, Kan. We have what you want.

We carry in stock: Kansas Nut Coal Kansas Screened Lump Coal McAlester Washed Nut Coal Fernwood Grate Coal (Semi-Anthracite) Furnace Coal, Lump (Semi-Anthracite) Pennsylvania Anthracite Nut Coal SQ UARE DEAL SEED COMPANY 709 Union. Phone 57 Pay to F. H. WEAVER, Rear Peoples State Bank-Successor to Newman Realty Co. BY "HOP' COAL! 1 AXES uassmedfl mi WILL YOU BE MORE BEAUTIFUL tomorrow or next year? Then why not sit for your picture NOW, and use them for Christmas Gifts A dozen Photos make 12 nice gifts involving only a few minutes of your time.

LET FALK BE YOUR PHOTOGRAPHER The Bargain Counter of WANTED WANTED Your collecting. I do collecting of all kinds. R. L. Piepmeier, over Journal office.

Phone 54. G-3tf WANTED Watch and clock repairing; will call for and deliver; reduced prices. Fred Corman. Phone 997. 109 West 10th.

ll-29tf WANTED Household goods af all kinds. We pay cash or allow liberal prices in exchange. Let us make you f-f rrl 4i T. L'DPTTCnW an BROS. WANTED 8 or 12 laying hens, barred rocks.

Notify The Journal, giving price and particulars. 4-3 I FOB SALE -4 FOR SALE 1 pair black driving po nies and one 2-seated surry; at bargain. Call at 1105 South Davis street. 29-9 FOR SALE Store fixtures and office equipment consisting of wax fig ures, Lanson cash and package carrier system, snow cases, winaow nxiurtis, desks and Oliver typewriter. The Regulator, 1108-1110 Walnut St.

6-6 AUCTION SALE Shoes and dry croods. Saturday, December 4th commencing atone o'clock. 1015 South Walnut, east side of street. K. Andrews.

Col. R. I. Norris, auction eer. 3-3 FOR SALE Household, goods 6 rooms.

Will sell all or part. Phone 1130 or call 601 Beech. 4-3 FOR SALE Complete furnishings in 2-room house cabinet, gas range, linoleum, table, chairs, rockers, dishes, cooking utensils, couch, folding bed, dresser, etc. One month's rent in eluded. A bargain.

$7.50 cash; $1.50 weekly. House rents to purchaser at $3.50. Might rent furnished. See FERGUSON BROS. Tel FOR SALE Cyprus oil or water 'tank, 75 barrel capacity; cheap if aken at once.

Pearl Steam Laundry. Phone 444. 4-6 FOR SALE Ferguson Special. Kitchen Cabinet, as good as new, cheap if taken soon. Inquire 406 West Fourth.

OPEN EVENINGS SCOOP Is Going Right After Local Color 1 1 1 LfrWS I-S'SSId mrSSfeEtR A-huckfnmw I regular. oronen father. af" i Phone 12CC. turn to Falk's Studio. 3-3 9 I.

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About The Coffeyville Daily Journal Archive

Pages Available:
59,291
Years Available:
1880-1923