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Show Utah, Monday ikirmnu, Tiir mornixii Ek is, isoi. i)i:ri:.Mr.f:ii M i.gjl 'kz& 2 If in 1914--' - DIAMOND RINGS M DIAMOND CUFF BUTTONS. DIAMOND BROOCHES, DIAMOND LOCKETS, LADIES' CHAINS, set with diamonds. BEAUTIFUL BROOCHES. GENTS AND LADIES' FOB CHAINS. OPERA GLASSES. TOILET 6ETS. LADIES WATCHES. From $7 and up. BOYS' WATCHES, Including chain, 1.25. BUSWELL, Jeweler :ith st. 370 First Ilnor Wort of Z. C. M. 1. Will a Savins of 25 to 50 Per Cent vis perhaps an unworthy ellort It spun my part, hut the way It turned out may work ultimately for the general public good. Trifling the other afteraaon with the Spectrophonu in the darkness of its Inventor' s den, it occurred to me that (be possibilities it affonh-- as a labor saving device ware enormous, and I immediately atarted in to turn the tbing to account In that particular direction. Why ahonid I not, thought I, twist the inis a half dozen or more years into the fatnra and look up' some library or shops in which my own boons refuted, leek out those that were still Mt only unwritten but as yet of, copy down their contents tkas and thsre and so save myself both tbs physical and intellectual effort, however moderate, that would be book in their preparation?,.! fairly hugged myself with at the Idas, for I must confess that sometimes the labor involved in otherwise Involved de-U- of one of my books is alaoit as great aa that of the reader vho for some eonpelling cause is The required to peruse It. Bpactrophoae would make my cad of the work a practical alnecure. The lahar involved in the production or Ry augnoa opus would be no greater than that erf the ordinary copyist vho Ukas the manuscript of another ud reduces it to more legible form, aid If In thus avoiding the diflicult nad to achievement I were guilty of up moral offense it was at least only Wimt myself that I sinned, since it via so part of my plan to appropriate to ay ewn uae the work of any other. I Utils thought as this brilliant idea Uuhed 'across my mind of some of the risks I ran to my own pride in venturing upon such an enterprise, but was not long before .1 was dlsil-- 1 unwed. Turning tbs screw so that m lrus rested upon the year 1914 I ht to penetrate the .mysteries of Jh Boston Public library at that time. This superb creation of the public Mtt of the Hub architecturally still the preparation Y FANCYCAN KILL ranarkable case of death caused V lamination was recorded yesterday. at Cincinnati, depressed young girl out drank what bottle of carbolic 4 she aci.1, BeRti to be taken to a doctor, medical however, " npidljr sank and efforts, died. A showed no traces of "0 and the bottle of carbolic achle Z" untouched, while the bottle which she had drank the contents to have contained only a harmless mixture, aarjr can kill and fancy can cure, Proverb which, whether in that S,1..!!1 ,he raying of the North imT? ,9nceit can kill and conceit "wpde ai Mre. is quoted nt far and wide whers- - English language is spoken, fundamental foundation vitxlr bring it into contrast many mhnr proverbs. can kill! More than that, M.: ,'0,ll'le(." imagination call it uriil has killed strong, li(.;r'u unjy. m?- and where it has not il '' riven them disease of a mj - '''kable 1111 Wind or has produced t,low which the drugs imWi "jriy ktsV?,:7' "u ki'L how It actually wu demonstrated by the f M,,ntPIHev t the time Shwii. 'hen ti!0 Vf,r, In l full'd upon its present site, liui within I found si range changes. Not only were uiy own huuks liui to lie found ot upon its blii'K es. but none oihi-rs modem silt burs, fp bisiis where there hud once been reading rooms oi rare lecbeauty and of studious quiet, were ture or reading halls in which people were read to instead of reading lor themselves. Then- - was a Borneo ol curreut fiction, but it canto no lunger irom prill od luges as of yore, nut from large phonographs placed high sounding having upun plaifuruiit hoards upon them so that no word Issuing from the cavernous megaphonic Jaws should be lost. To the utterances of these at the moment of my intrusion upon the scene in at least sixty reading rooms were the consumers of the period listening. Each hall was crowded to its uttermost capacity, the audience made up for the most part of women and young persons much an indication that, however methods of publication udgbl havo changed in the course of a decade, the personal of the reading forces of the period differed little from that of today. Brief visits to each hall failed to disclose that out of sixty works of fiction in course of perusal that day anything of mine was occupying to (lie least degree any measure ot public attention. Withdrawing my eye from these large, literary gatherings, I jicered through the corridors of the building and was entertained to observs that for readers desiring hooks not of the current hour there had been provided individual phonographs located in alcoves, into which cyiluders containing the especial work desired were placed, and which were listened to In rapt attention through the usual insulated Wires wih rubber nozzle ends Connecting the ear drum of the consumer with the cylinder within, exactly aa the martial notes of Sousa itmrches are now conveyed to the public ear by slot machines in railway There stations and ferry houses. were Kipling cylinders and Anthony Hope alcoves and corners given over to a vast array of unknown popular authors, some of whom are now probwho ably mischievous schoolboy g, hate pom position as they hate squills perfect ly healthy man,, tmt who labored Under the belief that if he had a bath he would die. He coujwdcs laughed at him. and to demonstrate how absurd was his belief they stripped his clothes on and pul him iuto the bath. When they took him out of the water he was dead. It might be urged that he was suffering from some organic disease and the hhock of ihe waexaminter killed him. A ation was. however, held, and uu disease was discovered. How 'fancy." which Is. after all, only anolher name for the influence of the mind, can produce a disease which will udtimstely cause death was most st rll'.ingly shown in a case which has often been quoted.. was a case In a certain prison ihi-rof smakipox. The ict was known, as. fn some Inscruiable way which the authorities would probably find it difficult to explain, such facts always do get known ut the prisoners. One of sound, them, a perfectly strong, healthy man. showing no symptoms of into a cell in weakness, which he was told a prisoner suffering from Smallpox had died. The statement was iiiaccuraie. for there had never been a smallpox case In that ceil at all. In a day or two the man complained of being ill. In a few days more he exhibited every symptom of smallpox. As a matter of fact, he had smallpox. 'He said he was convinced he was going lo die. He did die-kil- led by "fancy" and smallixix which he acquired merely by fancy.'' was-move- the habit of baring every year two ohlriihpr T,TiBccl'd SAVED BY "FANCY." custom which had hren hJlj , down to them from Rome. In striking contrast with bis case Or. ' determined to see what was that of another prisoner. 11a was 4m a m"re expectation f death put Intp the cell In which the original mux He was Wl ran who w as perfect- - smallpox patient had died. 7 hniihj or assnred that no one bad died there Asuch a subject nad ever bad the disease in it. been lhiwi m 'h1 they would kill him lthough the room must have off y by opening his reins a warming with the germs thrown wsw. They got a bath of by the man who had died there only pri.t-nathe 111,0 which they put hie a short time before, bJ'v bllndfolked him and did not get smallpox or anything m with the point of a and tvmained perfectly healthy without drawing blood. during all the time be was kept there tin if th. lking to each other and afterwards. doubt berhuw they never It is Ei.il docthey have a dlacssa that fancy" t'llBjK? .bi f?'w- - The man was dead, tors on the whole preserve such aa doubt itnmiinitr from sickness, as. no never ratfa "n,niI Ibat he was bleeding also, brmus- - their patient BATH! trouble their head as to whet was Ihe Vr .T!,Kr FATAL a there was a voung last case the doctor has come from, "din-Tint Bl iVjnsi who was a that they, too, toil to catch disease. 1,1 trtuZvI ihem i.- - . - but who and other nauseous doi-es- , in (he ten yc.-:rthat ure yet to coim; seize their pens with ailit and wrest llti liiurii from brows that now are piu'.,.y wtaring it. As lor books as we know them, there wore none in sight iu the liosicn l'ublic library, rave off in one cottier of the librarian's room one single copy of Fle,.,-rieFinance.- by Thomas V. Lhwsoii, in a glues case.' kept as a mere curiosity for coming general ions to gaim niton in iiKloniKlimeut at the clumsy ways of their ancestors, and at the .o time as a reminder of what heights Boston had once attained to in lit ei try achievement. So far from pleasant wan this discovery that I withdrew my gaze for the moment an.l by a slight deviation of the direction of the machine from east to sou lit nest I drew the New York Public Library into Possibly I had no right to expect to find any of my books in the Boston Public Library, where there ia a! wins a rut lu-- r nicer discrimination exercised in the selection of books for public consumption than elsewhere. ' Massachusetts is protectionist in principle, not. only In politics but in its literary mutter as well, and Boston In particular has tver been careful to keep front the cats of her young an.l t hing savoring either of evil or of flippancy. New Ymk, on the other band. is. more cosmopolitan, and writers like Hull Caiue, .Marie Corelli and myself might hope lor a remg-niiio- n here, which in the home of Emerson, Huxley and Thomas V. would be denied ui for very good reasons. A man may write very good music, for instance,, for a Broadway theiure of the first cluss and yet fail to liave liis opera prodneed ov Mr. Conned' forces in the sacred presence of the four hundred at the Metropolitan Opera House. Similarly ii was no reflection upon Mr. Caine and Miss Corelli and myself if our particular style of literature was not favored at the Hub. New York's standard of taste was about as high as wc could hope to reach or is that the at least way I consoled myself for , the situation that revealed itself to me in the Boston library. In New York I fouud the magnificent library finished, but, alas! it was less like a library titan a huge liter-ir.v distributing agency, a sort of Like the pariment store of Lit-r- a. Host on library, it held no- books in tight, ami all its mailer was circulated, only with a dilfcmire which struck me as characteristic of the great, metropolis. Instead of.having reading rooms, thanks to the munificence of a distinguished uuvclitd who had recently died and left all his royalties to the library, a Installed house service bad been which enabled the pnldlc to get at home all the stores of letters the library held iu trust. ' The greater part 0 film, building had been turned into a power house by which thousands of volumes were transmitted hourly to the residences, apartments and tenement houses of the city; just as electricity is sent over a third rail in our own time fur the propulsion of our motor cam. As a nia'tcr of fact, every avenue, street, bme and road in the great city of New York bad been fitted with the wires of letters over which were constantly running the latest and best thought of the writers of the hour. It was as easy for a New York householder under this superb plan to secure his reading matter as it is for him today to turn on the gas for the illumination of his drawing room, or in the privacy of his hath to extract hot nr cold water by the turning on of a faucet. 1 was amazed at the wonderful ingenuity of the plan. That a novel placed in Ike central reservoir of the motor library could be phonngrapbicall.v transmitted to a reader In Harlem, Long Island C'lly or darkest Brooklyn by the mrre pressure of a button struck me aa amazing. I had once observe in thu late nineties of the nineteenth century that I had no doubt the day would come when books would be served by; book men to consumers daily, just, as milk and breakfast rolls are served by milkmen and bakers, but that a literary service would ever become a public ui lilt y like the service of water or 11m delivery of one's letters by Ihe postman I bad never even dreamed. Yer here, only ten years ahead of me, tlrx very thing was going on aa merrily and attracting as little public wondnr- 1 de-wi- ll J - phono-griipliicul- d fm-ii- It la a fact well known to evorvono who lias any experience of hospitals ail a strong emelie." Within a lew minutes eighty of the hundred beesuw that, whatever may be ihe custoni to- - violently sick, merelv as the result of day, the students often used to leave "fancy. the wards and go down to see fever cases in the room set apart tor all diseases of a suspicions nature, and go back to work in the wards with nal disturbances, vet Sir Samuel Wilks out carrying infection with them, has recorded one rase which was having tatter no other precaution than clearly due to the effects of menial emotion, a potent influence over that of washing their hands. fancy." This is siso a potent cause On the other hand, it is equally well Llj known that In the earlier days of his dyspepsia from which so many medical career every student suffers barristers suffer at the beginning of which they have to ap acutely from the disease about which ,h """iwi the professor uf medicine happens Iu pear ns It Is of a similar complaints in be lpctur tig at the time or Ibe student many other professions and callings. himself happens to bo reading. InMuch has liecn been wriiien. and deed. there afe many wotnen who. If more has been talked of late alsmt a friend says she is suffering in such- - raiicer. the primary cause anil origin h a way, at once get every one of whirh is being sought by, it would of the symptoms mentioned. n diflicult to sav. how btany scientific con scattered tlimimhnut the length FILLS OF IMAGINATION. It has been said that fancy" can and breadth of the world. Few people pervert the ordinary action ot drugs. would believe thai fancy." the inlbi-anso produce unlooked-fo- r results, enee of the mind, culd produce it, yet One day a poor won,&a went to a Rif George Pam-- t once wrote, "In doctor. Jler youth belonged to the many cases I have reason for to.dlev-tlmbefore ibe Board school, and she Ing that cancer had its origin in pm- was therefore ignorant of many of the longed mentsi anxleiy." facts with which the young people of Dr. Murchison also wrote. 1 have today are thoroughly well acquainted. been surprised how often patients She was suffering from insomnia, and with primary cancer of the liver have in order to produce sleep the doctor traced the catm of this ill health to ordered her some opium pills, but did protracted grief or anxiety. The rases not tell her the reason for which he have been far too numerous to be sc-- j gave them. counted for as mere coincidences." The woman knew nothing of opium,) While Dr. Snow, writing Tn the Lan-anindeed, she did not read the cel" in 380, said, The vast majority prescription, whioh was made up for. of rases of eanrer. espoclslly of th her in the pnlinarv way at the dlapen- - J breast and uterine cancer, are due to ssry. It was impressed upon her that mental anxiety." and mental anxieit she was to take two pills at bedtime, j is often closeiv akin to "fanrv" -Tha only pills with which she was sc-1-- London Express, quainted were the ordinary antlbilious i ones which are to be had at two a Do you not sometimes have soulful penny at every chemist's, ghe took the two opium pills, and although by yearnings which yon long to convey in every law of therapeutics the action words, but cannot?" asked tl.e sentiof opium la exactly opposite to that mental girl. Yea. Indeed." replied th of antlbilious piiis. the woman was so young I wasouce convinoed in her mind, that the action m dreadfully anxious to For mmy. bm. I didnt have rn of aI pills was the same that the price of a telegram." London opium pills produced as powerful an as If they had been of the bum- - ! Bls bilious variety, but without making her slpep. "Nw , my nxii. said tlie gallant On another occasion th houeur-gen- leader, "don't forget the watchword at a hospital gave some colored give no quarter! With n yell of waier only that an! nothing more-- to the attacking dashi-a hundred different pwiicnis. Good for Ihe .lour In another paity inMant the hadveiiK." be caM, when the last one room was empty, ftr vng the waiter's 1 faavg had swallow pd ih-- draught, oiiisii't'ifhs.1 baud! Cleveland Ixw.b-r- . , ! and-suc- I d e ! mem as t bough it wen the most ua-tttral ihiug in the world. K.ve and ear fixed upon this great Motor library I was able to ('utral aim-ersurvethiug of the methods employed. Tlie consumer living, say, in the Bronx would ring up the Bronx r library anil call for 6.343 Isle of Man. The teleliooii girl at the Bronx would immediately connect the caller with the central library, the wire, by means of s large switchboard, would bo In turn connected with cylinder No. C.IMJ Isle of Mnn on shelf No. 37, sixth floor, alcove 222, and in ten seconds Hall Caine's latest novel, "The Bloom-sle- r of fireba" would go rat lliug over the wires up through Central Park and Harlem into the regions of tbs Bronx, Whrre the woud-breader was anxiously awaiting the results of her call. Other calls similarly made for H4kB Uraniercy, front Mnrray send Hill, would immediately Mr. Thirls latest romance into the hnudidr sontn of tair ad outer of his genius; 624,928 Brooklyn, called from Manliaitanvllle, would carry the poems of Edwin Markham to some would-bconsumer's ears and so on. Not a known boos in the whole history of letters but could be e "rung up" at this marvelous a under this even more marvelous system without an Immediate response unltws one were lo receive the telephone response of the present hour: Ring off, please, the hire's busy." Of course, there were inconveniences, aa 1 was made aware by hearing a complaint from a lady In flout h Brooklyn, who was very wroth because in ihe uddHt of an eacitlng episode In a historical novel by Stanley Weyman somebody had switched her off to the last chapter of "The Simple Ufa,' by Charles Wagner, but the usual ex ense of a crossed wire explained this to her satisfaction, and It was dear that In the main the acrvlce worked to Ihe beat interests of everybody. SiicIi whs Ihe library scheme of 1914, and of course, things being so all tbs letters of the period being thus locked up in cylinder form and securely stored away upon the shelves of the big institution at. Forty-secoand Fifth avenue, I was unable lo form a connection with the central office or Rub-Moto- - sub-statio- e e tore-hous- n f wan-deriu- put-tin- of yeue linen Intereat bill yooT The high grade machinery and modem methods of the Ogden 8team Laundry will add from 26 per cent to 60 per cent to the life ef your linen, WE DO NOT use Injurious cleansing agents. WE DO NOT crack the cel lira, WE DO NOT tear out button holes. WE DO wash colored geode and woolena In Distilled wa- ter. Are we laundering your linen f If net you are losing men ey.. Try vs. OGDEN SIMM , UU!W ,! East of the Reed Hotel. Both Phoneo 174, 1 THE ITALUNI SWISS COLONY flaost H (he Padfle coast raise Ito wtaos grapes on the Paelfio eoasLTheir are absolutely pure. If you wish to dl good cheer for the holiday yyiM some of their wine fn order BROS. Mw W KIUZZINI 100 The Owl Saloon 2h L CNaltl Brest Prop, No. M2 Dealers la first sUas liquors of alt UndA wlaaa and brandy. All goods 4 llvered to sny part of city ornrr qnwL Saturday. Whisky 76 eta to 1 quarts, $L .Wine 86 eta pr. quart, Brandy, 91 quart Whlikey pr. gaL TRIMMED AN ORATOR. DOGS. UMoK O'NEILL BROS Pro Hon. John E. Roche of Scranton was A small sensation was created yes'Phene 136e. a mebres of the Pennsylvania Legis- terday at Stliuaon's Cafe by a siring lature during the first Patti ton admin- at dogs which was led In, sicked iu. istration. He used to tell a good story dragged In and pushed hi. by numerabout how a pretentious orator was ous n.all boys and other owners oi squelched. Two young lawyers from high grade canines, who had mine in mipoining districts had been trying dur- answer to an. ad they had seen in a ing an entire session to make reputa- paper the previous evening. Mr. LivOPEN DAY AND NIQHT. tions as orators. When the apportion- ingston. who is ever fond of a Jol.e. erders ment bill was taken urn of them be would have a little run at everything hare the best Blurt nd 6 WHERE TO EAT BOSTON CAFE up. thought aft all hours, the exptmse of Mr. Btiuson. who ruus ef gams and fish In assn a cafe under bis pises of business, AS kinds Extra flee dinners Sunday, front and Inserted an ad la the paper tn 12 to 2 p. nx, 250. Fine lunch from the effect that a dug was wanted si 11 tedand 9tofip.m. .Mr. did Rtimson not take said cafe. A YOU NO, SUI Pray sekindly to the joke, however, ami BMXtMnUeflttLS treat cured an officer and started oa a si ill hunt. But Mr. Livingston in some way got. wind of the movement and If you want quietly left town. One mnn ventured, on Rtimsou's assertion that, the dog were returning out th front door, Beef Eastern Cora-Fe- d Uiat If the truth were known they would probably he found Mod up ia the go to Ballard & Rinckers kitchen. While a number of custom11 24th StroaC ers were sealed at. supper a Those Ka. IIS. ' nmn cams in and Inquired of the were for he a if looking proprietor watch dog. "Where's your dog7" ask"1 ed Mr. Rtimson. haven't any ," said the man, but I'm a good watcher fS myself." The man. however, was not CarpenlKlng Building, Retied np with the other dogs. ef pairing im Rsmedellng Houses Promptly attended tw All work Guaranteed. Enquire ef Ole N iaon, 646 Situ street. We Tre&t Telephone 126 y. I'JmStl-Bsh- w Bm IU Ttml TraakMU. Kfwmt Om Umm. IimM b lAtm TiurMm. tutu, HWM U-bm) IMmt Mmmm. BlaMar TimMm. CWtmm mMM of rMt OnaiUia, CkilSMB, spoke for five hours against the bill and whi-he had concluded his harangue, the other young mau took the floor fur another lengthy ebullition in favor tf tlm measure. In his peroration he said that he was entry to find his brother on the wrong sale, for there wits every reason ny limy should agree. VVe were raised together, we studied together, we playd log) her, we wer born in th same year; yes. even on the same .lay." Did 1 understand you to say that you were born on the same Hay? interrogated a member from Phila'delphia. Yes." came the prompt reply. tin the very same day?" "Ye, sir." "Then it murl have been s Tery einily day. said the Philadelphian. The orator sai down, squelched by roars of laughter. n j J one-arme- d Care rr lM n BM. itiS(W -- ct and could net any of the IMissihly get hold of my own Isioks even for my uwu benefit. It was with a thrill of joy, however, that I diwover-e- d that I was represented in the Tele-boo- k List" and could be called for at auy time by any oas who chose to ring up No. 41.12SJ Columbus; No. S6JM7 Hades and No. 7,737 Herald square. The titles and No. 7,737 llarald square. The Lilies of these books were unfamiliar to me, and I mast ssnumo are Mill to le written ia some metamorphosed condition (hat today I do not Andrew MacGarglll's Redream of: venge." "The Life Htory of Fergusou of Tluklelop" slid "The Inventions Msitbew Bilkerson of Butte." The discovery of these items filled my soul with a curiosity of ihe wildest suit, far 1 must admit that so far in my through life I have never yet even imagined that books having sneb titles could appeal to the kind of a const it nancy that I am moat eager to win to a friendly regard lor myself. Indeed, I am daily growing more end more earited over Ihe discovery that in 1914 nek works are to be credited to my Bios, for I frankly don't like the lit lea and It seems truly awful to me that I am inevitably scheduled to things, but I am, perforte, for Ihe moment compelled to sit in pal lance waiting for. another trial of the Spec- I roptaona to disclose to me the run- tents of those books, for just as I bad made my memorandum of the titk-- the inventor and owner of the apparatus returned and I was compelled to give up the machine to him. lie wanted lo look up the year 190K. lie had Just read Mr. Roosevelt's si element. that be would not rim again for the Presidency and he was anxious to in what the future had lo say on that subject. You never can tell so far ahead Jusi 1 bow things will ba." he said, and want tu lay a few bets with some inmy money telligent reason for on one Bills or the other." Of mb thing the reader may be assured. Lnless The Revenge of Andrew MactlargiU" and The Life Rtor) are boiler of Ferguson Tlnklelop" books than their titles suggest I shall never, never wriie them, eperlrophone or no eperlrophone to the cnuirery notwithstanding. Um IBumi. !r-- in w CkCMB. MB. THas' IBBB.I, WatMB. SMBB) TtwbMw Sk)a EIGHTH GRADE GRADUATES wJI receive 60 per cent on all pictures taken within the next SO daye at GASBERGS STUDIO, 270 26th St Mmb.bb haiaUM bm BmiiwiS nr M Sbwbib. SUM. Wwbib bM naBi TwM.TbmMw (ar Wa bsMi. BIobS Vim Oaf Sanr H raMria, BS,ISI. Imbmib, bm- - bm all Sarrama. I'Srin rn.BM bm DlaaMaa. Hm Tmtaiml Cma If fam Men Weak fna wr af Sa wmWmr waaSaaaaM at to tgawaaaw arena ar ibmS SansTnC AOtL T&S IU1 SKBSOS WO WakTIOTSLK VO. Wa Ban piMiwriMB la kf nWUaif tbs Im hBMb Mi CBBOTW mmmf ai smm. sbSas rrm.iMf own renas IK HITATK DISEASU jaia I nrr wr mnHAvs Bm mil truif a aki'l la iMaalusaf Wa irasswrw B.mwm Wm la H aanibsr war. Tbiala DRS. SHORES & SHORES. WHta fur UL Whennwaak Cured Pay a I WasarasM SmB an rxa akn aaua Mr MlMMmSsa. BiiKtf-ABU- TmaaM ot awUania ftmaMMn. Mm4i as. BvtSBVUTBOUiKI MM , BMa, SarmwnMM. Ouanr.baM. SvwiiU Varlanaaib. piaaamnf Mr SiwUbta Ol S I Iibbim (flMUwaM maarbaM, aaa.. Cwmsm SiaaS faLMa, aat bit WUI MB TMsmmUmM SWIa-itr- s. WSAhSrtSSe nf wab. OSS1I K NUTMO Ba m. ta I p. f Ml: Snatera aU MUaa lb a. Eipirt Specialist!, yMIfW MjOMMMMr 24S2 a. KavMlaca M IX Wash Ave. MONEY LOANED SALARIED PEOPLE Real Estate sad Chattel Loaaa ' Service qllck, eonfldeatlal sad private. No commlsslna. WESTERN BROKERAGE CO. 229-- 4 Eceiec Thaae 634-x- . Bidg |