Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 78, 30 March 1907 — Page 3

The Richmond Palladium and Sun-Telegram.

rpiLuJ

DAVID GHAffAfif ggfLM.ffS The governor was mine, and the legislature. Mine was the federal patronage, also all of It, if I chose, for Croffut. was my dependent, though he did not realize it; mine also were the indefinitely vast resources of the members of my combine. Without my consent no man could get office any--where in my state, from governorship and Judgeship down as far as I cared to reach. Subject only to the check of public sentiment so easily defeated if it be not defied I was master of the making and execution of laws. Why? Not because I was leader of the dominant party. Not because I was a senator of the United States. Solely because I controlled the sources of tho money that maintained the political machinery of both parties. The hand that holds the purse etrings Is the hand that rules if it knows how to rule; for rule is power pins ability. I was not master because I had the plum tree. I had the plum tree because I was roaster. The legislature attended to such of the demands of my combine and such of the demands of the public as I thought it expedient to grant, and then adjourned. Woodruff asked a three jnonths leave. I did not hear from or of him until midsummer, when he sent me a cablegram from London. He was in a hospital there, out of money and out of health. I cabled him $1,000 and asked him to come home as soon as he could. It was my first personal experience with that far from uncommon American type, the periodic drunkard. I had to cable" him money three times before he started. When he came to me at Washington, In December, he looked Just as before calm, robust, cool, cynical and dressed In the very extreme of the extreme fashion. I received him as Jf nothing had happened. It was not until the current of mutual liking was again flowing freely between us that I said: "Doc. may I impose on your friendship to the extent of an intrusion into your private affairs?" (He started, ami gave me a quick look, his color mounting. "Yes," he said after a moment. "When I heard from you." I went on. "I made some inquiries. I owe you no apology. You had given me a shock one of the severest of my life. But they told me that you never Jet that that that peculiarity of yours interfere with business." His head was hangng. "I always go away;" he said. "Nobody that knows me ever sees me when at that time." ,1 laid my hand on his arm. "Doc, Why do you do that sort of thing?" The scar came up into his face to put agony into the reckless despair that looked from his eyes. For an instant I stood on the threshold of his chamber of remorse and vain regret and well I knew where I was. "Why not?" he asked, bitterly. "There's always a sort of horror inside me. And it grows until I can't bear It. And then I drown It why shouldn't I?" "That's very stupid for a man of your brains," said L "There's nothing nothing in the world, except death that cannot be wiped out or set right. Play the game. Doc. Piny it 1th me for five years. Play It for all there is in it. Then go back, if you want to." He thought a long time, and I did not try to hurry him. At length he Bald, in his old offhand manner: "Well. Ill go you. senator; III not touch a drop." And he didn't. Whenever I thought t saw signs of the savage internal battle against the weakness, I gave him something important and absorbing to do, and I kept him busy until I knew the temptation had lost its power for the time. This Is the proper place to put it on the record that he was the most scrupulously honest man I have ever known. He dealt with the shadiest and least scrupulous of men those who train their consciences to be the pager servants of their appetites; he handled hundreds of thousands of dollars, millions first and last, all of It money for which he could never hare been forced to account. He had at one time as much as half a million dollars in checks payable to bearer. I am not confiding by nature or training. buU.am confident that he kept not a penny for himself beyond hi6 salary and" his fixed commission. I put his salary at the outset, at ten thousand a year; afterward, at fifteen, finally at twenty. His cimmisfcions, perhaps, doubled it. There are many kinds of honesty nowadays. There is "corporate honesty." not unlike that proverbial 'honor among thieves." which secures ft fair or fairly fair division of the Fpoils. Then there is "personal honesty, which subdivides into three kinds legal, moral and instinctive. Legal honesty needs no definition. Moral honesty defies definition how untangle its interwicings of motives of fear, pride. Insufficient temptation, sacrifice of "the smaller chance in the hope of a larger? Finally, there is inIPO Only those who have had pile ran realize the Mill nil Ulf i from the itching - ...uus ana oiirmti. or imagine the . , tola dt s doctor that a surgical operation Is the only cure. But if:1" afer. eurer. leta expensive and les Dr. A. V. Chasa'a Ointment which briDff relief almost instantly and effect thorouch care. -Thi Kreat oinuuent i eold Under a positive guarantee to nmt. - ..ti.f. fw e u&rautee to prove a aatUfao tory treatment tor Itching, bleedin and prol11? OP f,h Vuey b refunded, i cents a box. all dealer or Ur. A- V. Chaa redicine Co.. Buffalo. A. Y. For fale by Leo II. Flhe, . Druggist,

Almoner Tfff6Lif. tc. 1 ' miy bed-rock, unassallaible kind, live me the man who is honest sim.iy because it never occurs to him. And never could occur to him, to b? mything else. . That is Woodruff. There is. to be sure, another kind of instinctively honest man he who disregards loyalty as well as self invest in his uprightness. But there are so few of these in practical life that they may be disregarded. Perhaps I should say something here as to the finances of my combine, though it was managed in the main precisely like all these political-commercial machines that control both parties in all the states, except a few in the south. My assessments upon the various members of ray combine were sent, for several years, to me, afterward to Woodruff directly, in $1,000, $5,000 and $10,000 checks, sometimes by mail, and at other times by express or messenger. Tbes checks were always payable to bearer; and I made through Woodruff, for I kept to the far background n all my combine's affairs, an arrangement with several large banks in different parts of the state, including one at the capital, that these checks were to be cashed without question, no matter who presented them, provided' there was a certain flourish under the line where the amount was written in figures. Sometimes, these checks were signed by the corporation, and sometimes they were the personal checks of the president ' of some other, high official. Often the signature was that of a person wholly disconnected, so far as the public knew. Once, I remember. Roebuck sent me a thousand-dollar check signed by a distinguished Chicago lawyer who was just then counsel to his opponent in a case Involv? ing millions, a case which Roebuck afterward won! Who presented these checks? I could more easily say who did not. From the very beginning of my control I kept my promise to reduce the cost of the political business to my clients. When I got the machine thoroughly in hand. I saw I could make it cost them less than a third of what they had been paying on the average, for ten years. I cut off, almost at a stroke, a horde of lobbyists, lawyers, threateners without influence, and hangers-on of various kinds. I reduced the payments for legislation to a system, instead of the shameless, scandal-creating and wasteful auctioneering that had been going on for years. In fact, so cheaply did I run the machine that I saw it would be most imprudent to let my clients have the full benefit. Cheapness would have made them uncontrollably greedy and exacting, and would have given them a wholly false idea of my value as soon as it had slipped their short memories how dearly they used to pay. So I continued to make heavy assessments, and put the surplus in a eserve fund for emergencies. T thought, for example, that I might some day have trouble with one or more members of my combine; my reserve would supply me with the munitions for forcing insurgents to return on their agreements. This fund was in no sense part of my private fortune. Nowhere else, I think, do the eccentricities of conscience show themselves more interestingly than in the various attitudes of the various political leaders toward the large sums which the exigencies of commercialized politics place absolutely and securely under thelf control. I have no criticism for any of these attitudes. I have lived long enough and practically enough to learn not to criticize the morals of men any more than I criticize their facial contour or their physical build. t "As many men, 60 many minds" and morals. , Wrong, for practical purposes, is that which a man can cajole or compel his conscience to approve. It so happened that I had a sense that to use my assessments for my private financial profits would be wrong. Therefore, my private fortune has been wholly the result of the opportunities which came through my intimacy with fLoebuck and such others of the members of my cambine as were personally agreeable or, perhaps It would be more accurate to say. not disagreeable, for, in the circumstances, I naturally saw a side of those men which a friend must never see in a friend. I could not help having toward most of these distinguished clients of mine much the feeling his lawyer has for the guilty criminal he is defendinc. (To Be Otntinuad.) The secret of fashionable beauty. I asked the question of a noted, beauty specialist. "4n order to be round, rosy, plump, very pretty and stylish, take Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea. 35 cents. A. G. Luken & Co. T Column after column of the newspauers in the far Kast is filled with news about railways building, built and pro- . . jected in China The same is true as to Japan and the Federated Malay States. Chinese cities object so strongly to additional openings being made in their walls that the new railways are compelled to build their stations just outside. Neither railways nor trains cau enter the cities. Aunt Salome Sellers, of Deer Isle. juian in the State of Maine-

News of the Railroads by Local and General q.qwehkuhw

CATS PUT ON THE PAY ROLL THEIR SERVICES NEEDED AT THE PENNSYLVANIA BAGGAGE ROOM. Rats Prove so Troublesome That it is Necessary to Take Relief Measures. Local baggage men have received i orders from headquarters in Pittsburg to immediately secure a number of cats and place them on duty in the baggage room at the station, as a protection against rats, which have in the past been carrying things in a high handed manner. These cats will bo placed on the pay roll of the Pennsylvania, as their services are almost indispensible. In the past the rats have caused great annoyance- to Pennsylvania baggage agents, in that they knaw into every conceivable thing that gets in their reach, causing much damage to trunks and other expressage. The order has not only beer, issued to local agents but to all, along the line. At Cleveland, O., rats caused several thousands of dollars worth of damage each year, but when cats were secured, Mr. Rodent made his departure in a hurry. ' BULLET THROUGH WINDOW. When train No. 40 pulled into the station Friday evening on the Pennsylvania, a bullet hole showed up plainly in one of the coach windows. A group of small boys had been playing with a revolver several miles north of Richmond and accidentally hot through the window. As luck would have it no one was" sitting in the seat over which the bullet passed. Several of the passengers were quite alarmed for a time, thinking there might be a real Jesse James holdup and train robbery in prospect. CHICKENS PUT ON STYLE. Private cars for the feathered travelers constitute a new development in the transportation field. Four hundred and fifty of these special cars for live poultry, are now in service on the principal railroads of the country, including the Pennsylvania. It is probable that a large number will be placed in service on the Pennsylvania during the coming year. A live poultry transportation company operates the "traveling chicken coops" under the same system that other private AN HONEST MAN WAS SAVED BY A PHILANTHROPIST. Mr. T. A. Morgan, of " Hammond, Ind., had suffered for years with his stomach and kidneys, and while the great Root Juice scientist was proving the merits of the Root Juice remedy to the people of northern Indiana. Mr. Morgan purchased six bottles of the Juice and while it was being wrapped up he said: "If Root Juice cures me I will make the scientist a present of one hundred dollars." A short while ago Mr. Morgan called on the scientist and said that he could eat anything without the slightest inconvenience and that his kidney trouble was entirely cured. He wanted "the scientist to take the one hundred dollars, but it was refused. However, it was agreed to give the money to an orphan asylum. So Root Juice is not only curing the sick, but in this instance will be the indirect means of caring for some dead mother's child. Root Juice has proved its .wonderful merits to many people of Richmond. From the very start it seems to soothe and heal the linings of the stomach and bowels and strengthen the liver and kidneys, thereby giving nature a chance to, in her own way, throw off the impurities of the blood. For sale by A. G. Luken & Co. $1 a bottle. Root Juice proves all that is claimed for it. CLINTON NELSON IS SICK. Well Known Eaton Resident Has Congestion of the Lungs. Eaton, O.. March P.O. Clinton C. Nelson, who lately sold his home here, and who was making preparations to move to another state, is seriously ill, and his physicians say that it will be several weeks before he will be able to leave his bed. He is suffering with congestion of the lungs. Mr. Nelson is one of the most prominent citizens of Eaton, he having been the candidate of the republican party a few years ago for county clerk. Notice to Our Customers. We are pleased to announce that Foley's Honey ' and Tar for coughs, colds and lung troubles is not affected by the National Pure Food and Drug law as it contains no opiates or other harmful drugs, and we recommend it as a safe rem,edy for children and adults. A. G. Luken & Co. Carnations. Carnations, 50c per dozen. Roses, 75c. Friday and Saturday. GIFT FLORAL CO.. Tel. 1321. 7 N. Sth Street. 29-2t ANNUAL MEETING AND ELECTION NOTICE. The members of the German Mutual Fire Insurance Association of Richmond, Wayne County, Indiana are hereby notified to meet at their hall on the corner of Fifth and Main streets on Saturday evening, April the 6th, 1907 at 7:30 to elect 11 directors for the insuring and to transact such other business as there may come up before this meeting. C. A. BARTEL. Pres. HENRY" GREIVE, Secy. 2S-10L Artlficlal gas. the 2om century fuaL 10-tf. FREE TURTLE SOUP AT ED. CUTTER'S. 403 S. 4TH SAT.-NIGHT.

car companies operate their lines. The cars are owned by the company and are rented to the large poultry raisers, just as refrigerator cars and the railroads have no interest in them, other than collect the freight rates on the fowls shipped over their lines. The live poultry car is 36 feet long, ten feet wide and two feet higher than the ordinary stock car. Built along each side of the car are eight tiers of coops three feet wide and thirteen inches high. Partitions cut these into 128 sections, each of which hold three dozen fowls of large sizes. A carload therefore contains from 4,a00 to 5,000 fowls.

MAY MAKE A FIGHT. Attorneys of the Arkansas and Missouri railroads have been advised to take immediate steps to ascertain the best way to go about a restraining fight against the two cent fare laws passed by the recent legislatures of those states. It is probable the railroads will take tip the fight in other states which have passed adverse legislation. REPORT OF A MERGER. Again the report is circulated that the C. C. & L. and the Wisconsin Central have been merged. This time there seems to be reason to believe the report id true; in fact the highest authorities, while reticent signify that what practically is a merger is effected and will be consummated April 7, the date on which the C. C. & L. trains are to run into Chicago. RATES FOR THE TEACHERS. At its next meeting the Central Passenger association will take up application for reduced rates for tha annual convention of the National Educational association which will be held in Los Angeles in July. There is some doubt whether the eastern roads will grant reduced rates, as the educational people withdrew their meeting from Philadelphia and took it to the coast to collect the $2 membership fees, -'which the,. western roads have agreed to collect. The reason for changing the place of the meeting was the refusal of the eastern roads to add $2 to the rates and give it to the the association. Refusal to do so was made on the grounds that it would be illegal under the Hepburn act. Western roads have decided that they can take the chance and have issued circulars explaining all the rules and regulations with the rates for the event. BURCHENAL MAY BE GENERAL MANAGER Richmond Man Likely to Be Advanced in Position. SOAP COMPANY CHANGES. By the death of William Proctor, who was president of .the Proctor & Gamble company, the- largest soap works in the country, it is probable John J. Burchenal, a former well known Richmond man, will be advanced to tho position of general manager of the company. For the past five or six years Mr. Burchenal has acted as assistant general manager. Cooper Proctor, son of the dead millionaire, is now general manager, but since his father retired from active business about a year and a half ago, Mr. Cooper Proctor and air. Burchenal have virtually controlled the immense concern, which makes the world's famous "Ivory" soap. Mr. Burchenal plans to make an' European trip with his family this spring and summer. A specific for pain Dr. Thomas' Eclectric Oil, strongest, cheapest liniment ever devised. A household remedy in America for 25 years. Artificial gas. the 20th century fuel. 10-tf GIVEN THE THIRD DEGREE. Odd Fellows From This City Gather With New Paris Brothers and Have Enjoyable Time. New Paris, O., March SO. A large crowd of visiting brothers from Richmond, Eaton and Campbellstown, were present Thursday night at the I. O. O. F. lodge. Woodward lodge of Richmond, conferred the third degree in a very pleasing manner. After the work, short speeches were made by Judge" Fox. Thomas Jessup, Messrs. Penny and Ward of Richmond, C. W. Bloom. Rev. J. W. Williams and E. R. Clark of New Paris. After the speechmaking, refreshments of ice cream, and cake were served, followed by cigars. The I. O. O. F. lodge will celebrate its anniversary" assisted by the Rebekah lodge on April 20. SUPERINTENDENT 25 YEARS Liberty Schools To Have New Head to Succeed J. W. Short. Liberty. Ind March SO. It is very likely that the board will elect a new superintendent for the Liberty graded schoois, to succeed Mr. John W. Short, who is closing his 25th year as superintendent. Also that there will likely be several changes in the teaching force of tire school. In all probability the new superintendent will be Prof. Thos. W. Records, of Evansville, In J . who was here to confer - with the school board. Prof. Records is at present employed in the Evansville high school work, is a college graduate and has had some ten jears" experience in hih school in southern Indiana eit-

ARROW CLUPECO SHRUNK Qiuu-tw sum. Ue Mcb. I tor uc. CLtm. PEABOPT CO. a V akun of CluU moi Moutrcb Sail TELEGRAPH RATES TO BE INCREASED APRIL 1 Advance of Five to Ten Cents To Various Cities. MERELY "READJUSTMENT". A readjustment of the minimum rates for messages to a number of the largest cities of the country will be put into effect April 1 by the Western Union Telegraph Company. It is understood the Postal Telegraph compa ny is to make a similar readjustment, in order that there may not be a dif ference in rates. The increase caused by the readjust ment, it is staged, will be about five or ten cents, varying as to different cities. Those cities to which the minimum rate will be increased, will be those that receive the largest amount of business and. have had special rates. How Rates Will Be Fixed. As instance of the manner in which the plan will work, the rate to NewYork will be increased lo cents on the minimum charge for a message. if one hundred or several hundred words are sent under the new arrangement, however, they will cost no more than under the present rate for the same number with the exception that the 10-cent increase will be added, the same as it will be added to the smallest messages. It is related that the readjustment is not in the nature of a general increase in rates, as the rates will be increased only to those cities where heretofore, because of the amount of business handled, there have been rates that were lower than to cities an equal distance away, but where a smaller amount of business was handled. "I have been somewhat costive, but Doan's Regulets gave just the results desired They act mildly and regulate the bowels perfectly." George B. Krause, COG Walnut Ave., Altoona, Pa. -j SWIHART WON THE MEDAL. Carried Off Honors at Preble County Rifle Shoot. Eaton, O., March SO. The members of the Preble County Rifle club met on their grounds here Friday afternoon, and contested for a gold medal. Owing to a high west wind, the scores were very low. Daniel Swinart, the secretary of the club, won the medal by a score of 27 out of a possible 40. The other scores were as follows: Dr. W. H. Buck, 20; Frank Overholser, 2:; Simeon Bunger, 23; James Koakes, 22; L.. C. Reynolds, 21; Fred Filbert, 1J; Hugh R. Gilmore, 1!). Lugar's Circus at Eaton. Eaton, Ohio, March SO. The entire show owned by Joseph Lugar of this place, has arrived and the managers of Via. onirimonta am nnw encased ill ! training their animals. 1 Mr. Lugar ex pects to start his circus on the road about the first day of May. NEW BUILDING ERECTED. Prof. Walter Jessup Making a Success Of His Work as Superintendent At Westfield, Indiana. At Westfield, Ind., where Prof. Walter A. Jessup, a. Wayne county boy, is superintendent of schools, a splendid new building has just been dedicated. Prof. Jessup is a son of A. S. Jessup, of Economy, and is making a splendid record as an educator.

You a Bottle of New Liquozone, and Give it to You to Try.

When you learn what Liquozone means to you you will wonder how you went without it. You will regret, the time lost In treating germ troubles with, remedies which have no effect on germs. And it costs not a penny to know Liquozone. Simply tell us you want it and we will buy you a bottle gladly. Try it and let the product itself prove its power. All we ask then is that you tell others what the results are. Tell those who are waiting, as you waited, and who are losing what you have lost. What Liquozone Is. Liquozone is a tonic-germicide, the virtues of which are derived solely from oxide gases. No alcohol, no narcotic, nothing but gas enters into It. The process of making requires larg? apparatus, and consumes 14 days time. The object is to so combine the gases with a liquid as to carry their virtues into the system. The result is a germicide so certain that we publish with every bottle an offer of $1,000 for a disease germ that Liquozone cannot kilL It destroys them because germs are of vegetable origin. But to the body Liquozone is exhilirating, vitaliziug, purifying. That is its main distinction. Common germicides are poisons when taken internally. Th.eyare impossible,

GEWNfeTT THEATER,

WEEK OF

COMEDIANS

WITH'

And Their Own Operatic Lady Orchestra, Who Play and Sing Selection From all the Late Popular Operas. One Lady Admitted Free on Opening Night. If accompanied bv a person holding a Reserved Seat Ticket which must res-rved before 6 p. m.. Monday. Dally niatinee. 10c, beginning Tuesday. Prices, 0..20, 30c. Seats at Westcot Pharmacy.

The New Phillips Vaudeville Theater O. G. MURRAY, Lessee and Mgr. G. A. SCHWENKE, Treas. & Asst. Mflr.

Daily at 2:30 and 8:15 p. m. Saturdays at 2:30 and 8:15 p. m. SPECIAL ENGAGEMENT OF ETHEL DESMOND n.Vgn?&fK Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday, "Woman Against Woman." Thursday, Friday and Saturday, "A BROKEN HEART. Daily Matinees at 2:30; 10c to all. Evening, 10c, and a few seat at 20c. This Week Only. LADIES FREE TICKETS, Monday and Thursday Nights. One Lady admitted free with one paid 20c ticket. Best Seats. 6 BIG VAUDEVILLE ACTS 6. 2 BIG SHOWS IN ONE FOR 10c. Special Matinee each Saturday; children 5 cents. All other matinees. 10 cents, except to children under 5 years. Souvenirs at Wednesday's matinee.

THE THEATOROUCa 620 MAIN STREET THE TIME - THE PLAGE - THE SHOW THURSDAY, FRIDAY,. SATURDAY, the Celebrated Picture of Lifo In Parif THE BAD COINERS i? - And the Comedy v - THE OLD MASHERS: Hear Mr. Malotte Sing the Pretty Ballad, "Won't Tou Como-O-vw to" My; House." Continuous from 1 to 11 P. M. Get the habit Admission only S cent.

ROLLER SKATING AT THE GOLISEUQ TUESDAY, THURSDAY AND SATURDAY AetVnV Music furnished by the Monster Military Band Instrument at all times. Prize Mask Carnival April 4

At the Theaters Theatrical Calendar. GENNETT. April 11 "The time, the Place and the Girl. Week of April 1 Repertoire. PHILLIPS. Entire Week High class vaudeville. Week of April 1 Repertoire. THE THEATORIUM. Entire Week Motion pictures and Illustrated Songs. . Vaudeville at the Phillips. There is still time to see the vaudeville bill now running at the New Phillips in case yoiThave not already done so or wish to attend again. There are two performances remaining with the double performance of tonight. This evening the doors open at 7 o'clock, the first performance beginning at 7:30 and the second at 8:4.". North Bros. Gennett. North Bros!, comedians,, headed by Mr. Harry Chapin North and Miss Virginia Goodwin, two of America's foremost leading repertoire people, and a full company of real artists will open a return engagement at the Gennett theater, Monday night, April 1." The opening production will be "A. Daughter of the South." This is one of the nicest, cleverest and most interesting bills to be seen this season. The principal role is played by Harry Chapin North. High class specialties between the acts by such noted artists as the Two Deagons. Little PattI Seldon und Master Bobbie St . Clair. - The lady orchestra is one of the features for they destroy the tissues as well a3 the germs. That Is why medicine proves so helpless in dealing -vith germ diseases. Liquozone, on the contrary, acts as a remarkable tonic. We Paid $100,000. For the rights to Liquizone, after thousands of tests had been made with it, after its power had been demonstrated for more than two years in the most difficult germ diseases. Conditions which had resisted medicine for years yielded at once to it. and diseases considered Incurable were cured. That was five years ago. Since then millions of people in every part of the world have shared in the benefits of this invention. Nearly every hamlet, every neighborhood, has livins examples of its power. Now we ask you to let it do for you what it did for them.. Germ Diseases. Most of our sickness has. in lits years, been traced to germ -attacks. Some germs as in skin , troubles directly attack the tissues. Some create toxins, causing such troubles as Rheumatism, Blood Poison. Kidcey Disease and nerve weakness. Some destroy vital organs, as In Consumption. Some like the feerms of Catarrh create inflammation: some cause indigestion.' In one of these ways, nearly every eeriou .ailment is a germ result.

Ira Swishar, Manigir.

APRIL 1st. of this big company. Matinees daily beginning on Tuesday. Repertoire at New Phillips. Speaking of next week's attraction at the New Phillips an exchange says: "The patrons of the Rosedale theater were treated to a good production of "Woman Against Woman" by the Ethel Desmond Stock company, a new organization to the local stage. Thi-j company proved to hp one of the strongest seen at popular prices thij season. ' Miss Desmond Js an exceptionally tleyer little woman and ga a decidedly artistic interpretation, of a most thrilling part last night. GETS EASTER CLEANING Main Street Received Scrubbing Friday Night. Friday night Main street was given ts sound scrubbing to remove' the filth' that has accumulated on tho paving during the past few months. A street cleaning gang, armed with a large firq hose swept down the street from Twen tleth street to Fourth street and two huge streams of water flowed down. tha gutters, carrying with them, tons dirt and refuse. Main street then pre sented the appearance of having received treatment at the hands o a thriftyj housewife. . t Mrs. John Wherley of Northyrentb street has left for Indianapolis to Tisltl for several days. Such conditions call for a germicide, not for common drugs. Llq'iozone does what other , means cannot accomplish. And it is wroxg to rrling to old ways when million "f peop Itknow a way that is better. 50c Bottle Free. If you wish to know what Llqnozone does please send us this coupon. We will then mail you an order on a local druggist, for a full-size bottle, and will pay the vdruggiet ourselves for it. This is our free gift, made id convince you; to let the product Itself show you what It can do. In Justice to yourself, please accept It oday. for it places you under no obligations whatever. Liquozone costs 50c and SI. CUT OUT THIS COUPON rtll Itcatnd malt It to The l.lquozon Company, 4-464 Wabash Ave., Chicago. My disease I I bave nercr tried the new Llquozon. but If you will supply ine a iua bottle -free I will take it. 35 GIv fall addrs writ? plainly. MSV utir now cutting oat iu improUd Lt. quozon. ba-l ou rive year r.f xperleni:.. Andftrn old owtf iim.viwwpf theabov ff-r. o l-nrn how much iM-itrr th new product 1. Uqiiozorn- i guaranteed uuJ?r tb new Pure Food I.aw. - Anv phyticlan "r hospital nor yet uSn Liquozoii 11-be gladly supplied for a tb