Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 32, Number 107, 5 May 1907 — Page 4
The Richmond Palladium and Sun-Telegram, Sunday, May 5, 1907.
RICDTuOND PALLADIUM
AND SUN-TELEGRAM. Palladium Printing ' Cc Publishers. Office North 9th and A Streets. RICHMOND, INDIANA. PRICE Per Copy, Daily .................. 2e Per Copy, Sunday So Per Week. Daily and Sunday 7c IN ADVANCE One Year $3.50 Ort Rural Routes (one year)..... $2.00 Entered at Richmond, Ind., Postoffice As Second Class Mail Matter. Boosting helped the Y. M. C. A., so get together and boost the coming May festival. The decrease in the number of suicides in Indiana shows that Hoosiers ere coming to have a greater regard for their state and are more loath to leave it. Street Commissioner Dye's determination to prosecute the people who ere guilty of throwing waste paper la the alleys and on the streets will meet with the approval of the citizens ct Richmond. Richmond is by far too beautiful a city to have . its looks jmarred by unsightly accumulations of paper being blown hither and thither over its-treets. Furthermore It is an injustice to- the-taxpayer whose money is used for the upkeep of the street cleaning force for thoughtless people to add to the work and-the expense by throwing their waste paper into the streets and alleys. ACCIDENT BULLETIN SHOWS MANY MISHAPS Casualties for three months 1 Exceed 20,000. THERE WERE 474 DEATHS. Washington, May 4. The Accident bulletin issued by the interstate com merce commission for the thifc-e months ending Dec 31, shows that during that quarter casualties to railroad passengers and to railway employes while on duty, numbered 20,944, an increase of 1.094 over those reported during the preceding three months. The number of passengers and employes killed In tra'n accidents was 474. an Increase of 207 over the previous quarter. The number of passengers killed in train accidents In this quarter, 180, fa the largest on record except that for the quarter ending Sept. HO, 1004. Three accidents two collisions and one derailment caused 143 deaths. The number of employes killed in coupling cars and engines was 84, as against SI the preceding quarter. The total number of collisions an! derailments was 3,065, 2,220 collisions and 1.739 derailments, of which 301 collisions and 10O derailments affected passenger trains. The damage to cars, engines and roadway amounted to ?3,K99.228. REAL ESTATE TRANSFERS Furnished From Office of County Recorder Mosbaugh. George B. Dougan to Fred Greggereon. lot 15 C. T. P. 2nd add. to Jtichmond, $3,200. B. B. Myrick to Carl G. lu Stauber, t lots 11-12, Dugdale add. to Rich mond, $2,oo0. Carrie M. Wood hurst to Jacob Bchmitz et al. pt. S. E. 33-14-1, Richmond, $2,600. Maria Kramer to Henry J. Kaeuper, Jot 4-3 Poe & Hittle's add. to Richmond, $1,400. T. J. Bloom to J. P. lliff. lot 1, JIaynes add. to Richmond, $400. Edwin G. Kemper to Frank W. rromme, lote 6-7 Hannah I. Collins Odd. to Richmond, $1,500. Herbert J. Greenstreet to Clarence M- Greenstreet, lot 13, Economy, $2,000. Elmer N. Brumfiel to Sarah Hall, pt. T. E. 27-17-14; one acre, Webster tp., $S50. Sarah Hall to Win. L. Thomas, pt :. E. 27-17-14, one acre, Webster Tp.; $1 and other considerations. Abel K Study et al to Mary A. Weler. pt. lots 1-2 John P. Smith et al. add. to Richmond. $12,300. MASONIC CALENDAR. Week Commencing May 6, 1907. Monday Richmond Commandery, No. S, K. T., Stated Conclave. Tuesday Richmond Lodge Xo. 196, V. & A. M., Stated Meeting. Wednesday Webb Lodge, Xo. 24, F. A. M. Work M. M. degree; two candidates. Thursday Wayne Council Xo. 10, R. & S. M. Work in the degrees, three candidates. Friday King Solomon's Chapter, 2Co. 4, R. A. M., Stated Convocation.
MJLTORI MMMG (GdD-CMTI IS THE BEST
A OiFisiiaii Scientist Makes Reply to ir. J. M. Thurston Declares That It Will Take Ages for the Race to Pass from Material to Spiritual Conception.
Editor Palladium and Sun-Telegram: Our attention has been called to a reply appearing In your columns, from the pen of Dr. J. M. Thurston, touching upon points brought out in a lec ture on Christian Science delivered in your city recently. Inasmuch as this reply mistates and misrepresents, all unconsciously we doubt not. the real purpose and Import of Christian Science teaching, we ask in justice to all parties concerned space for the following statement: The doctor's scholarly thesis on phy siological and medical principles bespeaks learning and a high degree of proficiency in his chosen calling. Not a single statement along these lines do we question. Appreciating as we do the astounding intricacy and multiplicity of these man-made 'inventions," human ills and medical terms and concoctions, to say nothing of the complex anatomy of the fleshly man we hold in high esteem the calling of the reputable physician or surgeor. Coping manfully we believe, and to the best of his understanding with the awful complexity of human ills, the physician of today stands well to the forefront in the ranks of the world's benefactors. The fact that his system and methods are today as they have been for thousands of years largely, if not entirely experimental and largely curtailed of desired results because so absolutely physical, these facts do not militate in any sense against honesty of purpose and earnestness of effort in the case, we may state broadly, of the average physician. It will probably be ages before the race has been educated or progressed out of prevalent and timehonored material conceptions of life and being. Into a spiritual sense, the true sense, of all things, and into an absolute reliance upon divine and spiritual being and holier methods of healing. Until that time the reputable physician and his skill in medicine and surgery will be in demand. Meanwhile, however, elementary steps tending toward the absolute supremacy of spirit and recourse to spiritual methods are in a direct line with progress and should call forth the sanction of men of learning even in the medical fraternity. More and more also, as we thus pro gress out of matter and into spirit, will we come to understand the utter futility of an attempt to combine the spiritual and the material in our quest after health and peace. The command Is imperative, "Choose ye this day
whom you will serve." Just herejwheel barrow and tree be included therefore, is the crucial point in th9;among tne terms synonymously desigcourse of our correction of Dr. Thurs- i nating Deity. His Ideas seem confused ton's statements. Our critic, as do;amt in this instance savor of
practically all critics of Christian science, fails utterly to grasp the fact so clearly brought out in the Scripture that man's real life is God, distinct and apart from body, not dependent upon bodily conditions, hence unaffected, except in mortal belief, by the so-called physical or bodily organism. Jesus, the great physician who always healed, and never failed to heal, who healed fully and completely, enjoined very significantly, "Take no thought for the body." He himself also healed all manner of disease and raised the dead from the grave and material corruption without drugs or manipulation, without diagnosis or question. Moreover, our Lord's declaration, "I can do nothing of myself whatsoever things the Father doeth, these doeth the Son likewise," would seem to indicate that all which he accomplished. Including his works of healing, resulted, not from the action of the so-called human mind, as seen in the practice of mental suggestion,, mesmerism, etc. confused by our critic with the healing of disease through spiritual means in Christian Science, but from the opera tion of the one infinite, divine Mind, otherwise designated by Jesus "The Father." Our Lord's healing wrought by his followers for some H0O years after his departure from the earth was pre-eminently divine healing. It is moreover, the divine method of healing practiced by Jesus and enjoined by him on his followers of all ages which Christian Scientists are earnestly and conscientiously trying to practice. With what degree of success they are striving to fulfill this divine com mission and relieve human suffering, hundreds of thousands of men and women healed of all manner of dis ease without drugs or the knife rise up to testify. A careful and unbiased study of the text-books of Christian Science will reveal the fact that menal suggestion, socalled mind action (humanly speaking) personal influence and blind faith play no part in the process of restoring through Mrs. Eddy's method. We have already attempted to show that bodily conditions, physical organism, manipulation, are. not taken into consideration, and It is a foregone conclusion that Christian Science does heal. Hence it would seem that the balance of argument is on the side of Christian cience and that our critic's theorit-s of the origin of disease, of material methods of treating the same, wellworded as they are, fail of their pur pose in the present discussion, because presented along lints so utterly foreign to the spiritual realm of christianly scientific investigation and demonstra tion. It will bo readily conceded by all that spiritual things must be spirit ually discerned, hence the utter futility of our friend's effort to discountenance spiritual facts and their potency
by even a most scholarly exposition of material theories. It will be necessary therefore to touch but briefly upon a few of the most unreasonable points advanced by the doctor as derogatory of Christian Science principles. Neither Christian Scientists nor Mrs. Eddy ask or expect that others shall
accept their principles. simply upon their own or their leader's dictum. It is indeed true that in the investigation of any new system, the individual must assume the truth of some statements, however absurd they may seem to the novice in order to advance to point of proof. Jesus worked and taught in direct contravention of. material, sense testimony, and his statements and demonstrations often astounded his own immediate followers, but from blind faith step by step did they advance until they too could do-the wonderful work. "Whoso believeth on me, the works that I do shall he do also." We question whether the critic's statement that mind is an Impossibility without material brain organization to base it will meet with ready acceptance by your readers. If such were the case disintegration of frail material nerve structure would mean the annihilation of mind. Such arguing savors of sophistry. It will be well to note just here that Jesus and indeed the scripture throughout, distinguish between the mind of the flesh, the mind of sin, the carnal mind, and the "Mind which was also with Christ Jesus," or the "Mind of the Father." Jesus statement that he could do nothing of himself bore out this truth and carried with it the inference that so-called human intelligence is but a manifestation or reflection perfect in proportion to Its freedom from unGodly thoughts, of the Infinite, divine intelligence, the creative, governing Mind of the whole universe. This in brief is the conception of mind in Christian Science, and notwithstanding our critic's ridicule and rejection of the same, it is appealing to the thinking men and women of the day, is healing the sick, reforming the sinner, and opening up new vistas of hope and possibility for humanity. With what tenacity however and with what small Justice oftentimes do we seem prone to cling to time honored, but no longer even seemingly efficacious traditions at the sacrifice of new ideas which may be Immediately helpful and full of promise. Our critic ruthlessly confuses mind and its Idea3 when he insists that pantheism. Jesus found it necessary to upsat and revolutionize the prevalent theories of his day and indeed the learning of the ages in the promulgation of the truth, so that no critic need take exception to a similar upheaval today when the same healing gospel is again being preached in the earth. The learning of the ages, as has before been, intimated, cherished as it is by our critic has not sufficed to eliminate human woe. It has never been claimed that the results of Christian Science practice are in any sense supernatural, nor will the seeming wonders of Jesu3 be so construed if looked upon from the stand point of spirit and spiritual supremacy. He "who came not to destroy" did indeed set aside prevalent material theories, but in so doing established spiritual and indestructible truths in their place, thus working the race a lasting boon aside from the im mediate benefit of his healing work. The threadbare allegation that Mrs. Eddy derived her ideas of divine metaphysical healing from Dr. Quimby. the magnetic healer and mesmerist, while, it carries with it something of an admission of the efficacy of her system, has been so widely, effectually and re peatedly retuted m numerous magazines and newspapers as to require ro special attention from us at this time. We might cite the fact that while one magazine and one lone newspaper has j championed the opposing side (an-d' their statements effectually refuted), numerous of the best magazines and newspapers championing the other side have had a wider influence and their statements are unquestionable. We would direct your readers to these for a true statement of the facts relative to Mrs. Eddy and Christian Science. Our critic's assertion that science is one thing and the Christian religion another, is but another attempt on his part to dodge the basic issue of all controversies between Christian Scientists and their co-religionists, and will fall to satisfy your readers. The world yearns for a reconciliation of science and religion and will be satisfied with nothing short of such reconciliation. Christian Science teaching alone points the rationality and possibility of such a glad consummation. The very fast that all the people can noc be fooled all the time points the glad day of truth's ultimate triumph in theology and medicine. This hope encour ages the Christian Scientist to labor and wait, "with charity toward all and malice toward none." R. STANHOPE EASTERDAY, Christian Science Committee on Publication for Indiana. Leaving Richmond 11:15 p. m. via C, C. & L. lands you in Chicago at 7:00 a, m. Through sleepers and coaches. You will like it. apr6-tf
Safolbaii School lor Temperance AND Temperance tor SafoMh School An Interesting Treatment ot Temperance Subject Given by Eliza D. H. Mendenhall at the W. C T. U. Institute Recently.
However neglectful we maybe in our! their positions, and the bread winners, home instruction and it is an age that!with the helpless ones dependent upon . , t . - : them, know the cruel power of that delegates our most sacred responsibil temptatlon ities to the public; to whatever church , . , r ' By some such deft manipulation In we may belong; whatever our political rour legislatures, our whiskey monopoaff illations, there is no father or moth- ly wouid hoodwink the public, comer who does not desire for their chil-, Dromise the teachers, entrench hiirh li-
dren healthy bodies, intelligent minds and honorable lives. Just as surely as we love our children, we know that Intoxicants wreck the body, muddle the intellect and blunt the moral perceptions.
The drink traiiic does not connne 113 : traps for our Children when we 11ravages to some realm outside of our cense saloons and without temperance own, but it is here in our country in instruction keep them ignorant of the our state in our city on our streets,: death trap set for their unwary feet.
in our homes. It threatens your boy and my boy. It is not satisfied with the misery it has wrought in the present age, it must sow its seed in the unborn generations, to ripen an inevitable harvest of drunkenness debauchery, "imbecility insanity and death." "The iniquity of the fathers shall be visited upon the children and upon the children's children unto the third and fourth generation." Nor is its ambition sated until it throttles the joy and hope of the lif? to come, because "no drunkard can inherit the kingdom of heaven." The laws of civic righteousness, the Inexorable decrees of environment and heredity, bind nations just as surely as they do individuals. Babylon and Nineveh the glory of classic Greece the hoary wisdom of
Egypt and the power of the Roman em- sanity and imbecility, poverty ana pire perished for the sins of their bro- misery, crimes innumerable and unken laws moral and physical just as mentionable, blasting the hopes of surely as Soddom and Gomorrah. jthis life and of the life to come. But Our feverish greed for, gold at any they cant all talk freely to their concost our neglect of those essentials to they can't all talk freely to their-con-anv nation's real Drosoerity and Ion- gregatlons. There are other questions
gevity is past comprehension. Surely the hour has come for both the church and the state to awake ani to redeem the times for they are evil. Near one of the Hebrides Is a lighthousebuilt strong and high but it carries no lamp in its turret, only a mirror, that reflects a strong light, shot upon it from the shore. History records comparatively few heralds to be "like voices crying in the wilderness." Just a few names of reformers, lit up by the fires of martyr domjust a few with the courage, the j
will and the consecration to become light house with a mirror ready to relike their Master, the light upon the! fleet an aroused public opinion, and
shore. But the public in every age has been a species of high tower and has been a faithful mirror to reflect public opinion. Whenever we have persistently and fearlessly shot a strong light from the shore, it has reflected and multiplied the rays and so far as God has given us grace to shine it has enlightened at least the little world within our influence. There is no sufficient reason for discouragement, because the right will finally prevail, so sure as God lives. No time to lose in waiting, because we each have a place. We each have a worl We each have this day to do the thing God means us to do. Surely he does mean that as moth ers, in our homes as teachers in our day schools and Sabbath schools, we shall inculcate high moral and spirit ual ideals a knowledge of temperance and godliness essential to true manliness and womanliness and the crown of an enlighteied citizenship. Every state and territory of our United States five only excepted, have a law requiring instruction in scientific temperance in our public schools. Th Boston Transcript says that 13,000,000 children in the United States are now studying the effects of alcohol on the human system. Scientific temperance teaching has also been introduced into Canada, France, England, Germany, Norway, Sweden, Russia, Denmark, The Danish West Indies, Bulgaria, Turkey In Asia, India, Slam, Japan and China, the Child's Health Primer having been translated Into Chinese by an American missionary. All this through the persistent efforts of our Woman's Christian Temperance Union. God will bless us as he has blessed us. He will lead us through the storms of opposition that have tested us, through the criticism and ridicule that has wounded and distressed us, through many defeats, to final victory. They are a part of the schooling before we can win our diplomas. We must have the unwavering purpose, the dauntless faith, the tender patience, the keen insight, willing minds and understanding .hearts. We have no time to pause in the fight to congratulate ourselves. These laws without the constant pressure of a wide awake, active public sentiment may easily become dead letters. Mysterious changes in text books, j numberless new laws, or amendments to old ones can easily make our hard work of no avail. Our public schools are now maintained by the dog tax and the saloon license. The recent proposition to increase the license and by this means i increase the salaries of our public school teachers had a direct aim at the special temperance instruction now required by law. The conscientious instructors would be forced to modify their temperance lessons, or leave them out entirely to suit the element legislating against temperance, or they could not consistently retain Agency,
DUNHAEfi
-cense and jeopardize the safety of the
nation by tampering with our children's curriculum. Up in Dakota they pay ten dollars for every gray wolf's head, because they endanger the stock, but we lay The church recognizes the ruin wrought by the drink traffic. The Sabbath schools have always stood nominally for temperance, and the rank and file of our ministers advocate it. They know that hundreds of barrels of rum go out in the hold of ev ery ship that carries a missionary to undo his work, and to bring a worse curse than heathenism to the islands of the sea A recent Seattle paper says: "There was a constant stream of beer flowing across the wharves all day yesterday. It came in kegs, barrels, cases, by the train load, express wagons, brewery drays, bound for the Philippines This will be the largest consignment of beer ever exported from this port. The minister does warn his flock, concerning the direct results of the drink habit the perpetuation of inthan temperance we can not let It monopolize our attention, they say. There f.re all grades of opinion In our church. We cannot compel our individual viewf Reforms are the growth of years, not the result of an hour's frenzy. These talks on temperance might interfere with the government's busi ness the only business In which our republic deigns to engage. They may hamper the schemes of our religious polititions in advancing party measures. For our public is always the that wouldn't suit the man in the front pew, perhaps, who pulls the official wires or pays the biggest bank notes into the church treasury and to offend these would be to offend the brethren who have quite enough to do, to pay their quota of expense and the minister thus loses caste or influence which could be used for good in other ways. Then such long, tiresome temperance sermons. One cry of "mad dog" would stir the people to a frenzy of excitement, but a hundred thousand drunkards can go to their graves every year; a hundred thousand young men come on to offer themselves a horrid sacrifice to this minotour of our civilization and they go to sleep, or stay away, or raise a hue and cry because it is so hard upon the nerves. They pay for their sermons and they want good comfortable ones "like parmacetti the sovereign remedy for a bruise. And so day and night the deadly traffic goes on across continents and across seas. We, who carry the banner of Jesus Christ are too inert, or too pre-occupied, to sound a warning, or to call a halt. Much of our strength is spent in deciding whether we shall have prohibition or local option for our watchword, whether It should be high license or low license when it should be no license at all. Whether we had better encourage or close our church doors against the women who go around lecturing upon the subject, when it's the only thing you have left U3 to do, in most of our States. If our laws protected our homes and our children, there would be neither need nor desire on our part to take the public platform. And so far as women's ability to legislate is concerned, we have always been modest about that, but we can pluck up courage when we contemplate the muitude of senseless, compromising, ineffectual, unenforced temperance laws on docket. But whatever "our views" upon this matter, we can all agree that the children must be instructed in scientific temperance for their own personal safety, and as church members we can exert our Influence in upholding the minister and all the church workers in the stand, they take for temperance. 1 Our Sabbath Schools have a special temperance lesson in every quarter, -with an alternate lesson as a loophole for escape. But should there be an al ternative? Would one lesson in three months be the monopoly so dreaded. Do not both old and younsj need to ' read and think upon this serious prob-1 leni of our civilization? No newspaper I should ever be able to nublish truthfully that "Onlv one church observed I Temperance Sunday," as we read in While reforms are not wrought in ; the frenzy of an hour, we need notf for that reason dally Interminably or legislate idiotically. "We must find a way to teacn temperance without seeming fanatical. To teach temperance doesn't mean to inveigh against the saloon keeper. He is the victim of environment. When we snatch the bread from his children's mouths, by taking" away his business, some christian business association should be organized to substitute Some respectable means of livelihood. It int enough merely to recount loaiantlr the niiltitIied evils of
drunkenness. There mast be cold-
hearted, scientific facts, and practical work. It is a difficult and delicate matter for an outside organization to suggest temperance programs and outline temperance work, for the Sabbath schools in the county. Generally in the county superintendent's own home school and in the Sabbath schools all through our rural districts the suggestions are gratefully received and energetically followed, but again they are often received coldly or passed by indifferently and in a way to make us feel that we have exceeded cur duty or transcended our privileges In the matter. There is need of grace and tact a persistent courage that will not be downed. It would be helpful if we could send delegates to our different Saboath school conventions who would .speak interestingly upon the subject winning the Sunday school workers to a renewed zeal for the work they can do far more effectually than we at longer range. The county . convention should lay out courses of scientific instruction and really study the problem as one--among many problems for their consideration. Sabbath school libraries should be supplier! with temperance books of new and up-to-date authoritative, scientific information. A scrap book made from news paper clippings, can be collected by any wide awake interested Sabbath school teacher, and as the years go by, it becomes increasingly useful. The children in the Sabbath school should be taught their temperance songs and declamations. . Papers and talks should be encouraged among young and old. Temperance slides have been prepared for the stereopticon and illustrate the lectures effectively. The good work can and will go on. Our mantles shall fall upon younger shoulders when the years of our service are teld. All the powers of darkness leagued against us cannot prevail We need not trouble for the future ' "He that observeth the wind, shall not sow, and he that regardeth the clouds shall not reap. In the morning sow the seed and in the evening withhold not thine hand for thou knoweth not whether shall prosper, either this or that or whether they both shall be alike Rood. ELIZA D. H. MENDENHALL. Free advice given on the germ dis eases of domestic animals. Write the National Medical Co.. Sheldon. Ia. 3 Schneider Carriage Factory. Bring In your Vehicles and have them repaired for tho spring and cummer. ' Rubber Tiring New work to order. All work guaranteed. 40 N. 8th St. 1 , , 4 i 4 4 4 I I SPECIAL SALE SATURDAY On Bicycles and Sundries. Household Goods of All Kinds at Bargains. Lawn Mowers Sharpened. W. F. BROWN, Phone 1178. 1030 Main St M oore 6l Ogborn Write Fire and Tornado Insurance. Wo will bond you. Loan from 9100 to $2,500. Phono Home 1589, Bell 53 R. ROOM 16 I. O. O. F. BUILDING. ff' fr 4,,ff X "fr "fr "fr 'f1 "fr t' t STOP AND SEE. t Our price as low as the i t lowest. Quality the best that money will buy. Z t A. Harsh Coal & Supply Co. J Bell 113. Home 794. $ ! ! 4- ! ! 4 I INSURAIICE.REAL ESTATE I f LOANS, RENTS W. H. Bradbury &. Son Rooms 1 and 3, Wostcott Blk a. ,t, , VTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTtTTTTTTTT
Haw YdDi tei Tto? It Will Pay You to Go The New fflTMllOIIire is now ready to give you some of the greatest bargains that have ever been given in Richmond. Come and see me before you buy. If you need anything in FURNITURE it will pay you to come and get my prices before you make your selections. I am going to sell you GOOD GOODS AT THE RIGHT PRICE. I carry a full line of new and second hand furniture. W. LEFLER, Prop. 402 Main St.
TO CINCINNATI and Return Under auspices of K. of P. Iola Degree Team Via The C, C. & L. R. R. Sunday, May 5th BASE BALL Cincinnati vs. St. Louis. Visit F.cokwood Pottery, Art Museum, Eden Park, Burnett Woods, The Zoo, Etc Etc. Matinee at all Theatres. Special trains leave Richmond S A. M., South Richmond 8:05 A. M. Returning leave Cincinnati, I 1. M. C. A. BLAIR, P. & T. A. Home Tel. 41. ennsyiv&iiitii LINES EXCURSIONS TO JAMESTOWN EXPOSITION. Norfolk, Va. Daily until November 30. Low Faro Coach Excursions every Tuesday. Choice of a number of attractive routes. LOS ANGELES May 7 to 15 German Baptist - Brethren. June 10 to 14 Eclectic Medical Association, good going one route, returning another. COLUMBUS, O. May 13. H, 13, 16. 17. 20, 21 Presbyterian General Assembly. ATLANTIC CITY. May 31 to June 3 American Medical Association. Indiana State Medical Special. Through cars to Atlantic City, leave Richmond 4:55 p. m., June 2. SPOKANE SEATTLE June 27 to July 1 B. Y. P. U. July 1 to 5 C. E. PHILADELPHIA July 12, 13 and 14 B. P. O. E. WINONA LAKE, IND. Winona Assembly, May JO to September, 30. For full particulars consult C. W.' Elmer, Ticket Agent, Richmond, Ind. (Ur.lEnTG And MARKERS Best Material and Workmausblp. H. C. II ATT A WAT. , No. 12 Ncrtta 6th Street. Nyal's Cod Liver Compound Tasteless and Palatable. No oil or groaso. Easy to tako. It builds you up. Guaranteed by M. J. QuIcUy COURT HOUSE PHARMACY DR. W.J. SMITH i ..DENTIST..! H. R. DOWNING A SON, UNDERTAKERS 16 N. Sth St.; Richmond, Ind. Both Phones 75. WHY PAY MORE? Ripe Strawberries AND Good Thick Cream HADLEY BROTHERS, PHO tE 292
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