Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 33, Number 222, 24 September 1908 — Page 4
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THE RICHMOND PAIXADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, SEPTEMBER 24, 1908.
TOE MCIMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. Publisnad and owned by the FALIADIUM PRINTING CO. Issued 7 f days each week, evening' and Sunday morning. Offlee Corner North 9th and A streets. Home Phone 1121. Bell 21. RICHMOND. INDIANA. ' Radolph G. Leeds Managing Editor. Charlea M. MargM nnainras Manager. O. Owes Kuan Stitt Editor. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. In Richmond 5.00 per year tin advance) or 10c per week. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS. Ona year. In advance....... 5 0'j flx months, tn advance 2.60 One month. In advance .45 RURAL. ROUTES. Ona year, in advance. ..... I ..... .12 00 Etx months, in advance 1.2a Ona month, in advance... 25 Address changed aa often as desired: both new and old addresses must be given. Subscribers will please remit with order, which should be given tor a speoUfed term; name will not be entered am til pay moat is received. notered at Richmond. Indiana, postofftc as second class mail matter.
REPUBLICAN TICKET. NATIONAL TICKET. For President WILLIAM HOWARD TAFT of Ohio. -For Vice-President JAMZS S. SHERMAN f -New York. 1 rain .iti STATE. . ' .Governor ' ' JAMBS K. WATSON. v lieutenant Governor teTMONT C. GOODWINS, ; -ecretary of State t , TRJED A. SIMS. auditor of State JOHN G. BILLHEIMER. Treasurer of State OSCAR HADLEY. Attorney General JA3CK3 BINGHAM. ifllsfe Superintenflent LAWRSNCB McTURNAN. State Statistician J. L. PEETZ. -Judge of Supreme Court QUINCT A. MYERS. s-Jadge of Appellate Court DAVID MYERS. Reporter of Supreme Court GEORGE W. SELF. DISTRICT. Congress WILLIAM O. BARNARD. COUNTY. .Joint Representative ALONZO M. GARDNER. Representative WALTER S. RATLIFy. Circuit Judge HENRY C. FOX. Prosecuting Attorney CHAS. L. LADD. Treasurer ALBERT ALBERTSON. Sheriff LINUS P. MEREDITH. Coroner " DR. A. L. BRAMKAMP. Surveyor ROBERT A. HOWARD. Recorder WILL J. ROBBINS. Commissioner Eastern DistHOMER FARLOW. Commissioner Middle Dist.BARNEY H. LINDERMAN. vCommissioner Western DlstROBERT N. BEESON. V ejaaasaaasa WAYNE TOWNSHIP. Trustee JAMES H. HOWARTH. Asaeasor ; CHARLES E. POTTER. A NECESSITY. The) "theory has been adTanced by able romanticists now In the democratic ranks, that in case the county local optton bill goes through, there is no reason for electing a republican gov ernor. "Jim Watson's thunder will be gone" they say. As a matter of fact the necessity for electing a republican . legislature and governor remains precisely the same whether the county local option bill goes through or not. Everybody knows that a bill can be repealed. What Is the use of pushing a bill through In a special session and then allow It to be killed In the next ses sion. The solid front which the democratic members have shown against county local option Is In Itself conclu slve proof of why a republican legislature is necessary. And as for the gov ernorMarshall has not said yet what
he would really do if the bill came up in his administration if he were elected. . Whatever may be said pro or con about Watson, there Is no denying the fact that whenever Watson has spoken, be the place a breweery stronghold or a temperance place, his stand has been unequivocal on the question of county local option. Marshall, on the other hand , has lost the esteem of many of his friends by his evasive chameleon utterances. Whether county local option goes through or not, a republican legislature and a republican governor are a necessity to good government, free from brewery domination. -.. --n. Is It not a singular thing that the geratic party should be so . very million- on the merits of ward and the . r - - " . v-s . -A -V "' U 7
brewers should hold the same views? This singular coincidence of two bodies of men is of course not to be accounted for by the influence of one on the other. No! These men by individual thinking in widely separate places, have come to the eame belief. It is not to be supposed of course that there is any connection between Thomas Taggart of French Lick and the brewery trust, with Thomas Taggart, the war lord of the democratic party. Such would be an unwarranted assumption. The next legislature of the state of Indiana must be freed from brewery domination. To attain this it must be republican, elected on the platform of the republican party, which declares that county local option must be. And also there must be a republican governor a man who unmistakably comes out and Etays for county local option without evasion. The present special session can in no way dispose of the necessity for a republican legislature and a republican governor. It is a necessity for good government.
MR. ROOSEVELT REPLIES. Roosevelt has replied to Bryan's inquiry about Governor Haskell. It ought to be plain now to Bryan, in regard to the connection of his good man Friday with the Standard Oil company. Roosevelt has shown that the court record implicates Haskell without the shadow of a doubt, to say nothing of the suspicious Ohio business. Is Mr. Bryan sincere in his statements that Governor Haskell is to be put out if sufficient proof is given? Court records are rather formidable. "I call your attention to the fact that the question Is not whether or not the judge erred or whether the injunction was proper. The point is that the Governor was alert to take out cf the hands of the attorney general what the attorney general felt vas his sworn duty to prevent, ,an alleged instance of the breaking of the laws by this particular great corporation." That is not the sort of thing which Is the ideal behavior for a campaign treasurer. Is Mr. Bryan sincere? The suggestion that Haskell be tried is plausible enough. Certainly he should be tried. But in the meantime with evidence so damaging would it not be wiser to get rid of Haskell I and let him clear himself afterward? It does not appear that there Is any great alacrity to scent the disgrace of petroleum money in Its own camp. The cases of Haskell and Foraker differ completely. Foraker was discredited before the exposure. Haskell is defended after more conclusive evi dence is given. The whole proceeding gives one the impression that a great deal of this trust talk of the democratic party is nothing more nor less than talk. The reply of Mr. Roosevelt to Mr. Bryan was not devoid of its sting. "I put Mr. Taft's deeds against your words, I ask that Mr. Taft be judged by all his deeds for he wishes none of them forgotten. I ask that you be judged both by the words you wish remembered and by the words that seemingly you and your party now desire to have forgotten." How long will it be until Mr. Bryan desires that Haskell too, "is not contained in the party" and is one whom Mr. Bryan and his party "seemingly desire to have forgotten?" Mysterious Language. Without stopping to discuss whether legal phraseology is not at least as cryptic as that used by doctors or Insisting on the fact that every science must have what the toilers in other fields of Intellectual labor call a "Jargon" of Its own we freely admit that there is In medical terminology a good deal not only of bad Greek, but ol needless mystery. British Medical Journal. Lftttia: Gold Medal Flour makes the whitest bread. . Sri. via. MAN WHO SET AN EXAMPLE TO RICH. r 1 ..$:..i''W V WM. H. SINGER. Singer is the Pittsburg steel magnate, who at his golden wedding anniversary gave 4,000,000 to each of his four children.
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THOSE HIGH IfJ CODICILS QUAKE Hearst Charges Have Done Much to Create Overwhelming Fear.
AERIAL TRIP IMPROBABLE. PRESIDENT ROOSEVELT TO STAY ON LAND SINCE WRIGHT AEROPLANE WRECK CAPITAL CITY AGAINST BILL BOARDS. Special Correspondence. Washington, Sept. 24. When it first became known that W. K. Hearst proposed that his private and personal Independence Party should launch a presidential ticket, the prediction was made that it would help a lot toward livening up the campaign. The prediction probably was based upon a knowledge of Mr. Hearst's characteristics as a newspaper publisher. It's a dull day when Mr. Hearst's newspapers can't stir up something, but as backer of a presidential ticket the original "yellow" editor has made his l'ewspaper stunts appear tame as an old lady's eeiving circle. The campaign Is jet young, a far as real activity is concerned, but already Senator Foraker of Ohio has been sent to the mat for the count, and Cov. Haskell of Oklahoma is busier and madder than any hornet ever was. Eveiy lip i:; fiamed in the query: ""What next?" There are a lot of i.ien highly placed who will not be able to sleep well o'nighte until it becomes apparent thai Mr. Hearst has 'exhausted his sIock of exposures. No one but a hopt-Iest pessimist believes other than that the great majority, an oves whelming majority of American public men trearl the straight and narrow path, serving their country and their constituents with single hearted devotion. Contiariv.ise, the man Is a hopeless imbecile who does not know that there have crept into high places in the nation's councils, men a3 crooked and slippery as the creator ever allowed to crawl upon the earth. These are the ones who fear Hearst, just as they fear any other agent that makes for publicity. A good many Americans mad not admire Mr. Hearst. Some of them, no doubt, have a bad taste in the mouth when tLoy think of him. But it can net be denied that if the charges Mr. Hearst brings are true he Is serving a useful purpose. And, like other folks who trade in unpleasant goods, it is altogether likely that Mr. Hearst will have to pay the penalty of bis trade, but it can not be denied that he is an important agency in the cmbade for cleaner and more decent things in American public life. The aeroplane accident at Fort Meyey, in which an army officer lost his life and Inventor Wright was seriously injured, probably removes all chance that resident Roosevelt will take an aerial journey during bis incumbency of office. It is not at all likely that the Fort Myer accident would have the effect of weakening Mr. Roosevelt's nerve, but for the president to risk his life in one of the machines while the catastrophe was fresh in mind would be too flagrant a disregard of public sentiment. Mr. Roosevelt realizes as ; well as any other man that so long as j he is president of the United States his life is not his own to dispose of, and along with his love of adventure he has a pretty deep sense of the responsibilities of his office. , No one knows, of course, whether Mr. Roosevelt would have attempted flight in a heavler-than-air machine even had the accident not occurred at Fort Myer, but it is known that the experience would have been precisely to his liking. Had he announced his intention of taking a trip with Mr. Wright his personal and official advisers would have gone as far as they could in attempting to dissuade him. How well they might have succeeded no one will ever know, for the thought that it might have been the president of the United States instead of an army lieutenant who was Mr. Wright's passenger that day, will make argument unnecessary for a long time to come. A spirit of unrest is upon the citizens of the National capital. No sooner do they get out of one crusade until they jump into another. It is the bill board question now that is causing them agitation of mind. They demand that either the bill boards shall be abolished in toto or that they shall be rebuilt to more closely harmonize with the aesthetical spirit of America's most beautiful city. Why, they demand to know, should millions cf dollars be expended for palatial buildings, beautiful sttues, the care of parks and streets, while hideous bill boards are allowed to encumber the landscape. No enterprising advertising man has yet ventured to erect a bill board in one of the city's parks, but on vacant lots adjoining parks and adjoining private residences and public buildings of chastest marble they rear their horrid heads, flaunting In grotesque attempts at art the merits of whiskeys, breakfast foods, corset stays and what nots. At last the clamorers for a more beautiful Washington have arisen In their wrath and congress will be asked to decree that the bill boards must go. Not only is Washington ambitious herself to be a more beautiful city, but she wants to show other cities the way to beauty; and how can her example be potent while the bill boards endure? Kodol For Indigestion Palpitation of the heart. Divests what van ml
GEORGE ADE HOST TO LARGE CROWD
Indiana's Famous Humorist Held Big Barbecue at Brook. TAFT MAKES ADDRESS. REPUBLICAN PRESIDENTIAL CANDIDATE SPEAKS TO ENTHUSI AS TIC HUNDREDS WATSON AND OTHERS ALSO SPEAK. Brook. Ind.. Sept. 2.'. George Ade's ! big country place was thronged today j with thousands of people who came j from all over the state to attend the j t jepublican barbecue and to Lear Wil-j Ham H. Taft. James E. Watson. "l.'n- i cle Joe" Cannon, Uncle Jack" Gowdy ' end others deliver addresses. At noon today thousands were fed -on the lawn fcurron tiding the home of Indiana's most famous playwright and humorist, and during the repast music was furnished by the celvb'-ated Fourth R;giir.ent band of Chicago. This afternoon at J o'clock Mr. Wat- 1 ton delivered an excellent address and j his remarks were frequently interrupted by enthusiastic cheerinp. At the c:o;e of Mr. Watson's address. Mr. Ta't w ill ir.a'-e a speech and at ibis alve:r.o(ii he will depart on his special (rain for Chicago. Mr. Taft is expected to iual:e au address which will have a great bearing on the cam- , i aigr:. j Pi xa'-.er Cannon v,:ll ;e:i t':e cam-, it. ;u vA Jndianpno'is Thursday night j frr the republicans, w! en- he will! .:v?ak under p.iis-iices of the Mar-j i n 'l ib. V.'i'linm L. Taylor, former j v A ;;aU at And rson, Viucenrci : ::;M'Vo cr thiee other placoa in In-j "ianu tL's weak. ' Cba'rman Hares, of the republican! sneukii bureau, an;iou:ic3d today that Governor ll.tg-ios. of New York, v. ill kiim U lit Sn:if'i l!end. t :r!h ?r ' v 20. Governor Hughes will make but, one apaecti in Jtuuanr.. on teytemoer j 20, Senator Hevrridge will make his! first speech of the campaign in In-i diana at Tcrre Haute, where he willjo reply to tfrrau on labor. Oj October: 3 James S. Sherman, vice presidential j o nominee, will begin his Indiana tour! Arrangements are being completed for Bryan to speak at Terre Haute Friday afternoon. It is predicted that he will have an audience of 15,000 people. INTERRUPT A AUJIGHT ORGY Men Surrounded by Bottles Captured by Police. It wa3 an intended all night orgy that officers Vogelsong and Bundy in-l terrupted on the commons at Eighth and South H streets about 2 o"clock this morning. Sprawled upon thei ground were Henry Hoppe, Harry Kel!ey and Oscar Frame. About them were scattered several empty beer bottles and a smaller number of whishnttlos nnrtiv full TCelliiV and Hoppe were arrested and Frame, who1 Is the fntho- nt tin small rMlrtron I wa3 told by the officers to go home and behave himself. He was threatened with prosecution for the next offense, '"v In city court today, Hoppe offered a humble plea of guilty and was fined ?10 and costs. Kelley plead not guilty and stood trial. His conviction was just as easy. After the policemen had told their stories he said he guessed that was about the way of it and his punishment was the same as Hoppe's. Both men went to jail, Hoppe still somewhat unstable in his equilibrium. ROASTED TO CRISP BEFOREJCOM R ADES Horrible Death of Two When Brick Kiln Explodes. MInot, N. D., Sept. 24. Slowly roasting under tons of red-hot bricks, in plain view of comrades who were unable to assist, E. W. Drake. Sr. and Clarence Bailey met death. The big kiln of the Kenmare Brick and Coal company' burst this morning when but 10 hours from completion. Drake, ,who is the manager of the; plant, was buried up to his arms in j the red-hot pile. j Bailey, who is the seventeen-year-old son of a prominent farmer, was : completely entombed. His body was roasted to a crisp. A son of E. W. Drake was seriously burned in an attempt to save his father. An explosion of gas is supposed to have caused the accident. Some of the older historians tell nr. that Mohammed had a dove which he used to feed with wheat out of his ear. When the dove was hungry it used to alight on the prophet's shoulder and thrust its bill into his ear to find its meaL Mohammed, it is said, thng led the Arabs to believe that the bird was a messenger from God with Inspired truths for him. New Tort American. Gold Medal Flour saves worry.
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Palladium and Sun-Telegram Classified Ad. Contest Only eight more days until the prizes will be awarded in the great Palladium & Sun-Telegram's classified ad contest. Nine days is a short time in which to gain the lead in your district and it behooves each contestant to leave no stone unturned in covering their district thoroughly. It should be much easier to obtain classified ads now than at the beginning of the contest inasmuch as the subscribers of this paper are becoming firm believers in the great results obtainable frcm reading and using Palladium want ads. "Little satisfiers for big wants" is an easy way in which to describe this paper's classified ads. The want ad page is the market place of all the people in Richmond and Wayne county and to become a trader in this market only a few pennies is necessary. Let each reader of the Palladium think of anything he wants, wants to sell, trade, to rent or, in fact, anything may be advertised among these little adiets. Send or bring an advertisement to the Palladium office before twelve o'clock tomorrow and we will be glad to credit any one of the contestant's names appearing below. There is still an opportunity for anyone to enter the contest in the districts below and if the proper amount of energy is displayed in soliciting want ads there is a splendid chance for the last one entering to be the one to win out at the end. Anyone wishing to enter the contest now is entitled to 200 votes for the first ad brought to this office. Below is set forth the standing of the contestants in their respective districts
DISTRICT NO. 1. William Hiliinn, 1123 Sheridan .
DISTRICT NO. 3. May Weiss, 129 South 6th 450 Howard Sihkman. 316 S. 6th 410 Bessie Smith, 17 S. 5th 210 Ida Corcoran. 17 South 4th 200 Elizabeth McElhany, 427 Main DISTRICT NO. 4. Russell Parker, 207 South 11th 200 Hsnry Schneider, 226 South 9th... 200 Lee Genr., 120 South 10th 200 DISTRICT NO. 5. Russell Stout. 217 S. 13th 200 DISTRICT NO. 7. Doris Shesler, 24 North 6th 1180 Rose Mercurio, 19 North 6th 470 Charles Morgan, 311 North 5th 200
Ihe KING of fi
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IAMONDS.
By Louis Tracy, Author of "Winus of the Mornintf," "The Pillar of
4 A A Litftit," COPYRIGHT. 1904. By "c-. joti wilt, will you? And bow will you hare it, iu notes or gold?" lie could not help this display of cheap sarcasm. The situation was losing its annoyance. The humor of it was LeginrrinK to dawn on htm. When his glance rested more critically on rhilip, the boy's age. the ioverty of bis circumstances, the whole fantastic incongruity of the affair forced his recognition. Not unprepared for finch a retort, I'hlllp gathered the stones togetner and twisted the ends or the paper, Evidently the parcel was going back into bis pocket. lie glanced at a clock, too, which ticked solemnly OTer the ofSee door. "Here, what are you doing?" cried Isnacsteln. "doing to some one who will deal with me in a reasonable manner. It is Dfl yy late yet I suppose there are lemy Ol UCUiS .1KB JOUIB in Hatton Garden, or I can go back to Mr. son""Sit down. Sit down." growled the man, vainly striving to cloak his nervousness by a show of grim jocosity. "I never saw such a boy in my life. You are touchy as gunpowder. I was only joking." "I am not joking. Mr. Isaacsteln. Your price is my price 50,000." "Do you think I carry that amount of money in my purse?" demanded Isaacstein, striving desperately to think out some means whereby he could get Fhllip Into a more amiable mood, when, perchance, the true story of the gems might be revealed. "No," was the answer. "Even if you gave It to me I should not take it away. I want you to advance, say, 30 today. I require clothes and other things. Then tomorrow you can bring me to a bank and pay a portion of the purchase price to my credit, giving me at the same time a written promise to pay the remainder within a week or a month, any reasonable period. In fact Tlia diamond merchant was quickly becoming serious, methodical, as be listened. This businesslike proposal was the one thing needed to restore his bewildered faculties. "Tel! me, boy," he said, "who has been advising you?" "Xo one." "Do you mean to say you came here today to trade with me without con suiting any otber person?" "I certainly told Mr. Abingdon I was coming, and I feel that I can always return to him for auy advice if I am in a difficulty, but the offer I have just made is my own." Watching Isaacsteia's face was an interesting operation to Philip. Under ordinary conditions be might as well expect to find emotion depicted in a pound of butter as in that oily countenance, with its set expression molded by years of sharp dealings. But today the man was startled out of all the accustomed grooves of business. He was confronted with a problem eo novel that bis experience was not wide enough to embrace it. v So Philip caught a glwim of resentment at the introduction of the magistrate's name, and be instantly resolved to see Mr.- Abingdon again at the earliest opportunity. "Oh, he treated you kindly today, did he? snarled Isaacsteln. "Yes, most kindly." "You don't driak. I suppose? broke In thether abrr;r .
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VOTES. 97n i w Etc. EDWARD JK CtODE. "Noj I am only a boy of fifteen and do not need stimulants." He was favored with a sharp glance at this remark, but he bent over hia diamonds again and began to examine them one by one. He knew that the action was tantalizing to bis companion, and that Is why he did it Isaacsteln went to a sideboard and poured out a stiff glass of brandy. He swallowed it aa an ordinary person takes an oyster. "That's better," he said, returning to his desk. "Now we can get to close quarters. Hand over the stones." Philip did nothing of the sort. "Why?" he Inquired blandly. "Ton know all about them. You can hardly want to examine them so frequently." "Confound It!" cried Isaacsteln, growing red with renewed Impatience. "What more can I do than agree to your terms?" "I asked yon for an advance of 50. I said nothing about leaving the diamonds In your charge. Please listen to me. I make bo unreasonable demands. If you wish to kep the stones now you must first write me a letter stating the agreement between us. If it is right I will give you the dia monds. If It Is not according to ray ideas you must alter it" "Do you think I mean to swindle you?" "I fcj no V'Tv on that point I mm .4 , - , 41
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DISTRICT NO. 8. Ernest McKay, 1028 Main 1060 DISTRICT NO. 9. Eugene Hay, 402 N. 16th 290 Clarence Love, 229 North 18th 220 Russel Guyer, 1514 Main 200 Carl Sieweke, 1413 North B 200 Geo. Pettibone, 409 North 16th 200 Paul Brown, 402 N. 17th - DISTRICT NO. 10. Lida Hopping, 1322 North F1...-1070 Ruth Davis, 818 North H .-910 Frank Cummins, 800 North 12th.200 Willie Moss, 820 North H St . Daniel Van Etten, 1108 N. I street Bryan Cooper, 916 N. 12th William Stephen, 900 N. 12th.
am" only telling." yoa Rrfeat CryebBdV- , tions are." Isaacsteln sat fcack'ta fete-cbsd and regarded Philip fixedly and with aa much calmness as be eovld samraoa to his aid. A raj of snsblne lltamlaed a bald patch on the top of hto head, and the boy found almsetf Idly peculating on development la the man future life. The man, oft Tatv-part. arse ' seeking to read the boy's incrvtaM character, bat the fixity of FhUfp'f gaze at hi denuded croem laooftcet ed him again. What are yon looTtlnf ttT Bg xnanded suddenly. "I was wonderlaf bow yon vO faoV when ym go to heaven, lfr. Isaac stein." was the sstonadlnf reply. "Ton Imagine, thea, that I toayeal , fairly with your be said at last. Oh, yee. Why ahoald yo rob toet Yon can earn more money than yo eaa ever need In this world by looking after my Interests properly. If only ye will believe this statement it will aave f you nrach future worry. I asevre 700." "Were yon in earn eat when yo satj that you have an abundance) etooe like those in your hand?" "So many, Mr. Isaacstem, t&sTf Jwt will hare some trowble la dfsposag M . them, I have diamond as bts let m see aa big a em . The wonder 1 that the ma-H mot faint "My Godr ha aura-led. knew what yon are aaytef . v3ker are they, boy? Toa will be robbe&V murdered for their aake. Where are) they? Let me put them teaiotaafa place. I will deal honestly peak I weardtby all the I held sacred, you must have them taken eaa . "They are qatte safe, be certain of that Beveal my secret I will net I have borne Insult and lmprtsoneaent to preserve It, so It ie not nkefy I will Yield now to vcur aooeala." (Continued.) Biggs Now there to talk ef a 1 trust Dlggs No danger of that Auy trust in sanaa ge would be topojaffaaju.
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Grows Hair and we can PROVE IT! The Great DANDERINE Never Fails to Produce the Desired Results.
IT enliven and invigorates tk haw glands and tissues f th acalp. resulting in a continuous and Increasing growth of the hair. Lefiera ef sraU ar eootlaoaT jr eornlof la from aearlr ail ana ef tbo constrr (MUdc that udrU baa renewed lb. growth wf aalr la caaea tbei vara coaal4are4 abaa lately bnpeleee. A tadr from BraoVra wrftaat "After a abort trial air balra(p4 f alllDf, aaa i new bare Hrrt'.j be4 wf bair. very baary ai4 orer 00 aaa a quarter yarda lone " Oanderine stimulate iWm seal, makes it bealthy and fcaeps it . It is the greatest acalp iovigorator known. It is a wboIeaorM medicinal for both the bair and scalp. Even a small bottle of It will put more genuine life In your bair than a gallon of any other hair tonic ever made It shows result from the very start. Now aa sale at every drug and toilet store in the land ; 3 stses 25C, 50C and 91.00 g mm m To (bow how aalckly a I a DanderiD ania.vs wflleao a larc iaia4a faa by ratara mall 10 aar eaa w aa aeada tbla freeeoapoa aafba Cut This Out . Uaatlaa ftaaaariaa Ca. Catcagi. with tMram and ae4reae aad toe ta ailrer ar r'ao ta T poMace.
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