Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 34, Number 180, 7 May 1909 — Page 6
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THE RICHMOND FALIADIUM AST SUN-TELEGRAM, FXHDAY, MAT 7, 1CC3. News of Surrounding Towns Of Interest to the Farmers
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WcsCcrcdby LydiaEPinkfccn'sVcctcblsCompoana Adrian, Ga. I suffered untold misery from s female weakness and fflwwt, and I could not stand more i wan a minute at a time. My doctor said an operation was the only chance I had, ana I dreaded It almost as much as death. One dav I was reading now other women had been eared by Lydia EL Flnkham's Vegetable Compound, and decided to trv Rjifnm T had taken aim bottle I was better, and now l am completely cured." Leva. V. HMrtnr, Route No. g, Adrian, Ga. Why will women take chances with an operation or drag out a sickly, half-hearted existence, missing threefourths of the joy of living, when they can And health In Lydia . Flnkham's Vegetable Compound? , ' For thirty years it has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has cured thousands of women who have been troubled with such ailments as displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularitiM, periodic pains, backache, indigestion, and nervous prostration. If yon hare the slightest doubt that Lydia IS. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound will belp yon, write to Mrs. Pinkham at Iornn, Mass- fsr adTioe-v vTowr letter will be absolutely confidential, and the adytoe free. ; CHICAGO WOMAN TO LEAD FIGHT Miss Edna L. Foley Will Direct - Campaign Against Great White Plague. PRELIMINARY WORK IS ON CHICAGO 1 INSTITUTE HAS AL READY LOCATED SEVEN DISPENSARIES IN VARIOUS PARTS FOR THE BIG WORK. Chicago, May 7. A woman is to be in charge of the real fight against the white plague, which is to be waged by the Chicago tuberculosis Institute, She is Miss Edna L. Foley of Boston, Mass., and she already has taken up her preliminary duties at the offices of the Institute. The institute has seven dispensaries in different parts of the city and nine graduate nurses who assist in treating the tuberculosis patients. Over these dispensaries and nurses Miss Foley will have full charge and the responst billty for the treatment of the afflicted will rest with her. Miss Foley is a young woman, hav ing graduated from Smith College In lflrtl. When she left college she de cided to become a nurse. She took a course at the Hartford . training school and later became head of the nursing department in the, Hartford hosoltal. She also was connected with the Child's hospital of Albany, and the Children's hospital of Boston, She resigned her position in the Bos- ' ton consumptive hospital to come to Chicago. Natives of Burma and parts of India prepare tea In a peculiar way. called "pickling." The leaves are boiled and pressed into bamboo tubes, which are buried in the ground until the mater ial has matured. . C? Gcnofipatcd . Test It Prca Every year intelligent people are vresslng more lightly and paying more attention to their health. If a person eats what is sufficient for his bodily , requirements he will give the Mood plenty of strength to warm the remotest points of the body. It tsu as you see. much more a owes tlon of Mood than of heavy clothing, but the tooMhoh and bowels, nevertheless, reculate the quality of tho blood. Of flrst UBMitanc la the dally moron eat of the bowels, so that tho wast mattor may - be carried from tho syetem and not got In Cm Mood. If a pcaoa haa lew than one movement of tho bowels la each M hours, he or she la constipated. If eoastteated there Is no' better euro than Dr. Caldwell's 8yrup Pepsin. It cures so permaaenUy and scientifically that eventually you will be able to do without medicine of any kind, and that Is the Mint you are aiming at. Tou cannot ax poet permanent results from salts, powders. cathartic plus or purgative tablets. They are at beet but tamoorary reliefs. Dr. CaMwett's Syrup Papain, belngr a Jaaettve toate. will euro the trouble and eo tone the donative organs that they wflt soon learn M do nature's work without assist ance. That is the experience, ethers.- of Mrs. Benntaoa. of Ki UL, and John It. Neeskern, of 1 This wonderful herb laxative can be obtained of any drorgist at M eeots or St a bottle, frequently In Itself swlioloat for a cure. Thousands of tellable families keen- It steadily for mot each . eeaefsjeacy. Xfv however, you have never yet used it ana woum lute tr try it sendPfA send your name and addi to a free test bottle wta be to your home. The results wis than our words, write to47. If there Is anything about iat yea don't or If you want tvtoe, write to the doctor, and he wul answer yew foBy. no charge for this
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The address Is Or. W. & Caldwell. CM Oeltwea tti.
ELDORADO, OHIO. Eldorado, O.. May 7. The Indict
ment against William Coblentz, a former resident of Eldorado, in the Miami county courts for obtaining money under- false pretense was thrown out the second time by Judge W. D. Jones when he sustained the demurrer made by W. A. Haines, attorney for Coblentz. As general manag er of the Gem City Acetylene Generator Co., Coblents disposed of a large block of stock to West Milton capital ists, after which the company went into the hands of a receiver and later emerged from the receivership. Last October Coblentz was indicted by the Miami county arand jury, after a num ber of civil and criminal prosecutions were commenced against him. This indictment was declared irregular and he was reindicted last January, which was also pronounced irregular. In re taliation, claiming he has been irreparably damaged financially and otherwise, Coblentz has recently instituted several damage cases in the Montgom ery county court for tnese criminal prosecutions and asks for damages in the sum of $200,000. Coblentz is highly connected, being a brother-in-law of Isaac Miller, a wealthy land owner and cashier , of the Farmers Banking Co., at this place. He is a prominent member of the U. B. church and is at present educating his daughters in the U. B. Seminary at Westerville. Cole Younger, former bandit, out on parole granted by the Governor of Minnesota, has taken to the lecture platform in Oklahoma. "A young man never made a more serious mistake than to suppose that the world owes him a living. It doesn't, says Younger. "The understanding with the Governor of Minnesota was that I might do as I pleased as long as I didn't do it in Minnesota," the bandit declares. THE ONLY WAY Many Richmond Citizens Have Dis covered It. Just what to do when the kidneys are affected, is a question that con cerns both young and old. Weak kid neys neglected1 in childhood lead to life-long suffering. People of advanc ed years, with less vitality, suffer doubly. In youth or age, languor. backache, urinary irregularity, dizzi ness and nervousness make life a burden. There is one remedy that acts di rectly on the kidneys and cures these troubles. Doan's Kidney Pills owe their world'wide fame to the fact that they cure sick kidneys and cure them permanently. Follow the example of this Richmond citizen and you will be convinced that this is so. Mrs. James Henry Brokamp, 62 Sherman street, Richmond, Ind., says: Doan's Kidney Pills have been used in my family off and on; for at least six years and they have brought such good results that we always keep a supply on hand. Wheneveg an attack of backache or any other symptom of kidney complaint appears, Doan's Kidney Pills are used and they never fail to bring relief. I have no hesitation in recommending this remedy." For sale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Foster-MIlburn Co., Buffalo, New York, sole sgents for the United States. -. Remember the name Doan's and take no other. MEW PARIS. OHIO. New Paris, p.. May 7. Miss Mary Porterfield spent Wednesday with Miss Shirley Watt. Miss Grace McWhinney was enter tained by Miss Mary Porterfield Tues day. Miss Margretta Hoerner visited with Miss Alice White Tuesday and Wednesday. Miss Gertrude Bice who has been very sick is slowly improving. Miss Eva McKee spent Tuesday ev ening with Miss Roxie McKee. They also attended a class meeting out at the Miss Hoerner's. There being ten present of the class. Mr. U. Z. Reigle of New Madison was in town Tuesday. Those who successfully passed the Patterson examination were Paul Clark, Paul McPherson, Byron Kuth and Helen Sawyer of this place. All Odd Fellows and Rebekahs are notified to turn out next Sunday evening at the Universalist church to hear the anniversary sermon by Rev O. G. Colegrove of Plain City. ' Fred Welch who has just received his discharge from the navy is the guest of his sister Mrs. Silas Hoerner. He was with, the Atlantic fleet, being on the West Virginia. He will not re-enlist but will go to school this fall and winter. : Walter Relnheimer and wife will oc cupy the half of the W. I Hahn flat, recently vacated by George S. Kessler. - Mrs. Elmer Murray is able to be up and around some, of which her friends are glad to know. Mrs. Earl Williams is convalescing from an attack of pneumonia. Rev. Behner expects to go to Missouri for a couple of weeks vacation. George Fbrtney is assisting Manager Snell of the Telephone company in a lot of line and outside work on the plant which is to be pretty thoroughly overhauled this summer. H. E. McKeon the marblelthic tile contractor has been awarded the contract for the tile work on Richmond's new school house. This is a nice job and Mr. McKeon is to be congratulated while the Richmond people are also assured of a good job. Harry Hoffman was elected principal of the, Lewiaburg high school at the ' meeting of the school board of that place Monday evening. Mr. Hoffman has been assistant in the New Paris high school the past three years and has made good. While we lose a good teacher and are sorry to lose him we rejoice la his promotion. We
congratulate the Lewisburg people on securing his services. Mr. Wesley Prather has been appointed to take his place. A former New Paris boy who has made good. Mrs. Barber and Miss Helen Spier of Sidney were here Wednesday calling on friends. H. H. Whitman has been appointed road supervisor.
The township schools closed on Tuesday of this week after a very prosperous year's work. The final examination occurred on Thursday and Friday of last week. The grading and promotion of the pupils will soon be completed and then every body will be ready for the summer vaca tion. Owing to the serious illness of Mrs. Wehrley wife of the janitor at the school house, school was dismissed Monday morning for one week. It will open again next Monday. Mr. Cbas. Standish of Cable is here filling Mr. W. A. Nelson's place who is with his brother at Straughn. Ind. Miss Elma Hoerner was pleasantly surprised Tuesday evening, it being her birthday. Her Sunday school classmates were to hold a class meetlag and so planned the surprise to take place along- with the meeting. There were ten of the class present. Light refreshments were served and a very pleasant time was spent by the young ladies. AN ITCHING PALM. No Cure for It. Other Forms of Itch ing Preferable. There is no cure for an itching palm the money kind. Even poslam, the new skin discovery, cannot help it. But when it comes to eczema, the most annoying of itching skin trou bles, poslam will stop the itching at once and cure the worst cases in a few days. So with hives, rash, scab ies, split toes, piles, and scaly scalp, all of which are different forms of ec zema, accompanied by severe itching and caused by imperfect digestion and careless diet. ' Poslam comes in two-dollar jars, but fifty cents worth will answer in curing any of the diseases mentioned It can be had of any druggist. W. H Sudhoff makes of specialty of It. That results are Immediate will be amply demonstrated overnight by the use of the experimental sample which the Emergency Laboratories, 32 West Twenty-fifth Street, New York City, will send free by mail, in plain wrap per, to any one who will write for it. MILTON. IND. Milton, Ind., May 7. Mrs. Louis Plankenhorn and daughter, of Great Bend, Kansas, are visiting Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Hart. Master Dwight North Brown is con valescing from a light attack of scar let fever. There are no other cases In the vicinity. Mrs. F. A. Scott is visiting relatives in Crawford county. The sermon subjects at the Chris tian church Sunday are: Morning, Old Landmarks"; evening, "Dreams and Dreamers." 'At the morning service Harry Doty will sing a solo. Frank Bee son, one of our most esti mable citizens is near death's door. He no longer takes nourishment and has been unconscious for a day or so. Harry Hoshour is in Cincinnati where he began the season as band director with Buckskin Ben. The high school boys defeated the "outsiders" at base ball Wednesday afternoon. The Senior class floated their colors, gold and black, above tho school house, Tuesday night, and remained in the school building until near midnight to watch that they were re moved. Later in the night the Junior colors supplanted them. Edgar P. Jones has .returned from Indianapolis. MBS. M'VEAGH IS WANTED III COURT Wife of the Secretary of the Treasury, Will Be Used As a Witness. MUSICIAN BRINGS A SUIT HE CLAIMS MRS. MACVEAGH OWES HIM $50 FOR AN ENTER TAINMENT AT HER HOME ON NEW YEARS. , . Chicago, May 7 Mrs. Franklin MacVeagh has been invited to attend a function in the Municipal court, May 12. The invitation has been sent out by one of Judge Uhlir's bailiffs at te suggestion of Louis Lipsky, an orches tra leader. Mrs. Mac Veagh, whose husband is secretary of the treasury, is in Washington, but it is believed she win make It a matter of principle to attend. Mr. Lipsky has extended this invita tion because he contends that Mrs. jaacyeaga mvues nun to attend a watch-night party at her home on the Lake Shore drive on New Years eve in his professional capacity. He alleges that Mrs. Laura Dainty Pelham, a society entertainer who had charge of the Revels at Mrs. , MacVeagh's home, engaged him to furnish the music Mrs. Pelham, however, says she engaged other music at Mrs. MacVeagh's dinner. However, Mr.. Lipsky is suing for $50.00 which Mrs. MacVeagh steadfastly has de clined to nan.
Imports ofrtce for"tT"year"l&9fe are placed at 3.00a000. while the export trade was less than $900,000.
The Job of teaching the calf to drink Is simplified quite a bit if the little chap to not allowed to suck the cow at alL This plan Is also Just as well for the cow, as she Is not so likely to hold up her milk as she is If the calf is allowed to suck for three or four days. A. full stand of small grain or corn not only means more dollars at harvest time, but big chunks of satisfaction all through the growing and ripening season. It is fair to assume, too, that land feels more respectable under these conditions than when disfigured with a multitude of weeds. Considering the fact thst the value of a pasture wisely handled will run all the way from $8 to $12 an acre per season; the pasture question Is one that should receive more attention than Is usually given to it. Well handled, it should be one of the most profitable factors in the farm management.. A. Minnesota farmers co-operative creamery la utilizing its organisation not only for the buttermaking business proper, but for the operation of a cow exchange by means of which owners who have cows they want to dispose of bring them to the creamery, where tbey may be inspected and purchased by those in need of cows. Dry farming Is that type of soil cultivation which is carried on in sections where the annual rainfall is fifteen inches or less and where the moisture necessary for the maturing of a crop is conserved and stored by deep plowing and frequent cultivations, which keep the surface soil mellow, enabling It to retain a maximum amount of that moisture which falls as rain and tending to increase the amount of moisture which rises from the subsoil to the cultivated sone. It is a pretty sure proposition that chronically bad roads anywhere keep land values below what they would otherwise be. Such condition Is in part due to the handicap which own ers are confronted with In hauling their prodnoe to market while there is little question thst the mere ap pearance of the highways has a considerable Influence with a prospective purchaser in causing him to arrive at an estimate of what he considers piece of land in such a poor roads lo cality worth. ''.'' An odd feature In the practice of Norman tenant farmers to that often their leases entitle them to carry off from a farm when they leave It a foot or so of the rich black surface soil, the equity of the procedure seeming to lie in the fact that, since he has been to considerable pains and expense to en rich the soil, he to entitled to a certain portion of it when be moves to an other place. If renters in this country were doing a little more of this business of carrying soil fertility around with them, instead of as a class being soil lmpoverlshers, the condition of things would be a good deal better, all parties involved, than It to today. An honest writer in an advertising folder Issued by a western railroad company for tbe purpose of exploiting the lands tributary to its lines, in discussing the question of a possible overdoing of the apple business ta tbe mountain and Pacific states, makes the pertinent suggestion that to avoid tbe danger of such a condition only the best varieties of apples should be planted now those that because of their exceptional appearance and quality are bound to fetch good prices even If tbe market to drugged with poorer apples. The point to well taken and should be kept In view not only by those In tbe west, but also by those In the east, who are about to set new orchard tracts. There Is no time when the work of giving the young orchard trees lew heads and sturdy branching limbs can be done so easily as at the time when they are first set out. If the young trees as they come from the nursery are tall and spindly they should be cut back so as to leave a trunk of the desired height. While this may seem harsh treatment, the result will be that sturdy lateral branches will be set out and a good "head" started when nothing of the kind would be possible were the tree allowed to continue Its vertical growth uninterrupted. Tbe finishing of the Job may have to be carried through several seasons, and the amount that will need to be done from time to time will be indicated somewhat by the habit of growth of the tree and the definite ideal or type of tree which the orchardlst may have In mind. . While the Holstein cow Johanna TV.'s Colantba holds the world's record so far as milk and butter production during any given year to concerned, tbe Jersey cow Jacoba Irene has, completed a three years' batter production thst has never been excelled. During the year 1906 she gave 11.391 pounds of milk, which tested 5.44 and produced 610 pounds of but ter fat; In 1907 she gave 14J63 pounds of &5S per cent milk, which showed 792 pounds of butter fat. while last year her milk yield was 17.253 pounds. testing 5JS3 and giving 964 pounds of butter fat or the, equivalent of 1.122 pounds of 85 per cent butter. Added to this remarkable continuous milk giving performance, Jacoba . Irene has produced three healthy calves, which makes her record tho more remarka ble. Many will watch with Interest to see If her 1900 record to an Improve ment on that of 1908. Two thmcs on a coed manv farms need a better chance to show what they can do for thi mas Hen, the beys and girta and the soil, which are the enter assets ana measures of and prosperity. It is just as unreasonable to expect old Biddy to keep out of a bed of
house as duct to stay away rrotn a pond of water. On this account It Is well to fence the hens from the flow
ers or the rev When the calves are a few weeks old they should have whole corn and oats where they can get a good bite of the ration once or twice a day. This will tide them over until there Is good grazing. There is no harm if the light grain ration is kept up well into the summer. ; " ' " The escrnteolarmer will likely get along just as well end perhaps better with scrub stock as thoroughbreds, as the former for generations have been used to putting up with most any kind of care and accommodations and as a result will not suffer so much if compelled to sblftfor themselves. The size of the different leading breeds of sheep is quite directly traceable to the abundance of feed In the pastures in which they have bad range for successive generations. The same law seems to hold also in the case of horses and cattle, the Shetland pony and the Perc heron and the Jersey cow and Holstein being the products of ! widely different native pasture con ditions. The work of getting a stand of clover on land which has not been 'growing it may be simplified if a small quantity of soil from an established field of clover is scattered on the land with the manure before it Is plowed, a species of bacteria work on the roots of clover largely increasing their capacity to absorb nitrogen from the sir, and if these bacteria are present In the soil when the young plants are getting root tbey will be strong and thrifty as a result. The thinuess of the milk cow may be the result of her inherited tendency to convert her ration, all but that necessary for her bare existence, Into milk, or it may be due to a diseased condition of body. In tbe latter case the cow will In addition to being tbln have a sick appearance, in which case the cause of her trouble should be lnaulred Into. Tuberculosis Is auite like ly to be the malady, and this can be determined by means of the tuberculin test, which should be made without delay. It to a sorry day for any community when the homes therein so far fail to fulfill their mission that tbe municipality to called upon to exercise the authority and restraint over the boys snd girls that should be exercised by the parents and has to have a curfew ordinance and establish Juvenile courts. These are to be commended as makeshifts, but only as such. The better order Is where the parents In each home look after their own children. make the home an attractive plsco for I them and keep them from gaoling nights. The sensible purchaser of pure bred stock will insist that breeding animals which he purchases at long prices shall be free from tuberculosis infection. If the owner is not willing to guarantee them as such, the former would better not buy, even at bargain prices. Pure bred cattle more than scrubs are prone to tuberculosis, this being due to the fact that they are usually coddled, kept stabled and have an impaired vigor as a result of .inbreeding. Some of tbe worst Instances of this disease have been found In Just such herds. rwvab. n eusBd-taejasn f a A southern teTth'.t Tave been are today under tbe disadvantage resulting from being devoted too exclusively to the growing of the great staple cotton, which makes them dependent upon other sections for their (vegetable, grain and hay supplies. This one line business, while It hss its distinct advantages, hss also its drawbacks la agriculture as well as In Industry. Diversification with crop rotation to being Introduced in many sections of the south, resulting In a resting and renovation of the son and making such ' locality more independent. Tho system to one thst should be more generally adopted. While dairymen here and there may not concur in the statement, it seems to be largely true that the dual purpose cow, as the term to generally understood, is likely to be a sport fhat to, a decidedly beef type, so far as build and general appearance goes, but an individual in some one of whose ancestors a milk giving habit made its appearance. It to because of this rather exceptional tendency to milk giving that makes tike development of a breed of such cattle so difficult a matter. In either the strictly beef or dairy types the breeding of the type traces back to an ancestry in which the beef or the milk hsbit to very pronounced and firmly fixed. The result of this is that the use of aires and dams of either type gives a large per cent of offspring which show these well developed characteristics. The dual purpose cow, having largely a beef ancestry, will produce relatively few calves of a Urge milking capacity. Fere Beaushene. tbe missionary priest, has died at , the Pasteur Institute in Paris, of sleeping sickness, contracted In Africa. Fourteen other patients missionaries, officials and colonials are undergoing treatment for the same disease at the institute. In all twenty-six cases have been under observation there, several of which have terminated fatally. The treatment has been so far for the most part experimental- Among the reme dies tried are atoxyl, a chemical pre paration containing arsenic, whlcn has afforded marked, but only temporary, relief. " -
PALLADIUM WANT AOS. PAY.
NewSadpsneartae WALL Ccnstcstly Atrlvins. High Gehool end Colloco Pcnncnta Special line off Picture Mouldings for Pcintlns ELLVtfOOD HORROS Q CO. 720 HAIR OT.v RICHHOriD.
La S. CHENOWETH DENTIST
First Door Soatti of Masonic Temple oai Pftwsie-Oeice IMS, Beslec
Eventao; Work by Special Appoint
Indulgent Parents are Given Rules to Raise Ideal Families
Chicago May 7. "What is an ideal family?" Chicagoans discussed this question, which was "solved" in a number of letters to Rev. D. D. Vaughan, pastor of the Halsted Street Institutional church in response to questions he asked in his series of sermons. on the model husband, the perfect wife and the ideal home. Here Is a composite picture of the ideal home, according to Dr. Vaughan 's correspondents: The wife has as much right to the money as the husband. Positively no credit must be considered. Parents must never sacrifice themAtl OLD ROMANCE COMES TO LIGHT Nephew of E. H. Harriman Claims Mother Is a Chef's Affinity. WANTS SLICE OF ESTATE MOTHER OF THE YOUNG MAN 18 NOW A PROMINENT 8AN FRANCISCO SOCIETY WOMAN CitsE IS MYSTERIOUS. San Francisco, May 7. Wraiths of a withered romance have been incanted from the grave by Edward A. Averell. until yesterday known as the nephew of Edward H. Harriman, who revealed his mother as a former affinity of An gust Artot, a chief esteemed by the Gourmets of the old San Francisco, in proceedings he has begun in the supeI a ava ewus v w ..w .a nva uvu VI uaa7 maiiot dtf-t waaavaii cm wts4 Iao a i35'M? JtLSL?" sine. Averell's petition for a partition ot the estate left by Artot, who died last June, is one of tbe most outspoken
aoglhifl Dim aolba The Havam filler for CONTRACT 5-cent straight cigcr is bought vherc it grows in Cuba. Thus the moiufccturerc cecmc better stock at a lower price. As a result they ccn use a fcrcer quantity end a better qudhy of Havczn filler than youll find in any other 5-cent smoke. That's why there never vrcs a ctjcr
Iflce
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LOUIS C DSSCmVER
CO.
Indi snapeKs, Ind-, : Readslon Stock Faro
"ClELLrJCLl" no. 1200
Winner of forty-seven flrst prises (only tuna shown). Never defeated, the grandest individual ever In the state, weight 1&V lbs. Kelmer's services offered to owners of approved mares at a nominal fee. No colt of his ever sold for less than $275. For particulars and terms, address, John OaflST, Sunt, of Bsilston Stock Farm. Centerrillo, Indiana, ;- - . - ,
selves to tbe point of Indulgence. Force children to be obedient with a hope of reward, and be free In expressing your love for them. Children should never be lied to la order to force them to be obedient: never burden the older children with the younger ones. The sisters should never be 'obliged to give up school for the brothers. Brothers snd sisters should treat each other alike, and favors at home should not be governed according to their sexChildren have no right to be paid for the work they do at home. Mr. Vaughan will preach on this top ic next Sunday evening.
documents ever filed in the superior court. The attorneys associated In the case realize this fact and have been endeav oring to drape the document la mys tery, claiming that they are not famlliar with any more of the history of Averell, than It discloses. Averell, who is 23 years old, entered the services of the Pacific Mail steam shop company last December, when he became storekeeper on the liner Korea. Mrs. Averell, his mother, is now the wife of Isaac Seymour Averell, a first cousin of Mrs. B. H. Harriman, and 4 former partner of the railroad magnate In the brokerage business In Wall street. The elder Averell Is at present connected with the Southern Pacific railroad. Estimates place the amount of capital value of British Investments in India at $2,350,000,000. ' Try it on the dog Nothtna- will please Floo more than a Whls bath and nothtna will keep hiss free from ltco and flees like Whls ; It lathers freely 1st harSsst water and It "rrs.be the dirt" Just apply Whls water
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