Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 19, 26 November 1909 — Page 4
THE RICIIMOXD PALLADIUM AND SUX-TELEGRA3I, FRIDAY, NOVEMBER 26. 1909.
PAGE FOUR
The Richmond Palladium - and Son-Telegram Published and owned by the PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. Issued 7 days ach week, evenings and Sunday morning. Offlre Corner North 8th and A streets. Home Phone 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA.
Rudolph O. Leeds Editor Charles M. MorKan. ..Maiaclos Kill tor Carl Berahardt Associate Editor W. II. rouadstoae .News Editor. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. In Itlchmond $5.00 per year (In advance) or 10c per week. MAIL 8UBKCKIPTIONH. On year. In advance $5.00 Klx month), In advance 2.60 One month. In advance 45 KUItAL ROUTES. One year, in advance $2.r0 flix months. In advance 1.60 One month, in advance '-'5 Address changed as often as desired: both new and old addresses must be given. Subscribers wilt please remit with order, which should be given for a specified term; name will not be entered until payment is received. Entered at Richmond, Indiana, post office as second class mail matter. Association off (New Ysrk City) ku aa certified to taestrerilatioa Oaly tae flams of i ON THE WAY Thanksgiving has ushered in the season of the Holidays. The joy-laden time of the year is at hand. The bright prelude of crisp days is already here. Expectancy is in the air. The Consumer's League has some suggestions to Christmas shoppers which will make the season a real Christmas time for everyone. J. Buy early In the season and partly in the day. 2, Send packages two weeks ahead, narked "Not to be opened until Christ jnas." 3. Minister to actual needs. Give chiefly to children. 4. Choose presents having either usefulness or beauty. 5. Demand articles which have been made and soM under conditions fair and wholesome to the worker. 0. Remember that Christmas is of noble memory, not an occasion for dis play, ' The announcement of that able statesman, Tim Woodruff, that Col Theodore Roosevelt can be nominated and elected to the governorship of New York, will no doubt quiet the person 3 who started the Conspiracy tale and the Back from Elba story. In the meantime there is some disquietude a? to when Mr. Roosevelt will leave off hunting. The most conclusive evidence that The Laird of Skibo has really retired from business is his declaration that he is for forts, but is against "the mad race to see how many expensive bat tle ships we can construct." On the other hand, Mr. Rockefeller experienced his usual horror when he found that his corrpany had been indulging in violations of the law and stated that he had retired from business. Mr. Rockefeller had no sooner finished saying "We must struggle to be happy," than he conferred with his corporation counsel about the decision Against the Standard. I It is rather touga for Mr. Shank to rfce blamed for not keeping his promises and to be prosecuted for having ) made them, isn't it? At any rate, the decision had the effect of halting the $800,000,000 Copper Trust in Its organization. Mr. Loeb announces that he is not $-et through house cleaning. Customs change. Of course no on can expect Uncle Joe to be pleased. Of course, the Times-Star is not real' Jy prejudiced. Items Gathered in From Far and Near Convict Labor and Good Roads. From the Baltimore Sun. The employment of convict labor on the public roads In certain of the southern states has been found to be altogether advantageous, and in some of them, more especially in the Carolinas, great results have been achieved and a splendid system of highways built at small cost. Georgia has also embarked in road improvement by convict labor on a large scale, and it is expected that farm values will be greatly enhanced and the prosperity of the state advanced. The Menace of the Mines. From the Detroit Times. It is not time that America was aroused? In no other country in the world is the disregard of human life so great. The annual sacrifice of lives In our mines is appalling. Our system is wrong. The responsibility of every man and woman must be made clear. Public opinion must be awakened.
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Then the system will be changed. Legislation will compel a greater measure of justice, and these horrors will become less frequent.
Economic Anesthesia. From the Milwaukee Journal. A Missouri dentist says rosewater is as good as cocaine to inject into gums for painless tooth pulling, and asserts that all that is needed is to make the patient believe it will not hurt and ho will feel no pain. This economical tip might also be used to advantage by physicians applying the radium treatment. A Kentucky Amazon. From the Philadelphia Inquirer. A Kentucky girl fired a couple of barrels of buckshot into a mob of night riders and routed them com pletely. It is a pity that Kentucky does not possess more girls who can shoot. The Boycott. From the Providence Journal. Mr. Mitchell is fighting a shadow when he declares that no one can make him buy an article he does not want to buy. No one, in fact, has tried to do bo. But there is a vast difference in law and in morals between refusing to buy an article and threatening those who do buy it. The Sunday Drunk. From the Portland Cegonian. The police judge rules that Sunday drunks hereafter will cost five times as much as weekday ones. Some of the victims may take the view that weekday drunks cost only one-fifth as much as Sunday ones, and be governed accordingly. A Cause of Laziness. From the Wilkesbarre Times-Leader. The hook worm may cause laziness down south, but the angle worm dangling on the end of a line is better known here. TWINKLES (BY PHILANDER JOHNSON.) The Juvenile Imagination. Little Bobby had heard the story of the prophet who went to heaven in a chariot of fire. "Did they put the fire out?" he ask ed. "Certainly not." "Well," commented the youthful inventor, "they ought to have used a aeroplane instead of a dirigible balloon." "De world," said Uncle Eben, "is sumpin' like a lookin' glass. You's g'ineter get better results if you smiles dan if you makes faces." Autumn Economics. The gloom that in autumn compels us To banish good cheer from our minds Is due, so the scientist tells us, To causes of various kinds; But in seeking the source of resentment, To this our attention he begs; There is likely to be scant contentment When we all have to scramble our eggs. The hen, erstwhile kind and auspicious. Is the niggardly means of our woe; The pearly soft-boiled, so delicious, Went out of date some weeks ago; And the fried-on-one-side, once alluring, Tastes like things that they've handled in kegs In some primitive process of curing Far better to scramble our eggs! It isn't the rose that has vanished. Nor the lack of a bird-song each dav That leaves us with happiness banish ed It's the fact that the chickens won't lay! Conditions can scarcely be mended And prosperity put on its legs Till this strike of the poultry is ended And we don't have to scramble our eggs. Manifestations. "Did you hear from your departed friend at the seance?" "Yes," answered the man who suppresses his doubts. "What did you learn of him?" "Well, his tambourine playing has ONE LESS BALD HEAD If You Are Losing Your Hair Read This Interesting Letter. Giroux Mfg. Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Dear Sirs "I was told of your great remedy, Parisian Sage, that it would grow hair on bald heads, so I got a bot tie and tried it and it is fine. I am ; young man anly twenty-five, and was completely bald on the top of my head and now I have hair one inch long with the use of only one bottle. I only wish I could have shown you my photo before the hair started to grow and how it is now. I shall certainly keep on using it until I have a good head of hair, which I have no doubt it will bring." Oscar Armstrong, Engineer, Belleville Horse Shoo & Rolling Mill Co., Belleville, Ont., August 21. 1K. To every reader of the Palladium and Sun-Telegram the American makers of Parisian Sage wish to emphatically state that thy do not guaranteo Parisian Sage to grow hair on bald heads, because in the great majority of cases the hair roots are absolutely dead and not even the wonderful virtue of Parisian Sage can resurrect them. Mr. Armstrong started to use Parisian Sage in time, before the hair root was entirely dead and in such a case there is no good rvason why Parisian Sage should not restore his hair. L. H. Fihe guarantees Parisian Sage to remove every trace of dandrugg, stap falling hair and itching scalp ia two weeks or money back, but he does not guarantee it to grow hair on bald heads. Sold by leading druggists all over America and in Richmond by L. II Fihe. Large bottle oO cents.
improved, but he isn't as good a per
former on the guitar as he used to be." Zelaya, Please Note! No boastful swagger do we bring To view when cause for strife occurs; Our eagle can full gently sing. But our dove of peace was born with spurs. Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Copy.isht, 1908, by Edwin A. Nye HER. KINGDOM FOR. A DRESS.' Margaret North, a pretty nineteen-year-old school girl of Chicago, represented herself as another person and secured a gown in which she could outshine her girl companions at a party. The girl was afterward arrested and acknowledged in court that her longing for fancy clothes led her to commit the illegal act The judge fined her $25, which was paid by her father. According to the father's statement, the girl's humiliation might have been averted but for the desire to excel in dress. She wanted to emulate the example of girls whose parents were rich. "My daughter has frequently told me," be said, "that unless she could be dressed as well as her chums they would not want to associate with her. "My daughter's sad case should be a warning to other girls of middle circumstances who try to emulate girls whose parents are wealthy." Mr. North says his daughter asked him with tears in her eyes for a new gown for the select party. He felt he could not afford to gratify her. On the impulse of the moment she secured the gown by false pretenses and made the misstep which brought her bitter disgrace and her family deep chagrin. The lesson is not merely for girls. It is for schoolteachers and parents. The public school is or ought to be a pure democracy. Any considerable distinction of the pupils by way of dress defeats the equality and fraternity of the school and should be frowned upon. Every child should be made to feel entirely at home in the schoolroom. Parents should keep the desire for expensive school clothes out of the heads of their girls. It matters not if the parents are financially able to buy fancy clothes. They are out of place in the schoolroom. Besides Such dressing fosters a trait in girls that needs no encouragement. Instinctively they desire to wear pretty clothes, but these need not necessarily be expensive clothes. There is plenty of time further oti in their lives for elaborate and costly toilets. Poor Margaret North! Desire for dress, that craving for beautiful things which has ruined the lives of so many women, has made of her an early victim. She has paid her penalty. How many youthful hearts have ached and yearned and suffered hearts of the myriad childreu of the DPl ' Jl JSOWING WILD OATS. "Oh, after he has sowed his wild oats he will settle down." But will be? There is a popular impression that youth male youth, not female must have its fling; that It is a necessary experience in the evolution of man. But if so why not let the girl sow her wild oats? Why not let her gain her experience in scattering evil? "Oh, that's different!" you say. How different? What has the boy to gain iu knowledge of evil things and practice of evil ways that a girl may not gain? And if the young man can sow with reckless haud and then miraculously settle down to an exemplary life why not a girl also? Don't you see it is all wrong, this wild oats flinging to the wind? Don't you see the danger of reaping the whirlwind? He who sows wild oats must reap wild oats not wheat. "Whatsoever a man sowetb that also shall he reap." And not only must he reap the sort of grain he sows, but more than he sows. Evil propagates evil. A grain of wheat will "stool out" in the growing, producing many stalks for the harvest, which make a tough reaping. It is hard work, this harvesting of evil seed. The stalks are tangled and tough, and the sweat must pour from the faces of the harvesters. Young manMany a man of middle age today who has fought his way out of this snarled harvest field into the open would give his right hand to blot out the scars aud the memories of that reaping. He shudders when be thinks what the result of his sowing may have been to others if not to himself. "Whatsoever a man soweth" if the young men only knew! Many of the sowers struggle and go down in the intertwisted mat of the harvest. You have seen them hopelessly entangled! You will come out all right? Let us hope you may. but yon will be" a weaker man than you should have been. The odds are against you. The tangle of the weeds and the tares is about your feet. "Whatsoever" not something else whatsoever yon sow you shall reap. And you must reap more than you sow. That law of the moral world Is just as true as the law of gravity in physics or the law of crystallization In chemistry. "Whatsoever" not less, but , -More! Iron pavements were first laid in London in 1S17. The first pipe organ was made by Archimedes in 220 B. C.
PRESIDENT WILL OPEN CONVENTION
National Rivers and Harbors Congress Will Meet at Washington, D. C. PREPARING THE PROGRAM ADDRESSES WILL BE MADE AT THE SESSIONS BY MEN WHO HAVE NATIONAL AND INTERNATIONAL REPUTATIONS. (American Xows Service) Washington, D. C. Nov. 26. While the program for the National Rivers and Harbors congress, which meet in Washington, December S, 9 and 10, U still incomplete, enough is known to predict the most interesting series of meetings ever held by a waterways convention; being the culmination of the busiest year ever known in the cause of improving the rivers, harbors and canals of the country. The opening address will be made by the president of the United States and around Mr. Taft, men of national and international prominence will be grouped. Secretary of Commerce and Labor, Charles Nagel and Secretary of War Dickinson, will represent the administration with addresses. The German Ambassador, Count Von Bernsterff, and iossibly Earl Gray, governor general of Canada, will represent the foreign interests. Some of the Speakers. The following others have consented to deliver speeches during the sessions of the congress: Senators T. E. Burton, of Ohio, chairman National Waterways commission; George E. Chamberlain, of Oregon; Governors Judson Harmon, of Ohio; Eberhart, of Minnesota; Burke, of North Dakota; Hadley, of Missouri and Patterson of Tennessee and Representatives Alexander, of New York, chairman of the Rivers and Harbors committee; Dalzell of Pennsylvania, Small of North Carolina and Burgess of Texas. One qf the sessions is to be given over to addresses from some of the leading editors of the country among whom will be Harvey M. Scott, of the Portland Oregonian; Lafayette Young of the Des Moines Capital; A. T. C. Hamlin, of the New York Tribune and Dr. J. F. Crowell, of the Wall Street Journal. Prof. Emery S. Johnson, of the University of Pennsylvania, who was with the National Waterway commission on its recent European trip, as the representative of the National Rivers and Harbor congress, will present a report on his observations during the summer. Other addresses will be made by exGovernor Benton McMillan, of Tennessee; Hon. Frank Gates Allen, of Illinois; W. C. Fitts of Mobile, Ala.; Danforth E. Ainsworth, New York; Hon. Albert Rettinger, of Ohio; W. A. Johnson, order United Travelers of America, F. W. Crandall, Traveler's Protective association of America and C. P. Austin, chief of the bureau of statistics, department of commerce aud labor. ALCOHOL IN MEDICINES. Alcohol is the best known preservative of medical compounds, and the average proprietary medicine contains from 15 to 22, which is the smallest possible amount to preserve the ingredients, while the average doctor's prescription contains from 25 to 50. Such standard preparations as Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound contain but 18, and they even put the Compound up in tablet form, which the over-scrupulous woman, who objects to alcohol in any degree, may use. LID CLAMPED TIGHT Clamped down tight and nailed was the proverbial ' lid-' in Richmond yesterday. It was not even tilted and no effort was made on the part of any local saloon keepers to pry it open, even a tiny bit. There were no arrests made on any charges whatever, yesterday. Even the old police court characters, who usually make it a practice to get gloriously "soused" on all holidays, abstained from the use of intoxicants yesterday and there was no evidence of any liquor having been sold in the city. LINDLEY TO SPEAK Professor Harlow Lindley of Earlham College will leave next Tuesday for Champaign, 111., where he is scheduled to address the Library school of the University of Illinois. Professor Lindley is the librarian at Earlham and also Indiana Archive librarian in the State Library at Indianapolis and is one of the most prominent experts in the state. Professor Lindley will discuss, "The Library as a Local Historical Center," and "Some Library Problems." A SOCIAL SESSION Osceola tribe of Red Men held a social session yesterday evening to which the members brought their wives and children. The entertainment consisted of instrumental and vocal selections following which there was a dance.
GREAT LOVE STORIES of HISTORY By Albert Pay son Terhune
Nero and Poppaea A long train of donkeys were driven daily to the mansion of Rome's most beautiful woman. Poppaea Sabina. There they were milked. The milk was poured into a huge marble tub. In this tub Poppaea took her morning bath, on the plea that washing in donkeys' milk added to her beauty, j However true or false this theory may j have been. It certainly had the effect i of advertising Poppaea. It even i brought her to the notice of the emperor, Nero, and led to a love affair which was to cost thousands of innocent lives. Octavius (Julius Caesar's nephew) had turned Rome from a republic to an empire, with himself as emperor. His successors kept the title without inheriting any of its originator's genius. At last a weak, foolish man named Claudius came to the Imperial throne. In 49 B. C. he married his niece, Agrippina, a wicked, clever woman, who induced him to disinherit his own son and to proclaim her young son Nero as his heir. Having accomplished this, Agrippina poisoned Claudius and set Nero on the throne. The young emperor was at first a gentle and wise ruler, meekly obeying his ambitious mother's commands. But flatterers at court finally prompted him to defy her and to run the empire to suit himself and them. Still Agrlppina's influence was more or less powerful over the youth until he met Poppaea. Poppaea Sabina was wealthy and of patrician fam A Jealous Husband. ily. As a girl she had married a nobleman who had divorced her. Then she had married a daring young soldier and profligate named Otho, one of Nero's boon companions. Otho loved her jealously. So when Nero, falling in love with the beautiful woman, suggested that Otho give her up, the husband flatly refused. In this refusal he was backed by Poppaea herself. Not that she cared for Otho, but she read Nero's nature, and knew that opposition would fan his fancy for her into worship. She was Justified in this belief, for Nero before long found means of separating her from the heartbroken Otho. Poppaea had made up her mind to be empress. Agrippina hated her. Nero also had a wife, Octavia. But these obstacles did not check Poppaea. One by one she cleared them away. She persuaded Nero that his mother was conspiring against him, and worked him to such a frenzy of rage and fear that he bad Agrippina murdered. Next Poppaea induced him to divorce Octavia and to consent to her death. Nothing now stood in the fair adventuress' way, and she and Nero were formally married. Poppaea's ambition was gratified. She was empress of Rome. Moreover, Nero loved her so madly that her lightest wish was his law. She could frighten or cajole him into doing anything she desired. At her order one after another of his saner advisers were put to death. And now began a period of reckless dissipation on the part of Nero and Poppaea that nearly wrecked the empire. Poppaea brought out all that was worst and maddest in Nero, and spurred him on to terrible deeds. Among these (which she is credited by many authorities with suggesting to her husband) was the burning of Rome in 64 A. D. While the city burned the emperor composed and sang an ode in honor of the conflagration. The plain people had been patient under their ruler's tyranny. But the burning of their city drove them to fury. Nero was frightened. Advised by Poppaea and his flatterers, he declared the Christians had set fire to Rome and put hundreds of them to death in barbarous manner by way of pretended punishment for the crime. This for the moment pacified the people. But soon fresh iniquities on the part of the imperial couple angered them again. At last, in a fit of jealous rage. Nero one day struck Poppaea. She died from the effects of the blow. Nero mourned her loudly and long and wrote poems to her memory. But his own time of retribution was at hand. And the Otho Takes Vengeance. man he had most wronged was to punish him. Otho had joined with an old general named Galba in stirring up the Roman armies against Nero. He marched to Rome at the head of his legions to avenge himself on the tyrant who had robbed him of his wife. In spite of his haste Otho turned aside long enough in the march to visit the grave of Poppaea. There, weeping, he piled her last resting place with fresh flowers, and passed on to his work of vengeance. But Nero did not await his enemies' coming. Deserted by flatterers and guards alike, he killed himself to avoid the fate he knew he must otherwise expect at Otho's hands. Y. M. C. A. In Germany and America. There are 1.990 Young Men's Christian associations in Germany only 1,939 in America; yet, where the German associations have but 117,000 members, the American have 446.000. And German association property holdings have a value of $2,400,000. contrasted with a value of $40,00.000 in America. His Admiration. "Who is your favorite author?" asked the literary girl. "Thackeray," answered Mr. Cumrox. promptly. "And what do you most admire about Thackeray?" "The fact that mother and the girls approve of him." For a good, wholesome, cheap breakfast, always buy Mrs. Austin's pancake flour. Your grocer has a fresh supply.
KIDNEYS ACT FINE MID BACKACHE GOES AFTER TAB A FEW DOSES.
Out-of-order Kidneys are regulated ending Bladder misery. Out-of-order kidneys act fine and backache or bladder misery is relieved after a few doses of Pap"s Diuretic. Pains in the back, sides or loins rheumatic twinges, debilitating headache, nervousness, dizziness, sleeplessness, inflamed or swollen eyelids, worn out feelint; and many othesymptoms of clogged, inactive kidney simply vanish. Frequent, painful and uncontrollable urination, due to a eak or irritable bladder is promptly overcome. The moment you suspect any kidney, bladder or urinary disorder, or fe"l rheumatism coming, begin taking this harmless remedy, with the knowledge that there is no other medicine, at any
World Was a Surprise To Him John Rogers, Freed After Twenty-seven Years, Burial in a Kansas Prison for Helping a Defenseless Girl.
Leavenworth, Kan., Nov. ."Buried alive is years" were the words of Dr. Manette, a character In Dickens's "Tale of Two Cites." Dr. Manet made shoes in a French prison. There stepped from the Kansas penitentiary, at Lansing. Thanksgiving, John Rogers, who for 'T years has gazed only on the four walls of a prison. Thanksgiving day he went forth into a world full of strange wonders. Fo John Rogers never saw a motor car or a trolley car until the doors opened for him. Into his prison house have crept whispers of ihe world's progress. They were as fairy tales to Rogers. Now, a modern Gulliver, he goes forth to fee how the world has progressed while he 'marked time. Rogers, when he was years old, killed the father of the girl he loved. The killing was the result of a quarrel after the girl and her mother, with THE BASEBALL UMPIRE. Very Different From the Fight Referee or the Race Judge. Good umpires are rare. In the whole country there are not more than ten first rate ones. The combination of the keen eye, nimble braiu and coll nerve is not a common one. The umpire is the chain lightning of baseball. His decisions are rendered in the fifth part of a second. He renders them knowing that he must stand by them afterward, no matter what happens. Every man inside the fence, whether blinded by prejudice or loyalty to the home team, sees the same things and therefore feels that he has a right to his own opinion, but the umpire is the one man who is paid to know what he sees. The prizefight referee sometimes haa to decide which boxer won a hard battle. He has had time iu which to review the situatiou. The whole moving picture of the fight stretches backward in his memory. Should the choice prove a difficult one there is always the comfortable middle ground the draw decision, in which neither man wins or loses. The baseball umpire can render no draw decisions. The man is safe or he is out. When two race horses come nodding down to the wire and two noses flash by the post so close together that a finger breadth means thousands of dollars to the backers, the race track judge may fall back on the dead beat. The baseball umpire has no dead heats. Watching foot and ball, he must know which one was first. He cau confer with no one. Right or wrong, the judgment must be made in the twinkling of an eye. C E. Van Loan In Munsey's Magazine. The Piano Virtuoso's Hands. Contrary to popular belief, the piano virtuoso as a rule has extremely unattractive hands. "The artistic hand is a phrase peculiar to the hysterical young woman who haunts musical recitals, but in reality the band of the pianist is not at all artistic or beautiful when judged by the usual standards of the artist, the painter or the sculptor. Constant, vigorous practicing overdevelops the band and makes It actually ill shaped. The fingers do not taper, but are blunt and round, ending often in what appears to be a cushion of Lard flesh. New York World. Aggravating. When the late General Edward M. McCook lived in Pike's Peak he once presided at a dinner in honor of a famous Indian fighter. j Mr. McCook. as be then was. conj eluded his introduction of the Indian ! fighter with the words: "I can find but one fault with the j colonel's methods. I allude to his well known custom of enlisting in his regi- : ment only bald headed men. To ag gravate the Indians' feelings so cruelly as that is carrying war too far." Georciaka: Our chef says Gold Medal Flour . WE HAVE FOR SALE INVESTMENT PROPERTY Good for 10 net Income. WM. H. BRADBURY eV SON. U3 Westcott Block.
Time For Hardy Shrubs Fred H. Lemon & Co. Florists and Decorators.
price, made anywbr.-e else In the world, which will effect so thorough and prompt a cure, as a fifty -cent treatment of Pape's Diuretic, which any druggist can supply. This unusual preparation goes direct to' the out-of-order kidneys, bladder and urinary system, cleaning, healing and strengther ing these organs and glands, and completes the cure before you realize it. A few days' treatment with Pape's, Diuretic means clean, active, healthy kidneys, bladder ud urinary organ and you feel fine. Your physician. vnarmacUt, banker or any mercantile agency will tell you that Pane. Thompson & Pane of Cincinnati, is a large r.nd responsible meI icine concern, tho-oughly worthy of your confidence. Accept only Path's Diuretic fiftycent treatment from any drug store anywhere in the v.orld.
Rogers's assistance, had left home be cause the father was cruel. Recently he wrote this to a friend: "I did not, like Harry Thaw, make an insane and idiotic plea of protecting a lady whose degradation was al-. ready complete. Put I do make the substantial plea, which the records bear out. that 1 had tendered a little defenseless maiden a helping hand, protecting her when I knew that nefarious men had conspired and boasted what they intended to accomplish regarding her. She stands today a good woman, a monument to my honor manhood and verac ity. She is also a rebuke to Kansas civilization, which has punished me for saving her." Rogers was take.i to St. Joseph, Mo , for his Thanksgiving dinner by Mrs. C T. Artlip. sister of Governor J. K. Brady, of Idaho. He did not sleep all Wednesday night, but hugged in his arms a pet kitten which he had raised. He will be given employment in St. Joseph. SKIN CURED THROUGH SKIN. Old Way of Dosing the Stomach Abandoned by Specialists. Suppose you scratch your hand do you dose the stomach to cure the wound? Don't you wash and cleans! it instead, and thus let the akin euro itself? It is the same with Eczema and other skin diseases. To accomplish this cure the best medicine is Oil cf Wlntergreen Compound, and thla must be used In liquid form. The liquid penetrates to the Inner skin and kills the germs while soothing the healthy tissue. This oil of wlntergreen compound known as D. D. D. Prescription ha only been sold at $1.00 a bottle. Hut on a special offer we have now arranged with D. I. D. Laboratories for a trial bottle at 25c It will sto;i the itch instantly, and we hope you will try it on our assurance. Conkey Drug Co. Thm Waiter's Fate. The waiter had been very Inattentive. Still the man tipped him. The waiter walked off without thanking him. The man shrugged bis shoulders resignedly. "The only thing to do with these waiters, be explained, "is to leave them to their fate. They get a bigger percentage on what's sold than the boss does. If they are energetic iu robbing him and supplicating tip they eventually become boss. Then they get all that's coming to tbem. Tbey j get cursed, anathematized, backbitten and robbed. New York lress. i ft Drug Store Kid" Th ymm Am pmft ntpmnmi A PERFUMES ate ftgrif us style eaeia- The yet pttjccming aottaafe is vogue, We have them all and the old tiaae farocitca alee. AO sixes from trial bottles to gift ia siata, Sachet powders too. Quigley Drag Stores, 4H sua Malta. 821 N. E St. 1722. EATQUAKER BREAD Ask your grocer ZWICOLED'O
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