Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 100, 15 February 1910 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 15, 1910: News of Surrounding Towns Of Interest to the Farmers
MllTON, 1NP. I Milton, Ind., Feb. 15. Mr. and Mrs. Urumfield spent Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Frantzman, at East Germantown. W. E. Booth Is working at the piano works in Connersville. O. I j. Beeson was at Richmond yesterday. The Rev. Mr. Van Winkle preached an excellent sermon at the Christian church Sunday morning. He look for his subject "The Calling of Dan Matthews" by Harold Bell Wright, and after a brief review he brought out many excellent thoughts showing how the church was not measuring up to the ideal. Mrs. Nellie Utterback of Cambridge City spent yesterday with Mrs. Andrew Higgs. Laurence Ilittle of Indianapolis has been at his mother's, Mrs. Ilittle. The Christian Endeavor Valentine social will bo with Mrs. K. P. Jones tomorrow evening. Mr. and Mrs. Leroy Kinimel, of Centerville, spent Sunday with his mother Mrs. Elizabeth Klmmel. Mr. and Mrs. O. II. Beeson and daughter were at dinner with Mrs. Kmlly Williams, Sunday. The Embroidery club meets with Mrs. Ingermann tomorrow afternoon. Mr. and Mrs. A. J. Hart were at Richmond, yesterday. Lewis Powell aged about 70 died suddenly at his home near Harrinburg, about five miles south of here, Sunday evening. Mr. Powell had been in ill health some time, but was as usual and walked out to the barn Sunday morning. He was talking with his family and friends about five o'clock when it was noticed that something was wrong with him and in another moment he was gone. He leaves a wife and two daughters, Mrs. Chas. Stone of Connersville and Mrs. Grant Williams of Ilarrisburg. He is also the uncle of L. P. Zeller, of Milton. Mr. Powell was a prominent Odd Fellow and had been one over 40 years. Aside from past grand, he was treasurer of the Harrisburg lodge many years. The funeral will be tomorrow. '
PILE8 CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS PAZO OINTMENT is guaranteed to cure any case of Itching, Ulind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles in 6 to 14 days or money refunded. 50c. ECONOMY, IND. Economy, Ind., Feb. 15. Tom Mumbower, Lon Edwards, C. D. Hunnicutt and Miss Francis Lindsey spent Saturday in Richmond. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Osborn arrived from Denver Saturday. They will make their home here for the present. Mr. and Mrs. Ollio Weyl, of Richmond, visited here over Sunday, with relatives. O. L. Hiatt made a business trip to Greensfork Saturday afternoon. Rev. N. Paul Barton and Rev. Leo Chamness met with an accident while driving from Old Center Friday night. It was twelve o'clock when their horse blundered and fell over an embankment earring buggy and occu pants with it. The buggy was wreck ed and both men were badly shaken up. It is a wonder that they were not seriously hurt as the buggy was smasheS into kindling. It happened in Randolph county which is supposed to be dry. Mrs. Rebecca Edwards received a card from her grand daughter, Mrs. Reba Chamness who resides in Whit'tier, Cal., stating that the Friends church she attends has forty members that are over eighty years old. Mrs. Martha Good who has been suffering with heart trouble is reported getting better. Mr. and Mrs. Joe Lamb and chil dren were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. John Replogle. Mrs. Diana Edwards and Mrs. Har ry Macey celebrated their birthdays Saturday. Each were given a post card shower. Prof. J. A. Moore was sick Satur day and did not attend the teacher's institute. Mrs. Bertha Turner and baby, of Richmond, is visiting Mr. and Mrs. Ray Marshall. Mr. and Mrs. John Needier of MunRE.LIE.VE ONE OF THESE LITTLE TABLETS AND THE PAIN IS GONE. "I have awful spells of Neuralgia and have doctored a great deal without getting much benefit. For the last two years I have been taking Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Tills and they always relieve me. I have been so bad with Neuralgia that 1 sometimes thought I would go crazy. Sometimes it is necessary to take two of them, but never more, and thev are sure to relieve me." MRS. FERRIER, 2434 Lynn St., Lincoln, Neb.Sold by druggists everywhere, who re authorised to return price of first package If they fail to benefit. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart. Ind.
1 ziJzs
cie, are visiting their many friends here, this Week. E. E. Nicholson of Greensfork, is still painting and hanging paper at Centerville. ' Charley Harris who has had such a time the past several days is reported getting better. W. L. Fennlmore of Richmond,
came up Saturday to spend Sunday with his family. Mrs. C. D. Hunnicutt is with her mother Mrs. Ann Scantland, of Williamsburg. Mr. and Mrs. Charley Cole are vis iting relatives at Parker City and Red Key. NEW PARIS, OHIO. New Paris, O.. Feb. 15. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. McKee were Sunday guests of Mr. and Mrs. George Miller. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Hawley and son spent Sunday with his parents, Mr. and Mrs. C. C. Hawley. Mr. and Mrs. Morris Sullivan had for their Sunday guests Mr. and Mrs. James Sullivan and family of Campbellstown. Mr. and Mrs. Elmer McKee and family of Richmond, were entertained Sunday by Mr. and Mrs. George Fortney. Miss Margaret Bonn and Miss Win nie White were Sunday guests of Edna and Blanche Mitchell. Miss Mary Canny of Dayton was home over Sunday. Mrs. Mary McWhinney has return ed home after an extended visit with relatives and friends in Indianapolis. The Methodists have paid off their last note on the new church amount ing to $500. On Sunday morning Rev. Grauser took the note and burned it, holding it above the audience so that all might see it destroyed. Their protracted meeting began Monday night at Gettysburg. Mr. Clyde Kuth is visiting relatives here. Miss Mary Cronin of Xenia spent Sunday here the guest of Mr. and Mrs. George Smith. Mr. Chas. Roach of Xenia spent Sunday here. Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Taylor of New Castle were guests of his mother Mrs. Caroline Taylor. Mrs. Mary Young and family en tertained at Sunday dinner Mr. and Mrs. Wm. Sawyer and family, Mr. and Mrs. Sam Showalter and family and Mr. and Mrs. Chas. Jones and daughter, Minnie. Miss Louise Shinkle spent Sunday in Eaton. HAGERSTOWN, IND. Hagerstown, Ind., Feb. 15. Mr. Al bert Hindman entertained the Misses Mable Teeter and guest, Reba Nor ton of Greenfield, Ohio, at dinner Sunday evening at the New Hindman. Mr. and Mrs. Monroe Sherry, south of town, entertained at dinner Sunday Mr. and Mrs. W. O. Jones and daugh ters, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Locke, son and daughter, Mr. and Mrs. John Scott and children, Louis Kirby and Louis Petty. Mr. and Mrs. Porter Thornburg were entertained at dinner Sunday by Mr. and Mrs. Dennis Gregg. Miss Irene Addington went to Cin cinnati Monday where she will spend two weeks at the wholesale millinery houses. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Creek entertained Mr. and Mrs. Samuel McCullough and family, Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Charles 'Smith spent the day Sunday with Mr. and Mrs. Har ry Thalls. Mrs. Lydia Rowe, who is spending a few months at Anderson with her daughter came down to attend the funeral of David Werking. The Presbyterian Aid Society will meet with Mrs. Clifford Foutz, Friday afternoon of this week. Mr. and Mrs. Dave Harter and son Henry Eugene, of Cambridge City, were guests of her father, Volley Gohring and Miss Katherine Gohring over Sunday. Mr. and Mrs. Albert Jones enter tamed a company of friends at a "heart" party Monday evening. Michael Hastings is quite sick with the grip. CAMBRIDGE CITY, IND. Cambridge City, Ind., Feb. 15. Har ry Allen, of Indianapolis, came Sun day and will remain until Wednesday with his parents. Dr. and Mrs. J. B. Allen. The condition of Dr. Allen remains unchanged. Mrs. Allen is thought to be slightly improved. Prof. H. A. Studebaker of Greens fork, was the guest of Rev. and Mrs, J. E. Coffin, Sunday. Miss Jennie McGrew went to In dianapolis. Monday to attend the Fahnley and McCrae millinery opening. Miss McGrew will trim for the Falls Sisters the coming season. James Dennis, of Indianapolis, was a Cambridge City visitor, Monday. Mrs. Eddie Thomas of Anderson joined her husband here, Saturday and will remain throughout the week Miss Ruth Coffin has returned after a visit with friends in Muncie. Will Greisinger spent Monday with his sister, Mrs. George Cary, at Mun cie. Fifty persons went to Milton, Mon day evening where Rev. Tilman Hobson conducted services. Among the number were members from both the Men's and Girls" Glad Hand clubs. The services will be resumed at this place tonight. Sixty persons from llichmond will attend the services Wednesday evening. Sergeant W. H. Stanger and George Beard of Ft. Benjamin Harrison, spent Sunday in Cambridge City. Mrs. Nora Wright was called to Mill ville early Sunday morning by the critical Illness of her mother, Mrs. VanausdeL Twenty-seven friends of Mr. and Mrs. David Bertsch were very pleasantly entertained at their home near this city Sunday evening.
PRUNING THE ORCHARD. The best time In which to do prun
ing work In the orchard is from Feb. 1 on to blossom time. Were it possible to get all of this work done at one fell swoop the best time for it would be the week just before the blossom buds open, as from this time on is the period of quickest growth and hence most rapid healing of pruning cuts. But since the work cannot be done in a week it has to be started earlier and extended through a period of several weeks. For the one learning the or chard business a few simple directions will be helpful. Aside from giving the tree the type of head, low or high. whichever may -be desired, by means of the pruning process, all cross limbs, those that rub one another and water sprouts should be cut out. In a choice between two limbs the one should be left which is more vigorous and will at the same time add most to the sym metry of the tree and its value as a fruit producer. The head of the tree should be kept sufficiently thinned so that a good sized cat can be thrown through from almost any direction. More exactly, it shold be kept open enough so that the 6pray rod may be Inserted to the center without incon venience and the work of picking the fruit done without a fellow's having his shirt torn off. With trees which have a tendency to spread too much one should prune the outspreading branches to an inside bud or shoot, which will tend to give an upright growth. With trees of the upright habit of growth breadth of top may be secured by pruning the upright limbs to outside buds. No two trees are exactly alike, and on this account each presents an Individual problem for the pruner, who must be guided to some extent by the ideal tree type he has in mind, but even more largely by the needs and possibilities of each individual tree. Like boys and girls. trees to attain their best must be given continuous attention, it not be ing possible in the case of pruning any more than in the case of training to do all of the work at one time. Best results are obtained where it is started early and persisted in carefully until maturity is reached. BIG CORN PRIZES. The Hoosier State was very much In evidence at the national corn show held in Omaha in December. F. C. Palin of Newton, Ind., won the prize for the best single ear of corn and also the Kellogg trophy, valued at $1,000; J. R. Overstreet of Franklin got first prize on the best ten ears of corn and also th $1,000 trophy put up by the Indiana Corn Growers association, while C. L. Kerlin exhibited the best bushel, or seventy ears, of corn and received therefor prizes aggregating $500. This makes the third consecu tive year that Indiana has won the leading prizes at the national corn show. Mr. Talin states that his prize ear was the result of seven painstaking years of seed selection, the seed which produced the prize ear being de scended from Reid's Yellow Dent and the Alexander Gold Standard. Judges pronounced the ear in question by far the superior of any ever exhibited. Its kernels were three-fourths of an inch deep, with very little room left for cob. CORN FREAKS FROM PERU. Two cereal freaks exhibited at corn shows held the past season have been the primitive or wild husk corn, in which each kernel is incased in a husk of its own, as in the case of grains of wheat, and the giant Cuzco corn, grown in Teru, South America. The husk corn is supposed to be the parent of the varieties of cultivated American maize, the busk of the original type being reduced to the light chaff to be found Incasing the germ of present day corn. The kernel of the primitive corn is short, nearly round and flinty in character and about one-third of the size of an average kernel of corn. Samples of the Peru corn exhibited were twenty-two inches long and fourteen Inches in circumference, the kernels being three-quarters of an inch long, nearly as broad and having a surface as large as a nickel. OILED ROADS GOOD. The people of Sedan, Kan., have had a good object lesson the past season in the use of oil as an aid in roadmaking. A mile of road running south of the town was oiled at an expense In crude petroleum and dragging the roadof $50. The road was well roundFroo Etomody For IVoali Bouols There are two forms of bodily cleanliness, the external and the internal. The one is for your pride in yourself; the other for your life and health. Both are important, but of vastly more importance in the long run is the internal cleanliness. This is one point that all should watch about their body the cleanliness of the bowels. Keep them clean and free from obstructions. To do this you must have one or two movements of the bowels each twenty-four hours. If ycur system does not do this naturally. In the process of eating and drinking, then you must w.u... v. cv.uv iuu. jxiLer iixxuins out that cathartics, salts and such things ! relieve you for a day. but bind you up worse than ever the next day. then try mi simpler and more natural remedy like: Dr. Caldwell's Svrun Pensln. ! For the skeptical the best way to begin is to send your name and address to Dr. Caldwell for a free sample bottle. Use It as directed and If It convinces you that & brief continuance of Its use will relieve you permanently that it will train the stomach and bowel muscles to again work naturally at certain hours then buy it of your druggist- at fifty cents and one dollar a bottle, just as so many others are doing. Thev beean with a sample bottle, then bought a fifty cent' uoiue. ana now. runy convinced of Its merits, thev buv the one dollar fanllT size. All the members of the family can! use it down to tne very TOunetst A brief use of this grand laxative tonic will cure constipation In its worst form. Indigestion, liver trouble, sick headache, sour stomach and such ailments and keep you la continuous good health at a very small cost. Such is the experience of many families like that of Mrs. Oscar Fleener. Unlonvtlle. Ind.. J. F- Daniel. Saron. Tex., and hundreds of others that could be named. Dr. Caldwell personally win be pleased to jrive you any medical advice you may desire for yourself or familv pertaining' to the stomach, liver or bowels absolutely free of charge. Explain your case in a letter and ho will reply to yon In detail. for the free sample simply send youv name and address on a postal card or otherwise. For either request the doctor's address Is Dr. W. B. Caldwell, R.504 Caldwell buUdrar. Moa-
ear, anr tne oil was applied In May and when once packed down was firm and smooth, much resembling asphalt The road is the talk of the farmers of the locality, and they will go a long way to get a drive oTer It. In California, where crude oil is generally used as a dressing for highways, the same results are noted. It being necessary to apply oil but once a year after the road is pat in shape. The oil road is not only dustless. but quiet and very light in wear and tear on horses and vehicles.
Ten cents' worth of creosote will add more than a dozen years to the life of a twenty cent post. At these figures It pays to give the treatment. White strawberries imported from the West Indies a number of years ago are still grown in a limited way in one or two sections of Massachusetts and Michigan. Besides taking an annual toll from the western farmers of $10,000,000 annually, the California ground squirrel has recently been found afflicted with germs of plague and thus likely to be ready distributers of it. There are times when it is better for the small boy not to take a dare. One who didn't have the backbone to do so, whose case was reported in the papers a short time ago, left a good chunk of the peeling of his tongue on a frosty wagon tire. Orchard work is a most fascinating occupation for these who love outdoor work, and one is well repaid in the responsiveness shown by the trees to the thoughtful care bestowed upon them. More than this, they never bite or kick or talk back. On an area of 11,000 square miles Belgium supports a population of over 7,000,000 people. Were any one of several of the north central states, which are richer than Belgium agriculturally, as densely populated they would be supporting populations of from 35,00O?O0O to 00,000,000 inhabitants each. Many a native milk cow is cheap at $60 or $70 as a producer of butter fat, while many another, possibly better bred, would be a costly investment at $10. It is not a cow's appearance, but the cash margin lying between total annual returns from her products and the cost of her feed, that determines her worth as a factor in the dairy. Contracting one's crop a year in advance is advantageous sometimes, and at other timeB it is not: The western hop grower, notably in the Willamette valley, in Oregon, who year before last thought he was saving his bacon by contracting bis crop at 9 cents per pound, is at present gnashing his teeth when he sees prices mounting to from 20 to 25 cents. He will know better next time. A flock of forty goats has been doing a good work in a county in Indiana. They were taken to the section five years ago to clear up brush land and during the interval since have changed hands ten times, in every instance being employed to do the same work. They are turned loose on a brush patch, and as soon as the piece is cleared they are put on another or sold to a neighbor. At the land and irrigation show held lately in Chicago one interesting exhibit was samples of woven materials made from Arizona cotton, which passed the highest grade tests for Egyptian cotton. In view of the fact that the United States imports annually $16,000,000 of this product, the discovery that there are large areas in Arizona suited to the production of this type of cotton is a most interesting and valuable one. The Job of basting the roasting fowl may be simplified if it is not supplied with a good coat of natural fat if slices of salt pork are stuck on to the legs and breast with toothpicks, the melting fat serving the same purpose as the basting and preventing the' upper portions from being baked too bard. The strips should be removed from twenty minutes to half an hour before the baking process is completed so that the bird may be evenly browned. The boy and girl will give a fair indication of the kind of grown folks they will be by the kind of reading they do in their spare hours. The kind of reading they will do will depend to quite an extent upon the kind of books placed in their hands, whether inspiring, stultifying or positively pernicious. It is at this point that the good judgment of the parents should come in and where a very heavy responsibility rests with them for what they do or do not supply. Good books and magazines were never cheaper, and it's a very destitute home which cannot provide a few of the best and most wholesome. A reader of these notes told us the other day that he was nearly mobbed once for making a suggestion in a meeting of the patrons of a creamery of which he was a director that a resolution be passed requiring all cows supplying cream to the creamery be tested for tuberculosis. He added that as a result of using the buttermilk from this creamery for his pigs about half of them were infected with tuberculosis as a result of eating it It does not require a great stretch of imagination to suppose that the conditions here referred to could be duplicated in thousands of places all through the dairy sections. Now and then one wishes to stop a newspaper cr magazine. It is very easily done. First pay the subscription in full to the time when it is ordered stopped and notify the local postmaster that you want him to or der the publication discontinued, at the same time refusing to take it from your box. and see to it that It Is not taken out by any member of your family. If this does not stop the paper coming. Instruct the postmaster to send a .second notice tojthe publisher, and
10
(mum)
M E keep shoving the paper back. If ir keeps coming after this, the postmaster throws it Into the wastebasket, which means an end of the nuisance. Frinee Edward Island, Canada, raised last year 60,000 geese aBd 100,000 turkeys, a large per cent of these birds being exported to this country. Exercise is a law or requirement of health with heus as other animals. It is on this account that they will lay best when scratching most because in the best physical condition. Somewhat oddly, perhaps, the best way to take the chill from one's bands is to put them in cold water, and the best way to reduce frost bitten noses and ears is to apply a handful of snow. December saw the highest prices ever paid for steers on the Chicago market. One bunch of nineteen, aver aging 1,572 pounds in weight, brought $0.50 on the open market, while a single animal of about the same weight sold for an even $10 per hundredweight. There are 40,000,000 acres of land in the United States susceptible to reclamation by irrigation. Of this area there wHl have been reclaimed by 1911 by projects at present completed or under way 2,000,000 acres at a cost placed at $70,000,000, or an average of $35 per acre. The hens of the country never did so big a business as during 1909. the total value of ioultry products being $625,000,000, of which amount the value of eggs alone was $300,000,000. The total egg crop of the year is placed at 1,500,000,000 dozen and cost the consumer, at from 30 to 60 cents per dozen, close to $540,000,000. It is a quite generally accepted fact that apples from an orchard kept in sod are better colored, but smaller in size, than those from trees given con tinuously clean cultivation. A further fact that seems to have been demonstrated is that the trees under the latter condition not only attain a greater size, but produce a considerably larger quantity of fruit Generally speaking, roup in chickens is a chronic cold or catarrh brought on by housing under damp and unfavorable conditions or allowing the flock to roost where direct drafts will strike them. Dry feet and freedom from drafts are the best preventives. Roup is not only brought on by the conditions referred to, but is contagious as well when once it gets a foothold. Much can be doue to give the limbs of young pear and apple trees which grow too close in the right direction by pulling them out to the proper position and Inserting a cornstalk brace of the desired length. If from a stalk of sufficient size such a brace is both strong and light, while the ends are easily notched with a sharp knife to fit the limbs on which they are to rest. A large per cent of the hogs produced in the south would be a real curiosity at a fat stock show, not having been perverted by the artificial conditions Imposed by their owners. Such hogs range wild in woods and swamps, live en grass, roots, acorns and grubs, breed at will and are slaughtered at two or three years of age. weighing from 50 to 125 pounds, a far cry to the corn belt porker that tips the scales at 350 when ten months old. The practice followed by some of feeding spoiled or moldy corn or grain with a view to saving it is a very questionable one, merely from the standpoint of dollars and cents, often impairing the condition and retarding the development of a feeding animal to an extent greater than the value of the feed involved. It is safe to as sume that it is much the same with animals as with human beings that what they do not eat with a relish does them little good and often harm. Many an animal abundantly equipped with pedigree Is put up at the dispersion sale as a full blooded animal fit for breeding purposes when in appearance and getnp it is essentially a scrub and instead of becoming sire or dam the progenitor of other scrubs ought to be converted Into beefsteak or pork chops and its pedigree nsed to licht the fire. Atavism, this tend ency in an anlajal to show scrub! traits of an ancestor, is perhaps more often seen in catUe than in ebeep or bogs, but when it or other disqualifications appear in any pedigreed animal it should serve as a bar to its sale as a breeding animal. When the owners of fruit ranches in the Grand valley, Colorado, fought frost last spring it was done on a grand scale. The mature value of the flTrtkeatlie .trees jema 5je4 t SV
rsTI mM I III
j i j iwA u;vu;
IL D LAS OOO.ikjO. ana ft was this stave the owners worked for. Over an area of twenty-seven miles the temperature was raised from S to 9 degrees F. by means of 300.000 fire pots, part of irhieh burucd oil for fuel and part roal. All operations in the fighting of the frost were directed from Grand Junction by menus of telephone connections with weather stations here and there over the valley, from which reports as to the temperature were received every half hour. When the danger poiut approached the signal for lighting the fires was given, and they were kept up as long as there was need. In the manner described 75 per cent of all the fruit trees in bloom were cared for directly, while the trees of many a skeptical ranch owner were protected from frost damage by the 'fires In adjacent orchards. TO FLORIDA WITHOUT CHANGING CARS. Sleeping Car over Pennsylvania Lines leaves Richmond, 4:40 a. m. and runs through via Cincinnati, in "The South Atlantic Limited," arrives Jacksonville next morning. Dining Car service. For particulars consult Ticket Agent Elmer. 4 8-11-15 Early Ballooning. As early as 17Si the French government granted a sum of money to establish a balloon service between Faris and Marseilles with what were known as the Moutgolfier air balloons, though the project never became more than a project There Is no medicine so safe and at the same time so pleasant to take as Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, the positive cure for all diseases arising from stomach trouble. The price Is very reasonable 50c and IL
ANYBODY can make good ENLARGEMENTS with the Brownie Enlarging Cameras. Works like a printing frame. No Dark Room; No Focusing. $2. S3, and 94. W. H. ROSS DRUG COMPANY PHONE No. 1217 MAIN STREET Ross Peroxide Cream Greaselcss, 25 Cents
3 PER CEHT. ON SAVINGS
? Why Be Bothered! ? with that leaky roof when yon can get more than yoar money's worth la RUBBER ROOFING a CAIN LUMBER CO. PHONE 101S lt-37 Soath 11th St.
Diseases Female Diseases. Lo of Vitality from Indiscretions. Pile. Flatu(L FMssur and rireratlons of th. Rectum, without detention from bualn., RUPTURE POSITIVELY CURED AND GUAIlANTEEft
Applies to YOU, not Us We Have Plenty oi All Kinds Chestnut Hard Coal Pocahontas. Mather's Jcclison and WInlfrede A Bushel, a Ton, or a Car. MATHER BROS. COMPANY.
3 G5K3USJ sv C. W. Jordan. Chas. G. Blanchard. Daniel F. McManus. Charles G. Blanchard, Licensed Embalmer, of IS years' experience, is with Jordan, McManus . Blanchard, Funeral Directors. Parlors at 1014 Main Street Telephone 2175. Private Chapel for services. Public Ambulance. SUBURBAN HOME We have for sale a choice of Suburban property. WM. H. BRADBURY . SON, Rooms 1 & 3 Westcott Block. nunii own
DR. J. A. WALLS. THE SPECIALIST 21 South Tenth SL, Richmond. Ind.
Olllce days Monday. Taesday. Friday and Satnrday of each week. Consultation and one month's Treatment m. TREATS DISEASES OF THE THROAT. LUNGS. KIDNEYS. UVEK and BLADDER. RHEUMATISM. DYSPEPSIA and DISEASES OF THE BLOOD. E.llen.v ar falUfir fit. Cancer. Privat. and NervouS)
