Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 125, 12 March 1910 — Page 3

aCoMiaOneDay. CnpUi2 DaysVliZ W0J&r3 UTt I tomorrow afternoon.

I Smith op." New York Tribune. U 4 THE RICH3IOXI PAIXADIU3I AXD SUX-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, MARCH 12, 1910. PAGE THREE.

HEW STATES ARE HOT TAKEN INTO UIIIOIMII HASTE House Chairman on Territories Reminded of This by Arizona and New Mexico's Present Efforts.

TEXAS WAS THE ONLY STATE HAVING CINCH Representative Charles C. Washburn Is Known as House Humorist Rep. Kahn Formerly an Actor. (By Roderick Clifford) Washington, March 12. "It is inter esting to observe" remarked Repre sentative Edward L. Hamilton of Mich igan, chairman of the committee on territories, "that in late years, although the United States has grown bo phenomenally there is no- particular hurry to admit the territories into the sisterhood of states. "I am reminded of this by the numerous obstacles and the insistence on the performance of certain conditions before we may take in Arizona and New Mexico. The house has twice passed the enabling act. and the territories have signified their acceptance of the terms imposed, but it seems the senate wishes to further dictate to the terriories. Missouri was, I believe, the first territory that congress required conditions of before admittance into the union. Missouri Compromise. As I recall it, it is known as the Missouri Compromise, and involved the slavery issue. Michigan,-when applying for statehood, had to agree as a condition of admittance, not to claim 'a strip of land claimed by Ohio. Utah, would still be a territory but that she accepted the terms of the United States to give up polygamy. Oklahoma was admitted on condition that prohibition should be the law for 21 years in that part of the state which was the Indian Territory. "The only state ever admitted into the Union on her own conditions was Texas. Perhaps that is why she is railed the Lone Star State. We wanted her and she said she would join us, but only on conditions that she would name. "Yes, I am hopeful for the passage of the bill to admit Arizona and New Mexico, but the prospects do not seem as bright as they did two months ago." Washburn a Humorist. To look at Representative Charles C. Washburn, of Massachusetts, one would never think he possessed great humor. He is the picture of dignity, but unbends when you know him. The other day in the corridor of the House an employe mistook him for Representative Hamilton Fish of New York, and addressed him as "Mr. Fish." Without cracking a smile, the statesman from Massachusetts turned on the employe and said: "Why do you call me Fish; why not whale or shark." The employe almost lost his breath and forgot what he intended to say. Mr. Washburn continued down the corridor enjoying a quiet laugh. Has Great Memory. When it comes to memorizing a speech Representative Morris Sheppard. of the first congressional district of Texas, is easily the "king bee." He is an entertaining talker and when he addresses the House is always assured of a large audience. He has made several notable speeches that stamp him as an orator of the first class. Copies of his speech are furnished the press in advance, but when he delivers them he speaks as though they were purely extemporaneous. His speech in the last congress, protesting against Roosevelt's order striking from the coins of the United States the words "In God We Trust" was considered by all who heard it, a masterpiece. Requests for copies of the speech were received from many parts of the country. When Sheppard was elected to fill out the unexpired term TERRIBLE STRAIN RESULTED NOT AMISS A Lenoir Lady, After Two Weeks Grinding Labor, Feels Better Thin Ever. Lenoir, N. C "I am not tired at all, and am stouter than I have ever been' writes Mrs. Kate Waters, of Lenoir, N. C, "although I have just finished a two weeks' wash. I lay my strength to Cardui, the woman's tonic. I have taken a lot of it and I can never praise it enough for what it has done for me. I can never thank you enough for the ad vice you gave me, to take Cardui, for since taking it. I look so well and am stout as a mule." You are urged to take Cardui, that gentle, vegetable tonic, for weak women. Its use will strengthen and build up your system, relieve or prevent headache, backache and tie ailments of weak women. It will surely help you, as it has helped thousands of others, in the past 50 years. M. B. What m- Ladies Advisor Dent. Chatfa. aooca Medicine Co.. ChanMooca. Tena, lor Special fir Vwm&MtmtS

of his father In 1902, he was the youngest member of the House, being at that time only 27. Played With Jefferson. "Just about twenty-nine years ago I was a member of Jos. Jefferson's company," remarked Representative Julius Kahn, of California, to a party of members in the cloakroom on the republican side of the House. "We were playin Detroit, Michigan, in Rip Van Winkle. The second day of the engagement a young fellow called to see Mr. Jefferson, saying he had a business proposition to offer, which would make a great hit as a novel piece of advertising. "Now what do you suppose the proposition was. Give it up? "The young fellow represented a firm manufacturing spring beds. He told Jefferson that the firm would give him $",)M cash and a spring bed for himself and family, as long as they lived, if in the scene where Rip wakes from the 2 years' sleep, he would add to the lines "Oh how my bones ache" but they wouldn't have ached if I had

slept on one of 's patented spring beds.' "Jefferson agreed that it was indeed a novel advertising, but said it would kill old Rip, so Rip never slept on one of 's spring beds." Would Not Surprise Him. "It would not surprise me should the senate adopt a suggestion advanc ed by Senator Bailey, of Texas, to con vene at 2 o'clock in the afternoon," said Representative John N. Garner, of the Lone Star State. "It has been the practice on the part of many to criticise the senate, and say that the upper branch of Congress is unmindful of the people's time," continued M Garner, "but if you examine the record you will find that the senate fre quently forges ahead of the house in disposing of important legislation. The senate, like the House, has rules for the conduct of its business, but the general rule in that body, the one which is responsible for the disposition of the bills and resolutions reported from committee, is "unanimous consent Often the senate has been jumped on because they have no "precious question," as we have in the house: thus permitting a senator to talk as long as he desires. I do not think this privilege has ever been abuse to the detriment of legislation demanded by the people. It has, however, on occasions prevented the passage of partisan measures, notably the 'Force' bill. "I believe that if we had a "unani mous consent' understanding, such as prevails in the senate, many more mer itorious measures would be considered in the house than now have an oppor tunitv for consideration. The fact is, that the great mass of legislation in both houses is done by unanimous consent. The reason of this is that all bills and resolutions, for which unanimous consent is asked have been carefully considered by committees and reported unanimously to the house, and the knowledge of this, nine times out of ten, prevents objection to the re: suit for unanimous consent." OLD OXFORD NOISY When Girl Was Suspended From College, Made a Very Dashing Exit. Oxford. Ohio, March 12. Nearly smothered with kisses in a cloud of fluttering handkerchiefs, and with the cries of godby from scores of throats of her schoolmates, Miss Forest Ire land, of Lima, Ohio, made a dashing exit from Oxford College for Women. It was one of those enforced depart ures which often result when board ing school girls become unmindful of the rules of the institution. Miss Ireland is a tall, handsome young woman, a member of the junior class, and a great favorite among the students of the college. A night or two ago the Denison College basket ball team came here from Granville, Ohio, to play the Miami University boys. Of course, all the college girls wanted to see the game, but President Jane Sherzer's rules stood in the way. With one girl, however, it was differ ent Miss Helen Louise Aiken, of Bellefontaine, Ohio, happened to have her father for a guest that evening, and it was easy for her to coax papa to take her to the basket ball game. Also it was easy for Miss Ireland to go with the Aikens. But it was not so easy for her to cover her absence in the school building, nor to again get into the old college home. She saw, the basket ball game, all right, and the next day she saw her father, P. M. Ireland, a prominent business man of Lima, who was immediately summoned to this village by the college authorl ties. Of course. Miss Ireland must be made an example of that was all there was to it. So she was sent home for the remainder of the college year. In company with her father she left on the 6:40 train in the morning, and her departure occasioned unusual matuti nal activity, on the part of the other girls. The ovation attending her go ing away was unprecedented, and she was followed part way to the railway station, the center of a noisy demon stration. It Is probably that Miss Ireland will return to the college next year. Vho Are the Elect? Two modern statements of the doc trine of "election," neither of which would quite satisfy John Calvin or Jonathan Edwards, are given in the Congregationalism One was Henry Ward Beecner's epi grammatic and convincing phrase, "The elect are whosoever will; the nonelect are whosoever won't." Good as this is, there is another ex planation that Is a star of equal magnitude. It was made by a colored divine, who said: "Brethren, it is this way. The Lord he is always voting for a man. and the devil he is always voting against him. Then the man himself votes. and that breaks the tier

WHEAT KIIIG GETS

M WELCOME James A. Patten Is Mobbed by Brokers at Manchester Cotton Exchange. WAS RESCUED BY POLICE IN CONTRAST TO THIS RECEP TION WAS THE ONE TENDERED HIM BY CORN EXCHANGE BROKERS AT LIVERPOOL. London, March 12. A hostile demon stration on the floor of the Cotton Ex change at Manchester, and one direct ly contrasting it for friendliness on the Corn Exchange at Liverpool, were met with yesterday by James A. Pat ten, Chicago wheat and cotton operat or. In the first Patten was mobbed and probably escaped injury only by being rescued by the police; in the latter he was greeted with cheering and other manifestations of friendliness. Pat ten sailed from Liverpool today for New York on board the Cunard Line steamer Mauretania. The brief vacation in England of the Chicago operator had been spent most ly about the Liverpool markers, and yesterday he made up his mind to run over to Manchester to see the city and visit the Cotton Exchange. It was known to Patten that there had been threats of an unpleasant re ception should he visit "Cottonopolis." but he refused to believe they would be carried into effect. Emanated From Losers. These threats, it is said, emanated from persons on the exchange who had lost large sums as a result of Patten's operations in Chicago, and from others who held him responsible for Thursday's rise in the price of cotton, and who believed that his visit to Eng land had for its purpose the manipula tion of the market. Hardly had Patten touched the floor of the Manchester Exchange before the outburst came. Instantly hostile cries were raised and the air was filled with "booings and hootings, mingled with an occa sional cheer. Amid the din the brokers rushed to ward the American, who was quickly surrounded by a threatening mob and jostled hither and thither as the pres sure of excited throngs behind carried those in the center of the circle up and down the floor of the pit in an exhaust ing scrimmage. Driven Into the Street. After a while the brokers, exerting their energies in a common direction, made a final rush and. drpve the wheat king into- the street. The business of the Exchange was suspended and hundreds of men left the pit and followed the speculator in to Bank street, where another big crowd soon assembled. At this point the visitor received a reception even more riotous than that which greeted him within the Ex change. The mob hurled epithets and a nun dred fists were shaken at Patten, who turned deathly pale as the threatening srowd pressed closely and seemed on the point of personally assaulting him At a critical moment a strong force of police arrived, and forcing its way through the rioters, surrounded Patten and hustled him into an office and out of thte back doors into a cab, in which be was hurriedly driven to a railroad station. He. took the first train for Liverpool. Unhurt, But Surprised. While unhurt,. Patten was greatly surprised and irrigated at the dislike the people of Manchester had shown for him. Arriving in Liverpool, Patten just had time to visit the Corn Exchange before it closed for the-day. The floor was crowded with members, who evinced their sympathy with him for the treatment that had been shown him in Manchester by taking off their hats and cheering him when he referred to the incident A demonstration similar to the Man Chester affair took place on the London Exchange , after the recent election, when a member of the Exchange, who was a candidate for parliament and had made reflections in his speeches on the sobriety of the personnel of the navy, was chased from the building and along the street. PLACE FOR BANQUET Yesterday at a meeting of the committee of the Young Men's Business Club, which has charge of the noon day luncheon for business men, which will probably . be addressed by Hugh Chalmers of Detroit, Mich., it was practically decided to hold the affair in the business room at 821 Main street. This room is vacated, and R. G. Leeds, the owner, has promised that it may be used. Poetry. Poetry is the record of the best and happiest moments of the happiest and best minds. Shelley. Every Form of RHEUMATISM Sciatic, Aeute.Chrnnic, Inflammatory and Muscular Rbenmatism yield promptly to the wonderful pain relieving and curative powers of CROCKER'S Rheumatic Cure ( Cow Wama, Pa. For aale at 00c a bottle by C lom.Thlstlothwsito W . H Sudhoff

RO

At Local Theaters

"House of Thousand Candles." i There is more than, the usual j amount of real dramatic amusement provided in "The House of a Thousand Candles" which will be given at the Gennett next Saturday, March 19, matinee and evening. This is due to the originality of the story, the real dramatic suspense of its four acts, and the unusual characters that are portrayed. Bates, the mysterious; who will be impersonated by that clever actor, William Webb, is a rare stage personage indeed and it takes the final curtain to decide whether or not he is the friend of the thug. Morgan and the scheming Pickering, or stands with the daring John Marshall Glenarm. Among the other peculiar characterizations of the play is the mys terious old Glenarm, the fighting par son, Stoddard and the witty Irishman, Larry Donovan. Few stage women are breezier than Marion Devereaux, heroine, or Gladys Armstrong, her friend. "Classmates One of the charms of "Classmates," De Mille's big American play that is coming to the Gennett next Wednesday is the manner in which the characters are drawn. Duncan Irving, Bubby Durable, Hugh Lindsay, Silent Clay, Dick Owen and Bert Stafford are drawn true to life. They are aglow with the passion of youth, they have originality and shrewdness. what they have not learned in the knowledge of the world and in the knowledge of men they make up in their loyalty to each other and to their cause. Their triumphant simplicity is in striking contrast to the worldly and passionate, cynical, flippant, sentimental and fantastic characters with which the usual European imported play abounrs. Vogel's Famous White Band. Among the many musical and theatrical entertainments offered to the multitude of our pleasure seekers, none appeal more to the average audience, nor is welcomed with greater enthusiasm by both old and young than a first class minstrel show. As a simple entertainment in itself, it is an original and characteristic "American" style of amusement, and our past musical history is rich in many names that have become famous through long and successful association with such companies. Vogel's famous white band, in connection with John W. Vogel's Big City Minstrels, has made a name for itself in every city and town in the Eastern and Middle Western states of our Union. Vogel's minstrels was organized twelve years ago, and from the very start the enterprise flourished, and under the personal able and practical management of John W. Vogel, it soon came to be looked upon as one of the foremost and representative minstrel companies in this country. Connected with it from the vary start was an admirable band, which has made a name for itself to such an extent that it is considered by the press and public, to be the foremost band on the road with any theatrical enterprise. By dint of careful study and the employance of gentlemanly and skillful musicians it has reached a degree of perfection seldom attained by any traveling band. Another reason for their unusual success may be sought in the fact that Mr. Vogel himself is a musician of merit, taking great pride in the performance of his band and selecting each and every number in their immense repertoire of music. This famous band will give a free concert at 7:30 p. m. in front of the Gennett this evening and every lover of music should not fail to hear it. Whalo Houses. At one time not very long ago there was on the Lancashire coast, near Lytham. England, a cottage and boathouse that were made almost entirely from the remains of a score or so of whales that bad been driven ashore some years before. The framework of the edifice consisted wholly of whalebone, and the dried skins of the huge creatures were neatly and strongly fastened as a covering for the walls and the roof. There is another building of exactly the same kind at Peterhead, in Scot land, and in this case the skulls of the whales and some of the heavier bones are used with great effect as outside ornaments. Exchange. Miss Columbia. The Little Boy Mamma, who Is Miss Columbia? The Mother Uncle Sam's affinity. Life. Mayo's Medical &

603 Norm Delaware Street, Indianapolis, Indiana.

Dr. Mayo Treats Epilepsy : 603 North Delaware Street, Indianapolis, Indiana. Dr. Mayo has treated a number of cases of cancer without the knife. No cure, no pay. Dr. Mayo gives to each patient a written guarantee. Dr. Mayo treats successfully all forms of Chronic Diseases that are curable, such as Diseases of the Brain, Heart. Lungs. Throat, Eye and Ear, Stomach, Liver, Kidneys, Bladder, Blood Poison, Rectum, Catarrh, Rupture. Piles, Stricture. Gleet, Eczema, Epilepsy, etc. Dropsy, Varicocele. Hydrocele, Female Diseases. Im potency. Seminal Emissions, Nervous Diseases, etc.

GUARDEDBYJCY WII1D A Frigid Convict Station In the Northeast of Siberia.

THE COLDEST SPOT ON EARTH No Precautions Are Nseassary Against E sea pa at Varhoyansk Whan tha Wind Blows, Half an Hour In the Fiorco, Biting Cold Moans Death. The coldest place In the world on would naturally expect to be either the north or the south pole, bat it Is not. It Is a Tillage in the northeast of Siberia named Verhoyansk. There the average temperature of the three worst winter months Is S3 degrees F. below zero, which means 85 degrees of frost. During January the average temperature Is 56 degrees below zero; or SS degrees of frost. On one occasion the thermometer registered the remarkable figure of 120 de grees of frost! The average January figure for London, on the other hand, is 7 degrees above freesing point. But in Verhoyansk most months are winter months. July, curiously enough, is as hot there as in London, but the shadow of the terrible winter bangs over even the warmest months. Even in midsummer the forests which surround the desolate plain in the center of which Verhoyansk stands are withered and gray. The grass is colorless. The few flowers are odorless. The bare soil of the plain itself refuses to produce vegetables of any kind. The ground is frozen hard to an incredible depth. No farming, of course, is possible. There are no cattle or poultry. All food is imported. Why, then, does this little village exist? It is a convict sta tion, and its population of 400 is made up of officials and exiles. No precautions against escapes are needed. Prisoners are known to have gone mad with the loneliness of the place. But no one has ever been mad enough to try to escape. Verhoyansk, strange though it sounds, is guarded by the wind. A gale when the thermometer stands at 30 or more below zero will destroy every living thing that is not under shelter. One of the many curious facts about cold is that Intense cold is In itself easy to bear provided the air is still. One traveler has declared that he has often felt colder In riccadilly on a damp day in November than during his entire stay in Verhoyansk, where the thermometer sometimes showed 90 degrees of frost. The reason is that at Verhoyansk the air is Intensely dry, and dry cold does not penetrate far. With a tent at night and warm furs In the daytime one can be quite comfortable, however low the temperature. But let a wind once rise and things are .different. As Verhoyansk is the coldest place in the world, the few winds that come must bring warmth. But then all winds carry moisture. And so we have the curious fact that, though one may be quite comfortable with the thermometer showing GO degrees of frost, if a wind springs up and adds 20 or 30 degrees of warmth to the air one has to fly for dear life to shelter. Half an hour in that fierce, biting cold means death. But the intense dry cold that Is Verhoyansk's normal weather is, if not so dangerous, quite as powerful in its effects. In that icy stillness an Iron ax head dropped on the ground smashes like glass. A board of unseasoned wood, on the other hand, freezes hard as iron. De Wlndt in his travels in this region carried his milk in solid cubes in a net attached to his sleigh. His thermometers all burst, for at, the CHICHESTER S PILLS aOOrS THE BtlAMOMD BRAXB. A mm mvf w. vmbw.iv Huns nui,(u vests kaowa u Bat. Safest. AWran Rcllabla SOLD BY DRUGGISTS EVERYKHERE New Murray Theatre APPROVED VAUDEVILLE WEEK OF MARCH 7th. Special feature bill headed by Sun's Singing 4. The original singers with Denman Thompson in "The Old Homestead." Four other exclusive features. Matinee, any seat, 10c. Evening per. formances, 7:45 and 9:00. Prices, 10, 15 and 20c Loge seats, 25c Surgical Institute DR. W. R. MAYO, WILL BE AT Central Hotel Wednesday, liar. 16th, And Every Pour Weeks Thereafter.

wmmtrmx r r mi mix for t C hl-eam-ter MamaTlbraaaAAX hoies. Mled with Bla Rlhboa. V

Verhoyansk temperatures qmcssilver freezes and can be hammered like copper. It has iadeed been turned into bullets and shot through a deal board. All be could find of a case of claret were a few lumps of redjee and some splintered glass. But what troubled him most was the discovery that it was impossible to smoke. At 40 degrees below zero frozen nicotine blocks the stem of the pipe, while cigarettes or cigars freeze to the lips. , It must be embarrassing to find, as one does when the thermometer reaches SO below, that one's very breath falls at one's feet in a fine white powder. A mustache becomes a torture a heavy, solid lump of ice. To lay a bare hand on metal means that the skin will stay where it touches. A careless traveler once wltlessly left a shirt outside his hut to dry. When he picked It up again it bent and almost broke. When swung through the air it made a noise like theatrical thunder. At these temperatures many usually trusty articles, such as eonibs and razors and knife handles, shrivel or bend or break. Verhoyansk Is a huddle of mnd plastered huts along oue straggling street. The windows are of ice, so that candles are needed both summer and winter. Twenty miles away, across a dismal plain of snow, lies a low, black line of pine forests. On the other side is the frozen river, from which dense, unhealthy mists roll up for weeks together in the autumn. There are not flowers In spring, and summer is dingy. Perhaps they are right at Verhoyansk in looking forward to the lone months of winter. But It is not a cheerful place. rearson's Weekly.

The order of society is founded on human misery and Imbecility, and these are foundations which will never crumble. Anatole France. A Wife's Early Lesson. A curious custom used to accompany an Anglo-Saxon betrothal. After the giving of the ring the fatter gave the son-in-law one of his daughter's shoes, with which the son-in-law hit bis wife on the head to teach her subjection! Later on a more moderate (?) castigation was suggested, ani three blows with a broomstick became the custom! 'The Months of the Year.' by Rev. Femberton Lloyd.

STOMACH GAS, Hill,

HBUR

A little Diapepsin regulates bad Stomachs in five minutes. Every family here ought to keep some Diapepsin in the house as any one of you may have an attack of indigestion or stomach trouble at any time, day or night. This harmless preparation will digest anything you eat and overcome distressed or -out-of-order stomach five minutes afterwards. If your meals don't tempt you. or what little you do eat seems to fill you, or lays like a lump of lead in your stomach, or if you have heartburn, that is a sign of indigestion. . Ask your pharmacist for a 50-cent case of Pape's Diapepsin and take a Look as

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MflI A EPeedy, permanent, and lasting cure is what I will giro li-l you beyond a doubt if your case is curable; If not, I will not accept your money and promise to do anything for you. The best reference I could give as to professional reliability is the many cured, satisfied patients I dismiss, and proves that my methods cure when others fail to even benefit. Don't Give Up I will give the POOREST man a chance as well as the .RICH to receive a cure from me at a SMALL, COST. There Is no man too POOR to get my best advice FREE. I will give $500.00 for any curable case of "Diseases Peculiar to Men" that I cannot cure. This is plain talk and I mean it. The methods we use in every case wis treat insure men a lifelong cure if they are afflicted with the following diseases: Varicocele and Hydrocele. Our one-treatment cure is what you should have and what you will have to have to be cured right. Only one visit is required. We do no cutting and you suffer no pain nor trouble. All signs disappear in a few days. Blood Poison, Skin Diseases. We will give you treatment that will in a few days cure all rash sores, ulcers and every sign and symptom. Our treatment gets the poison out of the system Instead of driving it in, like other treatments. We cure blood poison and skin diseases so they do not come back. Stricture, Kidney, Bladder, Prostatic, Discharges are scientifically cured by us. Our methods immediately benefit you and the majority of cases we cure come from other specialists who failed. Piles, Fistula. We can cure you so quickly and easily that you will be surprised. We will give you just the result and Cure you are looking for without a surgical operation. Rupture Cured in a few Treatments Without Cutting. After an examination we will tell you just what we can do for you. If we cannot benefit or cure you. we will frankly and honestly tell you so . Patients can be treated successfully at a distance. Write for examination and question blanks. Street cars and carriages direct to the Institute. Call on or address, W. R. MATO. M. D-. President, or W. B. GILLESPIE. General Manager. Indianapolis, Indiana.

Dropsy Given up by Doctor "I had dropsy, and was told by my family physician that there was no cfiance for me. My family also gave me up. My limbs and body were swollen one-third larger than natural, water collected around my heart and I had to be propped up in bed to keep from smothering. I took Dr. Miles Heart Remedy until I was entirely cured. This was in 1902, and I am now able to do any kind of work on my farm. My cure was certainly marvelous." L. TURLEY CURD. Wilmore, Ky. Dr. Miles' Heart Remedy has been wonderfully successful in relieving heart trouble. Its tonic effect upon the heart nerves and muscles is a great factor in assisting nature to overcome heart weakness. Dr. Mllos' Hoart Remedy Is sold ky all druggists. If tha first bottlo docs not benefit, your druggist will return your money. MILES MEDICAL CO.. Elkhart, Intf.

Tha Main Thing. Chief of Detectives Now give hi a description of your missing cashier. How tail was he? Business Kan I don't know bow tan he was. What worries me Is that Im was flt,000 short. Joys are our wings, sorrows ars oe spurs. Rlchter. Guessing His Gait. r? "I never worry or hurry." "What department of government service are you in?" Buffalo Express. EGO. little just as soon as you can. Ther. will be no sour risings, no belchlngs of undigested food mixed with acid, no Ptomach gas or heartburn, fullness or heavy feeling in the stomach, nausea, debilitating headacles. dizziness or intestinal griping. This will all go, and besides, there will be no sour food left over in the stomach to poison your breath with nauseous odors. Pape's Diapepsin is a certain curs for out-of order stomachs, because it prevents fermentation and takes hold of your food and digests it just the same as if your stomach wasn't there. Relief in five minutes from all stomach misery is at any drug store, wait ing for you. These large liO-cent cases contain more than sufficient to cure almost any chronic case of Dyspepsia, Indigestion or any other Siomach trouble. CS&TOIkI

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