Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 163, 19 April 1910 — Page 4
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM,' TUESDAY APRIL 19, 1910.
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Tt3 r.:ctr.c:d Palteiica . tzl Sxs-Tcletram Published and owned br the PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. sued 7 days each week, evening and Uunday mornlnfr. Office Corner Jorth 9th and A Btreets. Home Phone 1121. IUC11MOND. INDIANA.
Redols ft. Leeds Editor Ckarlee M. Moraaa... Managing; Editor CaH Berakardt AaaoHata Editor W. R. Poaadatoaa Kewa Editor. SUrtSCUIPTION TERMS. In Richmond 5.00 pr year (In advanre) or 10c per week. MAIL HLTtHCIMI'TIONS. One year. In advance ....... 5.00 Hix month, In ailvance 2.0 One month, In aclvunce ItUMAL KOL'TES. One year, in advance ....$2.50 Fix monthn. In advance 1-50 One month, in advance 25 Addrena clixngcri an oftrrt as doMlred; Ixith new and old addrcHDcs must be given. KiRtv-ihprs will please remit with order, which Hlioulcl he Riven for a specified term: mime will not bo enterd until payment Is received. Kntcred at Itlchmond, Indiana, post office an second class mall matter. M 11m Association of Americaa J Advertisers (New York City) has A 1 examined and eertilled to the circulation , of this publication. Only the fUrorea ol . dreaiatloa contained la Its report on ' , gneraatoei by the Association. a.... ........ ......,..,d J terns Gathered m From Far and Near , THE. CENSUS TAKER. From the Baltimore'Sun. Of course be polite to 'em, but nobody need ask the census enumerators In to dinner. From the Jacksonville Times-Union. The census man is your friend. Help him all you can. ; From the Cincinnati Times-Star. Seven per cent of the census enumerators for Cincinnati are to be women. Won't they have a hard time getting their slster-vlctims to answer the question, "How old are you?" From the Columbus .Dispatch. When the census taker calls, remember that it Is up to you to help make an accurate census, with all the good that la Implied. From the New York World. That census query, "How long have you been married to the present incumbent?" suggests that Uncle Sam Is trying to keep up with the procession to Reno.- ; " From the- Scranton Tribune-Republican. ' Keep an eye out for the census enumerator. He will be in our midst torow. '- From Jhe Harrlsburg Telegraph. Fortunately the census taker will not ask how many times the "fan" has . lied In order to get to a ball game. " From the Detroit News. Wyandotte has a lady census enumerator. "Because" won't suffice as an answer From the Detroit Free Press. v In the census report, however, poor man gets official recognition as tho head of the family, which helps some. From the New York Herald. " Census man was on his rounds yesterday. Must have been surprised to find many women no older than when be called In 100O. , mt. Mckinley.. From the Utlca Observer. .The Fairbanks expedition failed to find Dr. Cook's records at the summit of Mount McKlnley. Perhaps somebody will organize an expedition to the top of Mount Ararat to find the brass tube Noah should have left there. ' From the Indianapolis News. That brass tube which Dr. Cook left on top of Mount McKlnley must have drifted away with the Ice, too. From the Pittsburg Dispatch. . , Capt, Osbon's explanation that, of course. Dr. Cook's- record was blown away or burled In the snow, corroborates Prof. Parker's opinion of the value of that Mount McKlnley ascent. From the Syracuse Post-Standard. The Fairbanks expedition reports that It went to .the top of Mount McKlnley and found no evidence that any one had ever been there before, which will be conclusive proof to the defenders of Cook that the Fairbanks expedition never reached the top. . From the Kansas City Times. ' Dr. Cook, It appears, left his records on the summit of Mount McKlnley th same way he deposited his polar proofs at Etah. TWINKLES (By Philander Johnson) The Spotlight Spirit. "The census people promise abso- , lute secrecy concerning any informav tton you may give them. : "Yea, replied Mrs Flimgllt; "I don't ' set why they want to waste one's time on something that Isn't going to get ' anybody's name into the newspapers." Avoiding tho Stereotyped. "Why are you putting up all those tents!" ''Because," replied Mr. Cumrox, "mother and the girls want to do something original in s social way. They1 want to give something In connection with which the words 'bouse guest' and "house party' cannot be used." Comparison. - ' The comet in its awesome flight ' )ooras up less dangerous by far Than yonder swift and threatening . light. The, head lamp on a trolley car. A Serious Matter. HJ suppose we will soon be hearing
GEORGE LOCKWOOD, REACTIONARY. George Lockwood, of Marlon, has been down in Washington for the last few days on a mission to the president to tell him the. situation In Indiana. What Lockwood told Taft is probably an enlargement of the inter---view which he gave out to the newspaper correspondents in Washington. In that Interview Lockwood said that the "reason there was no organized , fight In the state convention to secure an endorsement of the Payne tariff law" was merely because it has been customary to accord the "candidate for senator the privilege of writing the state platform.' - And Lockwood, when declining the palm of the race for congress, renounced his .aspirations, desired only to be a member of the resolutions committee at the state convention, knowing with all the rest of Indiana, that the Issue was to be fought out in the committee, as to whether Beveridge was to be supported or to be scuttled with no resolutions to run on. The "no organized fight" which Mr. Lockwood so noncahalantly refers to, was a fight of the bitterest, behind the veil, in which Hemenway, Watson," the tariff lobbyists, and all their retinue of petty politicians, go-betweens, and heelers fought, and have been fighting for months past in order to beat Beveridge, by trading, cajoling, threatening, promising and worse and more than that, are still fighting. The fight is not in the open it is veiled sometimes behind the most praiseworthy protestations and appearances. Mr. Watson never admits In public that he is not supporting Beveridge and is careful to explain that his acts are not to be Interpreted as offensive but every one knows (or does anyone know all) his relation to legislation in congress since he was forced to retire from the race of representative in the Sixth district, because the people would not stand for his broken pledges to them and his friendly attitude toward Unseen Government." .
It is to this category that Mr. Lockwood belongs the politicians who are waging war on Beveridge because he' has fought for the people and has refused to be entangled as a part of that machine which stretches from New York to Seattle, and has its hands on the strings in Washington, D. C. "No organized fight" "Two of the congressional conventions .' have already demonstrated that Senator Beveridge is out of line with the Republicans of his state" shouts Lockwood. Mr. Lockwood can account for the resolutions In the EleventhHe contented himself after finding no opportunity for him to express his "reastionarism" at the state convention, with taking pains that his district should not endorse the state convention's resolutions. According to Mr. Lockwood'a logic the resolutions of the state convention are meaningless mere perfunctory things turned over as of no account to the candidates for the U. S. Senate of the Republican party whoever they may happen to be, while the well spring of truth and honor In the Eleventh remains the true expression of the people. If the state convention's resolutions are of no value why Mr. Lockwood's anxiety to be on that committee? 1
And in the Tenth? Is there any relation between the Gary of the Steel TruBt which Beveridge fought in the tariff, in the instructions to Hunyaka and Poles too Ignorant and too late from serfdom to throw off the yoke is there any relation in that to the resolutions of the Tenth? The state platform is not popular with the Tobacco trust, with the Steel trust nor with any trust or predatory Corporation or any of their allies or agents. That is why the platform indorsing Beveridge is more than a Republican platform it is a platform of the people. That is the reason that the rlngster and the rlngster's backers are fighting Beveridge under cover they cannot fight him in the open. . " And as to the bill of pillage that Beveridge fought against says Lockwood: "Despite the efforts of certain orators and editors to create dissatisfaction over the Payne law, its beneficial effects are becoming so apparent to wage earners that I predict before election day that it will be as popular a measure as the Dingley law." A safe prediction! There is little real difference.. The wage earners were so dissatisfied with the 'popular' Dingley bill that they were promised a decent and genuine revision of it in the national platform, by the presidential candidate, by Senator Beveridge, and by the men running for election In the congressional districts. And Beveridge who fought against a reduplication of the pillage of the Dingley bill as It stood, a barbarous relic of the time when we had small businesses instead of watered monopoliesthe man who kept his promise to the people, is condemned by the stripe of Lockwood to the President whose words On the stump Mr. Beveridge backed up by his vote in the Senate.
But now to Lockwood's real defense of the tariff. "There are 200,000 more wage earners profitably employed in Indiana , than there were two years ago, when the country was passing through the uncertain period of tariff revision. They would rather pay high prices for food products raised by those who help consume the output of the factories than to walk the streets hunting for jobs." , Those 200,000 men why were they out of work under the beneficent Dingley bill two years ago wasn't It because the Unseen Government had precipitated a panic to discredit Roosevelt? It received its power to throw men out of work In an attempt to coerce government by such nefarious schedules in the tariff as Beveridge has fought against. ' . And the wage earner has the choice of not having enough money In his pay envelope to live "or walking the streets hunting for jobs" while Unseen Government fighta them In trying to discredit Roosevelt, their champion. ,u . . '. Now that Roosevelt is out of the government these same forces in a different way, but as nefarious and insidous, are fighting the men who are carrying out the Roosevelt policies. s And such a man Is Beveridge. 1 ... I Therefore the people are against '. Beveridge and for the popular Payne-Aldrich tariff, says Lockwood.
These are the reasons that Lockwood, who fought Taft's nomination vigorously in. Indiana; Lockwood tlie chief publicity agent of the old, crowd that fought Roosevelt in Indiana; these are the reasons and this
is the advice that he gave President
Beveridge may indeed be "out of line with the sentiment of the Republicans of the state" like Lockwood, Watson, Durbin, Hemenway but he is in line with the people. .
the joke about the big fish that got away." : -; "My friend," replied the fisherman, "with food at present prices, the fish that gets away is not a joke. It is a calamity." A Conversational Device. "Why do you start that man going on his favorite hobby, the habitability of Mara?" "Because," replied Miss Cayenne, "he gets so interested that he falls to notice my utter lack of attention." The Answer. Why does she long for worry? Why does she wish to vote? Why does she seek the flurry Where campaign banners float? The answer speedily is writ, "Because she does. That settles it .Why does she seek the power That baser mortals crave When man would fain allow her The right to call him slave? Oil. swift reply! Oh, cold rebuff! "Because she does," And that's , enough.
Taft.
"The citizens of Christiania have had a queer experience," writes a correspondent from the Norwegian capi tal. "An enterprising, business concern erected in the Karl Johann street, the principal promenade, an heroic stat ue of Mercury, for advertising purposes. The figure was so scantily- draped that some citizens protested, with the result that the police furnished, drap ery, which was torn away on the first night. A close watch was placed on the statue, which was once more clothed and again stripped. - To end discussion the police received orders to remove the statue and now both parties claim a victory." Mrs. Imogen B. Oakley, of Philadelphia, Is the first woman to be Invited to appear officially at the annual din ner of : , the National Civic Reform League. A:-. She was introduced by Mr. Choate, and on her appearance every man present rose to his feet and ap plauded. , In general and electrical engineering factories in the United Kingdom more than sixteen thousand women are em ployed,
STAND BACK, BROTHERS! . St. Louis, Mo., April 19. The "squeeze play" Is not so popular in the Wyoming street Police court as it is In the bleachers' tribunal at League Park.' Philip Besch, who was accused of dancing in too close proximity to a pretty partner at Lemp's Park Hall, was fined S3 by Judge Klieber. With him , were arraigned Rudolph Schneider, an attorney, and his brother, John Schneider, who was floor manager of the dance. The latter declared that his peace was disturbed by the ardor with which Besch crushed his partner to his manly breast, and also by the blow which he planted upon the manager's eye when he demanded an apology.
COUNCIL FAVORS. THE IMPROVEMEHT Indorses the Plan to Better Condition of the National Road, West. WILL COST- CITY NOTHING ORDINANCE REGULATING CAB FEES WAS UNANIMOUSLY PASSED SANE FOURTH ORDINANCE UP FOR A READING. Upon being informed that the proposed improvement to the National Road, from West Fifth street to the Wayne-Center township line, would not cost the city one cent, council, last evening, unanimously passed a resolution favoring the improvement, as far as the matter pertains to the city. This Is the third time that such a resolution has been considered by council, on the first occasion, it was adopted and two weeks later it was rescinded. . ... Council did not have a clear understanding of the matter when it was first introduced. It did not want to approve of any measure which would involve the city financially. Since that time, however, the matter has been investigated and approved. The viewers of the road were delayed in their report because of the action of council In not approving the improvement. However, now that the city approves the viewers will proceed, and report at the first meeting of the county commissioners in May. The attorney for the petitioners intimated last evening, that the viewers would approve of all the recommendations for the improvement, as petitioned for. No More Delay Urged. The city fathers were told that If they wanted a good Improvement, which would not cost 'the city any money It was time for them to approve the resolution. Councilman Bartel motioned for the adoption of the resolution and this was seconded by Councilman King. Result, unanimous vote. The cab and transfer ordinance was passed, unanimously last evening. It will compel the companies, engaging In this business to charge , uniform rates all over the city, or suffer the consequences, by making themselves liable to arrest and a" fine of from $3 to $50 for each violation. The ordinance protecting the city shade trees, shrubbery and the like, which may be planted on the grass plots between the curbs and sidewalks, passed without amendments, on third reading. It Is probable, however, that the board of works will appoint an advisory committee to inspect investigate and recommend the attention that the shade trees of the city should receive. " Several men in the city, who are interested, have volunteered their services. Albertson Gets a Lift. ' An ordinance was passed on third reading, providing that the city expend a small sum in paying for half of the official bond of County Treasurer Albert Albertson, acting as city treasurer. The bill pertaining to a safe and sane celebration of the Fourth of July, which came up on second reading, "received litle consideration last evening, as council wanted to adjourn at nine o'clock. An amendment was introduced by Councilman Bartel, in which he provided that the board of works would have the power to grant special privileges to adults, in event the city or an organization desired" to give a public celebration. " Mayor Zimmerman was against the -, ordinance because he believed it was conducive of too much conservatism. Several minor complaints were made. Councilman Burdsall said that the trash in the alleys in the Eighth ward had not been removed but twice in three months. Councilman Englebert said that complaint had been made about the small diameter and durability of gas pipes on North Eighth street and recommended that something be done to remedy this, if possible,' before the street was improved. " Councilman Kauff man ' .offered a complaint about the very bad condition of South A street. ' City Controller E. G. McMahan made a report of the city finances, which is in part as follows; General fund, on hand at time of last report and receipts since then, $49,381.13; disbursements.! $.14,047.71, leaving a balance of $15,- i 333.44 in the fund; balance in sinkingfund, $9,104.63; balance in - sinking fund, $4,6671; balance in street im-i provement fund, $5.K3.1J. ! Get out the old fashioned household ! remedy book and scratch out two remedies. one advising raw beefsteeakl spread on a bruise and the other ad-1 vising bacon for a felon. We can't waste beefsteak and bacon on braises 1 and felons these days. Atchison Globe.
City Cleaning
MRS. F. W. "The city that might be the city that ought to be this is the object of our faith, of our devotion. This is the city that Is coming down out of heaven from God coming as fast as we make room for it.. It comes very slowly because there are so few that believe in It, and look for it and make ready for it; according to our faith it must be unto us. For just as soon as the people begin to believe in a city like this it will be here in all Its glory. Nothing hinders its coming nothing in the world, but our want of faith." Washington Gladden. Whenever the homes of a people have come to mean more to them than mere lodgements from cold or rain, wind or sun, there has sprung up, very gradually, perhaps, but none the less surely, a desire to improve them.- Chicago has awakened to the fact that business will not make up for lack of beauty. Denver boasts thus of itself: "No other city in the country is made up so exclusively of citizens to whom civic pride and love of nature's beauties have become a passion. Here no prodding or exhortation is necessary to induce the home owner and the man who rents, to do their utmost to contribute to the general beauty scheme of the city." - The truly beautiful city is one in which attractive homes are common and in which their making has brought most widespread pleasure. It is the individual on whom this task devolves. He complains that the city is ugly, yet he has an unsightly plank walk or a dangerously dumpy brick one in front of his house, a high unpainted plank fence around his back yard, and a miscellaneous collection of tin cans and kindling wood at his back door. He asks for, nay demands, that the health department work day and night to preserve his family from contagion, yet the weeds on the vacant lots he owns, sway In the breezes and hoard up enough microbes to start a lively plague in the whole neighborhood. Gladstone once noted Americans as
BLAME IT ON THE COMET;
THERE'S NONE CAN REPLY
Evidence is multiplying. It's a fact there's no denying, . About the comet they are lying, - And thereby hangs a tale; It's been libelled by all nations, Each day brings new accusations ; If proof is not forthcoming Some one ought to go to jail. Pretty tough on. Mr. Halley And his little hot tamale, But they'll keep it up, by golly. Until he knocks them flat; For, according to the paper, It seems to be the caper To blame things on the comet . And let it go at that. Skyline Sonnets. Looks as if they were rubbing it in on the poor old comet, doesn't it? Everybody knows that it keeps bad hours, but that's no reason .why . It should be blamed for everything. Comets, like human beings, have their failures and when it comes right down to brass tacks, the only legitimate fault to be found with Mr. Halley's electric sign is its failure to get here on . time. Folks have been expecting it for months, and its failure to show up has given its traducers a splendid opportunity to libel It. But until it arrives and takes the stand in its own behalf it will continue to take the blame for everything that goes wrong. . ' . Just as well that Mr. Halley has not taken the trouble to deny the countless charges against him. If he started in to 40 so, he would have a pretty busy summer because persons who never tell the truth when they can avoid it, are finding out that the comet makes a pretty good "goat." No one will ever know how many thousands of men it has saved from making early morning explanations. When they have found themselves on their own doorstep after an unsteady journey in the dawn they have stayed the rolliag pin with the statement that they have been delayed through watching for the comet This explanation has always proven satisfactorily except in cases where the fond wife uses the rolling pin first and demands an explanation afterward. Reno is filled with men and women, who blame their marital disagreements on the comet. One woman confessed that she mid quarreled with her husband over the sex of the comet, ' She had insisted that it must be a man because it stayed out all night while he was equally certain that It was a woman because It carried tales. Evansvllle, Ind., was one of the first municipalities to lodge a complaint against the comet. Scores of persons assert that they have been unable to sleep for the last three weeks and attribute this fact to the approach of the big rocket The Chamber of Commerce has denounced the comet and isn Dr. Whitehall's Dbacafc Dczdy for years the Standard Remedy for acute and chronic Rheumatism. If you. suffer from this dread disease, or are afflicted with lumbago, gout, sore muscles, stiff or swol lea joints it will relieve those distressing symptoms, destroy the uric acid!, and prevent reerrliig attacks. 50 cents per box at druggists. Write for trial box. TMf ML
Is World Wide
STEPHENS. conspicuous for combining enthusiasm for, their country with love for their cities. On how many sides, moral, physical, intellectual, political and economic, does an effort for beauty in towns and cities touch the welfare of mankind. Let us realize for a hundred reasons the vision of artist and poet becoming humanity's the dream of cities beautiful. In the Bible itself the progress of mankind is represented as ending in a celestial city after having begun in a garden. A twentieth century city's prosperity goes hand in hand with its honor. , A force of 04'.) men keep Madrid clean at the small cost of 15 cents per inhabitant per year. Paris threatens to compel- distributors of circulars to employ persons to follow them and pick up and place in receptacles, circulars thrown on pavement..'. ':..".'.' ' New tarring system of dust laying in Paris after four years test proves excellent from every standpoint and the expense is only 3 to 4 cents per square yard. ; The man who looks upon dark and dirty walls and windows all day long and then on his way home or during his leisure hours, upon leaden skies heavy with smoke and dust, trees and plants stunted by sulphur fumes. streets lined with ugly bill boards or intermediate walls of brick or stone, can not be expected to have much civic spirit. It is an effort if he Is able to muster any at all. On the other hand, if he can ride dally to his work along clean and well paved streets, past frequent small parks and open spaces adorned with trees, shrubs and statuary, point out to his friends state ly public public buildings and institu tions, housing a city government. which is honest. Intelligent and efti cient. that man is going to be devoted to that city's Velfare. He is going to praise Its greatness at every opportu nity, and he is going to inspire others with a like confidence In its future. has withdrawn the freedom of the city, On the other hand, residents of Phil adelphia say they cannot keep awake since the agitation started, but no fair minded person would think of laying this charge at the comet's door. Jersey farmers report- that their hens are so busy looking skyward that they release their eggs and' fail to give the signal. Landlords in all parts of the country say they are un able to collect their rent on account of the comet. Every time they call, the tenants are on the roof waiting for the - pyrotechnic parade to pass. From Texas comes a story about baked apples growing on the trees and cows in the same neighborhood giving nothing but cream both facts being credited to the influence of the comet. In a few days the Reds and the Cubs will be telling how they lost ' their batting eyes by sitting up waiting for the comet to make a home run. It's an absolute certainty that the comet will be blamed if both teams fail to win the pennants In their respective leagues. Jeffries and Johnson have their comet excuses all prepared in case their calculations are uqset at San Francisco, on July 4. Members of Congress who fail of re-flection won't mince their words In denouncing it, and every time it rains the comet will be charged with bribing Mr. J. Pluvius. .-. At this writing it looks as if the annual sea serpent story from Atlantic City and the other , summer fiction would have to surrender the right of line to the comet NOTICE. I refuse to pay any debts that my wife contracts for. Charles Martin.. 18-2t Lstttia: Gold .Medal Flour makes the whitest bread. Sylvia. All the Novelties of Spring Hat Pins. Bell Pins. Cull links. Lockets. Necklaces and Fancy Rings at Jenldns & Co. '72S Main St. Now is the Time to Plant Sweet Peas We have Rice's Bulk Sweet Peas fn mixed and separate colors, best and largest variety of Rice's Tested Garden seed in Bulk that we have ever shown. Special Lawn Seed ' to grow In shady places. Onion Sets, Yellow, 10c quart, 3 for 25c; Onion Seta, White, 12!c quart, 3 for 30c ' We can save you money by buying your seeds at GEO. DRED&l CO. rfcwte 1747 517 Mail SL Open Every Evening.
All ORDIIIMICE TO
TAX VEHICLES IS . BEFORE COUNCIL (Continued From Page One.) drawn by two horses. $2.00. On each one-horse dray, $2.O0Y On each two-horse dray, $3.00. On each bus, cab, coupe, hack or om nibus, drawn by two horses or'mort. $2.50. On each buggy, coupe, surrey, sulkey, bus, cab hack, driving cart or buck board, drawn by one horse, $1.50. On each buckboard, buggy, coupe. surrey, sulkey, driving cart drawn by two horses, $2..V. On each hearse, $5.H. On each vehicle drawn by two horses not hereinafter mentioned. $3.00." On each vehicle drawn by more than two horses, not hereinbefore mentioned. $1.50. On each automobile, locomobile, or similar vehicle ' with seats for three persons or less, $10.00. On each automobile, locomobile or similar vehicle with seats for four persons or more, $15.00. On each motorcycle, $2.00. On each bicycle, except those used by children under fourteen years of age. 50 cents. - On each vehicle not embraced In the above schedule, $2.00. For each riding horse, $1.00. (V ing up to the fact chat peppermint 1 1 .. . . lutcngcs, coarcoai ana ayspcptla cures" are onlv iniWihifta in th mm of so troublesome a complaint as something- that will not only riUva but which will ton and train tha cUMattv apparatus to again do Its work normally, and this these sUnplo retnedtos cannot do. Th?ISi omethta ora to tho euro or indices tton than aweetonlaa tho breath, and yot remedy that only 000. Ulna digestive tngradlanta will not cor permanently, as the basis of lndtaasUoa. is poor bowel circulation, and tharrsQulres a scientific laxative. Wtkam of no remedy that combines these requirements better than Dr. Caldweb'a a auartr nf m m(ii svmi vr. uuawni'i ayrup Fepam M a 1 tlve tonic, a actentlfle btoadtaar of . -- m in, am cw Ok atinatlAn. lniiM.i " .T plaints. Its Ingredients will so straec&aa and ton the stomach and bowel musctaa Mt they will again do thsir work naU unUy and when that has bara ooaom. pllshed your trouble to ever. Knit Stuart. Staunton. Vs.. waa longtime sufferer, as was O. Tuck. BtocXftwav ESS VifJLPi11 jr wJtSS: -SSI Dr. Caldwell's offer of a trZ ManU wboToVwU: nsF oHhFS'Tii w uua ivnieuy. XTiey ur. uaiawen personally win bo desire for yourself or family tha stomach. Mm- mAr te' letter and he will reply to yoa In "e tree sample simply send yaor nme and address on a postal card or otherwise. For either reooest the doctors address Is Dr. W. B. CUdwetL&Mslatu" wall building. sfonUceno. m. anvmM 710 8t ntcuuoixv , An unusually good remedy for colds. They are little . sugar coated tablet and easy to take. Get thorn where your cold first starts to obtain the best results. 15 cents per box. Only at Adetss Dtc3 CZztq , 6th and Main. "The Rexall tore" IErxcorsiono ViaCCG L.CLD. Q3.15 ConndiTrtp ' Account Old German . Baptist Conference. Selling dates May 13th and 14th. Final return limit, June 10th, Q21.55 Boon Trly To WKifcgfca.D.C on account World's Sunday School Association. . Selling dates, ; May Is, 17, IS and 19th. Final return limit, ' June 15th. For particulars call C A. Clair, P.IT.A, Richmond. M -Tel. 2062. '
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