Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 193, 19 May 1910 — Page 4

tAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TLEGRAMf THUBSDAY, MAY 19, 1910.

Tto Qlctr.ond Pallslcrrn is. Sis-Telegram :. . ,v Published and ownd br tha -PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. Xssutd 7 'days each week, evenings and Sunday morning. Offleo Corner North 9th and A streets. Hone Phone 1121. ,; RICHMOND. INDIANA.

Haeela O. Leewa...... B4KOT Leftae Jtan ...BmImm Bfaaaser Carl atora bar t........ Associate Edttev W. ftl, Peeaaateae... Newa Editor. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. Xa Richmond f 5.00 per ear (In advance) or 10c per week. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS. One year, in advance ............ 5A2 Six months. In advance .......... ' One month, in advance .......... RURAL ROUTE! One year. In advance $2-50 Six months. In advance 1' One month. In advance - Addresa changed as often as desired; both new. and old addresses must be given. Subscribers will please remit with order, which should be given for a specified term; name will not be entered until payment ia received. Entered at Richmond. Indiana, post office aa aacond class mall matter. -.JiJiJSxe..e mhim a AsaodatJon of (New York City) baa and certified to tha eirculatien J puouceuo. only tas njmres oc nrmtsisea la Ita report an ay the Aaaoelatioa. , , r e fa aa irn tn RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY' Has a population of 18.000 and la arrowing-. It la the county aeat of Wayne County, and the . trading- center of a rich agricultural community. It Is lofated due eaat from Indlanapola t$ miles and 4 miles from the etate line. , Richmond Is a city of homes and of Industry. Primarily a maajufaeturlna city, It la also the Jobbing- center of Eastern Indiana and enjoya the retail , trade of the populous community far miles around. Richmond Is proud of Its splendid streets, well kept yards, Ita cement atdewalka and beautlfal shade trees. It has S national banka, 2 trust companies and 4 building- associations with combined resourcea of over $1,000,000. Number of factories 125; capital Invested 17,000,000. with an annual output of $27,000,000, and a pay roll of 93.700,000. The total pay roll for the city amounta to approximately $,S00,000 annually. There are five railroad comFanles radiating- In eight dlferent directions from the city. , Incoming freight handled dally, 1.750.000 lbs.: outgoing freight handled dally, 750,000 lbs. Yard facilities, per day 1.700 cars. : Number of pass&nger trains dally, 89. Number of freight tralna dally 77. The annual poet office recelpta amount ., to 980,000. Total assessed valuation of the city. 915,000,000. Richmond has two Interurbanrallwaya. Three newspapers with a combined circulation of 12,000. Richmond Is the greateat hardware Jobbing center in -the atate, and only second In general jobbing interests. It has a piano factory producing a high grade piano every 15 ' minutes. It la the leader In the manufacture of traction enf'lnea, . and producea more hreshlng machines, lawn mowers, roller skates, grain drills and burial caskets than any other city In the world. The clty'a area Is 2,640 acres; has g court house costing $500,000; 10 public schools and has the finest and most complete high school in the middle west under construction; 3 parochial schools; Karlham college and the Indiana Business College; five splendid fire companies In fine hose houses; Olen Miller park, the largest and most beautiful park In Indiana, the home of Richmond's annual Chautauqua; seven hotels; municipal electrlo light plant, under successful operation, and a private electric light plant, inaurlng competition; the oldest public library In the state, except one. and the second largest, : 40,000 volumes; pure, refreshing water, unaurpassed; 85 mllea of Improved streets; 40 miles of sewers; 25 miles of cement curb and gutter combined; 40 miles of cement walks, and many mllea of brick walks. Thirty churches. Including the Reld . Memorial, built at a cost of $250,000; Retd Memorial Hos?ltal. one of the most modern n the state; T. M. C. A. building, erected at a cost of $100,000, one of the finest In the state. The amueement center of Eastern Indiana and Western Ohio. No city of the else of Richmond holds as fine an annual art exhibit. The Richmond Fall Festival held each October la ' unique, no other city holda a similar affair. It Is given In the Interest of the city and financed by the business men. Success awaiting anyone with enterprise In the Panlo Proof -City. Items Gathered in From Far and Near Jutt a Few Sample. Springfield Republican. "Please tell us what the democratic party stands for," urges the St Paul Dispatch. Well, just now, it is standing for W. J. Bryan, Governor Haskell, of Oklahoma; Senator Tillman, of South Carolina; Senator Jeff Davis, of Arkansas; Congressman Foss, of Massachusetts; Gumshoe Bill Stone and various other celebrities.

Wasn't So Long Between 'Em. : Chicago Record Herald. What Emperor William and Colonel Roosevelt said to each other was probably even more to the point and of greater Importance than what the Governor of North Carolina said to the Governor of South Carolina. ; Wag It Arranged on Purpose? Pittsburg Leader. The funeral of King Edward is to be made one of the greatest events of state in modern history. And, of course, it happens just at the proper moment for the Colonel. Experts to Fight to the Last Ditch. Omaha Bee. . Uncle "Joe probably does not take to the Chautauqua salute because it looks like hoisting the white flag. Loan Wouldn's Dare Search Him. Boston Transcript. Ex-Governor Rollins' st-edtoajaveat - e

TENDENCIES.

It has not been so long since the people of some communities fought the Invasion of waterworks because they believed that a violation of : their rights was engendered when the privilege was taken from them of drinking water from their own cees pools. The same sort of propaganda appears in the following advertisement widely circulated: "Do you want government by political doctors? When doctors disagree so constantly, should your choice be abridged by law, or by the ruling of a Department or Bureau? Do you want your health and hygiene to be regulated by an army of United States , Inspectors under the direction of a medical bureau? "Do you know that there are five bills before the present Congress which, if passed, could be so used,, and the concealed purpose of which is to give such powers to a national department or bureau or "officer" of health, and that the political doctors are making the final supreme effort to get one of them passed before the close of the present season?" Not the least of this medical despotism of a paternalistic government Is the pure food law and the like. Perhaps when translated into 'plain and understandable language the inspection of meat will not be so terrible In Its sound as "government by political doctors." It is no doubt somewhat an encroachment in a feeble way on the Socialists but they are not the ones who are fighting it to the best of our belief though they deserve more real sympathy for having this : poaching on their preserves.

EX-PRESIDENTS.

In view of some slight difference of opinion on the propriety of exPresidents in attending public and popular functions, the memoirs of John Quincy Adams may throw some light on the importance which exPresidents have held the people of this part of the country. In 1843 Adams, then an old man, made the arduous journey by rail through central New York, by steamer from Buffalo to Cleveland, and by canal boat and stage from Cleveland to Cincinnati. He did this to lay the corner stone of an observatory at the latter place. The real object was, of course, to be the guest of the people of this new, country. He writes: "Yet there is a motive pure and elevated and a purpose benevolent and generous, at least, mingling in the impulses which in this case I obey."

Curiously enough Wayne County figures in his memoirs. There is no record that he took offense or regarded as nauseating the meeting of the citizens of that early time. , Listen to his views and the circumstances: "Professor Mitchel of Cincinnati, came with two resolutions from the Astronomical society of that place inviting me to lay the corner stone of an observatory which they are about to erect there and with two letters from Judge Burnet and Mr. Pendleton, urging me to accept the invitation. I asked Mr. Mitchel for an interval of time to make up my mind upon a proposal so strange to me and so flattering that I scarcely dare to think of It with composure. "25th. This morning I delivered to Professor Mitchel my answer to the resolutions of the Cincinnati Astronomical society. . . . I have accepted the invitation and promised to perform the duty, if in my power, on some day of November next, to suit the convenience of the society.

After reaching Cincinnati, "Mr.r Raridan, with a large deputation from Wayne county, Indiana, personally and In writing gave him an invitation to come to Wayne county which he had not the time to accept."

It has remained for Mr. William D. Foulke to find something so degraded and so disgusting in the people of this section that an invitation to another ex-President to participate in the centenary of a great county k embracing other great counties of a great state is a gratuitous Insult. MODERN MACHINERY. . I Two municipalities, the largest !n the state, have taken formally action through their commercial bodies to investigate the commission form of government. ' It is to be rejoiced that they go to the task of visiting the typical cities where the new government in force with open minds. The Indianapolis and Ft.; Wayne committees from their respective organizations will visit Galveston, Kansas City and Des Moines for the purpose of making a comparative study and in event of their finding anything more desirable than the present municipal code in Indiana will so recommend to the Indiana legislature. It is idle to speculate on what their findings will be yet we would call the attention to the desirability of approaching the question' from this viewpoint. As municipal government is local government and should be regarded as such, it is necessary that local government should be adapted to local needs and desires. The main ideas which are so well thought of in the new form of government are not hide-bound in the form which they take. Indiana may be able to modify its present code and at the same time establish the new principles which are sweeping the country. The men selected for the task' in Indianapolis are reputable citizens and not without considerable experience; and they know the character and temper of the people of the state. " . The most important thing is not that the people of the state 'should adopt any and every new form of government which may start up over the land but that they should obtain the one which is best adapted to their uses. The desire for modern machinery is not limited to the industrial world.

may be a warning to the ex-president Poor Bill is Always Being Robbed. Denver Republican. The college professor who says this is the year 1914 instead of 1910 has TUDEHCILGS1S TREATMENT vs. TUDEKCUL0SIS CURE There is a vast difference between a treatment and a CURE. Sanatorium, Dietetic and Climatic Treatment are beneficial in a way. They "bolster up." But ofttimes give the consumptive the Impression that he is cured, while the disease has really been slumbering, and soon gains headway again, developing more rapidly. Nature herself tries to heal, but the disease germs develop faster than Nature can work, and the result is eventually the total destruction of the lungs. Consumptives first think of sanatoria when seeking a cure. In the public mind also that seems to be the one method. Tet how many people do you know who have been permanently cured by Sanatorium reatmentl Statistics seemingly faU to nllghten on this point. Medicine as a :ure for Tuberculosis is frequently decried by physicians and consumptives themdves. but when the makers of Erkman's Alterative can produce irrefutable testimonials and affidavits made by those who have been cured, few reasonable, broadminded consumptives will refuse to listen to the new call of health and happiness that is made by Eckman's Alterative. These cured people were skeptical. Everyone is- But If your present treatment is not curing you. ia it effective? No! The disease must be eradicated entirely. Find out what Eckman'a Alterative may do for you. - We refer you to clergymen, priests, nuns Ood's ministers to the sick whose word could not be bought for any money. Eckman's Alterative has cured many cases of tuberculosis that Sanatoria had pronounced absolutely incurable. - Could more be said? Eckman's Alterative Is good tor all Throat and Lung troubles, and la on sale In Richmond by A. O. Luken & Co. and other Druggists. It can also be obtained at, or procured by. your local Druggists. Ask for Booklet of Cured Cases or write for Evidence to the Eckman Laboratory. Pfcila., ra. "

cheated Mr. Bryan of another presi

dential nomination. We'll Want a Moving Picture of This. Birmingham Age-Herald. T. R. cannot dash through London in true cowboy style. He is doomed to stalk along mournfully as an am bassador at a funeral. Can't Establish Such a Precedent. Chicago News. In toning up the postal savings bank bill for Its final passage Congress should not hesitate to use a little com mon sense. TWINKLES Something Visible. "Show me some tiaras, please, want one for my wife." "Yes, sir. About what price?" "Well, at such .a price that I can say, 'Do you see that woman with the tiara? She is my wife." Fliegene Blaetter. For the Asking. "Pardon me, governor," began the interviewer, T " "Certainly, certainly," replied the Tennessee executive, reaching for a blank. "What are you guilty of?" Philadelphia Public Ledger. Almost Regretted It. General Jackson had won the battle of New Orleans. "Just as likely as not," he reflected, "it will turn out that I've committed a monumental ' blunder. - I ought to have let Pakenham have his way, and

take the whole Mississippi river. It would have been cheaper. Now, this country will have to improve the blamed old stream Itself!"

Years afterward, however, he chang ed his mind and decided that it was best for the victors to do the spoiling. Chicago Tribune. Aesop Revised. The rabbit and the turtle were pre paring for the race. "Keep an eye on the rabbit," cau tioned Timekeeper Fox," he is going to welsh." . "Ha! Ha!" laughed the turtle. "In that case he will be a welsh rabbit." But alas for poor turtle, when the race was over he landed in the soup. Chicago News. System. "How did Jones get such a reputa tion both as a singer and an artist?" "He sang before the Painters" club and painted pictures for the Musicians union." Cleveland Leader. When They Get Young. The heart that hears the circus come Beats with the quickstep of the drum, And there men go unto the strain. Turned back to boyhood once again. Baltimore Sun. Why They Don't Speak. ''My husband," bragged Mrs. Jones, was a famous long-distance runner in his day. He once out-ran a horse in a twenty-mile race."' "Isn't that funny?" answered Mrs. Smith. "We once had a horse like that." Now Jones and Smith wonder why their wives don't speak. Buffalo Express. Agricultural Advances. Now is the happy seed time; Behold each tiny row, But soon it will be weed time, And "whack" will go the hoe. T. E. M. in Detroit News. Uncle Ezra Says: Playin' on one etrine soon wears nut the string as well ez the player. Boston Herald. HOW THEY BUY COAL Methods Employed by the Pur chasing Agents of the U. S. Government. GEOLOGISTS ARE USEFUL Washington, D. C Mav 19. Th United States government buys about) ,uuu,ihm worth of coal every year for use in the navy. In DDublio hnilH. ings in Washington and other cities, ana lor other purposes, about one-third for use in the navy, in miblie build ings on specifications under which prices are fixed according to the value or quality of the coal delivered t.h successful bidder. A definite standard of aualitv for the coal thus purchased is sneriftari hv each bidder, and this standard is con sidered In awarding the contract. If the value of the coal furnished is be low the standard fixed a discount is made from the contract price; if its value is above the standard an allowance is made for the excess of value and a proper sum Is paid in addition to the contract price. The value Is determined by tests and analyses made by the Geological Survey on samples taken from the coal furnished by the con tractor. These analyses and tests show the quality of the coal in terms of fixed carbon, volatile matter. sulDhur. ash and moisture, and especially Its heat ing value in British thermal units, as determined by calorimetric tests. Until within a few years the agents of the government, in buying coal, relied upon the integrity of the dealer and the reputation of the mine or district from which the coal was obtained, and these formed the only possible assurance , that the coal was equal in quality to the grade to be furnished. The new method has been so successful that it will probably be gradually extended to cover a larger share of the government's fuel supply. A full statement of this method of buying coal is contained in a recent bulletin of the United States Geological Survey (Bulletin 428), entitled "The purchase of coal by the government under specifications, with analyses of coal delivered for the fiscal year 190&-00," by George S. Pope. The bulletin Includes a statement of the factors affecting the value of coal, a description of the methods adopted for sampling and testing, a form of specifications used under the new plan a list of government contracts for coal for the fiscal year 1909-10, and a table of analyses of coal furnished for the fiscal year 130SOO. WIUE BEING FAKED (American New Service) ! Paris, May 19. The work! . of the old masters are not the only articles being "faked" and sold as genuine. Count de Lur-Saluces was passing in front of a Paris wineshop, when he saw bottles of his own Sauterne, with apparently genuine trademarks. In the window He went in ordered a bottle, drank it, and there and then lodged a complaint. A sample of the alleged Sauterne was analyzed in the Municipal Laboratory, and the result fully justified the count's action. The supposed white Medoc, advertised as coming from his favorite vineyards, and bearing every mark of authenticity on the bottles and the corks, was found to consist of white wine grown in Algeria and doctored with glycerine, tartaric acid tannin, sulphate of potash, saccharin, silieylic acid, and various artificial coloring matters. It is satisfactory, to learn that the dealer convicted of having made this concoction has just been sentenced to six months' imprisonment and a fine of f 1000. t

That Instinct of Dr. J. N.

minor Importance are forced upon children, and in consequence they die In early manhood or womanhood. But after all; It is wrong eating which destroys most lives. Stimulating foods, excessive amounts of food, fancy cooking. Insufficient mastication, kill more people than alcohol, which isa poison whose victims cannot be counted. Eating should be a deliberate act. Even poor food deliberately eaten In reasonable amounts. Is less injurious that good food, hastily eaten and washed down. Even the advertisers of nostrums for the cure of preventable diseases, tell us "K is a well known fact that the close office life, the failure to secure a sufficient amout of sunshlnand air, a thousand diatetic errors, to a fierce attack upon those long-suffering and patient organs, the stomach, liver, pancreas and intestines." Then the nostrum advertiser proceeds to tell us he has medicines which will cure all ills caused by our foolishness, and we buy them. Mark Twain somewhere says: "Nature has made man all right, he makes a fool of himself." AN ODD CHARACTER Arkansas Man for Fifty Years Has Scorned to Wear Any Coats. FIRM BELIEVER IN HATS Prescott, Ark., May 19. "The man without a coat" has just celebrated his 73rd birthday anniversary. He signs his name M. Osborn, but in this community, which has never seen him with a coat or without his bat on for nearly half a century, Osborn is known as "the man without a coat." Forty-six years ago he bought a coat, a navy blue garment, cut in what was then the latest style. He got it to wear at his wedding. He had worn it only three times since, two of the occasions being subsequent weddings and the third occasion being the "coldest night he ever saw," eleven years ago. In his entire life he has not worn out, he says, more than two coats. "The next time I wear a coat I will wear it a long time," is the grim determination expressed by Osborn. The following are some reasons why Osborn is entitled to be called the most eccentric man in Arkansas: He never removes his hat except when going- to bed and when eating with strangers.1 His hat is the first thing he puts on in the morning. He has not worn an overshirt but a dozen times in twenty, years. He drinks no Intoxicants.; He has chewed tobacco tor sixty-five years. He never smokes. He drinks black coffee and eats "hog and corn bread." He has heard two sermons only in the past fifteen years. Osborn is a carpenter. He was born in Jackson county,. Tenn., and has lived in Arkansas since before the war. He talks freely about his custom. His sole reason for going coatless, he says, is that he considers the garment unnecessary. He says he is healthier than he would be if he wore a coat. In support of his contention that coatlessness means healthfulness he says he has never had a headache and has not had a fever since 1862. He says he never feels "tough" after arising in the morning. He eats three meals a day and is not a faddist concerning his food excepting that it must be simple fare. Osborn's fourth wife died July 4 last and he is the father of a boy baby two and a half years old. FALSE THEORIES Lead to Worthless or Harmful Reme- - dies. . -, Stimulating the scalp may allay the itching of the dandruff, but that does not cure the scalp. The disease won't yield to quinine or capsicum nor alcohol, because It is caused by a germ or parasite. To cure dandruff the germ must be destroyed. Until recently there was no hair preparation, or dandruff cure, or hair restorer on the market that would kill that insidious gem that dries up the scalp in little scales called dandruff, and absorbs the vitality of the hair, causing falling hair, and finally baldness. Newbro's Herpicide is the only really scientific preparation to cure dandruff, prevent falling hair and baldness. Sold by leading druggists. Send 10c in stamps for sample to The Herpicide Co., Detroit, Mich. One Dollar Bottles Guaranteed. A. G. Luken Co., special agents. MATT

The line of Hats carried in this store are Hata that appeal to the nobby and conservative dresser alike. You will find an entirely new stock No left overs but the kind that have the latest style. See my Hat Window and watch it for new things for the man who cares. .

AT

THE PLACE YOU GET THE MOST CHANGE BACK." PHONE US. The distance te our store Is the distance to your phone, use our free delivery. TALCOLETTE, aw Improvement In talcum powder. CAMERAS and SUPPLIES. We do amateur finishing. CONKEY DRUG CO, Cor. th and Main Streets ' -If irs Filled at Conkeya, It Right-

Man to Live Hurry.

The Instinct to live la deeply planted within us. , The commandment says: "Honor thy father and thy mother that thy days may be long in the land which the Lord thy God giveth thee," It is certainly commendable to live long, and it is within our power to pro long our lives. The Infant that is kill ed by over or under care, or poisoned with impure milk or other unwholesome food (cholera infantum) is not. of course, here considered. But under ordinary conditions, the ordinary person who has reached ten years of age, has only to live simply and frugally that his days may be long and his life a success. Dr. J. Marlon Slmms, America's great original surgeon, "the Evangelist of Healing to Women." said: "No man lives as long as he should; most of us die prematurely, even when we die in moderate old age, because we violate some law of hygiene, or perpetrate some seemingly unimportant act that lays the foundation of disease, which terminates in death." In our ill ventilated, unevenly warmed, insufficiently and wrongly lighted school houses, impairments and defects of seemingly HORSES RUN AMUCK Furniture Company's Team Runs Away and Collides With a Theater. NEITHER HORSE INJURED Becoming frightened at a piece of falling timber, which accidentally struck one of the horses, the team hitched to the large delivery wagon of Allen & Co., furnishers, ran away yesterday in the allev in the rear of the store and cause considerable excitement for a time. The animals ran east in the alley to Tenth street and then turned north on Tenth, going at a lively clip until they reached North A street. At that point their speed was slackened somewhat. Turning west on North A street, the animals continued their run, which terminated abruptly. however, when they attempted to round the corner of North Eighth and A streets. After knocking down two of the columns of the portico in front of the Gennett theater and unloosening a third, one of the horses fell down and workmen in that vicinity soon put a stop to any further damage being done. . " One of the horses was scratched up a trifle, but was not Injured to any ex tent. The other animal was not even scratched. The harness was broken in a couple of places. The wagon was not damaged in any particular by the rough usage to which it was subjected in the collision. THE POKER. Hardly Changed Since th Days of tliP Early Mstal Workers. As the first fireplace was a circle of stones at the mouth ef a cave, so the first poker was a piece of green stick. It was necessary to have something to knock the logs together with when they began to burn through the mid dle, and as primitive man did not wear boots he could not use them to kick the hot embers into place, as some of us do to this day. That was a refinement, if it can be so called, which came later. The green stick lasted until the age" of Iran and was then super seded by a handy piece of metal which possessed the advantage of being stronger and of net burning away. But since the days of the early work era in metal we nave made no ad vance.-. . . The poker has hardly. if at an, changed through the ages. It is, as It always has been, simple and severe of outline. It lends Itself to no vagaries and to little ornamentation. It is one ef the few things which no one has ever patented, because it may be said to have leaped from the first foundry perfect and complete in every respect. The only notable attempt at Improvement has been to make the poker of brass with a twisted column, but even then the iron poker lurks at the aide and is known as the curate, because It does all the rough work. The orna mental poker la not a poker at all, but a sham, an upstart masquerading un der an ancient and honored name and gaining credit for duties which It is unable to perform. London Globe. REMOVAL KOTICE. Dr. Gist, Dentist Has removed Ids oftlec to 1114 Msln. COnKLIY'G :

KIPLING'S TRIBUTE TO KING EDWARD

London, May 1& Rudyard Klpllntj has written a tribute of Terse to King Edward. After detailing the greatness of Ms Inheritance, and how all looked to him for advice and encouragement, the poet says: .: And God poured him an exquisite wine ' that daily accrued to him. In the clear, welling love of his peoples that dally occrued to him. Honor and service we gave him rejoicingly, fearless. Faith absolute, trust beyond speech, and a friendship as peerless; And since he was master and servant of all that we asked him We leaned hard hard on his wisdom in all things, knowing not how we tasked himr For on him each new day laid com mand every tyrannous hour. To confront, or confirm, or make smooth some dread Issue of power; To deliver true judgment aright at the instant unaided In the strict level ultimate phrase that allowed or dissuaded; To foresee, to allay, to avert from us perils unnumbered; To stand guard on our gates when he guessed that our watchmen has slumbered; To win time, to turn hate, to woo folly to service, and mightily schooling His strength to the use of his nations. to rule as not ruling These were the works of our king. earth's peace . is the proof of them, We accepted his toll as our right, none spared, none excused him. When he was bowed by his burden his rest was refused him; We troubled his age with our weak-- . ness, the blacker the shame to us. He heard that his people bad need of him, straightway he came to us. As he received, so he gave, nothing grudged, naught denying. Not' even the last gasp of his breath. when he strove for us dying. For our sakes, without question, he put from him all that he cherished; :- . Simply as any that serve him he serv ed, and he perished. All that kings covet was his, and he flung it aside; . For simply as any that died in his serv ice, he died for us. YOU CAN CURE THAI BACKACHE, Pain alcethabacadiiilBisSjIiMdicasaaiasaaral tampeivQet epaeksM ofMotaer Oraja AUS-TBLaUAM-tJEA for all Kldaey. Blilssf aa4 Criaary troubles. Wbca yoa foal all raa 4 own. tired, wsak and without aaenjy yoa assi a (aw doass of this picaaant aarb cur, as a tagalatav It fcas no equal. Mother Gray's Avsttwliost-lVoaf Is sold by Droggleis Off sent bymail for Meant. Samola stat FREg. Aadrass, Tas Mother Ocay CoXs Boy, M. X. vr in Dayton Excursior GUN DAY May 22. Leave Richmond 8:35 A. M. WE ARE HIE AGENTS for the famous Macy it Weiss lines of office filing appliances. NICHOLSON Cl DROe ite Floiver Sbop ins Esiasi rtsi::3 QwSta cl Perfc?3 mm m A Cksletefce Scsvedr zlzt 25c Civea ME Saturday VUXiaS5c We are doing this to advertise THELMA, a perfume that has that fragrant and lasting quality and ii a surpassing cent of subtle sweetness. ; -----J-'1 JS-" V''.-. ." .-7 Brc3 SCcreo