Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 249, 16 July 1910 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM ANI SUN-TELiEGEAM, SATURDAY, JULY 16, 1910.
Tb Rlctaond Palladium
Published and owned br the ' PALLADIUM PRINTINO CO. Issued T days each week, evenings and Sunday mornlnjr. Of flea Corner North th and A stress. .Horn Pbone 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA. K.ala O. Uif BdltM Left as Jhm BuImm Mimi' Cart Bmkardt Asaaetata Bdltav W. Bk PraadalM Kawa Bailor. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. In Richmond 15.00 per jear (In advance) or lOo par week. MAIL BUUSCR1 PTIONS. On yaar. In advance '52? Mix montha. In advance S.eo On month. In advance " RURAL UOUTES. One year, la advance 15 $2 Mix montha. In advance lao One month. In advance . Addraa changed aa of tan aa deatred: both near and old addresses must f fclvea. Mubacrlbera wilt pleas remit with order, which should be (Ivan for a specified term; narre will not be enter, ed until payment la received. Entered at Richmond. Indiana, poat office aa second claaa mall matter. iav s e (New Yark City) baa aadaartiaadtataoalreiUatiem at tala pabUaatioa. Oaly the tUrares of atrralaUoa eeatslasd la Its report ate y tbe Aaaoetauoa. IM mi a a a. RICHMOND,. INDIANA 'PANIC PROOF CITY" Has a population of and la crowing. It Is the county aeat of Wayne County, and the trading cantor of a rich agricultural community. It Is located due eaat from Indlanapo. lis miles and 4 miles from the state. Una. Richmond Is a city of hemes and of- Industry. Primarily a manufacturing city. It la aleo the Jobbing center of Eastern Indiana and enjoys the retail trade of the populous comroua Ity for miles around. Richmond la proud of. It ' splendid streata, well kept yards. Ita cement aldewalao and beautiful ahade treee. It baa t national banka, t truat comr antes and 4 building; assoclalona with combined resources of over fl. 000.000. Number of faetorlea 126; capital Inveatad ' 7.000.000. with an annual output of $27,000,000, and a pay roll of 13.700.000. The total pay roll for the city amounts to approximately 14.100.000 annually. There are five railroad companies radiating; In eight different directions from the city. Incoming; freight handled dally. I. 750.000 lba.; outgoing freight handled dally, 750.000 lba. Tard facilities, par day 1.700 care. Number of paaaanger trains dally, St. Number of freight trains dally 77. The annual poat office receipts amount to 110.000. Total assessed valuation of the city. 115.000.000. Richmond baa two Intemrban, rallwaya. Three newspapers with a combined circulation of II, 000, Richmond la the great eat hardware Jobbing; canter In the state, and only second In Ran oral jobbing; Interests. It as a piano factory producing a high grade plant every 11 mautes. It Is the leader In tho manufacture of traction englnas. a n-1 producea more threahlng tnaehlnea, lawn mowers. Toller skates, grain drllla and burial caakats than any other city In the world. The city's area la 2.440 acres; haa a court houae coating $600,00; 10 publlo achoola and has the flneat and moat complete Mgh school In the middle weat under conatriictlon: t parochial schoolo; Earlbam college and tho Indiana Rualneas Collage: five splendid fire companies In fine hoae houses: Olan Millar park, tho larg-eat and moat beautiful park In Indiana, the home of Rlchmond'a annual Chautauqua: seven ho tale:, municipal electrlo light plant, under successful operation, and a private electrlo light plant. Insuring competition; the oldest publlo library In the state, except one. and the aecond lara-est. 40.000 vetumea; pure, refraahlng water, unsurpassed: 45 miles of Improved streets: 40 miles of sewers; tS miles of cement curb ana gutter combined: 40 mllea of cement walka. and many miles of brick walka. Thlrtv churches. Including the Raid Memorial, built at a coat of 1 1 150.000 : Raid - Memorial Hospital, one of the moat modern In the state: T. M. C A. building, erected at a coat of 1100.000. . one of the finest In the Mate. The amusement center of Rantern Indiana and Western Ohio. No cltr of the else of Rich1 mond holda aa fine an annual art exhibit The Richmond Pal! festival held each October Is unions, n other city holds a . similar affair. It la given In the Interest of the city and financed . bv the business men. Suceeea awaiting anyone with ' enterprise In the Panlo Proof City. Items Gathered In From Far and Near The Dangerous House Fly. From the Philadelphia Press. The city department of public health gives a timely and needed warning to those leaving the city for their vacations to avoid places where there are many flies. Those who f'.llow this advice will avoid places which are uncleanly, which allow food and garbage to be so exposed as to attract and feed the flies. They will avoid places where stables and dwellings re in near vicinity, as the exposed manure is the choice breeding place of thousands and even millions of flies. In other words, to avoid disease conveying files avoid places where they permit flies to breed and feed. Formerly the conditions which multlply flies and the flies themselves were considered objectionable but endurable. Now the patient toleration of flies ia known to be a heedless trifling irlth the health and life of human beings. Disease germs are for the most part Innocuous to man, until through some convenient medium they re conveyed to his system. This purveyor of disease Is the fly. His guilt haa been proved to a demonstration. His capacity for carrying on his feet from foul and putrescent sources the bacteria of disease has been recorded by gelatin plates on which he has been made to alight and have proven his guilt ' Baltimore and Music. From the Baltimore American. Baltimoreans are music lovers to
A Third Party
Tha cssantlal questions before tho people new are outside of party lines. In looking over the names of those who voted for the Payns-Aldrleh tariff bill, I am led to believe that regular Republicans and regular Democrats are the same. "I am a Republican and I do not believe In the necessity of a third party at this time, and there wont be any.' l am not a Cannon Republican or an Aldrich Republican, but I am a Dolliver, Cummins, Beveridge, La Foliette, Murdock, Morris, Stubbs Republican, and I like to be counted among that kind of cattle." Gifford Pinchot.
The succinct statement of bis attitude toward public affairs by Gifford Plncbot at Kansas City expresses the feeling of the main body of Republicans. The Insurgents are In the majority all over the country and the reason is simple the Insurgents are fighting the battle of the people. The reason there will be no third party at this time is because the struggle Is within the dominant party though the issue is outside of party lines. Rest assured that if the Insurgents had not forced the machine which rules the destinies of the Republican-Standpat-Cannon-Ald-rlch combination to the terms which the vast majority of voters demand we would have had the Third party before this. The reason is plain: "I am led to believe that the regular Republicans and the regular Democrats are the same." No, there will not be a third party, but there Is a second party.
And the second party does not bear the label of Democracy Republicanism It Is. the party of Honesty. Its platform is "Manhood first; property second." That is the way that Garfield phrases it. The program of this movement is thus enunciated by Pinchot: "We now Intend that the people must be compensated for what' the private interests get. The old practice of giving perpetual grants to private Interests Is now Impossible, and the future Is now safe against the oppressions of monopoly. "The fundamental Idea of conservation is to make of this country a better home for the race and to make the race a better one In that home. The nation should think of its marvelous riches. Conservation does not mean to stop develop- ' ment, but so to use the country's natural resources that the people who come after us may also enjoy them. "I believe a new school of policies is coming in the United States. This new school will decide whether the country shall be governed by money for profit or by men for human welfare."
In Ohio Garfield has started a panic among the 'old time politicians with his platform. The recall with special application to judges. State control of public utilities, similar to that in effect in New York state. A workman's compensation act, similar to that enacted in Great Britain. The short ballot, advocated among others by ex-President dent Eliot of Harvard university, including a provision permitting cities to adopt the commission form of government. The conservation policy, as applicable to Ohio conditions. Reorganization of the state department of agriculture to encourage practical Instruction in farming as a similar body In Wisconsin Is doing. The development of the state canals, for years rendered useless because of the state's Inability to decide whether to proceed with their Improvement or abandon them altogether. There Is real meat In that program. It does not smack of the oily phrase. It does no Hp service to the powers of pillage. The record of Garfield is Its guarantee.
That briefly is the reason that there will be no third party the progressive policies embodied mean only common honesty and they are coming to their own in the rejuvenation of the Republican party.
the very last man of them. When the season is in full jog they patronize concerts and symphonies, operas and oratorios. When the hot days come and the pulse of nature Is beating low and the senses appear to be in a swoon, the Baltiborean is no less a music lover than In the winter season. He gets his music in the open, that is the only difference. The park concerts, attracting many thousands to their melodic menus every week, are the center of the open-air musical program. Here under the direction of a most capable leader are rendered selections from the classic writers inter mingled with lighter airs and patriotic numbers. The music that has enchanted the world for 200 years is purveyed along with the latest composition that may run its racy course through nerve and tissue with a shortlived popularity and then be forgotten. Will Soon Wake Up. From the St Paul Pioneer Press. Theodore Roosevelt jr., says he has no desire for inordinate wealth. Still, he has not been married very long and the bills may not be coming in yet China's Predicament From the Providence Journal. It begins to look as if. when China wakes us, she will find the bed so crowded as to make it difficult for her to turn over without raising a rumpus with the parties on either side. A Worthy Cause. From the Chicago Record-Herald. Won't somebody please start a movement for the purpose of securing a safe and sane silly season? TWINKLES BY PHILANDER JOHNSON. Unsatisfactory Results. "I sometimes Uh I hadn't taken so much pains about saving the pennies," said the thrifty man. "Wasn't the practice profitable?" "Not when you consider the time and postage I have spent trying to find out if the dates on the coins gave them any value.' Complicated Economies. "Why did your cook leave V "L"She said our family was too small, replied Mrs. Cros slots. "Too small 1" "Yes. We didn't market for enough people to feed her family, even if we went without eating ourselves.". Evolution. They say that we are evoluted from The simian in some dense and distant thicket
nor
Let's hope that on the trip we did not come With an arrarement for a roundtrip ticket 8eeking Comfort. "I've got a long way to go and I'm not used to travel," said the applicant at the railway ticket office. "I want to be just as comfortable as I can, regardless of expense." "Parlor car?" "No. I don't care for parlor fixln's, "Sleeper?" "No. I want to stay awake an' watch the scenery . "Then what do you want?" "Well, If It wouldn't be too much trouble I wish you'd put me up in one of these refrigerator cars I've read so much about." Unmoved. "I understand your antagonist Is calling you every name he can think of." "Yes," replied Senator Sorghum, cheerfully. "But be hasn't much of a vocabulary." Lazyday. Nothing at all to worry about When the skies are warm and blue And the hours come drifting In and out 'Cause there's not much else to do, When the locust sings on the bending bough Where the leaf is green and still. It is Lazyday that is with us now, Let them call it what they will. Monday's a day to doze away; A dream is Tuesday's quest; Wednesday's the date for loitering play And Thursday for simple rest. Friday. Saturday, Sunday, too, For loafing ia an excuse. And worrying' no more use. Subject to the approval by the Turkish parliament, the city of Constantinople will have a first-class telephone system. The concession is to the Western Electric Company, New York, the French Thomson-Houston Company, the directors of the Nation al Telephone Company, London and the British Insulated and Helsby Ca bles Company (Limited), London, and is exclusive for thirty years, with power to the government to buy the plant at the end of ten years on ap praisal. The productioin of bituminous coal during 190S declined about 1G per cent. DAY FEVER can be Relieved oy Using Our VAPOR-OL No. 7 Special. It positively gives relief and la absolutely harmless. Serial No. 262$. Write for cir cular. Sold and guaranteed by . Leo H. Fine, Richmond, Ind.
OLD ROAD-TAX PLAH
IS APPROVED HERE Wayne County Officials Do Not View State Examiner's Views Kindly. WOULD BE MORE EXPENSIVE WAYNE COUNTY AND TOWNSHIP TRUSTEES HOLD TO SYSTEM OF GIVING ROAD TAX RECEIPTS DIRECT TO PROPERTY-OWNER. Suggestions made by W. A. Dehorlty the state tax examiner, for crediting farmers with tax for work done on the roads, do not appeal to county and township officers of this county. In order to avoid confusion the state examiner believes that the road super visor, instead of giving the road tax rtfctMpis 10 me iarmers should present the receipts to the county treasurer, who shall give immediate credit whether the property owner has paid the rest of his tax or not. In carrying out this plan, local coun ty officials see where it might be faul ty in many ways. Not only do they believe it would require a double checking and more assistants in the county treasurer's office. The amount of tax paid in this county by farmers working on the roads totaled $24,500 according to the spring settlement. Under the present arrangement, road tax receipt holders turn them in for their face value in tax before the first Monday in May. The plan of the state examiner is outlined by him in the following let ter which he has sent to different offi cials In the state for their opinions: Dear Sir: A great many complaints are filed In this department in regard to the way road tax receipts are hand led. The law requires that when taxpayer works his road tax the sup ervisor 6hall give a receipt for the same which shall be presented to the county treasurer for credit. Several months elapse from the time the re ceipt is issued until it can be presented to the treasurer. The taxpayer may lose or destroy it, when he makes pay ment of taxes or may forget to pre Bent the receipt. This causes annoy ance to the taxpayer. If a receipt Is lost or destroyed, the supervisor is asked to make a duplicate which is an annoyance to him. If the taxpayer fails to present his receipt to the county treasurer in time for redemption, he will ask the trustee who has no authority to do so and this will be an annoyance to him. In order to avoid all of this trou ble, we would suggest that you in struct each supervisor that when a person works but does not detach it from his receipt book, but keep it until he is through with his work, and that when he makes report to you, he file said receipts with the report. This gives you an opportunity to check . receipts with report. When you make your report to the county auditor you should file all receipts with him and he will turn them over to the county treasurer. In this man ner the receipts are not lost, the taxpayer is not bothered with preserving the same until he can get credit, the supervisor is not annoyed with writing duplicate receipts, you are not anoyed with being asked to redeem re ceipts and the county treasurer has the receipts at the time he writes tax receipts, can give credit at that time and thus avoid handling the same dur ing the rush of tax paying time. If a person insists upon having his receipt, the supervisor will have to give it to him; but if the. matter is explained to him we think he would much prefer having the receipt given to the treasuerer before he pays his taxes, thus avoiding the inconvenience of taking care of said receipts for many months before getting credit for same. This is merely a suggestion and if you deem it a better plan than the old way, this board has no objection to your adopting It Yours respectfully, W. A. DEHORITY. The Earth Lord and the Poor. They bes In the highways and byways. They beg- In the marts of trade. They be on the steps or the temple. These poor that your g-reed has made. They shiver with cold and hunger. Their faces are gaunt and pale. And their pleading eyes are turned toward you As they whisper their sordid tale. Their story of wrong and oppression. Their story ot sorrow and pain. Fellow men who have given tbeir lives To swell your golden gain. Tcday as you drink at your dinner Know that every drop of your wine Is blood of some brother crucified Xn your mill or factory or mine. Men nailed to the cross of Mammon, Men crowned with the thorns of greed. What will you have to say to them Xn the hour of your greatest needIn that hour when you must answer While they thunder at your gate. Not as men. but as monsters you've mad By your cunning and greed and hate? What win you say to the children. The disinherited ones of earth. Whose 'bodies are starved and broken To add to your dollar worth: To the woman who barters her honor. To the man who sells brawn and brain To keep body and soul together While you bear the brand of Cain? Not a rood of earth can these claim at law. Not a right but that you deny. They muat pay you for a chance to live And pay you for a place to die. But the better time is coming. Rejoice: Tls the hour of its birth When you can no longer crush them . Through your ownership of tha earth. - R. E. Cbadwick tn Public. , Entirely unprejudiced is the editor of the Allegemeine Fleischer-Zeitung a journal for butchers. He .advises butchers who suffer from headaches. nervousness or stomach troubles to give up meat and adopt a vegetarian diet
POINTS OUT WEAKNESS
OF THE ENGLISH NAVY Lord Charles Beresford of England, who recently delivered a raiher sensational address before the Cecil club In London on the condition of the English navy. The former rear-admiral of the British navy declared that the nation could never be prepared for war unless it had a war staff, which it did not possess. He discussed the folly of building Dreadnoughts at vast expense unless their was a complete fighting organization from torpedo craft to big gun. His hearers receiv ed his speech with enthusiastic and shrill cries of "Condor:" A Successful Women's Strike. "Boston has had its successful women's strike as well jis New York." Elizabeth O. Evaus lu th? Survey tells how the Hoxbury weavers, who are America born aud bred, won concession to the principle of collective bargaining. The neighborhood was aroused on the strikers' side. Property owners invited the irl pickets to stand in their yards, and self respecting women need no longer fear arrest for 'ioiteriug on the street." Chairs were brought out and runs to protect the feet of the watchers when It was damp or cold. There was a welcome at the kitchen fire for those chilled with the long vigil. By 8 in the morning or earlier the pickets and tbeir Sympathizers from outside the ranks of labor brought in by the Women's Trade Union league fathered round an im provised table and feasted ou hot cof fee. doughnuts and buns. Friendly reporters passed the news nnd trained cameras ou the group, and merry greet! njrs were called out by one and another passerby. Even the police were genial, their good will given perforce to women who were so courageous, yet so scrupulous to keep withiu the law. ( L'ncle Sam Lacks Jurisdiction. Attorney General Wickersbatn has advised Samuel Gompers. president of the Americau Federation of Labor, that the department of justice has no jurisdictiou over the assaults, batteries and acts of oppression which are alleged in the federation's charges against the Uuited States Steel corporation. These acts, the attorney general declares, are within tbe jurisdiction of the separate states in which they may have been committed. Labor's Best Weapons. Tbe union and the union label are tbe weapons by which labor can improve Its condition. Labor legislation may assist, but if a workiugman will not be true to himself In his union it is not reasonable to expect bim to be true to himself ou election day. If he is true to bis union tbe other will follow. Loyalty to the union and to the union label is fundamental to labor's success. Shoe Workers' Journal. LABOjGOSSIP. The British trade union congress this year will open in Sheflleid ou Sept. 12. In Sioux Falls. S. D.. there are twenty-seven unions, and Aberdeeu. Lead. Huron and Dead wood are all well organized. Organized labor Is fast gaining In Santa Cruz county. Cnl. Recently the bricklayers, cement workers, plasterers and carpenters formed unions. The label trade section of tbe American Federation of Labor has notified tbe central labor bodies throughout the country tbnt It is preiwred at this time to furnish tbe names and addresses of all manufacturers who use tbe union label. By a vote of three to one the membership of tbe Brotherhood of Leather Workers on Horse Goods decided in favor of Increasing tbe wages of Its general president and general secretary treasurer from $90 to $123 month. Major John M. Carson, chief of the bureau of manufactures, and before that a veteran newspaper correspondent in Washington has been chosen by Secretary Nagel of the department of commerce and labor to go abroad and study general trade conditions, and particularly to inquire into opportunities for American manufactures. SHAKE INTO YOUR 8II0E8 -Allen's Foot-Ease, the antiseptic powder. It cores painf ol, smamnir, nerroos feet, and instantly takes tbe icg oat of corns and bnnioaa. It's the neatest comfort ducovery of the ace. Allan's Foot-Bese makes tight or new how feci easy. It if a certain core for eatiBe. eailoos. swollen, tired, eebinsr feet. Always ae tt toBratk ia Sew shoes, TrvtUe-ase. v. '. uts- bj nuu i or s eta, ia staanw. Omt maxpt any m,b&MU. For FREEtnal nacav.
1 WV- ' I
Frohman Issues Warm Defiance Leading Theatrical Producer Declares; He Will Not Take Dictation from the "Big Little Managers." . New York, July 16 In an; interview demand and supply. They must have this week, Charles Frohman for the J the best that is to be had and that of
first time exactly defined his position upon the present theatrical situation. Throughout the various changes that have taken place Mr, Frohman has thus far remained silent. Barely four days since his return from London, he now asserts that the so-called independent movement is nothing but the self interested attempt of a group of small town managers to dictate to the pray producers whose stars and attractions are the only reasons for the existence of the very theaters that wish to control the theatrical business In America. By the possession of a new combination portable stage, Mr. Frohman means to play his attractions and stars wherever he wishes. In his interview last week Charles Frohman said: "In the present so-called situation all I find that there Is to talk about are some little towns where there are some big little managers who foolishly believe that it is a great thing to tell the producing managers that unless they come to their prayer meeting gatherings and walk along their streets, there ain t going to be no more opry houses for them. "Now, in what I have to say I Bpeak only because I like the publics of these little towns. I am bored with the big ones. They can only give you long runs and great successes. But just see what a fine thing it is for the actors of this country to be able to travel day by day and night by night through the heat or through blizzards to reach these towns. How much better this must be than having comfortable homes in the large cities with the surety of a long success. But, the big little managers of these towns don't understand the Joke. They think that we all come to their towns to visit them personally. But that is not the fact. I will explain it for them. We do not visit the managers of these towns. We visit the publics of these little towns. Of course, the real cause behind these associations of little managers is that they give the little managers an opportunity to come to New York every month or two and have a great deal of fun, after getting away by telling their families that they must go to New York to meet Important managers' and for the good of the great cause. As long as they can hold meetings in New York they can act like managers. And they can go on doing this indefinitely because they are always issuing postal cards to one another .announcing meetings. I have seen one of these postal cards and I notice that all the ittle managers are all officers of their associations. Warns tittle Managers. "All this activity has been goon fun for the big little managers of the towns during the summer time. But they must not forget the winter time when they need successes. Hence my only remark on the present theatrical condition is that the big little managers of these towns would do well to hava an understanding with the nm 4niAt-B whs. winlA it ftnanilallv nnocl. I ble for them to take another trip to New York another summer. "As far as I am concerned I do not care anything about these small town managers. Unless they can bring their audience to these meetings in New York what they do does not in the least interest me; what I am going to do must interest them. I consider them all my servants, just exactly as I am the servant of their publics, and we going right on to play In their towns when and where we like, because we are not going to have their publics, through the foolishness of some big little managers, lose the fine entertainments we have to give them. Public is the Client. "The real recompense that comes to our actors from traveling to those towns, is the great response that they get from the wonderful audiences in them, and they are wonderful. The little managers of these towns do not know how wonderful their audiences are, for they know nothing about the performances. They never see , them. They take no interest in either because they are busy all evening looking at and counting the large moneys our entertainments bring them. But we do know these audiences and do believe in actors and in plays, must step in and protect these publics. Now as a matter of fact there isn't any theatrical situation or any trouble at all. I only wish to speak to the pub-1 lies of these towns and assure them that the poor little gentlemen who; manage their poor little theaters, will not deprive them of seeing our plays and our players. . I play my attractions only with the theaters that are a part of our system; just like a railroad stops at the cities that are a part of ita system; and those who do not come into my system must travel narrow guage. But my plays will be produced in those towns I want to play them in just the same. I am cot going to disappoint any public that looks to me for my entertainments. There must be but one banner and that is mine. The public is my client, not a big little manager but I will not disappoint the public. "I have found no difficulty in placing my plays along the Thames, the Seine, the Rhine and the Hudson, so I hardly expect to find much difficulty in placing them along the Erie and the Missouri. The only problem In the theatrical situation in America today is for the big , little managers of the town to get together and find out how they can run their theaters without good attractions. It is a question of
JORDAN, LffJANUS & DLATXI1AQD FUfilRfU DIRECTORS & Ef-IDAIOOS. TELEPHONE 2175. PARLORS 1014 MAIN ST. Automobile Service for Call Out of City. Private Chapel and Ambulance.
course means me. .
A "Combination" Stage. "Now, I am very fond of novelties. My experience has been that the theater-going public is foad of novelties. So I have another one for them. From Austria, I have secured a new patent a stage that can handle attractions of any kind and can be placed in any town or public hall. Let me explain to tho little manager that this new combination stage is not a 'bus that runs from the depot to the theater of a town, but a stage 'to act on when the theaters of towns are closed o me. A traveling performance possible to any theater is possible to this new combination portable stage of mine and in less than an hour after the performance it can be packed up and carried away to another town. "But tho great novelty of this newAustrian Invention, this combination portable 6tage is in the fact that it will be a great novelty for the American public and a great novelty for me. It is going to be my way of disappointing theater 'managers' in certain towns and at the same time keeping my appointments with the people who go to the theaters of these 'managers.' I am going to let all these big little 'managers' close their theaters to me but with my new combination stage I am going to show them that they cannot cut me off from their theatergoers. With my new special stage I think I am going to do a lot of special good, because then little managers will have a chance to come and Bee my plays that they could not previously see. because they will not be busy counting money, and not having money, I am going to give them each" two tickets free to my performance on my new Austrian combination stage, v "In the meantime, these big little 'managers' will find that new theaters will be going up in these towns, and a lot of old ones, will be going up too." ITCHING SCALP VANISHES . IBBMSBBBBBBBMSft t Under the Magical Influence of Parisian Sage. As a rule, one application of ParisIan Sage will stop the worst case of itching scalp and make the head feel cool and refreshed. TJed as directed, this wonderful hair tonic (which can now be obtained ' in every town and city in America) wil stop falling hair and dandruff in two weeks, or money back. Ask L. H. Fihe. Careful people who desire an immaculately clean scalp and luxuriant hair, should not hesitate to try this wonderful invlgorator and hair beautifler, for nothing ever compounded can compare with it. Get rid of dandruff; stop your hair from fairing out; start to grow an abundance of luxuriant hair, make your hair look lustrous, radiant and attractive. Parisian Sage will do it and do it In an astonishingly short time. It Is not sticky or greasy; it Is delicately perfumed, and in summer will immediately drive away the disagreeable, odor arising from perspiration. Large bottle only 50 cents at druggists everywhere and at L. H. Fihe's. Mail orders filled, charges prepaid, by Glroux Mfg. Co., Buffalo, N. Y. LdDARIS For the next 90-days, we will make a specialty of short time loans, on furniture, pianos, livestock, etc., in amounts ranging from $10 to $100 on from three to six months time. Weekly monthly or any kind of payments to suit the borrower. We will absolutely guarantee a much lower rate than that charged by any similar concern in the city. Inquiry will prove that weoan and will save you money. Confidential. IndianaLoanCo. 40 Colonial Bldg City. 'Phone 1341.
2 JVALUES &
