Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 302, 7 September 1910 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PAI LADIUM ASV' SUN-TELEGRA3I, WEDNESDAY. SEPTE3IBER 7, 1010.
Tto QfcCir .P2llHsna
ci Sra-Tefccre: . Published and ownnd by the PALLADIUM PHINTINa CO. Isaued T day ach wcK. evenings and , Sunday mornln. Offtc Corner North tth and A streati. Henna Phona 1131. ' RICHMOND. INDIANA. MwdalM O. Lm4 Editor LotlM Joao ...... Baalataaa Maaaa-.r Carl BWrakardt ...... Aaaartaf Kdltav W. H. Paaatfatoao twm Editor eBBBBSsBjsjsBMaaaaaBjsssBaajsBBaiaBBBWaM SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. In Richmond fS.OO par year (In ad vanes) or 10c per waak. MAIL. SUBSCRIPTIONS. On roar. In advan S.99 PI montli. In advance 3.0 On month. In advance .......... RURAL ROUTES. On year. In advance ......$! JJ fits month. In advance On month. In advance .S5 Addreaa chanced a oftrn as dcalred; both near and old addreaate muat be given. Hubscrlbora will Blanae remit with ardor, which should bo riven for a speciriod term: name will not be entered antll payment la received. Knterod at Richmond. Indiana, post Office aa aecond claaa mall matter. KllJllllt'JMIMHH M.- mM liia irun 3 CfWw Yark City) haa 4 laa4aitiadtthslremiatSaal - Oal ta Darurw oi itslail u ixa iffan an i tM RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" lfaa a population of 23.000 and la (rowing-, u la the county seat of Wayne County, and the tradlna center of a rich agricultural community. It la located due oaat from Indlanapolla mllna and 4 miles from the state line. Richmond la a cltv of homea and of Induatry, Primarily a manufacturing; city. It la also the Jobbing: renter of Eaatern Indiana and enioya the retail trade of the populous community for miles around. Richmond la proud of Its splendid atreeta. well kept yarda. It cement aldewaike and beautiful shade trees. It haa t national hanka, 3 trust companies and 4 building; aaaorlatlona with combined reaources of over $8,000,000. Number of factories 1S5; capital Invested 17,000,000. with an annual output of 137.000.000. and a pay roll of 13.700.000. The total pay roll for the cltv a mount a to approximately 16,300,000 annually. There are five railroad companies radiating- In elg-ht different direction from the city. Incoming; frelg-ht handled dally. 1.7B0.000 lbs.; ntitR-otn; freight handled dally. 7K0.000 lbs. Yard facilities, per day. 1.700 care. Number of passenger trains daily. - Number of frelg-ht trains daily. 77. The annual post office receipts amount to 1X0, oon. Total assessed valuation, of the city. It R. 000.000. Richmond haa two Interurban railways. Three newspapers with a combined circulation of 13.000. Richmond la the arreatet hardware lobbing- center In the state and onlv second In greneral 1obblnar Interests. It baa a piano factry producing; a' hlarh a-rado rtlano every IS minutes, it la the earier In the manufacture of traction eng-lnea, and produces more threshing; machines, lawn mowers, roller skates, grain drills and burial caskets than any other city' in the world. The clty'a area la S.K40 acres; haa a court house costing; fSOA.000; 10 public schools and has the finest and most complete hlgjh school In the middle west under construction: 3 parochial schools; Karlham rollers anl the Indiana Ruslness Collesre; five splendid fire companies In fine hose bouses; Olen Miller nark, the largest and most beautiful park In Indiana, the home of Richmond's annual rhautaiinua; seven hotels: municipal electric llcht plant, under euccessfnl operation, and a private electrlo lla-ht plant. Insurtnr competition; the oldest public? library In the state, except one and the aecond lare-eat. 40,000 volumes- pure, refreshing; water, unsurpassed; 5 miles of Improved streets; 40 miles of sewers: IS miles of cement curb and gutter combined: 40 miles of cement walks, and msnr miles of ftrtck walka. Tblrtv churches. Including; the ReM Memorial, built at a cost of 3350.000: field Memorial Hospital, one of the most modern In the state T. M. C A. building-, erected at a cost of ' tlOO.000. one of the finest In the state. The amusement center of Western Indiana and Western Ohio. No city of the also of Richmond molds a" fine an snnual art exhibit. The Richmond Fall res tlval held each October Is unique, no other city holds a similar affair. It Is given In the Interest of the cltv and financed by the bnalness men. fleeess awaiting; anvnno with enterprise In the Panto Proof Cltv. This Is My 79th Birthday SIR ALBERT DE RUTZEN. Sir Albert da Rutsen, the aged magistrate of the famous Bow Street court before whom Dr. Crippen, the American dentist, will soon be tried for the alleged murder of hit wife, was born September 7. 1831. and received his education at Eton and Cambridge. He became a banister In 1857 and soon arose to prominence In the legal pro- ' fesslon. After several years as a stipendiary magistrate for Merthyr Tydfil he became a metropolitan polios magistrate In London In 1876. He presided successively in the courts of the Marylebone, Westminster and Marlborough street districts until 1901 since which time he has tiled the position of chief magistrate of the metropolitan police courts. ' '" " DO IT WELL. ' Never say to yourself that your work is too hard Say instead. "I wi3 do it so weB that the very doing of it wiQ make it easy. and never forget that the only real way 10 do your work easily is to do it wcSL ' ; . MASONIC CALENDAR. : ' i aaasawaaaaaassa, TTtdneaday, Sept. 7 Webb Lodge 'Na 14. P. A A. M. Called meeting. Wcrk In Entered Apprentice degree. - rttlay. 8ept. , 1910 King Soloreal's Chapter No. 4. R, A. M. Stated
The New Spirit
1 Theodore Roosevelt has made answer to the fears, the doubts, the hopes and the prayers of the mass of the American people. In the most remarkable utterance of any public man in America since the Gettysburg speech of Abraham Lincoln he has declared no new doctrine, but he has so fused and blended the patriotic progressive thought of the nation as to formulate a new bill of rights. What effect that Osawatomie oration may have upon the personal and political fortunes' of Roosevelt, the individual, can be but a matter of conjecture. But what Is certain is that never before did Roosevelt statesman and public servant, attain the stature that he did when he defined that program of American progress, that non-partisan platform of American patriotism. It Is splendid and a stunning answer to those who have trusted him most, to those who have doubted him most, to those who have hated him most. We feel assured that even the dauntlessgroup of leaders of Insurgency, who believed they were fighting against odds to interpret into legislation rightly the progressive spirit of Rooseveltlsm, feared that he might be enmeshed by machine trickery and old personal affiliations and stulify his career and their conduct. ' And hope was strong among the forces of exploitation that Roosevelt might be snared Into "regular" innocuousness by the bribe of some office, or by, reason of pride be taunted into approval of the man he made and In whom he mistakenly put too much trust. These doubts and fears and hopes are ended. There need be no more efforts to pick figs from thistles, no more weaving of ropes of sand. .Theodore Roosevelt crosseeVhis Rubicon at Osawatomie. Cold blooded, clear cut and unequivocal, temperate in tone and wording to the point of mercilessnesB, that speech lacks' the fiery intuitiveness that characterizes so many of the utterances of Theodore Roosevelt to which the people harken while they smile, because they are none the less true though they have a boyish exuberance. By contrast this new platform of Americanism is the calm, inflexible fruition of the sobered thought of a student and deep lover of his country, who has matured and broadened very greatly in perspective during the eighteen months since he left the white house the first period In more than twenty yeaers which his manifold activities permitted him for leisured thought and observation. Philadelphia North American.
Items Gathered In From Far and Near Providence Regulates Billboards. v From the Boston Common. Providence has just availed itself of the new Rhode Island law empowering cities to regulate outdoor advertising. The Providence ordinance prohibits within 200 feet of a public or parochial school signs advertising Intoxicants. The chief of police Is made censor for all outdoor advertising in streets, or in street cars, and proposed signs or cards must be submitted to him in advance. There Is a right of appeal to the city council. No bill board is to be built more than ten feet high on a building roof, nor more than twenty feet long, nor without leaving space enough to allow firemen to pass around without danger of falling off. Ground bill boards are to be set back from the street and are to be at least two feet above ground. A fine of $10 a day for violations is provided. Typhoid a Disgrace. From the New York World. Upon a Newport farm which cost a fortune the young owner lies ill of typhoid fever. A wealthy woman nearby suffers from the same "disease of dirt." In Manhattan last year there was a sporadic outbreak in the region of costly apartment houses. This year It is Brooklyn's turn. In this city, with its guarded water supply, it is likely that typhoid at this season is brought from insanitary summer re sorts or incurred during automobile runs. Every life lost by typhoid Is' a wasted life. It is absolutely preventable. People who live in marble halls without caring whether poison runs through the pipes behind them; the very rioh who spend millions in display but neglect sanitation; college professors oaught unawares by epidemics like that in Ithaca these have themselves to blame if the disease occurs. Typhoid originating . In any community disgraces it. Advance in Healing Art. United States marine hospital surgeons have had success with a leprosy anti-toxin which they have used on the patients at the Molokal leper colony in the Hawaiian Islands. They are convinced that hereafter there will be no difficulty in curing the most obstinate cases of the disease. This is an interesting epoch in the world of medicine. Hardly a month goes by without the announcement of important advances in the healing art. Power of Bristow. From the Providence Bulletin. Senator Bristow may never achieve the presidency of the United States, but he has accomplished what in many respects is far more than that. He has made Sena rotlAdrlch Issue a public statement in his own defense. Miracles like this have not occurred'before In the history of the United States. T AIDS l), S, Washington, Sept 7. President Taft has commuted to four years the sentence of Joseph A. Haas, who was caught .in 1908 by the secret . service men in a raid on a counterfeiter's plant at Braddock, Pa., a suburb of Pittsburg. Haas was sentenced to fire years and is now in Leavenworth penitentiary. Haas is a college man and a scientist. His sentence has been shortened because of bis aid in the secret service. "While In prison he gave information upon which counterfeiters now serving sentence will be re-arrested when they are released. He has ofrered to the secretary of the treasury a method for refining gold and silver bullion, said to be the cheapest and most effective yet discovered. and has written a treatise on Isomeric theoretical organic chemistry which is to be published and offered to the Smithsonian institution. - -A position Is waiting him in Pitts burg. According to the terms of the communication. Haas will be released a January, nix. ....
COtlVIC
TWINKLES
B YPHILANDER JOHNSON. Forgotten Dates. "Do you think a memory for dates helps a man?" "Sometimes," replied Farmer Corntossel, "but not when he is selling spring chickens." Examples of rGeatness. "In what respect do you regard it as most desirable to imitatet the old masters?" asked one painter. "In the price tag," replied the other. The Speeder. Another comet hastens by Upon its swift and heedless race,, A seachlight in the silent sky, A scorcher through the Realms of space. Making it Fit. "I am having a play made to fit my personality," said the eminent actress. "Is it nearly completed?" "Yes. All it needs is taking in the first act, a little letting out in the third and a new style trimming with morals cut rather more on the bias." Value. "Money doesn't seem to have any real value in Alaska," said the stranger in the north. "That's where you're wrong," replied the old prospector. "Why, a twodollar bill Is worth a whole strawberry." Coming Back. We bade farewell to mosquitoes, We banished the house fly, too. And we said to the rat In accents fiat, That his exit was overdue. We gave wise heed to the microbe So tiny and fierce and queer. And we turned him out, With a ruthless shout; But they all came back next year. Oh, the joys that make life worth living As well as the griefs we bear. Will fade, 'tis true. But they come anew As we Journey, we know not where. The rose and the thorn have left us, The bee with .his thrust severe All said "good-bye" As the months rolled by But they all came back next year. So what is the good of weeping And what Is the good of pride When pleasures fly Or when hopes are high Concerning what may. betide? For the old world follows its pathway And whatever may disappear. Be they harsh or kind, You are like to find That they'll all come back next year. G0LDSB0R0 HEARD FROM A Lady Who Lives in Goldsboro Joins in the Chorus or Praise for Cardui, The Woman's Tonic Goldsboro, N. C. "A physician treated me for many distressing symptoms." writes Mrs. Etta A. Smith, "but cave me no relief. "I suffered with neuralgia around the heart and was troubled at times with my I had P?in in my left side, bowels, left thigh, shoulders and arms. "After taking Cardui, I am now well and can recommend it to other suffering women." s Just such doubtful symptoms, as those lTDm Which Mrc Qmith ,ttt-A .uones for which it will pay you to take Cardui, the woman's tonic. ' . " at such times, when there is nothttltt to Show, for rntaiii h -l a the trouble, that you need a tonic, to give e ody strength to throw off the. illness mmm oiucuuy uircarens. vuum, wncn you are ill, witn the ailments of your sex. Take Cardui as a tonic, to prevent illness, when you feel it connng. ' Your druggist keeps it. V anofa MedMiaeCa.. CbaRaaooaa. ' ftllflMllMll mmA " kiT ta Woawa" acal ia stem
SAMUEL GOMPERS HOLDS JE STAGE Labor Leader to Talk Politics Friday Evening at the State Capital.
WHAT WILL HE ADVOCATE? DEMOCRATIC STATE COMMITTEE FIND8 IT HAS GONE TOO FAR IN ANNOUNCING HE WILL SPEAK FOR PARTY. (Palladium Special) Indianapolis, Sept. 7. Many and wide surmises are extent concerning the nature of the political speech which Samuel Combers is scheduled to ' make in Tomlinson ball. Friday evening, to the Metal Trades Movement members, and concerning its possible effect throughout the state. It has been announced he will speak of the proper organization of labor for its political needs this fall, but where this will lead is still a matter of conjecture. Lately, howover, it Is freely intimated by a number of those interested in securing him for the speech, that the occasion will not be utilized for the advocation of the cause of any special candidate." Thus far, he has kept personal recommendations out of his Indianapolis utterances, except in his general approval of Senator Beberidge upon his former visit. Gompers a Free Lance. The Democratic state committee found it had gone too far when it let out the announcement that Gompers intended to come into Indiana on behalf of democracy in general. The truth of this became evident in his declaration he would not speak under the auspices of any political organization. It appears John F. Keegan, a close acquaintance of Gompers, through his connection with the metal trades department of the American Federation of Labor, believed he was certain of Gompers O. K. of his personal and particular candidacy and probably told the Democratic committee so. If Gompers is to come out openly for Keegan and to bolster the latter's legislative aspirations, it is an intention which a great many laboring men would be glad to hear plainly stated. Not that they sympathize with any such a stand on the part of Gompers, but they would simply be the recommendation at what they judge it would be worth in the campaign. The prevailing sentiment is, however, that he will be more tactful with the labor constituency than to oppose the de sires of many of them. A COP "RILED II Then W. Rickman, Colored, Swore and He Was Hauled to Police Station. POSTPONE SIMMONS CASE A small colored girl on South A street threw several whiskey bottles on the sidewalk last night. As the broken glass caused danger to pedestrians, Patrolman Menke ordered W. Rickman, father of the ch'cild to clean it up. Rickman cursed Menke and was arrested. In police court this morning he was fined $1 and costs for insult. He explained that the neighbors had "riled him most of the time." Another postponement of the Skill-ins-Simmons malicious trespass case was made by the court because neither the plaintiff nor defendant and none of the witnesses made an appearance. Charles Skillins, a negro, alleges that William Simmons, a second hand dealer, came into his restaurant on North E street and damaged some of his goods by throwing soot on them. Simmons says a stove was bought on part payments and that the last one had been due for some time. In taking down the stove to remove.it the dirt was thrown on Skillins' goods. The defendant asked a postponement at the first hearing because of the absence of his attorney, Wilfred Jessup. The affidavit was quashed by the court on the second hearing, as it was claimed to be faulty by Attorney Jessup. Skillins was indignant at the continuance of the case today, but was given a sharp reprimand for his non-appearance. This case will probably be heard Thursday morning. - DO HOT MISS MAIL Seattle, Sept. 7. With the sailing of the schooner Bender goes the only means of communication with the outside world in a whole year for three white people. Dr. Edgar Campbell, his wife and Miss Anna Anderson, who are engaged in the Indian educational work by the government on St. Lawrence island In Bering sea. Since last October no word has come from these people, and none has been expected. Dr. Campbell and his wife have held the remost post for several years and are happy and contented. Once a yea rthe Bender carries supOnce a year the Bender carries supschool supplies and clothing, and last year's Christmas presents for the farawar white people. Not Saif Gavamad. Knlcker What Is Henpekt'a state of mindT Boefcer-H haaa't any; Ifa a terrttory.-Kew York 8un-
HIM
"THIS DATE
SEPTEMBER 7. 1535 Cartier reached the Isle of Orleans. 1729 William Burnet, colonial governor of Massachusetts, died in Boston. Born in 1681. 1737 Arthur Middleton, colonial governor of South Carolina, died in. Charleston. Born in 168 8. 1815 Dedication of the Farimount waterworks in Philadelphia. JS16 The Frontenac, one of the first'steamboats on Lake Ontario launched at Ernesttown. 1824 Nicholas Ware, U. S. senator from Georgia, died in New York City Born In Virginia in 1769. 1S28 Earl of Dalhousie finished his term of office as governor-general of Canada. 1855 The first Hebrew temple in the Mississippi valley was consecrated in St. Louis. I860 An insurrection broke out in the Papal states. 1863 The federals occupied Morris Island in Charlestown harbor. 1875 Statue of Charles John XIV unveiled at Christiana, Norway. 1892 John Greenleaf Whittier, the poet, died at Hampton Falls, N. H., Born at East Haverhill, Mass., Dec. 17, 1807. 1909 Sate de la Marina, Mexico, overwhelmed by a tidal wave.
Tell Tales of Bloody Days Guerrillas Meet at Oakridge, Kansas, and Swap YarnsThrilling Account of the Famous Lawrence Raid.
Kansas City, Sept 7. Thirty-two men each wearing a blood red badge bearing the portraits of QuantreLthe raider, met at Oakridge on the Independence line in the thirteenth annual reunion of the survivors of the guerrilla chiefs command. However good a citizen the ex-guerrillas may be the rest of the year, they are unreconstructed confederates these days. They make speeches, recoupnting the deeds of border days and exchange reminiscences that are not at all like nursery tales. Then they call the roll of the survivors, elect officers, give the rebel yell and disperse for another yeaer. The celebration' last two days. Went to Kill and Did. Standing on the porch of Miss Lizzie Wallace's home in a grove at Oakridge, Saptain William Gregg told his old comrades that as Quantrell men they had nothing to conceal. "I was at Lawrence," he said. "I never denied it. We went there to burn and kill and we did it.' There was a piano on the porch and it jangled forth "Dixie" and "My Old Kentucky Home between the speeches, and on the top of the piano was a large crayon portrait of Quantrell. With the women and children and a few confederate veterans, there were about a hundred persons on the grounds. Captain Gregg and Cole Younger made the principle speeches. Captain Gregg gave a history of the Lawrence raid, pointing out that Quantrell and his 374 men believed they were going to their deaths in attacking the town, but admitted that they only lost eight men. One of them might have been saved, but he stayed behind to get a last drink and the survivors of the raid lynched him. His name was Skaggs. The ex-raiders recently collected money to provide tombstones for the other seven, but Skaggs never had a grave to put a tombstone on. Cole Younger Reticent. Cole Younger evidently felt some delicacy in going into details on his part of the raid. He admitted that he took a cabbage that didn't belong to him from a Kansan's garden. The farmer's wife shook her fist at him and said that she hoped that it would give him the colic. Mr. Younger's recollection was that it did that very thing. He said he had thirteen bullets in his body at the present time, and admitted that be didn't get them all in the service of the Confederacy. Further than that he said little of his life.except that twenty-five years of it had been spent in the Minnesota prison. Ninety-Three Survivirs. There are ninety-three survivirs of 3 on The
IN HISTORY"'
the Quantrell band, according to the roster of Warren Welch, secretary of the organization. It has never been possible to get them all together. "You see, the boys scattered after we came back from Lawrence," one of them said confidentially. "A lot of them lit out for the Sni Hills and ain't tome out of them since." "They said we killed citizens in Lawrence," Captain Gregg said. "That's not so. There wasn't a citizen in the whole state of Kansas. They were soldiers every man big enough to carry a gun was a soldier and we killed them in retaliation for the killings of Redlegs, who came over in Misouri and raided homes. It was war, that's all. Why, talk about Its being a raid on a defenseless town, there were five thousand troops on our heels before we crossed the Missouri line. Quantrell gave me sixty men to protect his rear and I fought that army five hours. When we ran out of ammunition we fought them with rocks." The extra amunition of the raiders was carried in a mail bag on the saddle of one of the rear guard. Captain Gregg explained that the bearer of it in his haste in getting over a fence dropped it, and didn't wait to go back for it. But there were plenty of rocks about and the pursuing army was successfully repulsed. "I was with you in the rear," shouted a red bagded survivor in -the crowd. "Things was popping about thst time wasn't they, capn'? "I reckon I was there too," agreed onother. "I remember heaving them rocks. We fit like wildcats all the way back. I fit till I coudn't speak above a whisper. Plenty of Revolvers. "My company had the post of honor on the retreat from Lawrence," said one who lay under a tree and smoked bis cob pipe. "Quantrell told us to lead the van and we kept there all the way back. We was the boys to lead every time. I reckon we must have been a sight to them bushwhackers when we busted out of the woods yellin' and shootin'., I had six revolvers strapped round me and two on my saddle. When I turned and made back down the main street again the houses were blazing and the people were scattering like rats. My horse was waltzing down the street on his bind 'legs and I had the reins-in my teeth. I killed seven men shooting from the saddle. One old man with a long white beard and wearing a blue uniform was dragging himself across the street in front of me. Guess he must have had a leg broken. I started to ride around him and let him go, zut when I passed be shook his fist at
The Capital and Surplus oi the SECOND NATIONAL BANK is
c5S8(0)9G3S)c5o(lI)
The Capital and Surplus of THE EIGHT OTHER NATIONAL DANKS la the city of Richmond and Wayne County combined, totals
0717,676.16
The above figures are taken from the call for statement by the goverment on Jane 30, 1910. As yoa will note, we give you almost AS MUCH SECURITY AS ALL OTHER NATIONAL DANKS IN THE CITY OF RICHMOND and Wayne Co. combined.
Savings Accounts and Certificates Second National Richmond, Indiana.
me and cursed me, I let him have a
bullet right between the eyes. Lemme have a handful of tobacco. BillNot Afraid to Go Back. "I went back to Lawrence the next year and married, chuckled the gray bearded raider. i atnt been back since," he said reflectively, "but I wouldn't be afraid to go back tomorrow." "You can talk all you want to, Tom, about riding in the van back from Lawrence," said a toothless old guerilla, breaking into a bloody narrative, "but the hottest place any of Quantrell's men was in was down at Baxter Springs. I was in a house with three other men. and up came about three thousand blue coats. We repulsed 'em but I had to kill fourteen men doing it. I bad three revplveing rifles. Remember them revolving rifles, Tom?'" Tom did. Also he remembered riding over the very place where that reunion was being held and shooting the squirrel's eyes, and a hundred other things were in his memory trying to get out. Thus they talked and as they talked the union death roll grew alrmingly. It had reached a frightful total and was increasing by leaps and bounds, when No, not the bugle. These men were not regulars, you know, and commands were given by word of mouth. This Is what came yesterday. . "Hey, you fellers f Hey! Every body come back here at 10 in the morning, aure. The first day of the Quantrell reunion was over, and the survivors, most of them looked remarkably young, for they were only boys in the Bixties, went out and mounted electric street cars right there in the "crackerneck" country. a Ma va4aa . naaiilia MAut rAIAL Mid I Ant Brazil, Ind., Sept. 7. Mistaking the bare head of Thomas Holden, age nineteen for that of a squlrel, William Bowles, age thirty-five, fired a heavy charge of shot Into Holden's body. yesteraay, causing nis deatn three hours later. The men had gone hunting near Holden's home, three miles west of the city, but had .become separated. Holden climbed a tree to dislodge a squirrel, when Bowles fired the fatal shot. One hundred and ninety shot entered ' Holden's chest. He clung to a limb until Bowles to the ground. Holden was a prominent young man and a nephew of Jas. D. Holden, secretary-treasurer-of district No 8 United Mine Workers of America. - Cocoanut Piokers. Coconnut pickers in Triuldad get 00 eebts per 1.000. or more if the trees are very tall. A Tonlc-Stlmulant. The active business man, the brain worker, and all this class of people could not stand the constant strain on their brain and nerves -were it not for the timely use of a pure, gentle, invigorating- tonic fctfo plto i:z: ratify the standard of . Imrity and excelence for over half a century, is one1 of the greatest tonic- stimulants and strength-givers known to science. It Than fin tolled throughout the world for what it has done for suffering humanity. Its success in curing disease has caused many unreliable dealers to put p- substitutes and imitations with which tto fool the people, claiming thar their substitutes are "just as good as Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey," but they are thinking of their profits only. Insist on the genuine. Sold in SEALED BOTTLES ONLY. All druggists, grocers and dealers, or direct, $1.00 a large bottle. Medical booklet and doctor's advice free. fMOajMaUWlUaCoRacWw.N.Y Bonis:
" i ' I i - ( w -.
a A a. fa -a-rtita tijKitni
