Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 35, Number 344, 19 October 1910 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE IlICmiOND FAIXADIU2X AND SUN-TELEGRAM, WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 19, 1910.
Published and ownad by the PALLADIUM PHINTINO CO.
Issued 7 days week. evanlags and Sunday morning. Office Cornor North th and A street. Hon Phone 1121. RICHMOND. INDIANA. lUrtels O. Lm4i Esiter Leftna Jeaae Baalaoaa MiMltl Carl raaanU Aaaectate Kdlter W. R. Pesssaleae. Hews Baiter BCB8CKI PTION TERMS, la Richmond 11.00 per year (In advance) or lOo par week. MAIL 8UB8CIUPTIONS. One rear. In advance $5.00 Pis months, in advance One month. In advance RURAL ROUTK4 One year. In advance $i 00 8lx months. In advance 1.55 One month, in advance Addrewe chana-od as often as desired; both mw and old addresses must be Siven. ftubacrlbers will please remit with order, which should be riven for a specified term; name will not be enter ed until payment la received. Entered at Richmond. Indiana, poet office ae second class mail matter. -Ja.e.V-eje.e.e e tun 'eeeee;fl Tast Association of t Ai.ertiin (Nw York Oty) sal Samariaed aa WttjgH tft tat SnSTlUfl 1 tail aUaattno. Oaly taa fiewss of ta its men mww i esse. RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" lias a population of 13.000 and Is growing, it is the county seat of Wayne County, and the tradlna center of a rich agricultural community. It la located due east from Indianapolis miles and 4 miles from the state Una Richmond Is a city of homes and of Industry. Primarily a manufacturing city. It is also the Jobbing? center of Kastern Indiana and enioys the retail trade of the populous community for miles around. Richmond Is proud of Its splendid street, well kept yards. Its cement sidewalks and beautiful sha-.U trees. It baa S national banka. S trust companies and 4 building; associations with combined resources of over 18,000.000. Number of factories IzS; capital Invested 17,000,000, with an annual output of 117.000.000. and a pay roll of I.700.00C The total pay roll for the city amounts to approximately 14.100,000 annually. There are five railroad companies radiating; In eight differ ent directions from the city. Incoming freight hr.ndled dally. 1.- 1 T50.000 lbs.; outgoing- freight handled dally. 760.000 lbs. Tard facilities, per day. 1.700 cars. Number of passenger trains dally. Number of freight tralna dally. 77. The annual post office receipts amount to 110,000. Total asseeeed valuation of th'j city. 114.000.000. Richmond has two Interurban railways. Three newspapers with combined circulation of 19.000. Richmond Is the greatest hardware Jobbing cener In the state and only recond in general Jobbing; Interests. It has a piano factry producing a high grade piano every 11 minutes. It Is the leader In the manufacture of -traction en sr I nee, and produces more threading machines, lawn mowers, roller skates, grain drills and burial caskets than any other city In the world. The city's area Is 1.440 acres: has a court house costing SSOO.ftnO: 10 public schools and has the finest and most complete hlgn . school In the middle west under construction: 1 parochial schools: Karlham college and the Indiana dullness College; five splendid fire tompanlei i In fine hose houses: Olen Miller park, the largest and most beautiful park tn Indiana, the home of Richmond's annual rhantaunua; seven hotels: municipal electrlo light plant, under successful operation, and a private eleetrlo light plant! tnsnrlng competition: the oldest public library In the state. cepi 'one and the second largest. 40.000 volumes: pure, refreshing water, unsurpassed; 41 mllee of Improved streets; 40 miles of sewers: 1 miles of cement curb and gutter combined; 40 miles of cement walks, end man miles of brick walks. Thlrtv churches. Including the Reld Memorial, built . .t " fl0: Reld Mem orial Hospital, one of the most modem In the state' T. M. c. A. building, erected at a cost of aiOA.004. one of the finest In the etste. The amusement center of Ve stern Indiana and Western Ohio. No cltr of the else of Richmond holds a fine an annual art ex hthlt. The Richmond Fall Festival held each October Is unique, no ether city holds a similar affair. It Is given tn the Interest of the city and financed by the business men. ffucceea awaiting anyone with enterprise In the Panto Proof Oty. REPUBLICAN TICKET WAYNI COUNTY s r For Congress. WILLIAM O. BARNARD , For Representative LEE J. REYNOLDS For Joint Representative (Wayne and Fayette Counties) ELMER OLDAKER For Jotnt Senator (Wayne and Union Counties) WALTER a COMMONS For Prosecutor CHARLES L. LADD For Auditor " LEWIS S. BOWMAN For Clerk GEORGE MATTHEWS For Sheriff ALBERT B. STEEN For Treasurer ALBERT ALBERTSON . , For Commissioner (Middle District) BARNEY LINDERMAN , (Western District) ROBERT BEESON For Coroner IM .... 'A, . ;krcfj ,W LUM MATHEWS-,
The Issue
It there Is any community In the state that ought to know what the Issue Is this year It Is this community. Here In Indiana we have the tight between the people and the bi-partisan machine strongly developed. It is the Issue as to whether the great forces of business shall continue their victories over the people or whether the people shall wake np and defeat the machine of that community of special interests.
The people must not expect that It Is today.
The very reason that the United States Senate Is today full of men who own or who are owned by special interests is because the people never get a chance to vote for the United States senators directly. Hence it has always been possible except in rare cases, and by accident, for the issue to be clouded so that some smaller consideration is put before the people by which the narrow margin of votes necessary to defeat the real issue can be obtained. If the people of Indiana if the people of Wayne and the surrounding counties do not wake up to the fact that there is an organized attempt from all the forces lined up against them to defeat them and their cause it is the people who will suffer. This is not a political "campaign." This is not a fight this year of democrats against republicans, though the bi-partisan machine, of big business is using its money to work through parties wherever it will do the most good. It is because the United States senate fight can usually be hidden from the people because of a state issue that we have had so many crooks in the senate. And now one thing must stand out in the minds of the people of Indiana the people right here you the every day man.
If they can beat you on this game it will be your fault and that of no one else. .The light this year is too great to sacrifice it is a fight which means meat, bread the cost of living the lives of children it even extends into the future and brings, up the question of life and happiness not only for yourselves, but for your children. Every now and then this truth is apparent gleaming through the . hidden places. y It was just last night that the Billion Dollar Banquet was held in Chicago of the steel corporation at which spoke Judge Gary. His theme was "let well enough alone." Yea. And is it not the South Bethlehem steel works and the other steel works in this country where the wages for seven days a week for workingmen averages $7.00 and where those same men are not protected from accidents which occur. Let well enough alone? Defeat Beveridge who has led the fight for better working conditions and against stock watering of larger corporations against child labor and, we shall see to whose Interest this is. ' 1 Let well enough alone! Sleep ont Forget the issue! Let it be side-' tracked. No man can do this duty for you. This is up to you. If you can evade the responsibility you cannot evade the effect. You must pay the penalty not those who cry "Let well enough alone."
This Is a non-partisan fight against a bi-partisan machine. This is a non-partisan fight because there are as many democrats as republicans in the United States senate who are controlled by the forces which are against you. . This is non-partisan fight but there is no way of voting directly on the issue. The only way to vote for Beveridge Is to vote for the republican legislative ticket on the ballot. This is not a question as to whether you like the men who are put up for those offices not a question as to whether they have: patted you i on the head and called you sweet names. If each one of them is your bitterest personal enemy you would be voting against your own fight if you voted against them. For each man on the republican legislative ticket in Wayne county la pledged to Beveridge. We can go before the people in this campaign and promise you that these men will vote and work for Beveridge as long as Beveridge desires their support until the finish. There is no other way to vote for Beveridge. There is no personal reason in our fight for the legislative ticket It is because that is the only way in which we can work for Beveridge and we are not for Beveridge for any personal reason, but because of the principles that Beveridge stands for. We know he stands for those principles because of his record, and that is all that you can go. by or should go by. This Is your Ight.
PROMISE FULFILLED Washington Man Performs Service for His Mother as Dying Father Willed. TENDER CARE NOW ENDED Spokane, Wash., Oct. 19. When the mound of newly turned earth In the cemetery at Ottawa, Kan., closes over the coffin containing the body of his mother, Mrs. Mary A. Talbot, who died at his home, S08 Shannon street, Spokane, on October 11, W .S. Talbot, now on the way to the old home, will have fulfilled a promise made at his father's death bed in 1SS9. This was to care tenderly for his mother during her lifetime and to inter the body beside her husband's grave after death. Mrs. Talbot, who was 87 years of ago when she passed away, had as an attendant and companion during the last 21 years her son, an official of the auditing department of the Hoi-land-Hoor Mill company in this city. During his absence at the office his sister, Mrs. Flora F. Atcheson, ministered gently to the aged woman's wants, but every hour of Mr. Talbot's own time was spent by her side. This loving - devotion continued until the end came. . Talbot was a mere youth, hardly out of the secondary school, when his father, feeling the weight of years bearing him to the brink, called him to the bedside and gave the mother into the care of the son. The boy construed his promise to his dying father in the strictest sense and shut out all worldly pleasures for the society of his aged mother and their com panionship was complete. They lived together with Mrs. At cheson.' a life of books, of calmness and meditation. There were few callera and nothing to disturb the cloistered life they had chosen, and when the streaks of grey showed on his temples Talbot redoubled his efforts to make the evening of his mother's life one of peace and calm. Mr. Talbot was accompanied to the railway station by a few friends the morning of October 13. Thej brought
this issue shall ever be plainer than
IS FORJEVERIDGE Old Confederate Soldier Says He Is for Senator Because He Is Fighter. STANDS FOR A PRINCIPLE (Palladium Special) Indianapolis, Oct 19. E. T. Shubrick, 1725 North Meridian street, Indianapolis, a life long democrat who fought under General Gordon in the confederate army, said Tuesday before he left for Georgia for a fortnight in the interest of his health, he would return by November 8 and cast his ballot to elect Senator Beveridge. "I believe in Senator Beveridge with all my heart because he is a good fighting man," said Mr. Shubrick. "I fought with Gordon four years and I know what fighting means. In this day and age it takes courage to fight for principles and for people just as it too k courage to Ight for convictions In the sixties. "I take up a good man where I find him. I am for Beveridge because be Is not only efficient and honest but absolutely fearless and aggressive. My conscience guides me to the support of the progressive movement." with them a wreath and sheafs of fragrant blooms, which will mark the resting place of his mother in the cemetery In Kansas. MASONIC CALENDAR. Tuesday, Oct. 18. Richmond lodge, No. 196, F. A A. M. Called meeting. Work in the Fellow Craft degree. Wednesday, October 19. Webb lodge. No. 24, F. A A. M. Stated meeting. Friday, October 20, King Solomon's chapter. No. 4, R. A. M. Called meeting. Work in Royal Arch degree. Refreshments. Mrs. Austin's Famous Pancake Flour. Delicious light cakes, all gro-
REPUBLICANS OF
LITTLE MEET WEDNESDAY Convention Will Be Held at Providence, Harmony Probable, but There Is a Chance for Mild Storm. QUESTION OP SENATOR MAY START A PIGHT Opposition to Man Backed by Aldrich and Some Want Party Candidate Selected by the Convention. (American News Servic. Providence. R. I., Oct. 19. Extremely harmonious is the outlook for the republican state and congressional conventions to be held here Wednesday. Governor Aram J. Pothier and other state officers are slated for renomination. While the republicans are harmonious and well organized there are several 1 conditions existing this year which promise to make the campaign one of more than ordinary . interest. In the first place the recent death of Gen. Charles R. Brayton, the "blind boss," removed a leader upon whom the party depended in almost every campaign for the past thirty-five years. General Brayton's loss will be felt more seriously in the event the republicans control the next assembly which will choose the successor to United States Senator Aldrich. It now looks as if a battle were in store similar to that three years ago, when Colonel Samuel P. Colt, whose fiends are again urging his name, was the majority candidate against Senator George P. Wetmore. Colt Not Talking. Col. Colt has made no announcement regarding the senatorship, but many of his friends who have been informed that Col. Henry F. Lipi itt, the millionaire yachtsman and cotton manufacturer, is the choice of Senators Aldrich and Wetmore, are up in arms. Friends of Governor Pothier and former Governor Utter, whose names have also been mentioned in connection with the senatorship, are also strongly opposed to the plan of Senator Aldrich and his coterie to ignore all other candidates and select Colonel Lippitt for the senate. The opponents of Colonel Lippitt will probably endeavor to have tomorrow's state convention go on record for a senatorial candidate, as did the democratic party at its convention a few weeks ago when it indorsed Judge Arthur L. Brown of the United States district court for the seat of Senator Aldrich. The more aggressive leaders among the democrats are more hopeful of controlling the general assembly, though no republican can be found in the entire state who believes for a moment that there is any possibility of the G. O. P. losing control of the legislative body and the power to choose the successor to Senator Aldrich. The democrats it is pointed out, have had a majority in the general assembly only once in sixty years 'and never in a senatorial year. ' Democrats Mentioned. On the democratic side are found several men who would loom up conspicuously as aspirants for the Aidrich toga if all predictions should go astray and the democrats should carry the legislature. Among these is Col. Goddard, who twice was a candidate and was defeated by Senator Wetmore. Colonel Goddard is the head of a great manufacturing concern in which the bulk of the John Nicholas Brown fortune is invested. He is the father-in-law of the Marquise d'Andigne and an uncle by marriage of C. Oliver Iselin. . But the strongest man the democracy could present for United States senator probably is former Governor James H. Higgins of Pawtucket whose career has been the most meteoric politically the state has seen since the
RHODY
Mayo's Medical & Surgical Institute 4104 North Alabama Street. InsUsmapolis, Indlaunau
Or. lioyo Treats Epilepsy 603 North Delaware Street, Indianapolis, Indiana.! Dr. Mayo has treated a number of cases of cancer without the knife. No cure, no par. Dr. Mayo gives to each patient a written guarantee. Dr. Mayo treats successfully all forms of Chronic Diseases that are curable, such as Diseases of the Brain, Heart, Longs, Throat, Eye and Ear, Stomach, Liver, Kidneys, Bladder, Blood Poison, Rectum, Catarrh. Rupture, Piles. Stricture, Gleet, Eczema, Epilepsy, etc. Dropsy. Varicocele, Hydrocele, Female Diseases. Impotency, Seminal Emissions, Nervous Diseases, etc
days of William Sprague, the "war governor." Mr. Higgins is not yet thirty-five years old, but has been a representative In the general assembly, five times mayor of Pawtucket and twice governor. He has been practicing law since he retired from the governorship. He Is a graduate of Brown university and of Georgetown university law school, and is very popular with all classes.
. Rummage Sale, Thursday. Oct 20, at old Natural gas office, 43 N. 8th. PRAISES THE PRESS Chicago Jurist Says that Newspapers Can Aid Authorities by Publicity. MAY FRIGHTEN CRIMINALS Chicago. Oct. 19. Judge Scanlin in sentencing Thomas Jackson, colored, to an indeterminate imprisonment of from one year to life emphasized the worth of newspapers to a community. "If our newspapers would publish such sentences crime would diminish rapidly," said Judge Scanian. "If robbers learned through the newspapers that they were going to get life imprisonment when they came over here, neither the robbers nor their pals would be long in recognizing the best thing to do." The jury found Johnson guilty of thrusting a revolver In the faces of several waitresses in a restaurant at 67 East Twenty-Second ' street and robbing the cash register of $20. SHOT FOR A COON Robinson, 111., Oct. 19. While John Noblet, his son Robert and Henry York were, hunting coons four miles south of here, Robert Noblet was instantly killed by a rifle fired by York. The. party had scattered to look for game and young Noblet climbed a tree to dislodge a coon. York did not know the boy was in the tree, and when he saw something moving in the branches and saw two eyes glistening, he fired, the bullet striking Noblet between the eyes. DIRECTORY MEN MEET Louisville, Ky., Oct. 19. Nearly every one of the thirty-nine companies which supply the various cities and towns of the United States, Cuba and the Philippines with directories was represented, when the annual meeting of the Association of American Directory Publishers was called to order by President A. V. Williams of Cincinnati, O., at the Seelbacb hotel. The convention will last three days and an elaborate program for the entertainment of the delegates has been prepared, which includes a trip to the Mammoth Cave. Proscribed and Sold Hundreds of Bottles Dr. J. C. Convery, a physician and chetn. us or nign standing-, extols the virtu of the grant health restorer. "There is alwavs 9 oreat anil lactTnor satisfaction to be derived from administering a remedy and obtaining the re suit desired and exnected. I ha ve Keen engaged in the practice since I graduated, over 45 years ago, both in pharmacy and medicine, and I have sold and 1 I m ... . ... prcscriDea nunareas ot bottles ot Uutty s Pure Malt VhiWev in nt,c tn main tain and build up a patient's bodily re sistance ana snorten the period of convalescence, and natirnt whn rnmnliin of headache, biliousness, want of appetite, lack of vigor and ambition, and a eeneral run down anrl vhanstrl fil ing. I have found nothing more beneficial than Duffy's Malt Whiskey. I am positive of its being pure and unadulterated. Dr. J. C. Convery, 119 Sixth Ave., N, Nashville, Tenn. Ue sum you get the genuine imitations are impure and dangerous. druggists, dealers and grocers, or direct. $1.00 a bottle. Write if vn are sick, it will rnsf vnn nnthinor tn, learn how to treat yourself. Medical booklet and testimonials sent free. DR. W. R. MAYO, WILL BE AT DaichmniODid Arlington Hotel Wednesday, Oct. 26th And Every Pour Weeks Thercofter.
ADVISES RATIONAL IDLENESS AS CURE Greatest Health Cure Known for Rapid Living Americans Says Physician. VERY FEW REST PROPERLY
VACATIONS TOO OFTEN FOOLISHLY ARRANGED AND USUALLY IT IS A MERE MATTER OF TRANSFERING OFFICE. New York. Oct. 19. "A sane and rational degree of idleness should be mixed with every man's life." This is the opinion of Dr. Amelia M. Fendler, 1391 Madison avenue, who for the last few years has been connected with the women's and children's department in the Mount Sinai hospital and has made a special study of New York people. Dr. Fendler must know the secret of idleness, for she is calm, quiet, unruffled and apparently never tired. "I don't believe that one person out of ten in this city knows what real idleness is and how necessary to health it becomes. Their one great idea is to make money and seek pleasure. They never have a minute's rest or grant such a thing to another person. They are continually on the go from morning until night and when they can And no pleasure ready made they Invent them. Their brains are always in a whirl of excitement, they have what might be "termed New Yorkitis. Make Even Cows Restless.. "In any other community they would be termed insane and the pity is that wherever they go they take this restlessness with them and convert even a placid country cow into a nervous, restless animal. "Idleness should hold a great place in the life of every man, woman and child. It is the one quality needed to repair the damage done to the human machine caused many, by the continuous wearing of business and domestic life. "To my mind, children should be taught the art of idleness. By no means do I mean laziness, but idleness, which in its analysis means nothing more or. less than relaxation, rest, inducing a pleasant dreaminess of mind, and shutting out the hurry and worry of the world. "Men and women lose sight of the beauty and poetry of life because they always are too busy to see it. What causes a 'nervous breakdoVl?' Too much work and too little idleness. A man can do more work if he will be idle a little. How New Yorkers "Rest." "When a woman wants to rest in New York she goes to see a friend and talks for three or four hours. Yet talking is one of the hardest kinds of work. A man resorts to a different sort of so-called 'idleness.' He is tired and fagged; a friend comes to his office. 'Come out and have a drink and rest a minute,' and out they go and sit and talk, talk, talk, while they drink. "Vacations are foolishly arranged. TIME TAOLE C. & 0. R. R. of Indiana f Effective October 16th, 1810. East-Bound. Chicago-Cincinnati. Station. I No. 6 No. 8 Leave ) Dallrl Dally No. 4 ! Dally No. SB ftaa. Only '9:15a l:22p 4:32p 5:24p 6:18p Chicago . Peru, Arr. Peru, Lv. Marion . . Muncle . . 9:15p 1:09a 9:15a! l:22p 1:32d 1:14a :00a 2:07a 7:00a 2:24p 3:18p 3:10a 8:05a niohmond" I 4730a9V29a 4:40p 7:40p "6:2!pf8:21p 7:15pjl0:15p CX. Grove Cincinnati I 5:07a 7:15a West-Bound. Cincinnati-Chicago. Stations. No. n No. T I No. B No. XI No. II No. T I No. S Dally) Dallrj Dally ww uaiiyi uallyl Dally I Sam. Only ""8:15a 10:13a Cincinnati Ct. Grove S:15al 10:13a I 9:00p III :05p Richmond ...10:53a; 7:OOplU:47pilO:B3a Muncio 12:12p! 8:27p 1 :09a lY.rf2p Marion 1:1 Opl 9:30p 2:07a l:10p Peru. Arr. .. 2:01p!10:30p 2:67a 2:01p Peru. Lv. .. 2:llpl 8:02a 5:llp Chicago 5:55p 7:00a 8:55p 12th St. Station. v Through Vestibule trains between Cincinnati and Chicago. Double daily service. Through Sleepers on night trains. Fine buffet service on trains Nos. 4 and 5. For train connections and other information call C. A. Blair, Pass, and Ticket Agt.. Ilichmond, Ind. Home Phone 2082.
MFI A speedy, permanent, and lasting; cure Is what I will give you beyond a doubt if your case is curable; If not. I will not accept your money and promise to do anything for you. The best reference I could give as to professional reliability is the many cured, satisfied patients I dismiss, and proves that my methods cure when others fail to even benefit. Don't Give Up I will give the POOREST man a chance as well as the RICH to receive a cure from me at a SMALL COST. There is no man too POOR to get my best advice FREE. I win give $500.00 for any curable case of "Diseases Peculiar to Men" that I cannot cure. This is plain talk and I mean it The methods we use in every case we treat insure men a lifelong cure If they are afflicted with the following diseases: Varicocele and Hydrocele. Our one-treatment cure is what you should have and what you will have to have to be cured right. Only one visit is required. We do no cutting and you suffer no pain nor trouble. All signs disappear in a few days. Blood Poison, Skin Diseases. We will give you treatment that will in a few days cure all rash sores, ulcers and every sign and symptom. Our treatment gets the poison out of the system instead of driving it in, like other treatments. We cure blood poison and skin diseases so they do not come back. Stricture, Kidney, Bladder, Prostatic, Discharges are scientifically cured by ns. Our methods immediately benefit you and the majority of cases we cure come from other specialists who failed. Piles, Fistula. We can cure you so quickly and easily that you ' will be surprised. We will glye you Just the result and cure you are looking for without a surgical operation. Rupture Cured in a few Treatments Without Cutting. After an examination we will tell you just what we can do for yon. If we cannot benefit or cure you, we will frankly and honestly tell you so . Patients can be treated successfully at a distance. Write for examination and question blanks. Street ears and carriages direct to the Institute. Call on or address, W. R. MAYO, M. D President, or W. B. GILLESPIE. General Manager, Indianapolis, Indiana.
A man works fifty weeks out of the year 'and his two in which "to rest. By the time his vacation comes he is so nervous from the long strain he can not dismiss the business from his mind and he immediately goes to a place where he can have his papers, see the ticker and be In teleprapbie communication with his office."
BUT ROOFIHG LIKE UFE INSURANCE. .When vou buy life insurance yon don't care a rap what the policy is worth when you buy it. You want to know what it will be worth in the future. It's the same with roofI ing. It doesn't matter what it looks j like when you buy it. The only j matter you are interested in is how iwell, and how long it will wear on your roof. J One incontestable, absolute fact you know when you buy Rubkboiii Roofing, manufactured by The Standard Paint Co. of New York -1 it stands up under summer and win- , tcr weather conditions better than any other roofing made, and it 'lasts longer. The proof of roofing is in its wear. The proof of Rvbkboid 1 Roofing value lies tit the fact that . roof 9 which were roofed with it mneteen yean ago art ttill in perfect condition. I Asphalt is not weather-proof, j The oil which is present in its com1 position dries out and leaves pores I open to rotting moisture. Tin and ; iron are not as lasting as they were , of old, cost more than Ruberoid. ! need paint, and skilled labor to lay ; and repair. The same conditions j apply to shingles, with the further f danger from fire. Tar roofs are ; hard to lay. Tar melts and smells in summer, and when their oil evaporates tar roofings rot. Other ready roofings are surfaced i with sand, quarts, mica, and even. road dnst. lhese materials are useless except to give increased weight, which helps to deceive you when t buying, but have no value for wear. i Ruberoid RooriNo resists heat and cold and is absolutely water proof. I Another advantage of RUBEROID ROOFING is that it is also made in permanent colors of RED and GREEN. The : reason Ruberoid colors are permanent is that they are not painted on they are built into the fabric, and so cannot peel oft v Eia::c3 c:r:3 nu mails M.OAM.orr.) Is so good that it has over three hundred imitators. Look for the trade marks shown here stamped on every seven feet of its under side and on the outside of each roll. BUY RIGHT. (Q)(D Roaad Trip to Via C & 0. R. n. Formerly C C 4 L. Sunday, October 23 Train Leaves Richmond 4:50 a. m. Returning Leaves Cincinnati 9:00 p. m. Arriving Richmond 11:47 p. m. For particulars, call C. A. BLAIR, P. AT. A. Home Tel. 2062. DEIIIISYLVAIIIA 1 LITJEO Lomiusviiflfle $2 Excursion SUNDAY, OCT. 23 Account Woodmen of the World Celebration. Lv. Richmond It 35 a. m., re turning leave Louisville. 7 p. m.. Cen tral Time. '
