Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 49, 28 December 1910 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUX-TELEGRA3I, WEDNESDAY, DECEMBER 28, 1910.

The Richmond Palladium izi Ssa-TelegrcRi Published and owned by the PALLADIUM PKtNTlNO CO. Issued 7 days each week, evenings and 8undy morninK. Office Corner North Ith and A streets, ralladlum and Bun-Tl-a;rm Phones Business OffKo, liti; KdltorUl Jiwitu 1111. RICHMOND. INDIANA,

Rudelpb 0. Leeds) Rdlter J, r. niBskaff Business MiMgcr Carl aerahardt Aaaorlaia Editor W. It. raaiadalaaa Kawa Kdlter 8UBSCKIPTION TEUM3. la Richmond II 00 ,ur year (In dvanca) or tOo par wnk. MAIL 8UUSCHIPTXONS. Ona taar. In advanca $ l month a. In advanca ' On a monih. In advanca RURAL ROUTE One year, kn advance ...t--"J Mis rronthJ. In advance Cue month. In advuuct " Add.'ese changed aa oitmn at desired; botl nar and old editresses must te Ivan. Subscribers will please remit with order, which should b arlvei for a specified term; nam will not bo enter ad until pymtnl received. Entered at Richmond, Indiana, post offlca aa second class mall mattar. New York llpr. rnii lives Payne A Vounir. jn.J Went 13rd street, and till Wuit ll'nd at i act. New York. N. V. Chicago Representatives Payne A Young, 717-74$ Munjuctta UullJInrf. Chicago. 111. I Taa Association af Arnerke EAslrertisere (N.w York City ) tea j wiliri aad eertitted fc the circulation 1 at tail raWiontio. Only Ua tUmraa ol etresiattoa contained ta tta rtport an 1 L pnrtBteM ft? tat aaoeuuom. r ua AMoeuuoB. i iMra'W RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Ilaa a population of 13.000 and la growing. tn county cat of VVavna County, and tha tradlna; center of a rich agrt cultural community. It la 10 rated dua aaat from Indianapolis mlloa and 4 mllaa from tha atata lino. Richmond la a city of hornet ini! of Induatry. Primarily a manufacturing city. It la alao tha lobbing- co:.tr of Eaatorn Indiana and enjoys tha retail tra".a or tha populous community for inllcn around. Klchmond la proud of It splendid alrocta. wall kept yard. Its eement aldawalka and beautiful aha-U trees. It haa I national banka. I truat companies and 4 building; association with com Mned resources of ovar tt.000.0ftu. Number of factories 111; capital Invested 17.000.00ft, with an ar. nual output of I27.ooa.ono. and a pay roll of fS.70O.O0C. Tha total pay roll for tha city amounta to approximately fC,30i,000 annual' ly. There ara five rat'road com pan lea radiating; In eight differ ant direction fror.i tha city. In rnmlna; freight hr.ndled dally. ! T 50.000 Iba.t out go In freight bandtd daily. 710.009 lha. Yard facilities, per alay. 1.T00 rera. NumliT of pajseng-rr trains daily. . Number of frcta-ht trelns datlr, TT. The annual pout office receipt amount to fKA.ooo. Total aaaeoee.1 valuation of tha city, III. 000.000. Richmond haa two Inlerurnun rallwava. Three newapapera wtth a rnmhlned circulation of 11.000. rttchmond la the (rreeteot hardwere .tnnbtmr rener In the etate and only record tn reneral iooMnf IntereMta. It haa a plma factry nrodnclnr a high irrada piano avery II minutes. t Is the lenler In tha manufacture of traction enrlnea. and produces mora threshing; machines, lawn mowers roller skates, pratn drills and burial caskets than any otnr elty In the world. Tha city's area la 5.S40 seres; baa a court htte eoetlna tSOO.SeO; 10 public erhoola mi ha the flneet and r.toat complete ht! sche-l In tbo middle west tinder conatrnctlon: 1 parochial school i; Karlhsm coiletje and tha Indiana llinlneas rnllearej fVe splendll flra companies tn fin hosa bnuaea; fllen Miller par, the laereat and roat beautiful park In l-tdlana. the bom a of Ttlcb moxd'e annual chntitanina: eevea noteta; min-lpel electric llrnt p!nt. neder u eef ul nrteratlon and a private eleetrle lla-ht p1nt' Insuring competition: the oldest pnblle library tn the state, eept one and the second lnrirot aO.OOII vnliimes; pure, refreshlna" water. nnsirpaaaed; l mles of Improved rtroefa; 40 miles of newer? ?a miles of cement enrh and arnttcr combined: 40 mMea of eement welk end many mites of t brlcV walks. Thtrtv ehurehe. n. cludlna? the TteM Metn-Il, bnllt ' at a coat of I1SA.A00. TteM Momnrlel llnapttal. one of the moat mndeen In the State Y. M. C. A. tniM)nar, erected at a co.t of ttaoftOO ana of the finest tn the s'at. The amusement center of Veetarn Indiana and Western OM. Ho cttv of tb stn ef Tttchmnnd aMi a fine an annual srt exMW, The Ttlcbmond Fall Pesttvsl beld eo.ch fV'ober la inlrite. otb"r eltv holds a lmtlar ufftr Tt ta irtyen In tha Interest of the city and financed by the hnelneas men. ehteeese awalttntf anyone with e-terprlsa In tha Pan la Proof City. This Is My 58th Birthday CAPTAIN KNUTH Captain Heinrlch Berthold Knutb, one of the beat known commanders in the transatlantic steamship service, was born in Hamburg. Dec. 28, 1S52. From early youth he has followed the sea. For many years he served in sailing ships, making voyages from Hamburg to the Far East, to New York and to 8an Francisco. In 1SS3 he became a commander In the service of the Carr line. In 1S8? that line was absorbed by the Hamburg-American company and he has since been in the employ of that company, commanding the "Amerlka" and other noted liners. Captain Knuth In all of his many year on the sea has met with no serious accident on board any of the vessels of which he has been an officer. For his services in the Boxer war in China he has the Crown Order of Prussia of the Fourth Class, and he wears the Chinese and African war medals bestowed by his country. NOTICE. 8peclal meeting of Brotherhood Railway Trainmen 'to be held December 37th 7:30 p. m. Odd Fellows halt. Signed, F. Brown. r President Sl-71

About Councils

All sorts of office holders seem to be forming organizations for various purposes. The latest organization is that of the councilmen of Hammond, Gary, Michigan City. Lafayette, Kokomo, Frankfort, Peru and Logansport. Just what the real purpose of the organization is will appear later. A good many of us will have the feeling about some of these organizations that they are organized for selfish reasons. Some of us haven't much sympathy with office holders who form organizations to secure legislation which affects their own offices. However good the avowed purpose of such organizations among office holders, the suspicion lingers that the thing Is for the benefit, eventually, of the individuals who compose It otherwise they might Just as well Increase their membership to a larger scope and take us all in. Of the organization of which we speak, the indications are that the councilmen will move on the legislature with some such program as this: 1. The modification of the present cities and towns law by which the city council will be given the right to initiate legislation. 2. The modification of the law to make It necessary for the city council to approve the appointment of the members of the board of public works and to make approval by the council necessary for the removal of a member from this board. 3. The modification of the law to make it necessary for the council to approve all the appointments of the mayor, including the controller. On the fate of it the first proposal does not look out of reason and it is largely a question as to what, specific sort of legislation councilmen wish to initiate. Are we right or wrong when we assert that the tendency In the cities and towns law of the last vintage was to get away from legislation merely for legislation's sake? It Is no reflection on any councilman of any city, any more than it Is a reflection on the state legislature which passed the act which is under discussion, to say that when no immediate need for legislation exists, the mere presence of councilmen or legislators with time to spare on their bands results In such measures as the famous hat-pin ordinance of Indianapolis, and equally vital legislation. The ordinances of the city of Richmond are larger in volume than the city directory some of them not printed. The statutes of the state of Indiana are fairly complete In themselves and really when the legislative part of any city ought to be merely the passage of by-laws, with the rest of the government pure and untrammeled action one begins to wonder if there are not so many men in the city government that there Is not enough work to go round.

We fancy that almost any councilman could pick out of the present city government of any town In which he is living four other men who would compose a council of five who would and could give the city a mighty good a better administration than that city is now getting if the council had ull the power. And the citizens of the town would be perfectly willing If they could step in when things did not go to suit them and first advise, and second repeal any action that did not go to suit them, third, if the thing still did not please them, they could kick any man or all of them out of office. We fancy that the councilmen would rather like such an arrangement because It would give them a chance to make good. So would any set of five mayors. And yet the minute you call that thing commission government you find mayors and councilmen all getting together to' defeat it. It is a matter of record that those cities that have taken over commission government have for the most part put back their old officials because they knew more about the city affairs.

So the second and third announced objects of the councllmen's organization fall on unlistenlng ears. The trouble is that our city government is not yet simple enough as to responsibility. We have sympathy for those councilmen who are really not councilmen except in name. We don't think much more of the cities and towns act than they do. We suggest to them that if they really want something to do that will give them something real when they get it that they Btart In on the idea of really having a council which is a council which is a council and model it after the council of Des Moines which really is a council. That council has all the power and it does things. That is the sort of a councilman that any councilman we ever heard of would rather be because he can really do something as long as he behaves. The effect of the second and third change that this body of councilmen propose is to dispose of what responsibility we have already and scatter It to the four winds. You can't make everyone responsible without making no one responsible, that is so whether you are bossing a sewer, or running a train. If we Intend to hold the mayor responsible he will have to make the appointments. It wouldn't be hard to knock the proposition of the councilmen sky-high from an historical point of view for it's just the old constitutional gag which has made so much trouble for the United States and those unfortunate states and cities that have tried the plan. But boiled down It simply means that instead of making it impossible for people to do harm we will have to make it possible for them to accomplish something giving them responsibility. Whatever the thing is in the city government that does things it has to have the power to do things and it can't be held responsible if it hasn't. That's just plain common sense. Nobody cares whether you call this thing a mayor and council, a council, a commission, a board, trustees or a directorate the name doesn't mean anything. If the councilmen have proved anything by their attempt to-modify the cities and towns law it is that there are too many men, none of them with enough power to really accomplish anything. That is moving toward commission government, and the more they do against it the more they are apt to prove Its necessity. We don't want to run a city like the federal government, or with a legislature that has failed utterly. Give us a new deal and not a cooked over mess as sickening as turkey hash the ninth day after Christmas.

FAMOUS SPEAKERS ADDRESS TEACHERS (American News Service) Chicago. 111., Dec. 28. The secoud day of the Illinois Teachers' Association convention began this morning with a session In the banquet hall of the Hotel La Salle. Dr. William A. Evans, Commissioner of Health of Chicago, presented a paper in which "THIS DATE

DECEMBER 28. 176S-Rev. Alexander J. Forsythe, inventor of the percussion lock for firearras, born in Belhelvie. Scotland, died there in 1S43. 179S Charles Hodge, noted clergyman and educator, who married the great granddaughter of Benjamin Franklin, born in Philadelphia; died June 19, 1S7S. 1S37 Steamer "Caroline" captured and destroyed by the British near Niagara Falls. 1S45 Iowa admitted to the Union. I $56 Wood row Wilson, governor-elect of New Jersey, born in Staunton, Virginia. 1S5? Baron Thomas Babington Macauley, famous writer, died in London, born in Leicestershire, Oct. 23, 1S00. 1S62 The assault on VIcksburg ended in a victory for the Confederates. lS7t Riots In Mexico over the act of the Government In suppressing the religious orders. 1907 Alexander J. Cassatt, president of the Pennsylvania Railroad, Compajr, died in Philadtlpbia. Born in Pittsburg Dec. 8, 1S39;

he pointed out some of the faults of the public school system of today from the physical viewpoint. Other speakers heard during the mornins Included President W. O. Thompson

of Ohio State University and Miss Jane Addams of Hull House. Miss Addams spoke on the subject of social settlement work. Routine business occupied the afternoon session, which was held in Orchestra Hall. IN HISTORY"

Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE.

Copyright, 1903, by Edwin A. Nt HASTE AND HUR.R.Y. There is a big difference between haste and hurry. Haste goes directly and swift.y on Its way. like a railroad train. Hurry goes on its way swiftly, but not directly. It takes a zigzag course, like un aeroplane buffeted by head winds or la countercunents. Haste helps. Hurry is haphazard. Not long ago I watched two gangs of men at work on a new railroad embankment Ou each section the same number of men and teams was employed, and about the same number of square yards of dirt was to be moved. Oue of the bosses was a nervous fellow who continually hurried the men and horses. He urged and swore alternately. He stewed and fretted and worried his gang. The other was a quiet man who seldom spoke. Evidently his work had all been planned, and he simply kept his eyes oien to see that his plans were carried out. While there was no fuss and no hurry call, men and teams rapidly fell In line at the right moment. Several weeks afterward the superintendent of construction told me the quiet man completed his job ten days before the other. The fretful mind hurries. The trained mind makes haste. Speed is not always determined by the number of times the wheels go round. Hurry often marks time, while haste marches direct to camp. Ordinarily there Is no call for either. Things go smoothly. But wheu the urge is on every blow must count, every muscle must work, every force must be marshaled. Therefore When swift work is demanded hasten, but do not hurry. Behind the work must be the careful, resolute, resourceful mind that calmly directs each blow, expands every muscle and carefully aims the effort. Hurry makes men nervous and misdirects their energy. Hurry is wasteful. Make haste slowly. Plan the job. Go at it with reserve power and calmly. Then do it swiftly and inteiligejR;iv. , YOUR BOY'S FUTURE. The question of what career in life their sou shall choose troubles many parents. Iu European countries the son's life work is usually selected for him before he is born. lie la to follow tUe busiuess of his father, whatever that may be. Formerly, in this country, the old fashioned father sternly mapped out the calling cf his lie!r. whic h might or might not be that of bis father, and forced his son into it. " In these days the youth has more freedom to choose. But Often the mistake is made of urging the boy alons the lino of his eftriy desires. That i to say, if the small boy takes to machinery the parents conclude he should lie a machinist or engineer, whereas nearly all small boys like machinery. Or the boy draws pictures everywhere. Therefore his future must be along the art lines. Or the arbitrary choice of the youth himself is thought to be significant. If Johnny says he wants to be a doctor the family concludes he Is cut out fcr a physician. A ud so on. The fact is that few boys have sufficient judgment to know In advance what may suit their temperament or ability. Exceptions? Certainly. Some boy, instinctively choose the right vocation. And some manifest, a genius In certain ways very early In life. But the average youth has neither strong urg ings for certain employments nor genius. Do not worry, however. Your boy Is likely to wabble Into the right place. Lincoln wanted to be an inventor and got a patent on a useful device no tried the grocery business and surveying before settling to the law. Grant was a failure as a farmer and merchant. ' Stonewall" Jackson was a college professor before he developed his war talent. The best you can do for your boy is to give him a strong body, a sturdy character, an educated mind and let him work out his own salvation. Let him feel that the responsibility Is on him. Advise with him. Help him. And then Pray God to guide and keep him and turn him loose. THE NONUNIONlSTS RESPONSIBLE. ARE The nonunion men of this and all other countries are responsible for the employment of child labor, fcr the spread of consumption, for low wages and for long hours ta any branch of labor, for the employment of convicts in competition with free labor responsible for all ugly things from which labor suffers. Terrible indictment this, isn't it? But true true in every sense, for if there were no nonunion men the unions would be able to bring about all needed, reforms and make life for ail what it should be.

SUPREME COURT WORK.

How tha Justices Prepare Decision and Dissenting Opinions. On Saturday evening each justice receives from the chief justice an euvelope containing the names of tha cases the chief justice has decided to allow the justice to write the opinion on, and the chief justice also notifies the justices of the hour of the conference on Monday morning. The coherences are usually held In the conference room under locked doors. The chief justice presides, and cases are taken up or postponed according to the wishes of the justices or their readiness to consider them. Each justice Is furnished with a lock book, fa which he may enter the details of a case, the record of the vote on conference and the final disposition. On a case being assigned by the chief justice to a justice to write the opinion of the court the opinion when written must be agreeable to the Justices. If not the dissatisfied justice will promptly write a dissenting opinion. In some instances four of the justices have each written a dissenting opinion, but the usual custom is for one to write it and announce that the others coucur. Befinre a case is reached for nrpument the justices familiarize themselves with its records and briefs, and when one is directed to write the opinion he makes a study of the case, long or short, as its gravity demands. This may take a few days or months. The opinion is dictated, and after beins typewritten it is corrected, boiled down and revised: another copy Is then made, further revised and sent to the printer. In order that the com-, posltors who set the type may not know the decision of the case the foreman sets up the last few lines of the opiulon. locks them in a safe, and after the opinion is set up he nds them to it, takes two proofs and forwards them under lock and key tv the Justice. It is again read and revised and sometimes completely altered and returned to the printer, corrected by the latter and nine revises sent to the Justice. If the opinion is now satisfactory to the justice a copy Is mailed to each member of the court. These are returned to the justice with the notations of the justices, and the opinion Is revised or changed, if need be. to conform to their views. If there be a dissenting opinion the Justice writlnj the majority opinion holds it until the dissent is completed. Then on some Monday, the court being In session, the justice announces an opinion in the case, giving Its number and title, and then proceeds to read it at length to the dozen people who may be present If there be n dlssentiug opinion the justice writing the dissent reads It and announces the names of the justices who concur with him. Afterward the official reporter of the court sends a verified copy of the opinion to the publishers of the United States supreme court reports, and the case finally becomes one of thousands in the law libraries to be read and reread if of moment or to be forgotten if .mere detail. Independent Label Department Officer, The new officers of the label trades department are: President John B. Lennon of Bloomlngton, III.: Irst vice president, John F. Tobin of Boston; second vice president, Owen Miller of St Louis; third vice president. J. W. Hays of Indianapolis; fourth vice president, Jacob Fischer of Indianapolis; fifth vice president, T. A. Rickert of Chicago; secretary-treasurer, Thomas F. Tracy of Washington city. Trade Union Briefs. The sheet metal workers of New York have come to terms with the employers. The receipts of the United Mine Workers of America for the fiscal year ending Nov. 30 were about $2,000,000. The eleventh annual meeting of the National Civic federation will be held Jan. 12, 13 and 14, 1011, in New York city. The Woman's Trade Union League of England, oganlzed in 1874, has a total affiliated membership of about 185,000. The model for the first woman's trad a union was found in America. Thomas L. Lewis, president of th United Mine Workers of America, who is a candidate to succeed himself, predicts that he will be re-elected this year by n majority twice as large as that he received a year ago. The San Francisco Labor council has passed resolutions denunciatory of the lynching of two striking cigarmakers at Tampa, Fla.. recently and calling upon President Taft and others in authority for a full investigation of the crime. GOOD BLOOD. Given good, clean, healthy blood, Nature will do the rest with any case of catarrh. Inflammatory rheumatism, scrofula, eczema, erysipelas, boils, pimples, scrofula, or skin disease of any kind. Good blood invariably means vigorous appetite, good digestion and strength. Thus it stands to reason that an effective "alterative" or blood purifier, while it will not cure all diseases, will help in fighting any disease and will cure those mentioned above, all cf which comes from bad blood. Forty years ago Dr. A. B. Simpson, of Richmond, was known as one of the most successful physicians in three states. His auccess was founded almost exclusively on one prescription, the most powerful blcod purifier ever known. After his death this prescription was regularly put up as Dr. A. B. Simpson's Vegetable Compound. It has been used extensively all over the country and In forty years has never failed, even in that most dreadful of all blood diseases, syphilis In Its worst stage. And when an alterative will do that, it of course cleans and rebuilds blood affected with other troubles. Simpson's Vegetable Compound Is purely vegetable and as harmless as it is effective. It is sold at SI per bottle at ail drug stores. Voa neednt suffer with sick readacbe. ladJ Etkm. constipation or say othr troab'tes arisfrom a disordered stomach. Dr. Caldwell's Syrop Pepein wfil core yon sad keep roa weO, Ttt it keep it aa basd the yea arooad.

POLITICS AND

An election will be held in ArUna, February 9 to ratify the new constitution. Mt. Vernon is the first city in New York -State to accept the commission plan of government J. Hamilton Lewis, of Chicago, will be the chief speaker at the Jackson Day banquet to be given in Co'umbus, Ohio, next month. - The first Socialist eve- elected to office in Mississippi is S. W. Rose, who has just won a seat In the city council of Biloxl. Paris Gibson, who represented Montana in the United States Senate from 1901 to 1905, may again be re'urned to tlie senate Jrom that state. Beginning the first week in M irch former President Roosevelt will make a two month's peech-makiag tour of the Southern and Western States. Associate Justice John M. Harlan is now the oldest member of the United States Supreme Court, in Po nt of service as well as age. The Illinois Anti-Saloon League has started an active campaign to abolish saloons in Chicago. Tlie ma tcr will be passed mon by the voters at the April election. Edward Douglass White is the first Associate Justice of the Supreme Court of the United States since the organization of the court in 17S9 to be promoted to be Chief Justice. The five equal suffrane states Utah, Wyoming. Colorado. Idaho and Washington will participate In the first national convention of women voters ever held in the United States, to be held In Tacoroa next month. Tho California legislature will bo asked to abolish the local board system of government tor the StatVs institutions and substitute therefor a State board of control similar in organisation and powers to the Minnesota and Iowa boards. With the beginning of the New Year, only a few days off. which will mark the convening of State legislatures, political interest centers in the contests for United States senator in two States. New York and New Jersey will be the. principal battlegrounds, with Democratic senators to be elected in both States. Both the "regular" and 'fusion1' factions iu Tennessee politics are still claiming a majority of the legislature on joint ballot with the apparently confident assurance that each will be ene to name a 'United States senator t o succeed James B. Frazicr. The legislature will convene on January 3. According to report the inaugural message of Governor McGovern of Wisconsin will be longer than the annual message recently sent to congress by President Taft. It is said that Governor McGovern will take more advanced and radical ground than any Wisconsin executive before him, not even excepting Iafollette. He will propose much legislation to ameliorate the condition of labor, aid he will suggest that criminal prosecutions be changed so as to coufoVm more with modern day methods.

MASONIC CALENDAR Wednesday, Dec. 28, Webb lodge, No. 24, F. & A. M. Called meeting. WOrk in entered apprentice degree. Refreshments. Friday, Dec. 30. King Solomon chap ter, No. 4, R. A. M. Special work in Royal Arch degree. Refreshments. SOWING GLADNESS. There is no beautifier of complexion or form or behavior like the consistent endeavor to scatter joy and not pain around us. The World's

i , ,

mks. jennie Gardner no inconvenience at all. This is re markable, but nevertheless it is true. I could not do without Duffy's Malt. I expect to use it all my life." Mrs. Jennie Gardner, Monett, Mo. The voluntary testimony received from thousands of our grateful patients is proof positive of the great remedial qualities of Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey It is one of the greatest strength builders and tonic stimulants known to science. Its palatabiiity and freedom from injurious substances render it so that it can be retained by the most sensitive stomach. It improves the digestion and assimilation of the food and gives tone and vitality to every organ in the body. It has been used with remarkable results in the

prevention and cure of consumption, pneumonia, grip, coughs, colds, asthma, low fevers, stomach troubles and all wasting and diseased conditions. Recognized as a family medicine and prescribed by physicians everywhere. CAUTION. When you mtc your druggist. frocer or dealer for Duffy's Pure Malt Whls ey be sure you fret the genuine. It is an absolutely pure medicinal malt whiskey and is sold IN SEALED BOTTLES ONLV never in bulk. Look for the trade-mark, the "Old Chemist," on the label, and make sure the seal over the cork Is unbroken. Price St.OO a large bottle. Write Medical Department, The Duffy Malt Whiskey Co.,' Rochester, N. V. for an Aseptic Drinking Cup. also doctors' advice, and an illustrated medical booklet containing textimonials and common sense rules for health, sent tree. Start flic

with a clean slate. Why not get all your small bills into one that is easily handled? Come to us. We will advance the amount you need and allow repayment in small weekly or monthly amounts. Furniture, Pianos, Teams, etc. serve as security and left in your possession. Lowest rates, easiest terms. If unable to call, phone or write and we can arrange it at your home. 20 Years Experience in Our Business.

Cor. 7th and Main, Richmond, Ind. Phone 256C. Room 40 After Jan, 1.

POLITICIANS

A Waterfall In the Air. . On the road to the Pali from Honolulu, iu Hawaii, is a waterfall that never reaches land. A thread of water leaps from the cliff a thousand feet in the air, but before It can gather force and carry itself to the bottom of the declivity the hungry northwest wind, hurtling through the pass, picks up the streamlet and wafts it away in mist Mew York World A Tborniess Hose. The followers of 7-oroaster have a theory that prior to the existence cf sin in the world the rose was a thornless flower. In the east It is a tradition to this day that the burning bush in which the angel of the Lord appear ed to Moses was a rosebush. Besi edlclne There is no time in the life of man or woman when Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey will not; help. Mrs. Jennie Gardner, one of our patients, is passing through woman's most critical Krioa and she is enjoying the stof health. In her letter she says: "With pleas ure I allow my name and testimony to be used for the benefit of those who know not the merits of Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey. I think it is the best medicine in existence. I am now passing through the most critical period cf women's life (The Menopause or Change of Life). I am en joying good health, better than for years and all through this wonderful change have suffered comparatively New Year