Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 90, 7 February 1911 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR.
THE IlICmiOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, FEBRUARY 7, 1911.
Tt3 mctaond Palladium tzi S:a-Telc;rn Published and owned toy tha PALLA&IUM PRINTING CO. Issued I dare Mh week, evenings aad Sunday morning. Office Corner North tin and A streets. Palladium and Bun-Telearam Phones Muaincsa Office. SMI; Editorial Kooma, ML RICHMOND. INDIANA. iiHHHMBManBaaaMBMam KMalk U. Lm4i Kdltwf J. r. Ulaskefr Baslaesa Miiiftl Carl Bernhardt Associate Editor W. R. Paemfatoaa Nawa Editor
6CB9CHI PTION TKRM3. la Richmond $1 0 .w year (In advance) or lOo per week. MAIL 8UB8CIUPTIONa Ona rear. In advanca '5'2 His months. In advanca Ona month. In advanca RURAL. ROUTES Ona yaar. In advance 2? Six month, in advanca Ona month. In advanca Add., changed aa often as desired; both new and old addressee mutt be Ivan. Rubacrlbera will pleas remit with order, which should ba given for a specified term; name will not bo enterad until payment received. Entered at Richmond. Indiana, post Africa as second class mall matter. New York Upprespntatlves Payne fair.. 80-34 West JSrd slreet. and ISIS Vu.t SSnd street. New York. N. T. Chicago Representatives Payne & Toung. 747-74H Marquette Uulldln-. Chicago. 1IL Tkm Association of American ' AaWartieara (Naw York City) haa asaaUaad aad aartltied to ths etr-nilatlen ', si uia pubUcattoa. Only U ttamrw at aJrtnlatloa ecxtalaed la Its report an narantasj kg tha AnooUUoa. Mitll RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Has a population of 23.000 and Is growing. It la the county scat of Wayne County, and the trading center of a rich agrtI'Ultural community. It 1 located duo east from Indianapolis f.9 inline and 4 inllca from tlio state linn. Itlchmond Is a city of homci and of Industry. Primarily a manufacturing city, it is also tha jobbing renter of Eastern Indiana and enjoys tha retail trad of tha populoua community fur miles around. Kicbinond Is proud of Its splendid atreuts, well kept yards. Its cement sidewalks and beautiful shade trees. It hits 3 national banks, 3 trust companies and 4 building associations with combined resources of over IS, 000,000. Number of factnrloa 125; capital Invested $7,000,000. with an annual output f 127. 000.000", and u pay roll of 11.700 n0. The fu pay roll for the city amounts to approximately ' ,4o0,bui iiuniThere ara flva railroad torn panlee radiating In eight different directions from the city. Incoming freight handled dally. 1,760,000 Iha. ; outgoing freight handled dally. 7.0,000 Ihs. Yard facilities, per Uny 1.700 cars. Number of paasonger trains daily . Number of freight trains dally 77. The annual post, of flea receipts amount to ISO, 000. .Total assessed valuation of tho city, 115.000,000. Richmond haa two Interurban railways. Three newspapers with a combined circulation of 12,000, Richmond ia the greatest hardware Jobbing center in the state and only second In general Jobbing Interests, it has a piano factory producing a high grade r ilano every 1C minutes. It Is the. eader In tho manufacture of traction engine, and produces mora thrcnhlng machines, lawn mowers, roller akates, grain drills and burial caskets than any other city in tha world. The city's area Is 2.840 acres; has a court bouae costing $500. 000: 10 public schools and has tho finest and must complete high school in the middle west under construction; 3 parochial schools; Karl ham college and the IndianHualncss College; five splendid flra companlea in fine hoho houses; Ulen Miller park, till largest and moat beautiful park mond's annual rhaiitainjigt; seven In Indiana, tha home of Richhotels; miiulcipsl electric light plant, under successful operation and a private electric light plant, insuring competition; the oldest public library In the state, except one and tha second largest, 40,000 volumes; pure, refreshing water, unsurpassed; 5 miles of improved strrets; 40 miles of sewers; 23 miles of cement curb and gutter combined: 40 miles of cement wslka, and msny miles of brick walks. Thirty churches, including the Iteld Memorial, built at a cost of $210,000; Held Memorial Hospital, one of tlu most modern In tha stale; Y. M. ?. A. building, erected at a cost of $100,000. onu of tha finest In the state. Tho amusement center of Eastern Indlnna and Weatern Ohio. No city of tha sis of Itlchmond holds as fine an annual art exhibit. Tha Richmond Kail Festival held each October Is unique, no other city holds a similar affair. It is given in the Interest of the cltv and financed by tho bualness men. Syrcens awaiting anvone with enterprise lit tho l'anlu Proof City. This Is My 50th Birthday DANIEL F. LAFEAN. Daniel F. Lufcan, representative in congress from the Twentieth district of Pennsylvania, was born in York, Ta., February 7. 1S6I, and received hi education in the public schools of hit native place. As a young man he engaged in the manufacture of candy and through his business ability rose from a poor boy to millionaire. He is till known to hia intimates as the "candy king." although his interests have now extended to many other manufacturing, commercial and flnan Vial enterprises. Mr. La f can was ten dered a unanimous Republican nomination and elected to the Fifty-eighth congress. He has been re-elected to each succeeding : congress, notwithstanding the fact that the district he represents Is normally . Democratic. He Is director of Gettysburg college and of Gettysburg seminary and two years ago be was mentioned for the Republican nomination for governor of Pennsylvania. . NOTICE EAGLES! All members are requested to be present Wednesday night. Business of Importance. Wm. Bloom, W. Pres. Franklin More, Scc'jr. 6-3t
The Commons Bill Senator Commons seems to be dead right about his bill to establish an Indiana state farm for those prisoners who loaf in our jails. Most people will remember that famous remark of Mayor Zimmerman about the certain sort of outrage it was for the county to have to take care of professional hoboes at a great cost to the county. It is also a great injustice to the prisoners to give them to understand that they can sit around the jail and do nothing all the day. A visit to tho Jail Is not an inspiriting sight although the Wayne county jail is a good deal better than most of the Indiana hosteleries for the entertainment of prisoners. Tho only people who are apt to make any fight against this are tho sheriff and those who are in the business of providing provisions for the prisoners in the jails. This bill of Senator Commons's is the same law which has become so famous in New York. The plan is to put them to work at healthy labor in the pure air aud to mako them pay for themselves while bettering their physical conditions. That is a lot better in every way than the old system of contract labor that the trade unions seem to have some good ground for opposing. Thorn is nothing in this bill that the organized labor people can take exception to. Tho time was when our jails were little more than training schools for crime and degradation. They are not perfect yet. Tho system of allowing prisoners to sit around the jail as they loaf in real life around places of business is really an "expense of maintaining in idleness and vicious associations a large class of prisoners" and that is tho condition set forth for destruction in the bill. There are S00 bills in tho legislature by this time-but this one ought to pass.
RACE SUICIDE NOT EVIDENCED THERE IJaltlraore, Md., Feb. 7. Gathered in St. Ignatious Catholic church was ono of the greatest assemblage of babies in the history of Ilaltimore, 700 little blue-eyed, chubby-faced specimens of humanity being brought to receive a special blessing from Rev. William J. Ennis, S. J., who wlith Kev. John Condon, S. J., have been conducting a two-week mission. Father Ennis denounced in strong trems the evil of race suicide, which he characterized as. one of the greatest sina of the twentieth century. "Infants," he said, "have souls as well as grown people, and, further, even unborn infants have souls." He warned against race suicide, because, he said, this country would be In a bad way if the babies, the future generation, were not allowed to live to manhood or womanhood. "THIS DATE
FEBRUARY 7. 1780 Convention of delegates from the northern states met in Philadelphia to discuss measures relating to the currency. 1807 Tho French army under Napoleon defeated the Russians in the sanguninary battle at Eylau. , 1812 Charles Dickens, the great English novelist, born. Died June 9, 1870. 1820 First provisional legislature of Arkansas met. 1834 L. A. F. Bourriene. private secretary and biographer of Napoleon died. Born July 9, 1769. 1844 London and Dover railway opened. 1853 Robert Lucas, first territorial glvernor of Iowa, died in Iowa City, Born in Virginia. April 1, 1781. 1855 The Palmerston ministry entered office in England. 1867 Constitution of Hungary restored. 1892 Seventy-five lives lost in the burning of the Hotel Royal in New York City. 1901 Queen Wilhelmina of Holland wedded Prince Heny of Mecklen-burg-Schwerin.
POLITICS AND
Elgin, Illinois has adopted the commission form of government. The Democratic state convention of Michigan will meet in Muskegon March 1. Baltimore is laying plana for capturing the next Democratic national convention. Since the national convention system was introduced no incumbent of the speakership has ever been nominated for president. Benjamin W. Hooper, who has just taken office as governor of Tennessee, is the third Republican executive of that state. The "baby" member of the United States senate at the next session will probably be Luke Lea of Tennessee, who celebrates his thirty-second birthday this month. . Former Governor Henry B. Qulmby of New Hampshire has announced his intention to contest the re-election of United States Senator Burnham'at the end of the latter's present term in 1913. Representative Carter Glass of the Sixth Virginia district, who is a candidate for the United States senate will speak at the convention of the Virginia anti-saloon league in Newport News next month. John D. Works, the new United States senator from California will be one of the few civil war veterans in the new senate. He enlisted when only sixteen years old from his native state of Indiana. C. W. Watson, one of the new United States senators from West Virginia, is forty-six years of age. He is a man of large wealth and is 'president of one of the big coal corporations in West Virginia. Frank Buchanan, the new representative in congress from the Seventh Illinois district, is a "structural iron worker by trade, and was at one time international president of the Bridge and Structural Ironworkers' Union. Luke Lea, the Nashville lawyer and publisher who has been elected to succeed Senator Frazier of Tennessee, is related by marriage to Jacob M. Dickinson, secretary of war. Secretary Dickinson's wife is u cousin of the new senator. Five thousand dollars a year appears to be the average salary of a governor. Sixteen states pay their executives that amount. Thirteen pay more than that amount. Three states pay only $4,500, in seven the salary is $4,000. and eight others pay $3,000. Wyoming. Vermont and Nebraska pay the lowest amounts, $2,500 a year. William E. Chilton, nominee for the long term in the United States senate from West Virginia, is a lawyer and politician of Charleston. He is a former law partner of the late Senator Kenna, and later formed a partnership wlth former Governor McCorkle. He was born at St. Albans W. Va., fifty-throe years ago, and was educated in the common schools. He taught for a while aud was. admitted to the bar in 1S78.
ID, GENTLE LAXATIVE
So many of tha Ills of women ara due to habitual constipation, probably because of their raise modesty on the subject, that their attention cannot be too stroncly called to the Importance of keeping the bowels open. It is always Important to do that, regardless ot the sex, but It ia especially important in women. From the time the girl begins to menstruate until menstruation ceases she has always vastly better prospects of coming through healthy If she watches her bowel movements. If you find yourself constipated, with bad breath, pimply complexion, headaches, belching- raa-and other symptoms of Indigestion and constipation, take a small dose of Er. Caldwell's Syrup Tepsln. It ia a woman's favorite laxative. You will And that you can do away with salts, strong cathartics, etc, which
BETTER CHILDREN; STUDY OF FARMERS East Lansing. Mich., Feb. 7. "A Better Crop of Boys and Girls" will be one of the subjects which will be taken up at the annual roundup institute of Michigan farmers on Feb. 2S and March 1. 2, and 3. Prof. William A. McKecver, head of the department of philosophy in the Kansas agricultural college,' will give two lectures along the line of race improvement "Better Boys and Girls on the Farm" and '"Some Practical Aspects of Race Breeding." "Sunshine" McKeever, as he is called in the corn state, is the originator of the scheme of printing bulletins on the subject of better training of children in the home, and at his own expense has carried on a great work in the west along his chosen line.
IN HISTORY" POLITICIANS
FOR UGT.BJ GIVEN FREE
are entirely unsuited to woman's requirements. Mrs. Katherine Haberstroh of XfcKees Rocks, Pa., and Mrs. A. E. Herrtck of Wheeler, Mich., who was almost paralysed in her stomach and bowels, are now cured by the use of this remedy. A free sample bottle can be obtained by addressing Dr. Caldwell, and after you are con vinces or us merits nuy it or your druggist at fifty cents and ona dollar a bottle. Dr. Caldwell does not feel that tha purchase ot his remedy ends his obli gation, tie nas specialised in stomach, liver and boweKdiaeaaes for over forty years and will ba pleased to give the reader any advice on the subject free of charsre. All art welcome to write him. Whether for the medical advice or the free sample address him Dr. w. b. Caldwell, ui Caldwell building-. Monticello. 111.
Greatest Medicine on Earth
A prominent citizen of Evansville, Ind.. writes: "I was ill for five months with a plumonary trouble, and bad the best of doctors; I had hem orrhages and was in a very bad way. Through the advice of a friend I tried Vinol. and I feel that it saved my life. It la all you recommend it to be. I believe it is the greatest medicine on earth. I have advised others to try Vinol, and they have had the same re sults." (Name furnished on reauest.) We waqt everyone in this vicinity who is troubled with chronic colds coughs or plumonary troubles to come to our store and get a bottle of Vinol. If it does not go to the seat of trouble heal the inflamatiou and stop the cough we will cheerfully return every cent paid us for it. This shows our faith and proves that you take no chances. Do we mean it? Come and see. Leo II. Fine, Druggist, Richmond, Indiana, FALSE HAIRJH BAD Only Natural Product for Spring Millinery. Chicago, Feb. 7. The Pied Piper of Hamlin will have nothing on Chicago department stores, for they will have to "put the kibosh" on most of their artificial hair puffs this spring, according to an edict of fashion recently issued, and "great rats, small rats, lean rats, brawny rats, brown rats, black rats, gray rats and tawny rats," will have to follow the "piper" for their lives. Real hair, false hair, and manufactured hair that makes no pretensions to being anything like the real article done up in puffs, tufts and curls, all the wide variety of rats worn by women young and old, are booked to the Indian sign. If the practice of wearing false hair had continued many more years, according to fashion dealers, the Ameri can woman would have found herself under the tyrany of a hairless crown without a root to anchor a wig to. When the spring millinery season opens this year all women will find the rat has been spirited away to the river or the ash heap. The gentler sex must wear only their own hair, and as little as possible of that Wo men with extremely heavy crops of hair may have to cut switches from their crown, according to some to be in fashion. The coiffure this year will have a smaller nest than for many years. The hat to be in style must be small and will have a small crown. There will, however, be little alcoves in the rear of the new fashionable ideal for the wearer's hair, which must be combed down flat on the front of the head. A part will be permitted on the side or in the middle. During the long, dreary winter months mothers become tired, worn out, can't eat, sleep or work. Hollister's Rocky Mountain Tea is the great est blessing for mothers. Makes them happy, healthy and strong. Conkey Drug Co. MASONIC CALENDAR Tuesday, Feb. 7. Richmond Lodge No. 196, F. & A. M. Stated meeting. Wednesday, Feb. 8. Webb Lodge No. 24. F. & A. M. Called meeting, work in Entered Appretlce degree. Thursday, Feb. 7. Wayne Council, No. 10, R. & S. M. Special Assembly work in the degrees. Friday, Feb. 10. Wayne Council, No. 10, R. & S. M. Special Assembly work in the degrees, and Inspection. Banquet 6 o'clock p. m. for Council Aid Chapter members only. Friday, Feb. 10. 7:30 o'clock p. m. Stated Convocation of King Solomon's Chapter, No. 4, R. A. M. Also work in Royal Arch degree and Inspection.
JORDAN. MM AN US & HUNT FUNERAL DIRECTORS 4 EMBALMERS
Automobile Service for Calls Out of lance. Telephone 2175.
BRASS GOODS SPECIAL
For the next few days we will offer at special low prices our entire line of "KARNAK BRASS." This line consists of such pieces as Candlesticks, Smoking Sets, Clocks, Vases, Desk Sets, Clocks, Vases, Desk Sets, Jewel Cases and numerous other pieces. See Window Display. Ed L. Spencer, Jeweler, 704 Main St.
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COUNTY COUIICIL WILUJT CALLED To Consider Advisability of Constructing Ward for County's Insane.
Even though there is a possibility that the state legislature will yet appropriate sufficient money for the enlargement of Eastern Indiana hospital for the insane, this will not delay the county officials from making an investigation as to the advisability and probable expense, of the construction of an insane ward at the county in firmary. The county commissioners in session on Monday, decided it would be best to call a meeting of the county council some time this month and at that meeting to treat the question from a financial standpoint. The date for the meeting of the council has not been set. Earlier in the session of the" Indiana legislature an appropriation asked for by Dr. S. E. Smith, superintendent of the insane hospital, was turned down because of the economy plan of the governor, but now Dr. Smith, so he has Informed Senator Walter S. Commons, believes the legislature will go over the head of the investigating committee and appropriate a large percentage of the amount asked, if not all of it. The consideration of this appropriation is probable next week. To Act Immediately. However as the action of the legislature is problematical the county commissioners have determined on immediate action. Judge II. C. Fox oP the circuit court talked to the board and explained the urgency of the county providing quarters for its insane, who can not be admitted to the state institution until after they have been incarcerated with criminals in the county jail for months and in some cases, two or three years. Should the appropriation be made by the. state, then whatever preliminary steps have been taken by the county officials would be dropped, for with the expansion of Eastern Indiana insane hospital, county officials realize it would be a useless expense to proceed in the construction of a county ward for the insane. On the other hand if the legislature will not make the needed appropriation, the county will profit by having taken , time by the forelock. In event the legislature does not make the approi priation it is probable that before the end of the year there, will be a ward for the insane at the county infirmary, which will be adequate in all respects for the treatment of the insane until they may be turned over to state officials and placed in Eastern Indiana hospital. LOOSING HOPE, SENT HIMSELF TO PRISON Jefferson City, Mo., Feb. 7. William A. Hurt, who was sentenced to ten years in the penitentiary for killing his brother-in-law in a dispute over land, voluntarily came 250 miles to surrender himself and begin his sentence. An appeal was pending in his case, but he decided to abandon it. He went to the sheriff of Howell county got his commitment papers, and made the trip to the penitentiary by himself. He has a wife and six children. REST AND HEALTH TO MOTHER AND CHILD. Mrs. WinsloWs Sooth i no Bvar has been used for over SIXTY YEARS by MILLIONS of MOTHERS for their CHILDREN WUILK TEETHING, with PERFECT SUCCESS. It SOOTHES the CHILD, SOFTENS the GUMS. ALLAYS all PAIN; CURES WIND COLIC, and is the best remedy for WAERHCKA. It is absolutely harmless. Be sure and ask for " Mrs. Winslow's Soothing Syrup," and take no other kind. Twenty-five cents a bottle.
Eat What You Want If your appetite is fickle, your digestion weak, your bowels stow to act, try Schenck'a Mandrake Pills and you'll find you can eat what you want, enjoy it all, and digest it thoroughly. They cure liver ills, stomach disorders and keep you up to the highest standard of health. Wholly vegetable absolutely harmless sold everywhere, 25c. Send a postal for our free, book, and learn to prescribe for yourself.
DR. J. H. SCHENCK & SON, Philadelphia, Pa.
City, Private Chapel and AmbuParlors 1014 Main Street. that tires In ooe of your hoes Is satin moi ms bread ao faat that bafon n know aad arattr sooo U whole d ros is lolaetad. tfasm srpei tbeaa. Kothtac ia aa qalck Thla TamarfcaMe i tested salt wUl destroy ererr Isstwona la roar Hoes, aheea. mad ail other stock. na the anlmats ennaiooo, ao that avarr oasc of iom tae lot too. want ooij i-u ox a cans par by (be S. B. ltd
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PUZZLE OVER INTERNATIONAL TANGLE Minneapolis, Minn. Feb. 7. The right of a Canadian citizen to obtain custody of children who have never been in Canada, and whose mother asserts she is still an American, is to be decided. The question is involved in a divorce suit brought by Mary Putney against William Putney. Several years ago Putney went to Canada and took up land. To prove up it was necessary for him to become
a citizen of Canada and he was naturalized. Mrs. Putney refused to go to Canada and forfeit her citizenship, and the "two small daughters are American-born citizens. The chief contest is over the poEession ot the little girls. The mother has objected to their being taken to a foreign country and growing up as Canadian citizens. The laws provide that if a foreign woman marry an American citizen the marriage naturalizes her. Likewise, in ordinary cases, if the husband give up his American citizenship the wife loses hers also. W. T. Coe, attorney for Mrs. Putney, does not believe the federal laws will compel a woman to give up her citizenship against her will nor allow minor children to be taken from the country when they were born citizens and when their mother objects. I Avoiding the Executioner. "Why does a hen cross the road?" "So as to avoid getting iuto the chicken pie." Judge. How To Treat the Feet. Many men and women, and especially clerks, suffer with aching, swollen and sweaty feet. Others suffer much from cold feet, or corns and callouses. This form of misery can be readily banished by the simple daily use of antiseptic vilane iowder, a specific of extraordinary virtues. Obtain two ounces of vilane powder from any leading druggist and to a gallon of steaming water add a teaspoonful, also a tablespoonful of salt. Immerse the feet in this every night for a few weeks, ten to twenty minutes and it will sooth, heal and remove all poisons and soreness. Corns and callouses disappear and cold feet soon become unknown. Anyone suffering with their feet should have this know ledge. 60 Years Old, and Says: "I had always been troubled with constipation and had taken a great many different kinds of pills and laxatives, but could never get satisfactory relief until I bought .a package of Blackburn's CascaRoyal-Pills, and the gave me relief at once, and do not gripe or sicken. They are a God send to anyone troubled as I was. I shall never be without them." JAMES CURRANS, Woodstock, Ohio If you are old or young, and troubled with constipation and attendant ills, write today for a Free trial package of Blackburn's CascaRoyal-Pills. Address with a postcard to The Blackburn Products Co., Dayton, Ohio. Sold by all dealers at 10c and 25c. Blackburn's 1 W" scaR&'al Pill: 1
L
AM- 1P1P)13 TUMUITY For Your QlhtildlFeiniS
In Gold
To the Boy or QM sending Hot of most words to bo obtained from tho words : " GILT EDGE FLOUR " We will give $5.00 in gold; for next highest list $2.50 in gold. Buy a 242 lb. bag of GILT EDGE FLOUR at your grocer's and help your children win the Prize. If your grocer does not have GILT EDGE FLOUR, he can order it from Omer G. Whelan, Local Jobber.
CONDITIONS:
Each list must be accompanied by an empty GILT EDGE FLOUR sack. Contestant must be pupil of Richmond Grammar Schools. All lists must be signed, giving parents' address, also teacher's name, and name of grocer where flour was purchased. List must be at O. G. WHELAN'S office. South 6th St., before 6:00 p. m., Feb. 15, 1911. Each contestant must write and state in not less than twenty-five words, "How mother liked GILT EDGE FLOUR." Prizes will be awarded Saturday, Feb. 18th, 1911. ' For Sale at the Following Croeeries:
Harry Haseltine A. W. Blickwedel Chas. Bentlage J. B. Koorsen J. T. Brooks J. P. Aiken & Son Hayward Bros. C. H. King Little & .Boswell
DANIELS & PICKERING CO., Millers, Middletown, Ind.
CIGARETS THROWN OUT OF THE UNION
; Youngstown, Ohio, Feb. 7. As 'a part of the agreement reached between the Builders' Exchange and tho Bricklayers and Masons' Unions, which goes into effect on March 1, is that there shall be no smoking of ciKarets while the men are at work. The master builders claim that too much time is lost by the men in rolling tho cigarets. The new scale provides for an increase. HONEST ADVICE TO CONSUMPTIVES. Somehow thre exists a vast amount ot ikiuiim h 10 th possibility of curing: Consumption. . . . Y stal none but facts. hiiiI are sincere in wlwt we assert. ... If ourselves afflK-l-ed with Tuberculosis, we should u precisely what wo ask others to do take Kckmun'x Alterative promptly and faithfully, . . . The reason wo ( should do this, ami warrant we have for aking Mil Consumptives to tU it. is that we have the reports of many cures, one of which follows: 1619 Susquehanna Ave., IMilU., I'a. Oentlemcn: "For two years I was afflicted with hemorrhages of tho lunKs. the number totaled nearly ona hundred. Our family physician advised another climate, to nmmlii would probably be fatal; however, I remained, aud in February of 1902, 1 waa taken with a severe attack of pneumonisi. When T recovered sufficiently to wU about the house 1 waa left with a frightful hacking cough, which no medicine I had taken could alleviate. 1 was again advised to go to another part of the country. It was at lhl (hue. March. 1!0'J, that 1 learned of Kcknian's Alterative. In a short tlmo my cough was gone and 1 was proI nounced "well' or "cured. Since that time I have had two slight attacks of pneumonia and I have resorted to no other medicine to effect a cure; 1 am at present in excellent health and fed that as long1 as 1 can obtain Kcknian's Alterative. T have no fear of Consumption. 1 cannot speak tort highly for the good it has done." Signed HOW AUTi U KI'H'Z. Kckinan'a Alterative cures Bronchitis. AHtluiia. Hay Fever; Throat amt L,ung Affections. For sale by A. O. l.uken & Co. and other leading druggists. Awk for booklet of cured cases and write to ICckman laboratory, Philadelphia, I'a., for additional evidence. DO you remember your first watch? How proud you were how you rejoiced ir, its possession? That identical sensation of joy can be imparted to your children at trifling expense. Nickel watches, silver watches, for boys and girls and gold watches, too. Good time-keepers pretty moderately priced. A watch hospital and skilled surgeons to mend the breaks. Ratllff, The Jeweler 12 N. 1h St. W. H. .Schneider Phoenix Gro. Co. J. B. Hawekotte ' Corcoran & McManus J. C. Koehring Enterprise Grocery Chas; Hodge & Son H. R-Eubank Geo. A. Cutter . . ....
