Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 103, 20 February 1911 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE XXICH2XOXD PALLADIUM JLND SUN-TELEGRAM, 310XDAY, FEllltt ART SO, 1911.

Tte Richmond Palladium '. tzi Ssa-Telesrta Published and wind br the

PALLADIUM PRINTXNO CO. Xssuad T aara aaoh wk. evenings and - Sunday mornlna. Office Corner North tth and A street. Palladium and 8un-Tlram Phones -Huslness Office, :; EUHerial Itooma, Ml. RICHMOND. INDIANA. Radalak O. Laada Edltwr J. V. Mlaaaaff. ...... Maalaaaa Maaaser Carl eraharat Aeeaelaia Kdltar W. R. Paaadataaa " Kdliaa BCBSCKIPTION TErtMS. la fclchmond It 00 .-r yaar (In ad vanoa) or 1O0 par week. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS. Ona vaar. In advanea ..... ......If ' Mia months. In advanea Ona month. In advanoa .... RURAL. KOUTKM Ona year. In advanea 22 Six montna. In advanea Ona month. In advanea Add.aM changed aa often at desired; bath ntw and eld addresses muat ba Ivan. Subocrlbera will please ratnlt with order, which should ba si van for a apaclrlad torm: nama will not bo enterd until payment la received. Entered at Richmond. Indiana, poat off lea aa aecdnd claaa mall mattar. Naw Tork representatives Payne ft Yotna-. 10-14 Wast 13rd street, and lilt West 12nd atraat. Naw York. N. T. Chtraffo Ttaoresantatlvaa Payne A Tounc. 747.741 Marquatta liulldin. Chicago, 11L i a a a a a a a vaiin (Naw York City) has aad soifltlsa to tka efroaJatloa aklUattoa. Only ta Unraa ol sntstaH ta its report an fcy ta aMsaoUtioi. KaT RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Ilaa a population of 23,000 and la crowing. It la tha county aaat of Wavna County, and tha trading canter of a rich agricultural community. It la loratad dua east from Indianapolis St ml lea and 4 inllea from tha tata Una. Richmond In a city of horaaa and at Industry. Primarily a manufacturing city, It la alao tha Jobbing canter of Kaatern Indiana and anjoya tha retail tradof the populoua community for inllea around. Richmond la proud of Ita splendid streets, well kept yard. Ita camant sidewalks and beautiful shade trees. It haa 3 national banks. I trust companies and 4 , building asHOclatlona with combined resources of over f 8,000.000. Number of factories 115; capital invested 17.000,000, with an annual output of 127.000,000. and a pay roll of 3,700.000. Tha total pay roll for tha city amounta to approximately 14,300,000 annual ly. Thara are flva railroad companies radiating In eight differ- . ant directions front tho city. Incoming freight handled dally, 1, 7(0,000 lbs.; outgoing freight handled dally. 760.000 lb. Yard 'facilities, per day 1.700 care. Number of passenger trains dally IB. Number of freight trains daily 77. Tha annual post office receipts amount to $80,000. Total , aaaeased valuation, of tha city. tl5.000.VOO. Richmond haa two Interurban . railways, 'i'hrra newspapers with a combined circulation of 13,000. ' Richmond la tha greatest hardware Jobbing center In tha stata and only second In general jobbing interests. It haa a piano factory producing a high grade r ilano every 1& minutes, it la tha eader In tha manufacture of traction anglnes. and producea mora threshing machines, lawn mowers, roller skatea. grain drills and burial caskets than any other city In tha world. Tha clty'a area la 3.(40 aoresj haa a court house coating 1500. 000; 14) publlo schools and haa the finest and moat complete high arhool In tha middle west under construction: S parochial schools; Karlham college and tha Indiana Business College; five splendid Mre companies In fine hose houses; Glen Miller park, tha largest and most beautiful park inond'a annual Chautauqua; seven In Indiana, tho home of Rich hotels; municipal electrlo light tlant, under aucceseful operation and a private electric light plant. Insuring competition; the oldeot publlo library In the state, earept oAa and the second largest. 40.000 voluntas; pure, refreshing water. ' unsurpassed; S miles of Improved alreeta; 40 mllea of aewera; 25 miles of cement curb and gutter combined; 40 miles of cement A-alka. and many mllea of brick walks. Thlrtv churches. Including tha Iteld Memorial, built at a riet of 250.000; Raid Memorial Hospital, ona of the most modern In fha atate; Y. M. C A. building. erected at a coat of $100,000. ona of the flnaat In the state. Tha amuaement center af Eastern In. dlana and Western Ohio. No city of the also of Richmond nnlda a" fine an annual art aa hlblt. The Richmond Kali Festival held each October la unique, no other city holds a similar affair. It la given In the Interest ef the city and financed by the business mm. Success awaiting anyone with enterprise In the Panic Proof City. This Is My 89th Birthday CARL BEAUCHAMP. Earl Hoauchanip, First Commlafrttoner of Works in the Llritlsh cabinet, was born February 29, 1S72, and succeeded hla father, the sixth Earl, In 1891. The following year he marmler Lady Lettlce Grosvenor, daughther of the late Earl Grosvenor and later of the present Duke of Westminister. He was educated at Eton and Christ Chucrh. Oxford, and when he was only twenty-three years old was elected Mayor of Worcester. He has held office of one sort or another almost continually since then. For two years he was a member of the London school board and from to 1901 ho was Governor of New Bouth Wales. In 1906 he was appointed Captain of the Corps of Gentlemen-at-Arms, and In 1907 became Steward to King Edward. Ilefore his appointment to his present office he served as Lord President of tho Council. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE OAY Take LAXATIVE BItOMO Quinine Tablets. Druggists refund money If It fails to cure. E. W. GROVE'S signature Is on each box. 25c. Smoothing Irons. If your Irons becomo rough sod Ucky wash In warm soapy water, dry a4 rah with emery paper.

El;

a thl

Bess

ie

Ventilation

It seems to us, to use a common American phrase, that Mrs. Ben Bartel has the goods on the school system here. . The questions and their answers that she had been giving about the schools here In Richmond are the real thing. She can be trusted to have made a pretty thorough investigation of the matter. i Mott, the superintendent, says that he knows all this better than anybody. He ought to. As Mr. Mott has been running the schools since Gunner was a pup we should rather say that he not only ought to know about the poor ventilation of the schools. It is about' time the schools were well ventilated. We hope that Mrs. Bartel will tell some more things about the schools. If she doesn't the things are not bo hard to find out but we hope she will keep on. Why is it for Instance that no teacher In Richmond dares open his or her mouth about things? Who is the school board? Most of the men on that body are pretty busy. At least two of these men have more than they can attende to with their own affairs. It is with all kindness that we call attention to this fact. But somebody must be running the business of that administration. Is it Mott? Not quite. Think on. There is another matter. The roof on the new high school building. Why the leak? Why was a certain sort of root specified? There are some interesting facts about that. . Whoever is responsible now has a chance to make a public statement as to how this happens. We hope it will explain some facts we are aware of. In as much as the schools of this town affect directly one-fifth of the population small children that you would kill men for if a hair on their heads were touched we don't see any real excuse in anything that is coming Mott-ward Just now and will continue to bet on Mrs. Ben Bartel. We hope there will be some real ventilation and are willing to assist.

AN ARCTIC DELICACY. Eskimo Soup Would Hardly Tickle Refined Palates. Kane and Dr. Hayes, the first wbito men apart from an ocraa'.onal whaler to visit the Eskimos, found some difficulty in accommodating themselves to local customs. In "The Toll of the Arctic Sets" D. M. Edwards quotes Hayes' account of bis first visit to n native but After a cordial welcome he was pressed to eat. "This," ssys Hayes, "was an Invitation which I feared, but now that it had come I knew that it would be unwise to decline It. The expression of thanks was one of the few In their language that I knew, and I made the most of this. They laughed heartily when I said koyenak in reply to their Invitation, and immediately a not very beautiful young damsel poured some of the contents of the pots into a skin dish, and, after sipping it to make gure, as I supposed, that it was not too hot, passed it to me over a group of heads. At first my courage forsook me, but all eyes were fixed upon me, and it would have been highly impolite to shrink. I therefore shut my eyes, - held my nose, swallowed the done and retired. I was told afterward that it was their greatest delicacy a soup made by boiling together blood, oil and seal Intestines.' - "Three Sheets In tho Wind." "What was the origin of the phrase for drunkenness, 'three sheets in the wind? " a landsman asked a sailor the other day. "Well," said the Bailor, I'll explain that matter to you. The two lower corners of a ship's sail are held taut by two ropes, one called a tack and another called a sheet. The tack is always kept very tight, but the sheet Is loosened according to the wind, and the looser the sheet is the more freely the sail swings. If the sail Is quite free its sheet is said to be In the wind. Now, suppose that all three of a ship's sails were quite free. They would then fly about very eraxlly, and the ship would wabble. The course of the ship would be a rigsag one, and the reason for this would be that she had 'three sheets in the wind.' That, I guess, is why a man When he zigzags in bis course is said to be three sheets in the wind' also." Ho Was Not Laconic. John Morley in bis life of Gladstone tells the, sfory of the statesman's examination for admission to Oxford university wheu he was a youth The examiner, having utterly failed to floor the candidate on some point of theology, said, "We will now leave that part of the subject." "No, sir," replied the candidate; "if you please, we will not leave It yet," and proceeded to pour forth a fresh stream. The dean in Mr. Gladstone's day was Galsford, famous among other things for his trenchant brevity. "This laconic gift," observes Mr. Morley slyly, "the dean evidently had not time to transmit to all of hla flock." MASONIC CALENDAR Tuesday, Feb. 21 Richmond lodge, No. IDC, F. & A. M. Called meeting, work in Fellowcraft degree. Thursday, Feb. 23. Webb lodge, No. 24. F. & A. M. Called meeting. Work in Entered Apprentice degree.

"THIS DATE IN HISTORY'

FEBRUARY 20. 1631 Massachusetts Bay colonists celebrated thanksgiving for the timely arrival of the ship Lyon with provisions. 1716 David Gar'ick, famous English actor, born. Died Jan. 20, 1779. 1766 Stamp papers burned in Boston as a protest against the Stamp act. 1780 British under Gen. Clinton invaded South Carolina. 1790 Joseph II, emperor of Austria, died in Vienna. Born there, March 13, 1741. 1809 Saragossa,' Spain, . surrendered to the French after a most heroic defense. . 1820 Dr. Elisha Kent Kane, famous traveler and Arctic explorer, born In Philadelphia. Died in Havana, in 1857. 1831 Patrick John Ryan, Roman Catholic archbishop of Philadelphia, born in Thurles, Ireland. Died in Philadelphia, Feb. 11, 1911. 1864 Federals defeated at Olustee, Fla. 1878 Cardinal Pecci elected Pope as Leo XIII. 1893 Gen. O. P. T. Beauregard, famous Confederate leader, died in New Orleans. Born there in 1818. 1899 Russia curtailed Finland's rights of self government. 1910 Boutrous Pasha Ghali, Egyptian premier, fatally shot by a nationalist

HE FINALLY GOT WARM. A Writer's Indoor Experience on a Cold Night In Bordeaux. - What beautiful sunshine we hud at Borden ux, and how nice and warm it was in the daytime! As long as the sun kept out it was lovely; but, oh, when the sun went down! They gave gave me a beautiful, large, lofty room at the botel with doors and windows all over it. After dinner I went up to try to write, and then I found that Siberia had come again. I put great logs of wood upon the fire and blew them with the bellows till the flames roared up the chimney, but still I shivered In the Icy blasts that blew through every cref ice. Iput on my ulster, I dragged the blankets from the bed, I ran races around the room and practiced the Indian clubs with a heavy portmanteau in each hand, but still I felt my blood congealing, and the horrors of the early morning came back again. In this dilemma my companion's Sudan experiences stood us in good stead. He was with Gordon in the expedition of 1876-7. He took our walking sticks and umbrellas, and with these and the blankets and the rugs he rigged up a nice, comfortable tent in front of the fire. Sitting in this tent in our big room we at last got warm, and my fingers were able to hold a pen. George It. Sims la "Dagonet Abroad."

A Bawbee From Cariyle. I used to see Cariyle when I lived aa a child in Chelsea. I regarded him with extraordinary aversion and fear. One day I was sent to post a letter. X suppose I was older, though unconscious, as always, of anything ahead. I cannoned into Cariyle. The Impact laid me flat on the pavement, where I yelled for some minutes, though soothed eventually by England's great thinker. And then this is the point of the story Cariyle dived into his pockets, produced a halfpenny and said kindly, "Here is a bawbee for Bobby." 1 have the halfpenny to this day. When Mr. Cariyle died I was put into deep mourning. He Was the first and perhaps the most interesting of all my street acquaintances. Robert Ross in London Bystander. 8olf Reliance. The spirit of self help is the root of all genuine growth In the individual, and, exhibited in.the lives of many, it constitutes the true source, of national Igor and strength. Help from without Is often enfeebling in its effects, but help from within' Invariably invigorates. Whatever is done for men or classes to a certain extent takes away the stimulus and necessity of doing for themselves, and where men are subjected to overguidance and overgovernment the inevitable tendency Is to render them comparatively helpless. Samuel Smiles. A Field at Home. A Boston gentleman was showing, a West African who is interested in missionary work a number of photographs. "What Is this?" asked the visitor, gazing in wonder at one of them. "Oh, that's a snapshot taken during a football scrimmage at the stadium." "But has your church no missionaries to send among these people?" was the quick rejoinder. Boston Transcript. "

Heart to Heart Talks.

By EDWIN A. NYE. Copyright. 1908, by Edwin A. Nye WORK OR. GENIUS? Toung man If you succeed In life It will' be oolj by hard work. Do not fancy that you can escafw drudgery. Tho greatest men have bee; the hardest workers. Of these th writer names five Archimedes. Sit Isaac Newton. Michelangelo. Beetho ven, Shakespeare and says they arr the greatest men who have ever lived. One might make a dlffereat choice but all . are fine illustrations of tlit genius of hard l&ber. Archimedes set the pace In scieno for a thousand years. He worked on many problems of practical mechanic? One day ia hla bath be was tbinkin; diligently . about the comparatirt weight of metala and other substance It would seem one might rest his mint at leit while taking a bath, but Archi medes worked incessantly. Sudden'.j the solution came to him. and he Juin; ed out of his bath and rushed dowi: the street, crying: "Eureka! ,Eureka!" Sir Isaac Newton gave the next great impetus to science. Year aftei year he pondered the law of gravity set to the solution of this law bj watching an apple fall to the ground In the beginning Newton was a poo' clerk, but he did not complain that fahad no chance to do big things. He patienty worked on. Michelangelo, according to some was the greatest psinter, greates sculptor, greatest architect of tbt world's history. When a mere boy li took a block of rejected marble anc carved out his great statue of David The dome of St. Peter's and many masterpieces of painting attest hitremendous accomplishment Why? For a like reason Beethoven mnde himself great by great labors. Born a drunkard's son, he was cruelly disappointed many times, buffeted an1 mistreated. Finally, to cap the climax of his woes, be became entirely deaf And yet much of bis matchless musl.was written after be became deaf. And Shakespeare? Born n poor boy. beaten for poach ing. maltreated, be fled to London where be ran errands and held horse in front of the theaters for a living: Determined to be an actor, be began at the bottom. He said of the plays he wrote that they would live after him. And they will as long 'as the English language lives. Perhaps you have not tho brain these men had. perhaps yon have, but You can do as they did. They did their very best always and everywhere. Angels can do no mora. YOUR. SORE TOe. Do not nurse your grievance. If some one has slighted or wounded you do not nourish your grievance and torture your family or friends by putting the grouch on public exhibition. Do not show your sore toe. Half the slights you nurture are fancied slights. Half the injuries for which you put yourself Into a sort of self martyrdom were never Intended for you. 4 You fed them until they were ripe. Some persons put themselves In the attitude of looking for evidences of neglect or injury. They find what they are looking for. And then 'they make themselves and their friends miserable by chewing the cud of their resentment. How shall you treat your grievance? Forget it The more you think of a thing ef that sort the bigger it gets. The more you drag it through -your mind tho deeper you cut the channel until by and by it becomes a well worn rut in which your thought must travel .whether or no. Get out of the rut. Force yourself to think of something else. Make new channels for your thought. Change the subject. Get so busy trying to make, others happy and thus making yourself happy that you have no time to bother with grievances That is one way. Another way, which has high sanction, is to heap coals of fire on the head of the one who has injured you. tSpeak some pleasant word or do some gracious thing to the one who has tried to hurt you. and if he is really, guilty It will make him sorry, and thus you will have overcome evil with good. You seeInstead of the other person getting you Into his power, being able to make you miserable, you will have evaded his shaft and turned bis malice back upon himself. In any event forget. -. Do - not permit your mind to rub a slight wound into a festering sore. Life is too short for such abnormal cultures. Promptly treat the hcrt surface with an antiseptic and forget it And above allDo not exhibit your sor spot in public. . BAUSCH For the Dome, Lodge and Cfcsrcb. FOR SALE BY lY.n.RossDrngCo. RICHMOND. IND.

A BUSINESS REVIEW OF THE PAST WEEK BY HENRY CLEWS

The event of the week was an important change in the management of the Gould system of roads and the turning of them over to prominent banking interests. The talk of a contest for Missouri Pacific was unfounded for the reason that these negotia - tions have been going in a friendly manner for some time past. This transaction eliminates one more weak spot from the financial situation. And now that the Gould properties have fallen into exceptionally strong hands the probability Is that an era of reconstruction and upbuilding is in 6tore for these lines. Whether they will be remoulded into an independent system or whether they will be parcelled out among other systems is not yet divulged; but it may be ac cepted as probable that the new managers have important plans in prospect which will ultimately affect the railroad world favorably. In any event this deal removes an Important element of uncertainty from the market and should add to the stability of values in an Important group of railroads. Following the advance of 10 points which has taken place since early December there was continued realizing and taking of profits. This distribution of stocks heretofore held in strong hands naturally weakened the technical position. Money is plentiful and outside conditions show an improving tendency, but owing to the continue'd conservative attitude of banking interests there is no disposition to foster undue speculation. As expected the bank of England rate was lowered this week to 3Va per cent this action emphasizing the easy and improved condition of monetary affairs in London. In Paris also there is an abundance of "loanable funds, and throughout Europe financial and industrial matters are in better form than for some time past. This fact is of course, favorable to the placing of American securities in foreign markets." During the last two months Europe has been a liberal subscriber to our new note and bond issues, without which, it would have been difficult if not impossible for American railroads to obtain the funds which they imperatively required to carry on contemplated improvements and extensions. In general business the outlook is more cheerful. Trade at the west shows signs of recuperation and the impression is gaining that the tide has turned. Wheat and cotton are declining from their recently abnormally high level, a factor which will help foreign trade, stimulate business activity and aid in reducing the cost of living. There are signs of oncoming activity In the steel business, more liberal orders having been placed during the past two weeks; and now that the railroads are securing funds it is practically certain that they will soon become larger buyers of needed materials. The season is also approaching when constructive work will begin in our large cities, and this also will be an important factor in stimulating demand. The textile trades are showing more activity, and as distributors' shelves are bare of stocks the outlook is good for increasing demand. Many cotton and woolen mills are still running on short time, but the prospects are that they will soon be obliged to at least partially resume. One of the very best features in the out look is the continued expansion in exHas by far the best JACKSON, ANTHRACITE and SOFT COAL. The many tortures accompanying Eczema are relieved by the use cf Nyal's Eczema Lotion itching and irritation relieved almost immediately. 4- MEERHOFF The PLUMBER g Repairs in Gas, Steam, Water . 4 and Electrical Work 4 4- Phone 1236 4 20 REDUCTION ON ALL PYROGRAPHY GOODS Old Reliable Paint Co. We Retail Goods at Wholesale Prices. Phone 2230. 10-12 S. Tth. H. C. Shaw, Mgr. nuY A. WAVERLY Electric airy Wood AGENT-

ports and a decline in imports, which left an excess of 166,000,000 In exports in January compared with only $10,000,000 a year ago. ' These are the favorable elements in the situation. The unfavorable feat-

1 ures are few, yet important enough to ' require watching. Among these are the supreme court cases, which may not be handed down for some week6 to come. Nevertheless, the fact that ttiese decisions will affect nearly 1,200 holding companies, having more -than $10,000,000,000 of capital means that a great mass of investors will await the effect of these all-Important decisions with intense Interest. The impression gains that these companies have been working against the law. If this impression proves correct, it will mean a wholesale readjustment of this mass of capital to legal requirements. Of course as we have often stated this i does not mean destruction of property I rsr Iac an f rto-Kf fill Arn(nn- t n atn sl 4 j I' ' "s c",m'? , ' and If the supreme court should point the way of solution as is generally expected no seriously disastrous shock will follow. Nevertheless the uncertainty that must remain until the decisions are announced, will be an Impediment to activity in many minds and an occasion for apprehension to others. When the results are known then we may expect a rebound as an expression of relief. Concerning the railroads, a decision from the inter state commerce commission has long been expected. Something In the na ture of a compromise is anticipated, since some of the western rates are known to have been unreasonably high, and many of. the eastern rates are admittedly very low. Upon the whole it is evident that the railroads are not now very fearful as to the result of this decision; their confidence being shown by their activity in financing and carrying out projected improvements. It is known that some of the railroads have not earned their dividend in the last two or three months, but better things are expected of the future as traffic increases and unnecessary expenses are curtailed. The prompt passage of the reciprocity bill in the house at Washington was encouraging. The concessions in this measure upon either side are not very great, but the movement is a step in J.he right direction. What the action of the senate will be it is impossible to determine at this writing. Should that body by any means fail to act, there is a strong probability that President Taft will call an extra session. This, however, the senate does not desire, and for political reasons it is not considered good tactics to precipitate a general reopening of the tariff question such as might eas-; ily happen in event of a special ses sion. If you are troubled with sick naaflaena, eon ttlpatioa. indirection, offensive breath or any aisease arising trom tiomtcn trouole, cat a sue 'r li. bottle ot ur. (jaidwair yrui rapaia. It w positively fuarantsed to cere von.

Ifl Yom LaicEs Me Meatfly Moimey for things you have in mind, call on us, get our reasonable rates and terms. Twenty years' experience has shown us how to transact this business in the best and cheapest way and satisfactorily to our customers. We make payments to suit youweekly, monthly or quarterly. Furniture, Pianos, Teams, Etc., serve as security and left in your possession. No extra charge. Extension in case of sickness, accident, etc. If unable to call, 'phone or write and we will call at your home. Loans made in all surrounding towns. 20 Years Experience in Our Business Stofle LdDaiim CaDo In Rooms Formerly Occupied By Eniidjlusiinia Losrnn (C0 40 Colonial Building Elevator to Third Floor Cor. 7th and Main, Richmond, Ind. Phone 2560.

EXTRAORDINARY STAMP SALE

iiU Febrnarv

Remember Wednesday, Red Letter Day.

I o stamps FREE!

with one pound Sultana Coffee .....25c 25 STAMPS with one bottle Extract ....... ,25c 1 0 STAMPS with one can Evaporated Milk ....10c 1 0 STAMPS with one bottle C. Sauce 12c

DISH PAN with one can A.&P. Baking Powder 50c Or 80 Stamps

The Great Pacific 727 UAIls.

1

CHEERFULNESS. . Cheerfulness means a contented spirit; it soeans a pure heart; it meana a kind and loving dispoartio; it means charity; it means a generous appreciation of others and a modest opinion of oneself Stupid people, people who do not know how to k laugh, are always pompous and self conceited-Hhat ia, bigoted; that is, cruel; that is. ungentle, uncharitable.

Consumption of Coffee. The annual consumption of coffee per capita In the chief consuming countries is given as follows; Netherlands. 17.06 pounds; Belgium, 13.09 pounds; Sweden, 12 pounds; United States, 10.93 pounds; Germany, 7 pounds; other countries, less than Germany. WHAT CLEAN BLOOD MEANS They used to accusa Dr. A. B. Simpson, one of the famous physicians of Indiana, of having a cure-all because his great reputation was established largely on one prescription, the most effective alterative or blood-purifier -known. . "No," he would remark, "It will not euro consumption, nor typhoid, nor any one of a hundred common diseases. It simply purifies the blood, but It does that very thoroughly. What are the symptoms of poisoned. Impure blood? They range all the way from the dreadful syphilis to a muddy complexion. They include inflammatory rheumatism, catarrh, scrofula, ecxerna, erysipelas, pimples, boils, running sores. erysipelas,' pimples, boils, and a number of similar afflictions. All these yielded readily to Dr. Simpson's treatment. And durtng the forty years this preparation has been on the market as Dr. A. B. Simpson's Vegetable Compound it has never failed in a single case. Tho very worst cases of syphlllls have been cured as well 1 as all the other blood diseases named above and the same compound has always given clear, clean complexions to those, otherwise in good health. It is sold at $1.00 a bottle at all drug stores. Home Made Bread Wholewheat v. c.i.ii.. ca i9fweaaiy riuv H. G. HADLEY 1022 Mala St. Mesh Bags We have a few choice patterns left that we are offering, at remarkably low prices ranging from $2.00 to $15.00. DANERThe Jeweler 810 MAIN 8TREET 21st to 25th. 1 5 STAMPS with one lb. Plaza Coffee ..........30c 20 STAMPS with one lb. El Ryad Coffee . . . . .-. . . .35c 10 STAMPS with one pkg. Fluffy Ruffle Starch..:. 10c 10 STAMPS with 3 lbs. Laundry Starch, each...... 5c Atlantic & Tea Co. PCC3E 1215

i' c e i