Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 185, 13 May 1911 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AXfD SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, 31 AY 13, 1911. - . .

PwMtefce mm4 wntd hr the PAULADrOM PRINTINO OCX 4 I r tack vnk, itMlngi aad

amaaar momma. Offlee Certw North Ith and A treeta. Pallattwa end aun-TeUrram Pbonsa hijMj-iM Office, ; Editorial Koonr RICHMOND. INDIANA. ...aTMltw Maaac ...... Wewe MUM IXBSCRI PTION TBRU& U Ittcaasend $ year vaace) or 0e par week. MAIL BUBlCRIPTIONa. ' to fwr. In advance ....... la Moatae, In advance Om ateata. In advance RURAL KOCTBtf year, la advance ...........t fls amen the. la advance One aionth. In advenee Andrea changed aa aftaa as daatradt th in and old addrooaoo must Itob. uheerlbere wilt please remit wit rdor. which should bo afven for ooiflod tarra; naaao will not ho eater od aatU aarnoi.t la received. Kntarod at Richmond. Indiana, soot I orrtoo aa aooond elaao man mattor. Now York Repreeentetlee Payne A Tong. Ss-14 Waat llrd street, and ISM Woot Mnd otroat. Naw Tork. N. T. Chicago Raprooantatlroa Payno A Tw(7 f7-T4 Marquette Bulldlatf. Chicago, IlL (Now Ydffc City) has Oaly ttd tlBra of n M tonaft SIS RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Kao a population of 22,324 and to srowlna. It la the county noat of Wayno County, and tho trading- center of a rich arlcultural community. It la located duo east from Indtanapolla t miles and 4 mllea from tho otata lino. Richmond la a city of homes and of Induatry. Primarily a manufacturing city. It la alao the Jobblna center of Eastern Indiana and en Joy a tho retail trade of the populoua community for mllea around. Richmond la proud of Ita splendld atreota, well kept yard, Ita cement sidewalks and beautiful ahado treea. It hae three national banke. ono truat company and four bulldlna aaaoclatlona with a combined reaourco of over $t 000.000. Number of factories ItS; capital Invented $7,000,000. with an annual output of $27.000,000, and a pay roll of $3.700.000. Tho total pay roll for tho city amounta to approxlmatedly S, 400.000 annual. There aro five railroad com-' panics radlatln In eight different dlrectlona from the city. Incomlna frelcht handled dally, t. IftO.OOO Iba.. otitaolna- freight handled dally. 7(0.000 Iba. Yard faclllttee. per day 1.700 cars. Number of passenger tralna dally 1. Number of freight tralna dally 77. Tho annual poat office receipt amount to 180,000. Total aaaeaaed valuation of tho city, flB.OOO.OOO. Richmond haa two Interurhan railways. Three newspapers with a combined circulation of 12.000. Richmond la the greatest hardware Jobbing center In the elate and only aecond In general Jobbing Interests. It haa a piano factory producing a high grade f ilano every 15 minutes. It la the eader In the manufacture of Traction engines, and producca more threshing machines, lawn mowera, roller akatea, grain drllla ana burial caskets than any other city In the world. Tho rlty'a area la 2.440 acrea; haa a court house coating 1500.000: 10 public achoola and haa the flnaat and moat complete high school In tho middle west: three parochial achoola: Earlham college and the Indiana Buslnesa College; five splendid fire companies In fine hose houses; Ulen miller park, the largest and moat beautiful park In Indiana, tho homo of Rlchmond'a annual Chautauqua: aeven hotels; municipal electric light plant. Under successful operation and a private electric light plant. Insuring competition: the oldeat public library In the state, except one and the aecond la r rest, 40.000 volumes: pure refreshing water, unaurpaaaed; 45 mllea of Improved streets: 40 miles of sewers; 2S miles of cement curb and gutter combined: 40 mllea of cement walks, and many miles of brick walks. Thirty churches. Including tho Held Memorial, built at a coat of 1260,000; Reld Memorial Hospital, one of the most modern In tho atate; Y. M. C. A. building, erected at a coat of $100,000. ono of the flneat In the atate. Tho amuaement center of Kaatern Indiana and Western Ohio. No city of the alae of Richmond hnlda aa fine an annual art exhibit. Tho Richmond Kail Festival held each October Is unique, no other city holds a similar affair. It Is given In the Interest of the city and financed by tho business men. Success awaiting anyone with enterprise In tho Panto Proof City. This Is My 55 th Birthday BISHOP BERRY. Bishop Joseph F. Berry, of the Methodist Episcopal church, was born in Aylmen, Ont., May 13, 1856, and received bis education at Lawrence unlverslty and Upper Iowa university. He entered the Methodist ministry in 1174 and tor the ensuing six years be occupied various pulpits in the middle west. In 18S4 he became engaged in the work of editing the church publications. He continued In this work for twenty years and became well known to members of the denomination . throughout America. For six years he edited the Michigan Christian Advocate, which be gave up In 1S90 to become editor ot tho Ep worth Herald. He, was elected a bishop of the church in 1904. The fastest and longest non-stop rail-road run In England is 225 miles from Paddlngton to Plymouth, made at 64.S miles an hour. , c::e imro vcun oiioeq ASea'araet laaa, the sarlssptle sowdsr. Itranevsa pataNUaataftlag, trader, aorvoat feet, and instantly (akeetaeeueteat of eoraaaad bunions. It the rwajtMooBjidtsooToryof lbs age, Altea's rootMao awkea ttjht or sow ehoea fori aas. It la a oftsla relief for aweatlaf, calktaa, swollen, tired, I'ltar feet. Always aasltto Break la Hew shoes. Tt H H tm. gald SIWJ , IS cents. Ora't aawe mmm islaWwO. Per PKKS trial package.

1 ii a n.

Earlham

We hopa that Earlham has come Into its own. Certainly the trustee-, faculty, alumni, students and friends of Earlham must feel gratified at the change that has come. The different stages of Earlham's progress seem to have been of ten year periods. Certainly the sixties,, seventies, eighties, nineties and the new years of the new century have all marked themselves off as cycles of progress. The last ten 'years of Earlham have been In distinct contrast to those that have gone before. There will be no doubt in anyone's mind that the last ten years have been marked by what may be called radiation the giving off rather than the ingrowing. Earlham saw that the time had come for the small sectarian colleges not to assert their place but to make it self evident Instead of putting the bars down and insisting that all should fit and mould Earlham has turned away from the mechanical side of and taken the natural planting method. Members of the Orthodox Society of Friends who feared lest Earlham in the process should cease to be closely Identified with the society but ltU doubtful whether the society would be of such strength and power if it were not for Earlham. The question Is that of parent and child. The firings that the Society of Friends stood for In the beginning have become more generally diffused than they were in the days of Fox. If Ideas and Meals are the things to be, judged have we not most of us become one with "those people called Quakers?" . For a very good reason there are not today the Abolitionists yet who will say that the national acceptance of the Abolitionist view of the freedom of men meant a decadence of Abolition? The rights of women an early tenet of Friends has that not become a fact? And so all tbe way through the Society of Friends has won ita peaceful victories. This very thing the feeling in many men's minds that the work of. the society was done came very nearly extinguishing it If the Friends had remained reactionary. The early protest against formalism came near to becoming a form itself. ' . It is by thus frankly stating the dangers which befell the society that the Palladium can pay the greater tribute to it and to Earlham. If we say that the last ten years has been the greatest 6tride forward that the college had to make is the achievement not the greater after it has been performed?

That Earlham has taken rank with any college In the West has not been by accident. In the past there have been many scholarly men known and respected in their profession but now there has never been 60 large a percent age of real scholarship and broadmlndedness as at the present time at Earlham. Never has there been so great a disposition to prepare men and women for actual service In the world. There is another form of slavery which is facing America today it is as great a struggle albeit it has not come to its crisis as that which will be brought to all our minds next week when the G, A. R. comes to Richmond. It is for this struggle that all this generation should be rightly prepared. The University of Wisconsin has furnished many citizens to the state ready to take up the fight. They have proved themselves worthy of an alma mater. The splendid equipment and ideals they received there has emancipated their state which gave the university being. There are signs In Earlham that this ideal is at work. Within the last ten years there have been many expressions of this sentiment coming from the college. And now that the struggle is coming clearly in the limelight the work of the college is cut out for it. We have no doubt that Earlham will have . many men who will be willing to work as citizens with state-consciousness developed. There Is at the present time a conspicuous example in Woodrow Wilson to show what a college man can do. Who thinks of Princeton merely as a sectarian institution. . It is to the honor of Presbyterians that the college has become identified with the larger life of America, No friend of Earlham can doubt that this community and Earlham have come closer together. There has never been a time when the college has been so generally recognized or had so much reason for its recognition.

FAMED CANADIANS OFF FOR ENGLAND Quebec, May 13. Sir Wilfred LaurIcr, accompanied by Sir Frederick "THIS DATE

MAY 13. 1670 The Hudson Bay company was chartered by Charles II. 1783 The Order of the Cincinnati was formed by the officers of the American army encamped on the Hudson. 1836 The Roman Catholic diocese of Montreal was established. 1857 The Agricultural college of Michigan was opened to students. 1861 Queen Victoria commanded her subjects to observe strict neutrality in the American Civil War. . v y 1871 D. F. F. Auber, composer of "Fra Dlavola," died. Born Jan. 29, 1782. 1894 Dr. Talmage's Tabernacle in Brooklyn destroyed by Are. 1905 Hiram Cronk, last veteran survivor of the war of 1812, died .at Ava, N. Y., aged 105 years. 1910 The expulsion of Jews was resumed at Kieff.

News Forecast For Coming Week

Washington, D. C, May 13. The Mexican situation, the proceedings of congress and possible developments in the Los Angeles "dynamiting" case will continue to furnish "first page" stories during the week. . Democrats' and Republicans of the Ninth congressional district of Iowa, will mee at Council Bluffs Tuesday to nominate their candidates for the scat left vacant by the resignation of Representative Walter I. Smith. Governor Woodrow Wilson, of New Jersey, whose Western tour is attracting attention "because of its possible bearing on the contest for the Democratic Presidential nomination, will speak during the week in San Francisco, Berkeley, Portland and Seattle. Pursuaut to the call of Governor Glasscock the West Virginia legislature will meet in special session Tuesday "to enact a state-wide primary law, which shall Include provisions for the population nominations of United States senators, and to amend the Corrupt Practice act, so as to prohibit bribery and fraud at primaries, conventions, and political meetings of all kinds as well as at elections." Former President Roosevelt will be the only speaker at the clerical conference to be held in New York Tuesday afternoon by the Federation of churches, to which clergymen of all denominations have been Invited. His subyect ' will be "The Church and Righteousness," The foreclosure saleof the International " and Great Northern Railway company, one of the Gould properties in Texas, Is fixed to take place on Tuesday at Palestine. It is understood that the third mortgage bondholders. Including George J. Gould and interest allied with him. will bid In

Borden, Hon. L. P. Brodeur and sev eral members of the parliamentary del

egation, sailed on the Virginian today for England to attend the Imperial Conference, which is to open May 22 and the coronation in June. IN HISTORY" the road as a step preliminary to its reorganization. The Queen Victoria memorial in front of Buckigham Palace, London is to 'be unveiled Tuesday with elabo rate ceremonies accompanied by great military pageant. The event will be attended by the German Em peror and Empress. Accident prevention and industrial relief, banking and currency, immt gration, industrial education and nu merous other live -questions of the day are slated for discussion at the annual meeting of the National Association of Manufacturers, which will convene In New York Monday for a three days session. The two great general assemblies of the Presbyterian church will be held during the week, the Northern Pres byterians meeting at Atlantic City and the Southern Presbyterians at Louis ville. Another large religious gather ing of the week will be the Southern Baptist convention at Jacksonville, Florida. . Other large gatherings appearing on the calendar of the week are the Na tional Conference on City Planning, which Is to meet in Philadelphia; the Northwestern Mining congress, In Portland, Oregon; the annual convention of the American Cotton Manu facturers association, in Richmond; the annual meeting of the American Library association, in Pasadena; the national reunion of the United Confed erate veterans. In Little Rock Ark.; the supreme council meeting of the Royal Arcanum, in Minneapolis; the annual meeting of the American so ciety of Tropical Medicine, in New Orleans ;and the annual conference of the Canadian Association for the Prevention of Tuberculosis, In' London

Ontario t

Heart to Heart Talks.

By EDWIN A. NYE. Copyr&ht. 1908. by Edwin A. Nye COUNT YOUR. BLESSINGS. Said a woman of my acquaintance: "Last year my -husband was ill, and now my daughter is threatened with tuberculosis. The cost of living is high, and my husband's salary Is only $1,000. Why are we put Into this world to suffer so? Sometimes I feel that life is not,worth the living." I was sorry for the woman, and as I had known her a long time I took the liberty to say: "But you own your own home and you have never lacked for necessary things. "Moreover," I said - "The problem of suffering, like that of sin, is an old one, but I think it a mistake to fall into the habit of thinking that one is luckless beyond others. There are a lot of people all about you worse off than you." Doubtless my suggestions went in at one ear and out at the other. Privation? Suffering? Why, this woman did not live in a ramshackle tenement up a rickety stair. Her husband did not come borne from the corner saloon with empty pocketbook and heavy handed with j liquor. j Hardship? She did not live in a two room and eloset apartment where .you buy coal by the scuttleful, bread by the half loaf and Ice by the penny's worth. Destitution? She had never haunted the butcher shops late of a Saturday night when the very poor do their pitiful market ing to buy for almost nothing remnants the butcher will sell a cheap soup bone or a neck of mutton. No; this woman did not know. She did not know that to find a quarter of a dollar for the slot of the pay gas meter may be a financial problem and 'rent day a real tragedy. She had never heard her children cry of cold in winter. She never knew t what it was to partly starve a living child to pay the funeral expenses of a dead child. Perhaps she doubted if any lived in this way because "one half the world does not know how the other half lives." . That's it out of our ignorance of conditions we complain. We are as illogical as the querulous woman comparing our lots in life with those of the more fortunate. That is error. - Go along the streets with open eyes. For one person who is better off than you there are a dozen who are not ROMAN CATHOLIC ANNUAL PILGRIMAGE (American News Service) Carey, O., May 13. The annual Ro man Catholic pilgrimage to the shrine of Our Lady Consolation church here began today. The shrine is one of the most famous in the country. Hundreds of pilgrims are expected during the ensuing week from Cleveland, Toledo, Columbus and other cities and towns throughout Ohio. SOAP FOR SUPPER. Do you ever notice that sometimes the vegetables taste a little strong, and that the meat has a peculiar flavor? That's soap. In washing the pots and pans and dishes, strong, yellow soap is used, and instead of cleaning, the minute crevices are filled with dirty grease and rosin which later get into the victuals. Try Hewitt's Easy Task Soap it's a white, antiseptic combination of cleansing agents and absolutely cleans without leaving any deposit. - - INNS Uh CHINA. A Knock That Wracked a Door and Raised a Rumpus. Some of the Inns of modern China are badly built. The correspondent of the London Times in traveling across the country recently bad this experience: "At enly one village had 1 any difficulty. We were marching late in the dark, and 1 bad sent my groom on ahead to find me an inn, as he had often done before. De entered the village, and, finding the large Inn door closed, he called out to the people to open it. But his Peking speech is not easily understood in Kansu, and no one answered him. Then he knocked, andi to bis dismay the crazy door fell down. Immediately there was a row. The innkeeper and bis vociferous spouse shouted out their wrongs. "Every one came Into the street to bear; the whole village was roused. When 1 arrived it seemed like a demonstration ic my honor. As is the custom, a dozen people together told me what bad happened. I soon satisfied every one by first examining the damage and then paying compensation In full. I paid 100 cash (rather more than twopence), and my generosity was approved. The structure thus damaged reminded one of the jerry built houses familiar to students in Edinburgh, where It is on record that a lodger once complained to his landlord that the ceiling in his room had fallen down. 'But how do you account for that? asked the landlord. "Somebody in the next flat sneezed, replied the lodger. -,,,--.;: : r The kind that shines so r.r. K.T-

quickly.

DAIlXYCXXjlAL

WILL INVESTIGATE

Big Enumeration Gains in Cities Are Surprise. Indianapolis, May 13. Comparisons between the census returns and the reports of school enumeration received at the office of Charles A. Greathouse, state superintendent of public instruction, show some unexpected gains in the latter figures for several cities. The reports are being compiled by John I. Hoffman, deputy state superintendent. Some of the enumeration gains reported are so large as to exceed the comparative gain in population shown by the census report. " Mr. Greathouse will make a thorough Investigation of reports of school enumeration suspiciously at variance with the census returns. The distribution of school, revenue is based on the enumeration. Fort Wayne, which reported 17.1S7 children of school age, made a gain of 535 over the previous year. The Fort Wayne enumeration shows 8,477 males and 8,710 females. Reports by Cities. Other cities which have reported their 1911 enumerations to the state superintendent with gain and losses are: Columbus 2,142, loss 47; Hartforu City 1,846, gain 36; Lebanon 1,415, loss 3; Logansport 4,881, gain 28; Brazil 2.902, loss 72; Frankfort 2,341, gain 98; Greensburg 1.542. gain 9; New Albany 6,608,' gain 244; Princeton 1,917, gain 3; Marion 6,173, gain 149; Linton 1,868, gain 70; Greenfield 1,006, loss 74; New Castle 1,885. gain 168; Huntington 2,716, loss 121; Seymour 1,450. loss 89; Portland 1,349, loss 15; Madison 1,917. loss 144; Crawfordsville, 2,204, gain 149; Martinsville 1,375, gain 1; Kendallville 1,132, loss 26; Tell City 1,132, gain 6; Valparaiso 1,813, loss 71; Rushville 1,197; gain 62; Shelby ville 2,448, gain 101; Bluffton 1,241, loss 30, and Tipton 1,227,' gain 115; Richmond, 5,277, gain 196. Attend the dance at Coliseum, Saturday evening. Programs, 9 o'clock. Music by Prof. Hicks full orchestra. OLD FAMILIES.; 8ome In Europe and In tho Orient That Are Really Ancient. In Great Britain and on the continent those families pride themselves that count their ancestry through ten generations, but their claims to really ancient lineage seem Insignificant when compared with those of certain houses in the orient. - We read that the oldest family in Great Britain, the Mar family in Scotland, may trace Its pedigree to 1003. Then. too. we have the Campbells of Argyll, whose date is put down at 1100. The Grosvenor family, that of the Duke of Westminster, refers its origin to the same year that the Conqueror "came over"!, e.. 1060. The Austrian house of Hapsburg goes back farther than that, its date being 052. while the Bourbons proudly mention 864 as the date of their origin. But none of them is to be mentioned in the same breath with the emperor of Japan, whose office has been filled by members of his family for a period of over 2,500 years, the present ruler being the one hundred and twenty second in the line. The first emperor of Japan sat on the throne about the time when Nebuchadnezzar was flourishing that is. in 600 B. C. Another oriental branch, the descend, ants of Mohammed, presents claims not to be dismissed. The prophet was born in 570, and a list of his descendants has been carefully retained, being duly set forth in a volume kept in Mecca. Little or no doubt exists of the authenticity of the long list of names of Mohammed's descendants as registered in this sacred book. Harper's Weekly. WANTED NO FUSS. Any Old Thing Would Do For Dinner, So She Said. Mrs. Betsy Bazter was the last person in the world to want anybody tc make trouble on her account When she "dropped In" on Mrs. Doollttle unexpectedly for dinner one day she made her position on this point quite clear. "Don't you go to a raite of bother on my account. Mis' Doollttle. You know that I'm a person for whom you can Just lay down an extra plate and set before me anything you happen to have in the bouse. "If you Just fry a chicken same as you would for your own folks, an' make up a pan o your tea biscuits that no one can beat, an open a glass o' your red currant jelly, an have a dish o yonr quince preserves, an some o' the pound cake you most always have In your cake Jar, you do that, an have some piping hot apple fritters with hot maple sirup to go with 'em. an some your good coffee, an any Tegetables you happen to have in the house I like sweet potatoes the way you fix 'em mightily but -la. Just have anything else you happen to haTe, , "I'm one that expects an' is willing to eat what's set before me, an' no questions asked ner fault found when 1 go visiting. So don't you put yourself out a mite for me. If you have what I've mentioned an anything else you want to have 111 be satisfied. 1 ain't one that cares very much about what I eat anyhow. As the saying is. any old thins will & for me. Puck &u2 mm

LJ . LJl

Sunday Services At the Churches

St. Paul's Episcopal Church Holy communion 7:30 a. m: Morning pray er and sermon 10:30. Sunday school 9:15, Evening prayer and address 6:00. Holy communion Thursday and all Holy days 9:30 a. m. Evening prayer and Litany Friday 4:30 p. m. Rev. John S. Lightbourn, rector. St. Paul's Evangelical Lutheran C. Huber, pastor. Sunday school at 9 German services at 10:30. Subject, "The Promise of the Holy Spirit and His Great Work." Young People's meeting at 6:30. Subject "The Universal Duty of Making Pledges." Leader, Ralph Hasemeier. English services at 7. Subject. "The Kind Receiption Given to an Unworthy Son." Wesleyan Methodist South Tenth and C street. Love feats at 10:30 a. m. Sunday school at 2 p. m. Preach ing at 3 p. m. by Rev. G. C. Sampson, D. D., pastor at Bethel A. M. E. church at' which time the Lord's Supper will be observed. Young people's meeting at 7 p. m. Preaching by the pastor at 8 p. m. AH are made welcome. First Baptist Church H. Robert Smith, pastor. Preaching by the Rev. Hervey Wood of New York at 10:40. Subject, "The Irrepressible Conflict between the Church and the Liquor Traffic," and at 7:30 p. m., subject "In decision." Sunday school at 9:15 a. m. Juniors at 2:30 p.-m. B. Y. P. U. at 6:30 p. m. St. Andrew's Catholic Fifth and South C streets. Mass at 7:30; High Mass at 9 : 45 ; Vespers, sermonette and bonedictlon at 3 o'clock. Rev. j Frank A. Roell, rector; Rev. M. H. ' Weiland, assistant j St Mary's Catholic Masses every Sunday at 6:00, 8:00 and 9:00 o'clock a. m. and High Mass and sermons at 10:30 a. m.; Vespers and Benediction every Sunday at 3 p. m. Rev, J. F. Mattingly, rector. Rev. M. T. Shea, assistant. Whitewater Friends Church Mothers' Day will be observed by appropriate remarks and flowers. Worship and sermon 10:30. Sunday school at 9. Christian Endeavor 6:20. Evening service 7:30. All will be made welcome. West Richmond Friends At Earlham college. Bible school at 9 a. m. E. P. Trueblood, superintendent. Meeting for worship at 10:30, Elbert Russell, pastor. Prayer meeting Wednesday 7:30 p. m. Women's Aid society Tuesday 1:30 p. m. All interested are cordially invited to attend every service. " Second English Lutheran Corner of Pearl and Third street. E. Minter, pastor. Divine worship and preaching at 10:30 a. m., and at 7:30 p. m. Sunday school at 9:15 a. m. Bible study and prayer meeting Thursday evening at 7:30. A cordial welcome to you and all your friends. Third M. E. Church Corner Hunt and Charles Street. Charles C. Farmer, pastor. Sunday school 9:30. Fred Schagl, superintendent. Preaching at 10:30 and 7:30. Epworth league 6:30. The anniversary service of the league will be held at our place Sunday night May 14 commencing at 6:30, and at 7:30, sermon by the Rev. Arthur Cates of Grace M. E. church. A cordial welcome to all. First Presbyterian Church Rev. Thomas -J. Graham, pastor.' Sabbath school 9:15 a. m. Morning church service 10:30 o'clock. Vespers 5 p. m. Preaching by the pastor. - Subjects, "When Faith Must Be Unfailing," "Favorite Sons and Daughters." A cordial invitation to all backsliders strangers and visitors. Christian Science Masonic Temple. Sunday services at 10:45 a. m. Subject "Mortals and Immortals." Wednesday evening experience meeting 7:45 p. m. Public invited. Reading room No. 10 North 10th street Open to the public daily except Sunday 9 a. m. to 12 noon 1:30 to 5 p. m. First M. E. Church- Main and Four teenth street. J. F. Radcliffe, pastor. Sunday school 9:15 a. m. Preaching 10:30 a. m. The pastor will preach in the morning. No service at night because of the union Epworth league anniversary service at Third M. E. church. Mothers' Day Enterprise Bible class of Whitewater Friends Sabbath

YES! IT'S TRUE THAT TDE FJWOtlS

HOSTETTEK'S

is the best medicine and tonic you can take when the system Is rundown when the stomach is weak when the liver and bowels are Inactive when a real health maker Is needed. TRY A BOTTLE TODAY IT ALWAYS GIVES SATISFACTlSa

90 PER CENT PER ANNUM This is the dividend of the Reo Motor Company for the past five years. Common stock in most automobile manufacturing concerns . pays from 30 to 1,000 dividends. Our offering of the 7 Cumulative Preferred Stock of the CONSOLIDATED MOTOR CAR COMPANY, (Capital stock $4,000,000). of Cleveland, at par, $100.00, with a bonus of 100 ot Common, should prove equally productive of profits. The CONSOLIDATED MOTOR CAR COMPANY manufactures the Royal Tourist and the Croxton Cars, both of which are familiar to every Automobilist There are Individual, fundamental, mechanical reasons why their complete line of commercial trucks, taxicabs and pleasure cars will assure large profits to the Investor, these we will gladly furnish on request Investors will also be furnished with certified public accountant's statements semi-annually. The book value of preferred stock is 82 in excess of price asked. The Croxton Taxicabs are now being used by Walden W. Shaw Co. of Chicago and nineteen other large taxicab companies. This is the first public offering of the stock which is limited to $250,000. General illustrated prospectus, showing plants, assets, etc, upon request Address. EMEVEV A. WiTIXIISfiC. 32 Drocdway, New Ycrk.

school, corner Tenth and North G streets will observe Mothers Day at 6 the morning service on next Sabbath,

May 14th. A cordial Invitation is ex tended to everybody and a special in vitation to mothers to attend the service. . ,. Grace M. E. Church Corner 10th , and North A streets. Arthur Cates, ' pastor. Sunday school 9:15. The pastor will preach at 10:30. There will be no evening services on account of the union Epworth league meeting at the Third M. E. church. East Main Street Friends MeetingCorner Fifteenth and Main streets. Truman C. Kenworthy, pastor, Bible school at 9:10. Mothers Day will be observed during the school session with an appropriate program, and a cordial invitation is extended to all mothers and others. Meeting for worship at 10:30. Whitewater local meeting of ministry and oversight at 2: SO p. m. Christian Endeavor at 6:30. Gospel service at 7:30. Whitewater monthly meeting at 9:30 Thursday morning. Teachers meeting and conference in the evening at 7:30 You will be welcome to any of these services." Reid Memorial Preaching by the pastor 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. Sunday school 9:15 a. m. Christian Union 6:45 p. m. South Eighth Street Friends Levi T. Pennington, pastor. Bible school at 9:10, John H. Johnson, superintendent Meeting for worship at 10:30. ' Meeting on ministry and oversight at 2:30. Junior meeting at 2. Christian Endeavor at 6:45. Prayer meeting and monthly business meeting at 7:30 Thursday evening. A cordial welcome to all. United Brethren Cor. Eleventh and North B streets. H. S. James, pastor. Bible school at 9:30. Preaching 10:30 and 7:30. All are cordially invited. The First Christian Church Corner , Tenth and South A streets. Samuel W, Traum, pastor, Bible School, 9:05 a. m. Christian Endeavor, 6 : 30 p. m. Preaching by the pastor at 10:30 a. m. and 7:30 p. m. At the morning serv- . ice. the Red Men or tne city wm attend in a body. In the evening the pastor will speak on the subject of "The Three Trees ot Life." A cord-. ial invitation is extended to all who will share with us in the fellowship of these services. - Second Presbyterian Thomas C. McNary, pastor. Preaching morning and evening. Queen Esther, 10: 30. "What All the World's a Seeking." 7 : 30. Sunday school 9 : 15, Mr. C. A. Relgel, superintendent Christian Endeavor 6:45. Prayer and praise service Wednesday 7:30. Earlham Heights Presbyterian-Sunday school 2:15, Mr. O. W. Neff, superintendent Parents and children not attending elsewhere are cordially Invited to attend Sunday school. Singing school Friday evening. Free for all who wish to spend a pleasant evening singing and in a social way. Salvation Army Rhoda Tempde SIS North A street Ensign and Mrs. Deuier, omcers in cuarge ot local corps. Services Tuesday, Thursday and Saturday at 8 p. m. Sunday 7:30 p. m. Sunday School 10:30 a. m. Officers res-' idence 245 South Third Street Fifth Street M. E. Church M. L. Hafdingham, pastor. Sunday school 9:15. Morning worship 10:30. No evening service on account of the union Epworth league meeting at the Third M. E. church. Centerville M. E. Church Sunday school 9:15, Epworth league Installation service 6:30. Preaching by the pastor at 7:30. M. L. Hardlngham. , pastor. And Such le Fame. Mrs. BluehOse Your new boarder to literary. I am told. Mrs. Malaprop Yes. Indeed. Why. with his books and papers he litters his room worse than any boarder I ever had. Exchange. WARNING Bewarn of opiates in Quick Consumption; they may mean death In a hurry. BRAZILIAN BALM contains . no narcotics, minerals or poison. It kill the Brerms Instantly, and never failod ' or lost a case In 33 year. Improvement from Jt day. Has cured thousands. Also Typhoid. Pneumonia, and all contagious diseases. Drug-gists, or write Dr. B. F. Jackson. Arcade, N. Y.