Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 245, 12 July 1911 — Page 4
PA GE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PAJJLADI U2I ABD SUJf-TEIJSGRAlI WEDNESDAY JULY 12, 1011.
The Richmond Palladium as.! Son-Telegram Published and owned by the PALLADIUM PIIINTINO CO. ImvpiX 7 days Mcb wek. evealnfc-s and Sunday moi-nln. Office Corner North tth and A straets. Palladium and 8un-Tel-ram PhonesBusiness Offtoa. 266; Editorial Kooms. llll. RICHMOND. INDIANA.
Haaolpa O. Lm4i . J. r. Hlaa-h" Carl Hera hard t ... W. N. Poaadetoae . .Editor .Boitatu Midkm ,.. Associate Kdltor News Kdltor 8UDSCRI PTION TERMS. In Hlchmond 5.0 .ar yaar lu dvanca) or iOo per weeK. MAIL SUBSCRIPTION!". On a raar. In advance , 'S'sa fits months, tn advance ... On a month. In advanca . RURAL. ROUTES Ona year, ia advanca $ Blr months. In alvance Ona aionth. In advanca - , Add.-ea chanc id as often aa desired, both new and tld addressee DMtat Clver.. ... Mubaerlbere will please remit with order, which should be arlven for a specified terra; name will not beantera until 9yiw.l 1" received. Entered at Richmond. Indiana, poet fflca aa second clan mall matter. New Tork Representative -Payne & Ttr. 30-34 Weat Srd etraet. and till tVeet 2nd street. New York. N. T. Chicago Representatives Payne A Tnuna-. T47-I4I Marquette BulldlcaT. Chicago, 111. iiimn 'j It Association of American 2 an (NtW TOrtC UiriBHl .ixHaAtatBaairgaUttoa J at this publication. Only the Ugvtn ol 4 alraulatloa aosUlnad la Its raport are 1 tHIlltli ay the Associauoa. RICHMOND, INDIANA "PANIC PROOF CITY" Ilaa a population of 22,324 and la growing. It la the county aeat of Wayne County, and the trading center of a rich agricultural community. It la locatad dua east from Tndlanapolla miles and 4 mllee from tho atata Una. Richmond la a city of homes and of Induatry. Primarily a manufacturing city. It ia also tho Jobbing center of Eaitern Indiana and enjoya the retail trada of the populoua community for mllea around. Richmond la proud of Its splendid atreeta, well kept yarda, ita cement aldewalka and beautiful shade treea. It haa three national banks, ona trust company and four building associations with a combined resource of over 8,000,000. Number of factories 126: capital Invested f7.000.000, with an annual output of $27,000,000, and a pay roll of $3,700,000. The total pay roll for, the city amounts to approxlInatedly $3,600,000 annual. There are five railroad companies radiating In eight different directions from the city. Incoming freight handled dally. 1.760,000 lbs., outgoing freight handled dally. 750.000 lbs. Yard facilities, per day 1,700 cars. Number of passenger trains dally 81. Number of freight trains dally 77. The annual post office receipts amount to (80,000. Total assessed valuation of the city, $16,000,000. Richmond has two Interurban railways. Three newapapera with a combined circulation of 12,000. Richmond la the greatest hardware Jobbing center In the atata and only aecond tn general Jobbing Interests. It has a piano factory producing a high grade f ilano every 16 minutes. It is the eader In the manufacture of Traction engines, and produces more threshing machines, lawn mowers. roller skates, grain drills and burial -caskets than any other city In the world. The city's area la 3,640 acres; has a court house costing $500,000; U public schools and haa the finest and moat complete high achool in the middle west; three farocralal schoola; Earlham colege aand the Indiana Business Colleges; five splendid fire companies In fine hose houses; Glen miller park, the largest and most beautiful park In Indiana, the home ot Richmond's annual Chautauqua; seven hotels; municipal elertrte light plant, under successful operation and a private electric light plant, Insur- ! Ing competition; tho oldest pub- . llo library In the state, except ' one and the aecond largest, 40,000 , volumes; pure refreshing water, ; unsurpassed: 66 miles of improved streets; 40 miles of sewers; 25 miles of cement curb and gutter ; combined; 40 miles of cement walks, and many mllea of brick I walks. Thirty churches, includIng the Reld Memorial, built at a cost of $260,000; Reld Memorial j Hospital, one of the most modern 4 In the atate; Y. M. C. A. building, , f erected at a coat of $100,000, one "of the finest In the state. The .', amusement center of Kastern Indiana and Western Ohio. ! No city of the Hie ot Richmond holds as fine an annual art ext hlblt. The Richmond Fall Fes- ,. tlval held each October Is unique. . no other city holds a similar affair. - It Is given in the interest , of the city and financed by the business . men. Success awaiting anyone with Enterprise In the Panic Proof ? City. This Is My 31st Birthday PRINCE LOUIS OF MONACO. Prince Louis, heir to the throne of 'Monaco, was born July 12, 1870, the aon of Prince Albert, the present ruler, The mother of Prince Louis was Lady ! Mary Douglass Hamilton, to whom Prince Aibert was married in 1S6. Monaco Is a small principality with an area of only eight square miles and is surrounded entirely by French territory excepting on the side towards the Mediterranean sea. The revenues are derived wholly from the famous gambling casino of Monte Carlo. Un til a short time ago the Trince was an absolute ruler, there being no elec the popular demand live representation. Last January the popular demand forced the ruler to irrant a constitution. The people, however, are not entirely satisfied with the constitution and it is possible that Prince Louis may never become ru"ir of the ltttle principality. Yet it Is scarcely believed that popular an tagonism will go to the length of revolution, and it Is expected changes win be made In the constitution which win satisfy the people. MASONIC CALENDAR. Friday, July U King Solomon's . wuapicr i, n. a. i. oiakcu meet Ins.
A Healthy Sign
The Palladium haB from time to time called the attention of its readers to the record of Mr. Gray, congressman from the Sixth congressional district. The fact U that the American people have been cheated because of their indifference to the men in congress and their records and their readiness to be tricked by the name of party. Congressman Gray has at least twice refused to be bound by the caucus of his party. That he should have done this is no surprise to those who expect men in public life to keep their promises. For Congressman Gray had the courage and decency before going down to Washington to reiterate and classify the promises that he made in the campaign. One of these was that while be believed in the love feast that he did not believe in the party caucus. And in support of this reasoning we submit what Robert LaFolIette had to say in his interview with the representative of the Saturday Evening Post: "In your speech demanding a reopening of the Lorimer case you made the prophecy that the time is coming when the Senate will be democratized. What did you mean?" "The Senate ia at present controlled by a few bosses who represent privilege. Their scheme of control is simple and is practically the same
( on both the Republican and Democratic
Congress each party holds a secret caucus. The program of the bosses is arranged in advance and it goes through without a hitch. A boss is made chairman of the caucus and is authorized to appoint a Committee on Committees. One of the senior bosses is named as chairman of this committee and a majority of the Committee on Committees is composed of members who hope sometime to be Senate bosses. They defer largely to the chairman in making assignments to the standing committees. Each caucus ratifies the action of its Committee on Committees. "The business of the caucus is quickly finished. It Is all transacted in less than five minutes. It practically settles the fate of all legislation in the Senate for two years the full life of an entire Congress. When the committees aro announced In open Senate the bosses are found upon the com-
ft mittees that control appropriations,
commerce, roreign relations, military artairs, naval anairs, on tne juaiciaiy Committee and the Committee on Rules. And the Senate ratifies the
h action of the caucuses. "To the standine committees of
Introduced, aro referred under the rules. They amend, rewrite, pigeonhole or report or wholly suppress legislation at their pleasure. "To criticise the action of any committee or to seek to discharge a committee from further consideration of a bill is to overturn precedent and to violate 'senatorial courtesy,' which has become the inner citadel of privilege. "Mark the Inevitable result! Senators are elected to represent their states. They delegate their authority to the chairman of a caucus, and that authority is redelegated and delegated again until it works out finally in the selection of committees controlled by a few bosses who dominate all the legislation of the United States Senate. The power of these bosses is felt In every home its strong hand laid upon every business. It wipes four-fifths of the states off the map and makes mere dummies of their representatives in the Senate. "And it is a bipartisan control. Whenever there is a legislative question before the Senate which is not purely political in its nature for instance, a tariff schedule it is possible for privilege to combine its Senators of both parties. Whenever Senator Aldrich found himself in a tight place he could reach across the aisle and secure sufficient Democratic support to sustain him. A notable illustration of this was the vote to reduce the duty upon sawed lumber. The Democratic platfrom had declared for free lumber, yet eleven of the twenty-three Democrats who voted upon this question nearly one-half stepped across the aisle and voted with Mr, Aldrich against lowering the duty; whereas, if they had taken a stand with the progressive Republicans, the vote would have stood thirty-seven in favor and thirty-three against, and would have resulted in a lower duty on lumber. "Now take the vote upon the question of seating William Lorimer. Had it not been that eleven Democrats joined with the reactionary Republicans there would be no necessity to consume the time of the Senate at this session with a discussion of this case. The vote upon the resolution to declare the Lorimer seat vacant was: yeas, forty; nays, forty-six; and of the eleven Democrats who helped to make the majority, five were of the same group that aided Mr. Aldrich in defeating the effort to lower the duty upon lumber. "This bipartisan combination exists it operates in the Senate. It is more important to the people of the country that they study closely this combination at the present time than it has ever been in the past. "This bipartisan control will be broken. The United States Senate, now dominated by the bosses, who themselves are dominated by privilege, will be democratized. The states will demand equal representation , Caucus-made committees will be supplanted with committees elected by direct vote in open Senate under the Australian or some similar form of ballot. Once the citizen understands, he may be relied upon to protect and maintain his heritage of real representative government."
The Republican party has been led, and led over the precipice of defeat by the money changers and their agent Aldrich. Lafollette explains that the iniquity of the caucus.
The Palladium has been frequently attacked by the Tory press of Indiana and by the correlated force of honest, timid reactionary papers. We have been taken to task because of the honest record we have kept of the congressmen from the 6th District. If this record hurt the Republican machine or its candidates we cannot help it we would not do otherwise. We told the truth and evidently the people did not approve of the record. We wish to commend to our readers and to the papers both Democratic and Republican the actual truth printed in this editorial from the New Castle Courier: Congressman Flnly Gray, representing the Sixth Indiana district, is certainly entitled to the courage of his convictions in the stand taken by him on the question of free wool. Against the demands of the Democratic caucus and in opposition to the prayers and wishes of his Democratic confrees, eleven of them representatives in congress from Indiana, he positively declined to vote a tax on wool. On the contrary, according to a Washington correspondent, he offered in the openn house "an amendment to put wool on the free list and accompanied it with a ringing speech which for forceful argument and lucidity has not been outclassed at this session." Now what effect this dereliction of seeming political duty may have upon the future of Mr. Gray will come up for further consideration but just now it looks as if there was blood on the moon and that somebody will have a fight on his hands when it comes to selecting a successor to Mr. Gray from the Sixth congressional district.
Even our very partisan friends who would vote for a yellow dog rather than an honest Democrat will have some difficulty in explaining why the Courier of New Castle is not doing pretty good work for the Republican party when it insists that Finly Gray has shown up the rank and file of congressmen of his party. The Democratic party has for years enunciated the political faith of free wool and the Democratic party has not been conspicuous in voting for it in congress. The type of politician that will go into one district and fight a man who has kept his promise and his party's pledge and go into the other districts of the state and fight those who did the opposite thing on a different ground is recognized as a hypocrite. We have as little use for a Republican reactionary as a Democratic reactionary; as much praise for a mau who keeps his promises to his constituents, if he is a Democrat as if he were a Republican. It Is the man and his record that we are interested in. If the Tory press does not like that, we cause them vastly more concern than they cause us. The Courier will not be insulted if we say that it has been a "regular" Republican paper. We are interested to know what the Tories of the state think of its fair statement of Mr. Gray's record. We, if towns- - ... - . - -
'sides. At the beginning of every
finance, transportation, the tariff, the Senate so selected, all bills, as
men of the Courier, would be more inclined to listen to the Courier's views on Mr. Gray's shortcomings if we had read the truth given fairly about Mr. Gray's virtues. Our pleasure in seeing this extract from the Courier is great?" There are very few papers too few (both Republican and Democratic) willing to tell the absolute truth about such matters. The papers of this district have been apparently willing that their columns should be distorted rather tiian give credit for a remarkable piece of political bravery. If at the end of Mr. Gray's term of office there are things which should be put before the people against the credit side of Mr. Gray's record they will be put there more convincingly if the Republican papers of this district have not misrepresented things. People are likely to learn between now and then of the actual state of affairs. Such papers as the Courier, if they follow the example made by the Courier, will not suffer they will gain the respect of all intelligent people. And when the time does come to make a fight against the hyprocrisy of those in the Democratic party who betray their trust does anyone think the result will be doubtful if they have played square? Evidently the Courier does not think so.
Narcomania Tabaccum Written for the Palladiun As already explained, narcomania is a general term meaning, briefly, an uncontrolled and uncontrollable appetite for the internal use of hank-forming drugs, such as alcohol, tobacco, opium or any of its numerous derivatives, coffee, tea, &c,. &. It belongs to I hat numerous and rapidly increasing class of disease Insanity; Narcomania Tabaccum, is the latin term for tobacco-madness. This may seem hard to the deluded narcotian. bur often the scientific cold facts rudely strike our dearest idols. The old truism, none so blind as they who will not see, is doubly true of the tobacco-maniac; it is simply a physical impossibility to convince an insane person that there is anything wrong with them, they are all right and they are sure of it; the drunk man (an alcoholic maniac) is sure that every body is quite a little tipsy, and he has to wait for the bed to wabble his way to get in it; so also with the tobacco maniac, he thinks he is just a little bit smarter and healthier than anyone who does not. use tobacco and is absolutely sure (in his mind) that one who does not use the weed is missing all the good things of life with the joys of heaven thrown in. Poisonous Principles of Tobacco. The U. S. Dispensatory, 1877 Edition page 1417, tolls of the toxic principles of tobacco as follows: "According to the chemists, 10,000 parts of fresh tobacco leaves contain 6 parts of nicotine, 1 part of nicotianin, 267 parts of slightly bitter extractive, 174 parts of gum mixed with a little malate of lime, 27.7 parts of green resin, 26 parts of albumen, 104. S parts of a substance analogus to glutin, 51 parts of malic acid, 12 of a malate of ammonium, 4.8 parts of sulphate of potassium, 6.3 of chloride of potassium, 9.5 of posassa which was combined in the leaves with malic aci dand nitric acids, 16.6 parts of phosphate of lime, 24.2 of lime which had been combined with malic acid, 8.8 parts of silica, 496.9 of lignum, traces of starch, and 8828 parts of water." How wholesome, healthful and age prolonging must a drug be containing some sixteen cinstitutents at least half of which are virulent poisons! Tobacco Poisoning. Quain's Medical Dictionary, Tobacco Poisoning says: "The minor effects of tobacco poisoning, nausia, depression, vomiting, vertigo is well known to the incipient smoker. "Anatomical Characters After death from tobacco poisoning the organs and tissues have a tobacco-like odor, and the odor of nicotine becomes more pronounced on treating them with potassae. Turgescence of the brain has been described; but beyond the odor there is nothiig characteristic in the appearances. "Symptoms When a strong decoction of tobacco, or snuff is administered either by mouth, or by rectum, very speedy usually in about 5 minutes the patient is seized with vertigo, acute abdominal pains, nausia, and vomiting. The skin is pallid and bathed in perspiration. Stupor supervenes, with partial or general convulsions, and stertorous respiration; and death may result in fifteen or twenty minutes, preceeded by dilation and insensibility of the pupils. When the alkaloid nicotine is swallowed, insensibility supervenes almost immediately; "THIS DATE
JULY 12TH. 1712 Richard Cromwell died. Born Oct. 4. 1626. 1730 Josiah Wedgewood, famous pottery manufacturer, born. Died Jan. 3, 1795. 1776 British troops under Sir William Howe landed on Staten Island. 1779 Americans made an unsuccessful assault on the British works at Stony Point. 1S04 Alexander Hamilton, famous American statesman, died in New York city. Born in the West Indies. Jan. 11., 1757. 1S12 Sweded concluded an alliance with England. 149 Sir William Osier, noted physician and author, born in Tecumseh, Ont. 162 Confederates captured Murfreesboro, Tenn.. after a severe fight. 1870 Admiral John A. Dahlgren, inventor of the system of ordnance that bears his name, died in Washington. D. C. Born in Philadelphia, Nov. 13. 1"'9. 1910 The Fan-American congress opened at Buenos Ayres.
The Original White ??ndnr Soap
NEVER DISAPPOINTS
the pupils are widely dilated; respiration is speedily suspended, and the patient dies in 3 or 4 minutes. "Prognosis. The prognosis is in all cases unfavorable. "Fatal Dose. 30 grains of tobacco are said to have proved fatal. A drop or two of nicotine would certainly prove fatal."
Can any sound sane mind conceive that a drug containing inherent constituents that even less than one drop I has been known to kill, and two drops will certainly destroy the stoutest person in 3 or four minutes; while 30 grains of the natural drug will kill, is safe, wholesome, a luxury and the user of which will certainly live to a ripe joyful old age barring accidents? No, only those who use tobacco will affirm anything of the kind; and the narcotian is a maniac, incompetent to testify in a court of physiologic justice. A System of Practical Therapeutics, by Hobart Amory Hare. Vol. 11. Diseases of Sleep, p. p. 660-661, says "Alcohol and tobacco are the principal Intoxicants producing diseases of sleep, although similar derangements may be caused by lead, mercury, sulphide of carbon, tea, coffee, and the various drug-habits. Tobacco is not only a frequent cause of insomnia, but is one of the most influential factors in the production of disturbances peculiar to falling asleep and awakening. The insomnia of tobacco (and alcohol also) is apt to take the form of early waking, but not quite so early as the neurotic individual before described. The latter usually comes on soon after midnight, toxic insomnia about, two hours later, although there is nothing absblute about this rule. At any rate, in every case of insomnia, whatever the rype, tobacco should be thought of as a possible cause." And yet the tobacco user proclaims it a monumental luxury, conducive to sleep, good health and efficiency, a veritable elixir of life! And the nicoist is an honorable man; but but, sad to say, the narcotian is a narcomaniac and barred from the court of normal efficiency. Now let us be distinctly understood, we do not contend that every one who uses tobacco is a narcomaniac, like any other disease narcomania has its prodrome or incipient, its acute, subacute, very chronic, and incurable stages. When one can use tobacco or let it alone at will without the slightest inconvenience, then one has not yet, and may not have the disease; but when one is ill at ease when without I it, or frantic like the morphine, or co caine fiend when deprived of his tobacco, then one is a confirmed narcomaniac. In the next article we will discuss the so-called "stimulating and luxurious" as well as its effects on the higher ethical, social and spiritual brain -centers and the individual life. Note: In the last article the type made us say harmless instead of homeless weed. J. M. T. A HAPPY LIFE. The secret of a happy life does not lie in the means and opportunities of indulging our weaknesses, but it lies in knowing how to be content with what is reasonable, that time and strength may remain to us for the cultivation of our nobler nature. IN HISTORY'-
Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWLW A. NYE. Copyright, 190S. y Edwin A. Nye
THE CHALICE OF LIFE. The poet calls life a "crystal palace," which, is a tine figure. You can fill a chalice or bowl to the brim with a liquid. Then to make an overflow you drop something iuto the liquid. The overflow is as large as that which you put into the bowl. So is human life. The Lord of life has filled your earthly vessel to the brim. The chalice holds your life. If you want life "more abundautly" you must put something iuto the vessel. It must overflow. Aud what you get in overflow is measured by what you put in. For iustaiK-e-If you put love into the chalice your life w ill overflow In loveliness. If you put hatred into your cup it will over flow in hatred. If you put into it sin; you will overflow in sinfulness. In other words, you cannot get more out of your cup of mortal life than you put into it. You may get less; you cannot get mure. A harsh law? On the contrary, it is a gracious oue. It puts the powers of the universe into your humble hands. It commissions you lord of your destiny. You make what you will of yourself. You measure out to yourself your happiness or unhappiuess. You get what you give. Moreover, the figure holds in this: The chalice is crystal, transparent. You can see the process going on within the lives of others. You can see men and women putting into the cup of their lives love or hatred or envy or bitterness, and you can see the overflow In kind. And you? What are you putting in money? Then the overflow will !e merely money, nothing more. Certainly you would not expect to get an overflow of happiness. It is contrary to the law. Besides If you keep on putting in merely money you will get not only 4he overflow, but you will by and by fill up the precious chalice, and there shall be no room for aught else but money. And then Some day Death will come with his hammer and break your frail bowl of life and shatter it into fragments. And "all you can hold in your dead cold hand is what you have given away" what you have put Into the chalice. Here is the cup. What will you put In? Game for Washington Party. Give eaeli guet a nice, rosy checked apple, and lifter each one has eaten hers tell her to take four seeds from the core and place them in the palm of her band. The' host must then think of a name for each seed, but must not tell her thoughts. The person holding the seeds picks up one, saying. "This one I'll take and never forsake." She is then told the boy's name for the seed. She takes up another and says. "This is my heart's desire." With the third one she says. "This one I love with all my heurt." and the fourth and last. "And this one 1 cast in the fire." When the players learn the names that the hostess has given to their seeds the game produces lots of fun. If boys are in your party then give their apple seeds girls' names. Charac'e. I an a compound word of four syllables. My first is a domestic animal. My second is nn exclamation. 5Iy third is a number. My fourth is the appendage of animals. The whole was formerly used in pris ons to chastise the inmates. Answer. Cat o' nine tails. KRYPTOK LENSES are the neatest and best made. Let us fit you out with a pair the next time yours need changing. HANER, the Jeweler 810 MAIN STREET F. H. Edmunds, Optometrist. DON'T That NOW Is the time to protect yourself against loss by WINDSTORMS. Costs but little. DOUG AN, JENKINS & CO. Room 1, I. O. O. F. BIdg. Phone 1330. PHONE 2560 FOR MONEY You can have the arrangements made right at your home. Call us if you are in need. Any amount from $5.00 to $100 on pianos, household goods, horses, wagons, etc., without rembval. You have both the use of the money and property. Payments arranged to suit your income. Private. Reliable. as. I 11 fa S. E. Cor. 7th and Main Phone 2560
mm
ri aVTTVi 2
SUPS IN WRITING.
Curious Blundars Mad by Raportar and Correspondanta. Every once in awhile some school, teacher comes forward -with a list of ludicrous mistakes made in composition by her infant charges. The following laughable "breaks" were not made by school children, but by newspaper reporters and correspondents. Writing is their business, but they often make ridiculous mistakes in the haste of "catching an edition." In a story about a mad dog scare on Staten Island the reporter wrote. "Policeman .Jones drove the dog into ambush and killed it." The head of a prominent Wall street house, in telliug about the action of the directors of a certain company, was quoed ;s saying. "It came like a cannon bail out of a clear sky." The report of the result of a damage suit: "Cnrmint Carudnt was uwarded a verdict of $-J.t for injuries received by th jury rrom the Erie Railroad company." This from a P.rooklyn reporter: "He tried to end his life by suicide." This one might h:ive been due to an error in tyiiowritins: "The girl was affiliated wHh typhoid fever." A correspondent in a small town on Lorg Island, evidently laboring under great excitement, wire!. "Mrs. George K. Blank was the heroine of the holocaust." (She played a garden hose on a burning barn.) In further describing the blaze he s.-iid. "The flames swept into furious environment." New York World. CROCODILE TEAFfe. Old Lagends That tho Brutes Shad - Them Over Their Prey. There was an old story, to which we find constant reference in Elizabethan writers, that crocodiles wept over their prey. No doubt the legend arose because the crocodile possesses largely developed lachrymal glands, but It appears in various mousing forms. As early as the fourteenth century. In "Mandevillo's Travels," we find: 'lu that contre ben great plentee of Cok.idrilles. Thelse serpentes slen men. and thei eten hem wepynge." An odd turn is given to the tale by the narrator of one of Sir John Hawkins' voyages. Whether he was a married man or not w do not know, but he writes: "Ills nature is ever, when he would have his prey, to cry and sob like a Christian body, to provoke them to come to him. and then he snatched at them! And thereupon came this proverb, that is applied unto women when they weep. Lachrymne crocodili. the meaning whereof is that as the crocodile when he crieth goeth them about most to deceive, so doth a woman most commonly when she weepeth. In Fuller's "Worthies there Is the added information that "the crocodile's tears are never true save when be Is forced where saffron groweth." Shakespeare. Spenser and Dryden allude to this old world fancy. Looks That Way. I put my foot right down oa tbe whole business." "You V-toed It. ebT' WITH a National Cash Register in your office or store you have a positive check on Cash Sales, Charge Sales, Money Received on Account and Money Paid Out Before yea cesat year sMnejr at the cad ef tfce day, yea kaew jaat how aiack eheala ba there. Without the Information the register gives you, many unsuspected losses can cut down your profits and you not know it. Natieaals are sade ia sears thee 200 styles aad size. Prices, $20 p. Sold aa Small Maataly Paysjesti v a Liberal DUceent for Cask. Ask our agent to explain how your profits can be protected against losses. Investigation will cost you nothing. The National Cash Register Co., Dayton, O. L. F. BOCKHOFF, Agent 1411 South A St Richmond, Ind. The Clean Way to Cook "The Finest Gas Range in the World" Cook with Gas on an 'A-B NEW IDEA Gas Range
I
urn
the finest tu rmrifre in the world. It's white enaroelad dripping- pan, dirt trays and nlve handle are ao clean and sanitary that they are a pomtiTe detiajht to work with. The hieh oven with transparent mica door puts aa end to etoopine; and enables you to sea your baking aJl the tuna. See This Range ' see this wonderful ransje it's different and better than any yoa have ever seen before. Tbe cost is not as much aa yoa thick and we will pat it in on easy terma if desired. Jones Hardware Co.
