Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 36, Number 333, 7 October 1911 — Page 3

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. SATURDAY OCTOBER 7, 1911.

PAGE THREE.

(SUPREME COURT HAS 731 CASES TO HEAR Rate Hearings, Labor Cases, Political Questions Are Most Important.

(National News AnHoelatlon) ; WASHINGTON. Oct. 7. After a 'tour months' vacation the supreme court of the United States will convene Monday for the term of 1911-12. 'The docket is crowded with 731 cases, 'as compared with 696 cases a year ago at this time. No case of anything like equal importance with the Standard Oil and Tobacco diHsolution suits is on the docket, but there are a number of important and Interesting; matters that will come before the court for adjudication. The court is expected to take up first of all the numerous cases involving the activity of state railroad commissions. There are more than fifty cases of this kind to be decided. As all of them are correlated, it is probable the court will hear them as nearly together as possible. There arc thlrty-Blx rate cases fron Missouri alone, three from Minnesota, including that decided by Judge Sanborn, whlhc agitated the governors' conference at Spring Lake recently, and several froni Oklahoma and Kentucky. The opinions or the supreme tribunal in these cases probably will fix definitely the constitutional limits of state railroad commissions and circumthe powers they may exercise in the way of fixing rates of common carriers in Intra-state traffic. Several important cases have come over from the Interstate Commerce commission. The Government questions the right of railroads to make concessions to elevators, holding that it is rebating. The St. Louis Terminal company, owning two brldgeB over the Mississippi river is being brought to the bar on the question of its being a monopoly In restraint of trade. Another issue that will be fought out early In the term Is whether the stockyards in the large cities are common carriers within the meaning of the interstate commerce laws. A case against the Baltimore and Ohio Southwestern road is expected to lead to a 1 decision as to whether a railroad may transport sheep through a state into 'another state when the state through which the sheep pass is under quarantine. The battle for the initiative and referendum, the foundation stone of the Oregon primary system, will be fought before the court early in November. In view of the fact that numerous states already have followed the example of Oregon in adopting the initiative and referendum and others are preparing to do so, the decision in this case will have far-reaching consequences. The matter comes to the supreme court as an appeal in a suit brought by the Pacific States Telephone and Telegraph company against the state of Oregon to test the constitutionality of the initiative and referendum law. Among the most important caseB on the docket are several that were held over from last term. Included in the list are the cases involving the validity of the indictment of Charles P. Munday and others, growing out of the so-called Stacey coal-land claims in Alaska, and the indictment of Jas. A. Patten ond others on charges of violating the Sherman anti-trust law .in "cornering" the cotton market. The review of the trial of. Frederick A. Hyde and others on charges of land frauds on the Pacific coast will constitute still another important case. The court also will hear arguments in the Oklahoma land fraud cases, which are four in number and are ty- . pica! of 301 suits brought by the Government to invalidate 50,000 or more conveyances by Indians, of titles to real estate, which the Government claims were fraudulent conveyances. Labor has one Important case from Louisiana in which an employer is being prosecuted for permitting a laborer to work more than eight hours in one day. Also of importance to the labor world is the case brought to test the constitutionality of the federal employers' liability act of 1908. The court has been asked to interpret a treaty between the United States and Italy. The case in question involves the right of the Italian consul to take charge of the estate of an Italian subject dying in this country California contrary to local laws. Not the least of the problems before the supreme court is the necessity of A WEAK WOMAN ANDHER STORY Ja Roral, Ark., Lives a Lady Who Feels That Her Strength Was Restored by Cardui. Floral. Ark. "I must speak a good word lor Cardui." writes Airs. Viola Baker, of this place. "About a month ago I was in very bad health. 1 was so weak and nervous that 1 was not able to do my housework. "My husband bought me one bottle of Cardui, the woman's tonic. I took it according to directions and now 1 am in good health. "I think Cardui is a Tine tonic for weak omen." And you are not the only lady who thinks so, Mrs. Baker. Thousands, like you, have written to tell of the wonderful benefit Cardui has been to them. Cardui contains no minerals, or other powerful drugs. It contains no glycerin or other mawkish-tasting ingredients. It is Just a pure, natural extract, of natural vegetable herbs, that have been found to regulate the womanly functions and strengthen the female system. All druggists sell Cardui. See yours about it H. BL-WWH to: Adttioff OesJ, Ctartta n dock, noaw i rraiUMU.

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Scene from "When a Woman Wills" At the Gennctt, Monday, Oct. 10 relieving the congestion which threatens to clok the administration of justice if measures are not taken by Congress for its relief. As before stated, there are now more than 70 (leases on the docket, with the probability that fully 300 additional cases will be filed before the end of the term. The average number of cases that can be decided by the court in a year is about 400, and this is somewhat high. It is apparent, therefore, that the court is two years behind in its work, and will inevitably fall back still further if its labors are not lightened. That Old Sweetheart of Yours. How many men at middle age recognize in their careworn, overworked wives the beautiful girls whom they won in their youth? Overwork produces premature age and should be avoided by using Hewitt's Easy Task Soap for kitchen ami laundry work. It's the originai white laundry soap and has boen giving satisfaction for a quarter of a century. Costs five cents a cake, and you need its help. Amusements Murray. The show at the Murray this week surpasses antyhing that has been here before this season. There is singjing and dancing in plenty, a musical and a novelty act making it a well balanced bill. San Harris, the monologist opens the show with his songs and stories. Now eve ry one in town knows Sam, he having been here so many times before, both in minstrels and in vaudeville, so it is useless to dwell upon his success suffice it to say he is still making a hit. Fred nd Mae Waddell, a couple of club swinging and juggling comedians are acknowledged by all to be the best in the business. Their comedy is good and clean cut, Miss Waddell making the biggest success of the "Foolish Liz" character of any one now playing the part. ! Ingalls, Duffield and Ingalls, two young men and a girl, display some J wonderful dancing which has been 1 well received. This is one of the neat-1 est dancing acts that has played the i Murray in some time. j The Wendt Musical Quintette, the ! five young ladies who are the head- j r unci a una iiae maue a P11...... . I. : i . i i i . . A . . .i : 1 1 . , t j m i. -. i . i m,twm. m. iney nia; w nn mucn it-eiing nu u:piy mucn musical tai-; ent. Without a doubt tneSO JOUng ladies have put forth the most pleas ing act of the kind here this season For next week the Seven Samois j .rais. in a series ot acroDatic stunts will hold the boards. CELEBRATE UNVEILING OF PEACE TABLET (National News Association) ATLANTA, Ga., Oct. 7. Four governors and a number of mayors, in addition to many of the most famous military organizations in the United States, will be in Atlanta the first three days of the coming week for the celebration in connection with the unveiling of the Old Guard monument at Piedmont Park. The monument is to commemorate the "mission of peace" on which the Gate City Guards of this city made a tour of the North soon after the close of the civil war. CLOTHES AND I HE MAN. Good Appearance Waits Upon the Wi Garment Are Worn. "You can talk all you please abou clothes making a man." aald a Walnu; street tailor, "but I want to say rlgh: now that the smartest clothes in tot world can't make a man 'natty' it h Is not naturally so. There is an old stoop shouldered doctor uptown tha I have been tailoring for seven years He buys four and sometimes five suit: a year, and yet, except for a few day: after he has broken In each new suit he never looks nice. Tbe trousers bat at the knees, the coat falls away ii front, and the shoulders begin to look sloppy. The man's drooping figur and the poor care he takes of hi clothes furnish, of course, the explana tlon. "Did you ever notice the average college man's clothes? Almost In variably he looks neat and correc despite the easy swing with which bi walks. But you'll notice that he car ries his bead high, his shoulders fairh erect, and his trousers never 'break at the shoes, so that tbe crease is al ways preserved. All classes of mer go to college rich and poor. Few col lege men take more than fair care oi their clothes. It's all tbe way they wear their clothes. I think. Notice the young lawyers and doctors around town too. Few of them can afford the very best in tailor made clothes. That they usually look nice is due to the fact that they have picked up tbe distinguished way to wear clothes, 1 might call It, Clothes make the man. but only when the man Is wlillaa to neip.-- -iuiaaeipia uecora.

Troubles and Gossip are Going The Rounds Amongst Royalty

(National News Association) PARIS, Oct. 7 How will the Parisienne be dressed this winter? That is the question which at the present moment transcends all others in thousands of boudoirs, not nly in Paris, but in London, New York and Melbourne, in .fact in every civilized capital the world over. "Les nouvelles modes feminines" must shortly make their appearance, and as soon as the elegant Parisinenne has by her preference dictated to the rest of the world what is the correct thing to wear, the women of England and America, of Vienna and St. Petersburg will docilely accept her ukase. Is it to be crinoline? The new mode must differ from what has gone before or it would not be adopted. Either it j will be something entirely new, or it will be a modification of something that has already found favor in the eyes of those who set the fashion. But there are crinolines and crinolines, and those who claim to be in the "know" say that it isn't the oldfashioned hoops of fifty years ago that are coming in again, not the veritable crinoline, but a dear little innocent "cercolette," excessively supple and al-i together charming and with no more ! resemblance to a crinoline than there exists between a rose and a cabbage. A lady who has seen one of these "cerclette" dresses tells me that the bottom of the skirt is trimmed with fringe, and that it looks for all the world like a lampshade. It is certain that we shall see some of these models in Paris before long, even if they are only worn by those who love novelty and originality, but from that to a revival of the time-honored crinoline, there is just as big a gulf as that separating the motor car and the stage coach. Queen's Charming Charity. The Queen of Italy, who is a remarkably original woman, recently instituted a charming charity, which has added greatly to her popularity. Fifty of the most poverty-stricken motherless babies in Italy have been collected and brought to a white house overlooking the sea, wnich her Majesty has purchased at her own expense, and here they are to live and be educated under the immediate suprvision of their benefactress until thy are competent to look after themselves. The Queen visits her creche at frequent intervals and accompanied by her children, plays with the small inmates who call her "mother" and are all known as the "Queen's children." Alfonse is Fickle. A story about King Alfonso is going the rounds in Madrid that goes to prove that gay young monarch to be as fickle as he is gallant. And the story is all the better because the gallant is snubbed by the fair. As I h.v told before the King has been very attentive to a leading comic-opera star and singer. But it would appear that Alfonso is as inconsistent as was his father for the young King's fancy lightly turned to a beautiful musichall artist, a tremendous favorite with her audiences. The King invited the fascinating variety artist to supper, and enclosed in his missive two 1000 peseta notes. But the haughty music-hall star replied that, while she was highly honored by the King's attention, she is ; nnt in thp hahit of niavine "second fid die" to anyone the comic opera lady be,ng the ..firgt nddle of COUrse. So ghe decHned His Majesty's invitation. ! .v,i.,i trratofiillv fnr tho nntM and told him she would give the money to a charitable institution. .uuuna .....u,, , snrifrs of nnhilitv took to lnnahpon al the capital's most exclusive and fashionable club. No lovely woman could have been more demure than ! she was at the luncheon. But a memI Kiof u-hnco wife miH ri'ane'htr U'prA lunching with him complained of the lady's presence, and her hosts were expelled from the club after a lot of bother that nearly put an end to the existence of the organization. New Reigning Beauty. Now that Mile. Lantelme is dead, Paris is torn by the question of electinp n now nMninir hpaiitv. The nosij tion of reigning Deauty of Paris is a i tom th. Parian verv enviable one trom tne ransian actress 's point of view, but also a torrihlv unfortain honor ! hoatv ohtai anv- Bal. ary she asks from the theatrical man - apers. She enjoys the admiration of the richest and most brilliant financiers, authors, artists, noblemen and boulevarders of Paris. Famous photographers pay her princely sums for the privilege of taking her photograph. The greatest Parisian dressmakers beg her for the honor of making the most beautiful dresses thy can design for her and for a time the world and all its treasures seem to lie at the feet of the reigning beauty. Then because

of a little w rinkle in the face, tne ap- j w Miller, C. E. Xieland, Leslie Parkpearance of a new beauty, or some j er Emerson Rogers. Will Samms, Geo. mere caprice of fashion, her glories , c Schreeman, Karl Sehi, Ed. Smith,

vanish as dm tnose oi cinaeraua on the stroke of midnight. Among the most conspicuous candidates for the vacant throne of beautv are Miles. Regina Badet, Meyan, Monna Delza and Greuze. Regina Badet is said to be the most perfect living embodiment of the Greek type of beauty. Paris is thoroughly familiar with every line of her figure and she has a large and warmly enthusiastic following. But The kind that shjnes so quickly.

perhaps Mile. Badet's outlines are too classical, and she lacks the piquancy that appeals so strongly to the Parisian. If this is so, the beauty of Mile. Meyan is of a type that should win a vast number of admirers. She ts deliciously pert. Another interesting type of beauty is represented by Monna Delza. She is the acme of daintiness and luxuriousness. To admire her is enormously expensiv. She is proud to say that she has never put her feet on the pavements of Paris that is not since she became a public character. Before that she was a washer-woman's daughter. Norma Delza always rides in a carriage or motor car. The furnishings of her that are in harmony with

her exquisite taste, and its bibelots and other ronaments are noted for their rarity and costliness. Equally dainty is Mile. Greuze. She reincarnates the type of French beauty most admired in the eighteents century. She impersonates to perfection the women painted by her famous namesake, the artist Greuze, creater of "The Brokne Pitcher" and other exquisite masterpieces. The French worshippers of beauty will not elect a Queen w ho has merely perfect outlines of face and figure. She must have some strange or touching some abnormal quality. About Lantelme's beauty there hovered a sadness of expression that drew universal homage. The new Queen of Beauty must have a new quality. For instance, Folliere, odd as it may seem, despite her touches of grotesque ugliness may conceivably be made the Queen of Beauty of Paris. It was a French philosopher who said that true ugliness is the only perfect beauty. There are moods expressions, and poses of Folaire in which all her bizarre points bend into one compelling form, which Parisians, with their sophisticated sense of beauty, find transendentally charming. The French have created a paradox one must be truly ugly in Paris to be beautiful. But although the gay city cannot make each of them the Queen of Beauty, they will always have many subjects for does not all the world go to Paris to do homage to its women? An interesting story of Queen Wilhelmina is going the rounds. The Queen is very fond of walking in out-of-way places round her capital, and during a recent promenade she encountered a little girl in whom she subsequently interested herself. The child conceived the idea of showing her gratitiude in a tangible fashion. Kho thmiuhl thn Onoon wnulri h ! pleaged tQ rcjeive & mtle pregent from her, and after considerable meditation sent to the palace a pair of gloves. Queen Wilhelmina was much touchi ed, and promptly returned the comj pliment by sending another pair of 1 gloves to her young friend. By way ! of adding interest to the present Her j Majesty filled the right one with bonbons and placed pieces of money in the left. Accompanying her present ! was a letter in which the Queen asked j the little girl to inform her which i glove gave her the most pleasure, j The simple reply came as a suri prise to Her Majesty, your beautiful present has only caused me trouble," ' 1 rannnt tell vnn wtliotl of tho jtIavoq , . .. . . , i my father took the left glove and my oldest sister the right one." That same evening Queen Wilhelmina sent another pair of gloves, sim- ! iiarly filled, to her young protegee. ,Her Majesty took care that the pres. ent was delivered by a court function i ary, who saw to it that the gloves were not siezed by others. LETTER LIST The following letters remain unclaimed at the local postoffice and will be sent to the Dead Letter Office, if not called for within two weeks. Ladies' List Zellie Bailey, Mrsj R. E. Benson, Mrs. H. L. Born, Mrs. Margaret Cox, Miss Lulu Fay, Lucy Garrett, Mis. Alma Gray, Miss Lottie Guyett. Miss Iva Higbee, Mrs. Anie Jackson, Miss Mary Kelley (2), Mrs. C. 1. Kline, Miss Laura Reed. Firms Beckman Bros., Freeman j Bros., A. Hanawalt & Son (2), The j Colorcraft Co., The Henderson Motor j Sales Co. Gentlemen's List Armit Arson, J Maynard Bias, J. W. Black, Henry Brown, Leslie Brown, David Charles, ! Frank Claborn, John H. Crawley, Roy Eubank, James M. Frazier, Walter Godsey (2), Richard Grant (2), Perry J. Green. Mr. Hale, Ora Hartman, Hewey Hoffman, George Huber, Wal ter Hufnagle, Fred Hunt, Edgar . jeanes Forrest Jones, J. C. Marshall, P. W. Wilson, Charles Wright. E. M. Haas, P. M. PH1CHESTER S PILLS J jn TUB UKOS BRAND. X J UUMI JkMX j Taka a atker. Iir tfrar . Si mill Ask fn Cin-cnf'.a-TfcK S LAM HBAN PILLS, fee S lantww sBest.Safct.AlWT Rdiabia S0!B PY DRUGGETS EYEIMKlKf w III 1

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AUSTIN DISASTER HOW BEING PROBED District Attorney Nelson Conducts Investigation Town to Be Rebuilt.

National News Association) AUSTIN, Pa., Oct. 7 District Attorney Nelson today began the taking of testimony, in his official investigation of the Bayless dam catastrophe which virtually wiped Austin off the may last Saturday with heavy loss of life. The district attorney will act in the capacity of county attorney. The district attorney has opened headquarters in the Austin school house, one of the buildings which escaped demolition and will conduct his inquiry from there. A man who made a mysterious flying visit into Austin from Coudersport and who said his name was Thomas Keenan and that he represented the Bayless family, declared that Austin would be rebuilt by the Bayless Pulp & Paper Co. County Surveyor Maurice Smith, of Potter county, has been summoned to testify at the inquest. He made a significant statement saying: "Whereas the average dam is built to withstand a pressure of 500 pounds to the cubic foot, the Bayless dam, according to the plans, was constructed to withstand 850. THE PLANET VENUS. Night Eternal Reigns Over One-half of Her Globe. To have the same hemisphere exposed everlastingly to sunlight while the other is in perpetuity, turned away must cause a state of things of which we can form but faint conception from what we know ou earth. Baked for aeons without letup and still baking, the sunward face must if unshielded be a Tophet surpassing our powers adequately to portray. And unshielded it must be. as we shall presently see. Reversely the other must be a hyper borean expanse to which our iolar regions are temperate abodes, for upon one whole hemisphere of Venus the sun never shines, never so much as peeps above the star studded horizon. Night eternal reigns over half of her globe. The thought would appall the most intrepid of our arctic explorer!? and prevent at least everybody from going to the pole, or, rather, what herir replaces it, "through the dartcontinent." It exemplifles the even tual effects of a force in astronomical mechanics the importance of which is only beginning to be appreciated, tid:il friction. It has brought Venus as a world to the deathly pass we have contemplated together. Starting merely as a brake upon her rotation, it has ended by destroying all those physical conditions which enable our own world to be w hat it is. Night aud day, summer and winter, heat and cold, are vital vicissitudes unknown now upon our sister orb. Ther nothing changes while the centuries pass. An eternity of deadly deathlessness is Venus' statuesque lot. Dr. Tercival Lowell in Fopular Science. OLE BULL j Not a Classical Player, but He Bev;itched His Hearers. The truth is that Ole Bull was not a classical player. As I remember hira, he could not play in strict tempo. Like Chopin, he indulged in the rubato and abused the porta mento. But he knew his public. America, particularly in the regions visited, was not in the mood for sonatas or concertos. "Oh! Dan Tucker" ar.d tbe ' Arkansaw Traveler" were the mode. Bull played them both, played Jigs and oid tunes, roused the echoes with the "Star Spangled Banner" and Irish melodies. He played such things beautifully, and it would have been musical snobbery to say that you didn't like them. You couldn't help yourself. The grand old fellow bewitched you. He was a handsome Merlin, with a touch of the charlatan and a touch of Liszt in his tall, willowy figure, small waist and heavy head of hair. Such white hair! It tumbled In massen about his kindly face like one of hir nallve Norwegian eataract3. He was the most picturesque old man I evei saw except Walt Whitman, at thai time a steady attendant of the Car Gaertner string qwirtct concerts iL Philadelphia. (And what Walt didn'' know about music he made up in fate love for stray dogs. He was seldom without canine company.) James Hu neker in Everybody's Maenzine. A H0TRE DANE LADY'S APPEAL To all knowing' sufferers of rheumatism, whether muscular or of the joints, sciatic, lumbagos. backache, pains In the kidneys or neuralgia pains, to write to her for a home treatment which has repeatedly cured aU of these tortures. She feels it her duty to send it to all sufferers FREE. You cupre yourself at home as thousands 'will testify no change of climate being' necessary. Tnis simple rfiscovery banishes urio acid from the blood. looaens tbe stiffened Joints, pur ifles the blood, and brightens the eyes. grtag elasticity and tone to the wbc le nys-tem. 1 f the above interests you. for proof address Mrs. If. Summers. Box & Notre Dam. Iod POST CARD COUPON Clip this coupon and bring it to one ot the Quigley Drug Stores, with 10 cents and receive one set of 25 colored view Post Cards of Richmond. By mail 3c extra for postage. WANTED YOUR MACHINE AND REPAIR WORK BALLINGER eV GIBBS MACHINISTS O REAR 220 LINCOLN STREET Phone 3040 or 3158 a Use Queen Ready Mixed PAINT, $1.75 per Gal. Old Reliable Paint Co. a H. C SHAW, Mgr. a a 10 al 12 S. 7th. Phone 2230

CARELESSNESS A CAUSE OF FIRES

Indiana is going to be one of tbe five states to spend Monday, October 9, learning how to be more careful by having every city and town observe "Fire Prevention Day." It has been estimated that most of the great property loss and death rate by fire is

caused by carelessness or negligence, I local delegate. The meeting was a and it is to fight these two things tnat imcst enthusiastic one. It was preseveral states will observe the forti- j dieted that 100,000.000 Red Cross seals

eth anniversary of the Chicago fire by studying how to prevent fire or cleaning up rubbish. In five big fires since 1903, 1,115 people have lost their lives and millions of dollars worth of property has been destroyed. The Iroquois theater fire in Chicago caused 583 deaths, the

Boyertown. Pa. town hall. 200; thejthe paPt to anv real returns for

Collinwobd, O., primary school. 160; the Newark, N. J., tenant building, 2S and the New York City shirtwaist factory fire, 145. All these disasters are said to have been caused by care-1 lessness, the one in New Jersey by the j careless use of gasoline and the one in New York by the throwing of a lighted cigarette or match in some cotton clippings. j Although this state has not had a i loss of life as great as some others, j the property waste has been over 5,-! 000,000 a year, and it is against that that the "Fire Prevention Day" will j fight. Illinois. Ohio, Montana Nebraska, Minnesota, Missouri and Indiana will officially observe next Monday in nearly every city and town in the state. In several of these states the superintendents of public instruction has placed courses of study in the schools and the pupils are instructed in means of preventing fires and of escaping from a room where fire occurs. Following the suggestion of the Indianapolis Trade Association Superintendent Charles A. Greathouse sent leaflets to the city and town authorities, which were forwarded to the school teachers. These contain facts about the fire loss and instructions to be careful about the. fire loss and instructions to be careful when using matches, especially about gasoline. Resolutions are also appended which the pupils are to be asked to adopt. These provide for the use of safety matches, for the prevention of the ac cumulation of rubbish and for some quick plan of action in case of fire. Besides the instruction which will be given in the schools, public meetings will be held and experts secured to address the citizens on fire preven tion. In Indianapolis, Franklin H. Wentworth is secretary of the National Fire Prevention Assocation and is the author of several books on the subject of "Fire." Mr. Wentworth says that a large per cent, of fires are caused by carelessness on the part of individuals or negligence on the part of business and municipal officers. Other authorities have estimated that of the 10,000 matches used every second in the United States a large per cent, are thrown away carelessly and one-third cause firse. EZ-UM Will Make Yon- Tired Feet Cosaforta&e Tender, sore and aching; feet are instantly relieved by this perfect ' foot-comfort." Ez-Un is not like other foot preparations you have tried. It does not clog the pores like foot powders and astringent solutions. A SGBfTIFlC CUKE Es-TTm sets scientifically. It cleanses and strengthens the pores of the feet. For this reason EzTJoa cores calloused, sweaty and offensive smelling feat and prevents eraeklng of tbe skin between tbe toes. This soothing ointment brings the skin hack to Its natural condition after Use hard day's work, heated pavements, tight or heavy shoes. TRY IT FREE The generously fall sized )ar of Ks-TJin costs only S6o at your drngglat, but In order to convince yourself that Ei-Um does the work, ask any draggtat for a free sample, enough tor one treatment. Ez-ITm is one of tbe famous preparations of Dr. J. B. Lynns A Bon of Trogartsnoct, Ind. Dr. Lynns' VegetaaleOomnoand has been the standard reUof for soffertna woown lur vtw as years. Dr.Lraaa A Seal be GENNETT THEATER Monday. Oct. 9 THE CARLOS INSKEEP ATTRACTIONS Offers the Western Rural Comedy. "When a Woman Wills" A Complete Scenic Production A Play Without a Villain. Prices 10, 20, 30, 50c. Seats on sale at Murray Theater.

FODS-SZ3.LE 8 room, modern house with bath, electric lights, a fine barn, extra large lot, just the place for you if you have an automobile or horse. Possession by Oct. 20. Investigate at once. Will consider vacant lot in trade. PHONE 3247 OR 3234 Or Address E. G. KEttPGR . . 4 301 ty.-Cfain Ot"

PLAN CAMPAIGN IN WHITE PRAGUE WAR The Indiana state" society for the study and prevention of tuberculosis held an unusually important meeting at Indianapolis yesterday, for the establishment of a headquarters for the work in this state. Seven of the eight county organizations in the state, of which Wayne county was the first organized, were represented at the meetinc. Dr. S. Edgar Bond being the

wiil be sold in the United States this Christmas. The Wayne county society, which is the leading organization in this part of the state, will meet next Friday evening to plan for the management of the campaign in this district. It has been hard for the people here n the money they invest in the seals, as the money is all sent to Indianapolis, and a lot of red tape gone through with before the funds are distributed. Under the plan adopted this year, howover, 75 per cent, of the receipts from tbe sale in ths county, will be turned over directly to the local organization to be used at their discretion, and only 25 per cent. wilUbe applied to the general fund. Thts means that Wayne county gets the immediate benefit of the sale, and far this reason, the 'society hopes to. have a record sale of seals this year. A Russian aeronaut is operating his aeroplane on the basis of a taximeter and is doing such a hurtnesa that he will extend it by getting, more machines to take passengers onsshort funs. When the Stomach, Liver and Bowels have "gone 'back" on you there is nothing will do you so . much good as a abort course of) eosTCrrars STOMACH BITTERS For 53 YEARS it has been helping sickly folks back to health. Try it today. RAIGHEA Superior Electric Fixtures Direct From master to yo Craighecd 919 Main St. Planblng fA Electric Vila C. H. HADLEY Meat Market Phone 2531 123 Utb MURRAY'S Week of October 2nd WENDT MUSICAL . QUINTETTE Matinee, 10c Evenings, 10-25C BEER Agency Office at 304 N. D St. Bottled Beer Served All Orders Given Prompt Attention A. N. COLLET Mgr.

Good For You

It Does the Work I . 1

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