Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 72, 29 January 1912 — Page 3
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND 8UX-TELEGK AM, MONDAY JANUARY 29, 1912.
PAGE TRUER.
INDUSTRIAL PEACE tllEUEJFPROGRUM National Civic Federation Holds Important Convention in March.
BY RODERICK CLIFFORD. WASHINGTON, Jan. 29. Industrial Peace and Progress Is toe theme for the program of the National Civic Fed ration, which will hold ita twelfth annual conrentlon in thla city in March. So far the following governors of the various states in the Union have accepted invitations to send delegations to this meeting: Robert P. Bass, of New Hampshire; Vf. Hodges Mann, of Virginia; Abram J. Potbelr, of Rhode Island; Chester H. Aldrich, of Nebraska; Albert W. Gilchrist, of Florida; W. W. Kitchin, of North Carolina; Emmet O'Neal, of Alabama; John A. Mead, of Vermont; Lee Cruse, of Oklahoma; Chase S. O. Osborn, of Michigan; Joseph M. Carey, of Wyoming; Eugene N. Foss, of Mas sachusetts, John Burke, of North Dakota; John A. Dlz, of New York; Judson Harmon, of Ohio; Charles S. Deneen, of Illinois; and O. B. Colquitt, of Texas. Gibbons to Preside. The meeting will be ld in the PanAmerican Union building here. Cardinal Gibbons, of Baltimore, will preside on the first day of the session. The opening address will be made by President Taft. The relation of employer to employe will be considered from the standpoint of the private employer to his employes, the public utility company to its employes and the governmentFederal, State or Municipal to Its employes. A general discussion of the practical operation of the trade agreements between the railway systems of the country and the brotherhoods of engineers, firemen, conductors, trainmen and other employes ; the successful operation of the three-year contract between the National Association of Newspaper Publishers and the international organisation of printers, pressmen and stereotypers, as well as the contracts In many other trades, coal mining, and brewing will be indulged In by all the delegates. The contract between the publishers and their employes Is one of the most remarkable in this country, amounting to practical voluntary arbitration. The contract provides against all strikes, but it also provides for a local arbitration committee and to this committee must be submitted all grievances that may arise. If either side is displeased with the award of this local committee, an appeal may be made to the national board which consists of Charles H. Taylor, Jr., George C. Hill, H. M. Kellogg, James M. Lynch, Hugo Miller and J. W. Hayes. A Potential Feature. The feature most potential, however, in the interest of peace is that, should the men in any.pmce violate the agreement and 'strike, their places will be ailed by the union and not by the employers. Thus they are protected from being obliged to enact the role of strike breakers with all Its unpleasantness, and the very fact that every member knows that If he violates his contract and strikes his place will be filled by a union man, makes him think long and hard before he throws down his tools. While the printers have such restraints put upon them, the publishers also are restrained torn violations of the contract or attempts to Interpret It unfairly. Every dispute must be referred to the national body, and as it provides for an odd number of the board, there la bound to be a decision. The need for careful consideration of the relation of public employes, federal, state and municipal, to their employers Is emphasised by the tremendous upheavals which have occurred tn Europe. This subject will be discussed under the head of "How can public employes secure redress of just grievances without resorting to strlkesr The government controversy on this subject with employes is becoming acute. Following the defeat of Con- , gressman Loud by the Letter Carrier's Association, because of his refusal to approve certain new legislation which they demanded, an executive order was leaned by President Roosevelt, which has since been reissued by President Taft. The order forbida all officers and employes of the United States Individually or through association!, to solicit an Increase In pay or penalty of dismissal from the governSHE IS DELIGHTED For Nina Years Stomach Trouble la Gone. Everybody knows that the best fed people stand the best chance in the world If they are careful to keep their stomachs In good trim. Wo say positively that there is notklng that will do you so much good when you have stomach trouble and are ran down, worn out and 'weak, as , VlnoL our delicious cod liver and iron preparation without oiL Letha Chewning Lucknow, S. C, says "Indigestion, loss of appetite and general weakness have been troubling tm lor nine jvmrm. v uru i vrgau taking Vlnol a few weeks ago I noticed an Improvement In a very short time and now I feel much strouger than I have In years. Vlnol has built me up, improved my appetite and digestion, and 1 am delighted with Its splendid results." You can have your money back if Vlnol does not do all we promise you. and certainly thia Is a generous offer. Let Vlnol make you strong. Leo H. rihe, Druggist, Richmond, Ind. HOW TO SAVE YOUR HAIR Keep your scalp and hair clean and free from dandruff with Mrs. Mason's Old English Shampoo Cream. The hair treatment recommended by the Duchess of Marlborough, M me, Melba and many others. SSe a tube. Lao '.XL !&' and other Instate, v
dp The Kidneys
Richmond Readers Are Learning the Way. - It's the little kidney ills The lame, weak or aching back The unnoticed urinary disorders That lead to dropsy and Bright's disease. When the kidneys are sick, Help them with Doan's Kidney Pills. A remedy especially for sick kidneys. Doan's have been curing kidney troubles for 75 years. Endorsed by 50,000 people endorsed by citizens of this locality. Mrs. Jennie Dairy, Maple street, Cambridge City, Ind., says: "We had occasion to use Doan's Kidney Pills in our family in 1907 for a serious case of kidney complaint This remedy brought great benefit. We are pleased to recommend Doan's Kidney Pills." For ale by all dealers. Price 50 cents. Fofcter-Milburn Co., Buffalo. New York, sole agents for the United States. Remember 'the name Down's and take no other. ment service. This order, the employes, claim, was a denial of tbeir rights to petition and they are now supporting a bill in Congress which would give them the right to petition Congress on any matter. Similar questions have been raised (In several states where the school teachers, firemen and policemen hare organized campaigns to obtain an increase in salary. Balm for Injuries. Compensation for injuries sustained during employment by public employes and industrial wage earners will receive further impetus as the federation will devote a part of the program to its consideration. Pensions for Federal States and municipal employes as well as retirement plans for wage earners in private enterprise will also be urged. To become incapacitated after years of loyal service, with no means of support, is the dread of every thinking wage worker whether in private industry or in public service. The main question involved in all pension plans is the problem "Shall employes contribute to retirement funds? From the public standpoint it Is of serious moment that the work of the government should not be hampered by retaining In the service employes incapacitated by age. Until a proper pension plan is worked out, public machinery will be clogged, as no official has the heart to throw out of office those who have devoted their lives to the service of the government. The common surfman in the lifesaving service who has an enforced va cation of two months in the year without pay and makes only $65 a month presents one of the many types in the employ of the government, appealing for consideration. To urge legislation on pensions for public employes, fair to the state and to the employe, Is one of the objects of the National Civic Federation. BOGUS ANCESTORS. A Paying Business In England That Thrives Upon Snobbery. The most tragic form of snobbery in a country place Is that which concerns itself with the tracing of a pedigree In my travels I came upon a man who confessed that he bad made thousands of pounds out of the conceit and snob bishness of people living in countr. places, and especially people who nap pened to possess names of a hlgl sounding character. His method o work was simple, and only the ultr; snob could be taken In by It. He would glance through a local di rectory and select a few names of tin Fitz-Blank style. A short visit to tin town would help him to determine th character of the person a snob is ear Uy distinguished, and he would retur: to his place and write that he ha come Into the possession of a portrai which he had every reason to bellevi was that of au ancestor of Mr. Fitz Blank. There would be a few quaint hiero glypulcs on the back of the canvashowing thst the original was a nativf of the town In which Mr. Fits-Slant was resldiug. In nine cases out of te: that picture sold at a price -whicl meant a profit of 100 per cent to th dealer after he hnd paid the little Itnl lan artist, who turned out the pictures by the doxen. In many a country house today there is a fine old full length portrait of an ancestor which was painted in a murky studio somewhere down Whltechanel way. Margaret Ballantyne in London Saturday Journal. High Quality Tea. A verdict in favor of high quality tea as a harmless drink is given by the London Lancet, it is pointed out that when caffeine and tannin are in a-etatc of combination the harmful astrln gent qualities of the tannin disappeai and the bitter taste of free caffeine l not perceptible. Teas of high qualitj yield, as a rule, a simple infusion of caffeine tannate, not of caffeine or of tannin, and such teas must be regard ed as the most desirable from a phys iologlcal point of view. Excessive In fusion. It Is stated, will spoil a gooc" tea. but even a short infusion of i bad tea may be as objectionable as ai excessive infusion of good ten. .O. physiological grounds, therefore, thconsumer of high quality teas muless risk of digestive disturbances pro lded the tea Is made properly. Anoient Guidebooks. Guidebooks for the use of pilgrims tt Borne, known to exist In a rudimentary form since the time of Charlemagne, took a definite and characteristic shapf In the twelfth century with the "Descriptlo Plenarta Totios TJrbls" and with the "Graphta Aura" of the thirteenth. The institution of the Jubilees In the year 1900. calling to Rome hundreds of thousands of wayfarers, opened a new market for descriptive literature on the Holy City, and new editions "De MIrabilibus were, produced at least four times each cen-
Back Yard Gardens The High Cost
BY ISAAC L. TOTTEN. Last summer when the Palladium took up the subject of "High Cost of Living," the editor requested several men about the city to send in their views on this subject. Many responded to this request; and In the various letters . reproduced, j there was much food for thought. There was one letter that comes to mind in which it was stated that if; the back yards of many of the city homes were utilized for growing vegetables, a large portion of the family food problem would be solved, or words to that effect. A large number, no doubt, of those who read that letter resolved that when the garden making season of 1912 arrived they would test the truth of the statement. Of course, we may be a little previous to this article but it is always well to begin everything in time. Therefore permit us to suggest that right now is a good time to procure seed catalogues and to plan the garden. Some may think that there is plenty of time for thinking about the garden, and there may be, but a considerable amount of pleasure can be bad in Btarting the plans now, and adding to them as ideas come to mind. As a suggestion, suppose we take a blank sheet of paper and a pencil, and outline our little garden plot. Naturally we will want to raise all of the garden truck that we can on the little garden patch, and as many varieties as possible; consequently, it will be advisable to indicate the rows of vegetables, by means of lines on the outline of our garden plot. We will not make the garden into small plats or beds. One large plat covering the -entire garden is sufficient, and by making just one plat we will save a great deal of time and labor. From the writer's point of view, the garden that is made into one large plat is much more pleasing to the eye than when it is cut up into small beds. If the garden is maintained as a permanent source of our summer vegetable supply, it will be well to set aside a small portion of the little patch for rhubarb and horse radish, which, as we all know, remain in the ground throughout the year. The remaining portion of the garden is to be planned so that every square foot will do practically double duty. This can be done by raising more than one crop on the ground during the season. For instance; lettuce, radishes, spinach, peas, etc., may be sowed about every two or three weeks. It is the best practice to sow a small amount at a time and sow often. By so doing a fresh tender supply of vegetables may be had all during the season. Many of the earlier vegetables are out of the way in time to sow seed of the latter varities. There are so many different tastes, that it would be difficult to suggest just what should be put In a small garden in order to get the most good out of it. In the writer's garden we usually have lettuie, onions, parsnips, carrots, salsify, beets, turnips, beans, peas, sweet corn, sween potatoes, irish potatoes, musk melons, tomatoes,, cabbage, cauliflower, kohl-rabi and squash. But, of' course, our garden hero on the farm is much larger than the garden would be on the rear of a? city lot. Our garden is about 60 by 120 feet, and on this plat we grow sufficient amount of vegetables for both our summer and winter supply. That is, excepting potatoes. While we have a few rows of early potatoes in the garden for early use, our winter's supply is raised elsewhere. It is claimed that a tract of land 25 x50 feet can be made to produce all of the vegetables an average family uses in a season; consequently if any city man is so situated that he can have a garden patch it will pay him to have one. There is considerable pleasure in store for any city toiler who has a garden in which he can produce something for himself Not only is there pleasure in working among the growing plants, but one can get a large amount of exercise in the pure outdoor air that will yield double returns. We imagine that it is difficult to get any one to plow -garden patches in the city; but this need not worry any one that is not adverse to taking a little strenuous exercise. With a spading fork, one can spade the garden in a few evenings, and a garden that is well spaded is much nicer than when plowed. If the best results are to be obtained, the garden vegetables must have sunlight, heat, moisture, soil, plant food and attention. It is best to baVe the garden where the sunlight will strike it during as much of the day as possible. Of course, all city premises are not so located that the sunlight can reach them throughout the entire day. Although we have no direct or positive control over sunlight, yet we can keep the weeds out of the garden, which if allowed to grow might prevent the light from reaching the young plants. It is claimed that the first greatest damage caused by weeds is due to the fact that they shut off the light from the growing plants. As to heat, we look to the sun to produce that; but there are factors which should be given attention in order that tbe soil may be more quickly warmed by the sun. It is said that "more than five times as much heat Is required to evaporate water from the surface of the soil than would be needed to raise the temperature of the same amount of CASTOR I A For Infaata and, Children. TbsUYatoiLl the
Help to Solve oj Living Problem
water from the freezing to the boiling point. It is because of this that poorly drained soils are cold.- Dark soils absorb more heat and consequently, are warmer than light colored soils." As to moisture, of course, most city homes have a convenient means of supplying water for the garden if it should be found necessary to do so; but. as a general rule, nature looks after the moisture. However, by keepins a fine dust mulch on the soil, it will be rendered more capable of absorbing and retaining the necessary moisture. Plant food is a very important factor in a good garden, and it must be in the soli in an available form for the plants. If it is not there, of course, it must be supplied. There is no way in which to tell whether the soil contains a sufficient amount of plant food until one has tested it with crops. To make sure that the soil contains the necessary amount of plant food it is well to fertilize it well right from the start. ' Well rotted, fine stable manure, thoroughly worked in the soil will supply plant food and also add humus which makes the soil driable. If it is possible to have a garden this summer, have one by all means. It will mean much to you in a financial way. and it will provide a diversion that is both enjoyable and healthful. Weak, Sickly, Ailing Women have little ambition, their own troubles occupy their thoughts. They are nervous, despondent, poor home makers and most wretched companions. Such women should try Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. For nearly forty years it has been the standby of American womanhood overcoming nervousness, backache and "the blues" which are all symptoms of one cause. It strengthens the proper nerves and muscles and thus corrects displacements. LUGGAGE IN ENGLAND. None of It Gees Astray Because the People Are All Very Honest. Certain strangers within our gates have been wondering at our dealing with passengers' luggage how much better the system of other cotmtries, where you get a receipt and when the bag goes astray the official assures you it is impossible because there is tbe receipt So you go to bed and get up and dress In your bit of paper. Our method is insular and on the face of it chaotic. We throw our luggage to the mercy of some unknown porter. At tbe end of the journey we find a sort of lucky tub of portable property piled on the platform, and we plunge about and pick out what we want. You know the scene a hundred people who have only to say "That's mine" to a strange porter in order to get it Thus badly stated the system looks like chaos and the invitation to a general scramble for other men's goods. In practice it works out well, for every one. from porter to passenger, is on bis honor, and this is the point luggage In England is safer than in any other civilized country. Westminster Gazette. The Steamboat. Fulton himself said one day: "Neither M. Desblancs nor I Invented the steamboat If that glory belongs to any one it is to the uutbor of the experiments at Lyons of tbe experiments made in 1783 on the Saene." The one Fulton had in mind and to whom he thus generously rendered the "glory" "was tbe Marquis de Jouffray, born in 1751. fourteen years before the year of Fulton's birth. Jouffray's claim to be regarded as the inventor of the steamboat stands thus: His vessel, built in 1783. notwithstanding its faulty construction, embodied all the elements essential to success. In it he anticipated Watts invention of a steam engine having a constant and unremitting action. Lack of funds was the only thing that stood ln tbe way of bis gettng all tbe honors that came later to Robert Fulton. New York American. The Laugh en Edison. There are many stories of Edison. One of bis early childhood is recorded on the authority of bis only sister. When be was about six years old he found out that a goose belonging to the family was sitting. Later he saw the surprising result in a number of goslings. One day be was missing. He was sought everywhere, but no one could find him until at length his father discovered him in the barn curled up in a nest he had made and filled with goose eggs and hea eggs. He was sitting on the eggs and trying to hatch them! London Tatler. ia Sarsaparilla Eradicates scrofula and all other humors, cures all their effects, makes the blood rich and abundant, strengthens all the vital organs. Take it. nt It tnAm-v t- H-..1,! - .... j 111 0Me uiuiu iui us ui Don't Trifle With Time A NORTHWESTERN POLICY will mean little to yon now a small part of your savings it will MEAN everything: to TOUR family. H. F. PARDLECK, District Mgr.
Gasped For Breath
Gastritis Nearly Ended Life of Wm. V. Mathews. Read His Letter. "I was bothered for years with stomach trouble - and gastritis. Food laid like lead in my stomach and fermented, forming gas. This ' caused a pressure on my heart, so that I choked and gasped for breath, and . thought my time had come. MI-O-NA cured me after I had doctored without success." Wm. V. Mathews. Bloomington. Ind. If you suffer from indigestion, headaches, diziness, biliousness, constipation, inactive liver, nervousness, sleeplessness, bad dreams, foul breath, heartburn, shortness of breath, sour stomach, or despondency, be sure and get MI-O-NA stomach tablets. They are guaranteed. Large box 50 cents at Leo H. Fine's and druggists everywhere. A musements THEATRICAL CALENDAR. At the Gennett Feb. 1. Polk and McGibney Recital. Feb. 13 "The Gamblers." At The Murray All Week Vaudeville. At Coliseum. Feb. 28 Symphony orchestra concert "The Gamblers.' "The Gamblers," which will be seen at the Gennett theater Feb. 13, Charles Klein by several deft touches, has contrived to put a few technically fraudulent bankers in a most favorable and sympathetic light, and the agents of the law and commercial morality in an unfavorable one. The theme of Mr. Klein's story has received most favorable comment as his characters are true to everyday life. At The Murray. With the Alpha Sextette as the feature the bill at the Murray opened up this afternoon to one of the usually large Monday matinees. The show is unusually good from start to finish and there is not a dull moment from the time that Frank Rotetta starts the show off with his comedy acrobatic act until the close of the moving pictures. Rozetta is an acrobat of more than ordinary ability and interpsperses the act with a lot of comedy that is good, clean and takes well with his audiences. The Pepper Twins have anything beat that ever played in the city in the line of Scotch dancing and that's saying something, their voices blend like a church organ. Dorothy Lamb and Company present their bright, sparkling and snappy comedy "A Night with the Redmen." Miss Lamb is a finished performer and has surrounded herself with a cast that is most excellent. The Alpha Sextette, singing anything from grand opera to rag time were an immediate success. Their singing is the best heard here for some time and their selections are varied and well chosen. The act Is well costumed and carry their own stage setting making it a very elaborate affair. Shorn. "Miss Ella, was your bazaar a success?" "Glorious: All the men bad to walk homer Meggendorfer Blatter. His Last Residence. Lawyer (to witness) Now, then. Mr. Murphy, give us your last residence. Murphy Faith, sor, Ol dunno. but if 11 be tbe cimltery. O'm tbinktn'! Behavior Is a mirror in which every one displays his image. Goethe. borligb'8 MALTED MILK Tfcs Fscd-tfi-bSc ftr A3 Am. For Infants, brraEds,and Growmg duUren. PureNuiribnkimbu mvytatcathennrmigincAcrandnSeagcA Rich male, makea gam, m powder form. A ajaick hack Bfeparcsl ia a aanajfte, TakeassAsfibAaklsri:02UCa?S. Zcfin Ac& r cs The Dest Way to begin the New Yecr Sit down and sum up your bills, putting those of the butcher, the grocer, the rent man, the insurance agent, etc, etc, all In one amount, then come and see us and give us an opportunity to explain our plan for relieving your "financial pains." We loan on Furniture, Pianos, Teams, etc, without removal, gi Ting you weekly, monthly or quarterly payments. In which way yon may not miss the money. v If you need money, fill out and mail to ns the following blank and we win send a representative to yon. Phone 1545. Tour name Address Qlctz:cl Lcc3 Go. COLONIAL BUILOINQ Room S. RICHMOND, IND.
DEER AMD BULLETS. erieua and Uly Wound From Which the Animals Recover. "If all deer that are wounded in the coarse of tbe hunting season and succeed la getting oat of the way of the hunter should wander away and die
tbe woods would contain many more dead deer than are taken away." said an old banter. "Bat an .of them do not wander off and die a loss to the hunter. "Deer have great reeuperatiTe powers. It Is no sign that a deer is doomed to go off and die because it is badly wounded. 1 have killed many a deer tbat gave evidence of having been so severely wounded that its having survived to take the range again seemed almost miraculous. "I once shot and killed a buck that had a rifle bullet encysted near the skin of tbe left shoulder, but there was no wound on the outside of the sktn to show that it had entered tbe deer there. Investigation showed a, wound, long healed, near the top of the right shoulder, unmistakably made by that rifle bullet, which must have passed clear through tbe deer to tbe left shoul der, where its speed was spent and it lodged just under the skin. "Besides that severe wound that deer had been pretty well filled some time or other by buckshot, for I took out nine from one side of him, where they had broken several of bis ribs. These two ug'y wounds had been inflicted at different times, and in spite of them he was in splendid condition and 1 bad to give him two shots from a Winchester before I stopped him." New York Sun. TO CURE A COLD IN ONE DAY Take LAXATIVE BROMO Quinine Tablets. Druggists refund money if it fails to cure. E. W. GROVE'S signature is on each box. 25c. Two of a Kind. Convict No. 671 (ex-burglar) leaned confidentially over to his companion, a new addition, and whisitered: "What yer In for. sonny? . "Five years. And your "Same. Pinched a gold cup wot soma one give as a prize in a race an' tbe thing turned out to be on'y gilt arter all. Wbatcher larfln' atr Convict 099 (ex-company promoter) He, he! I'm tbe cbnp who gave the cup! London Tit-Bits. Telling Tales. "That," said the professor, "is an Egyptian queen. She Is at least 3.000 years old." "My!" exclaimed the girl with large fluffy hair. "I'll bet she'd be annoyed If she knew you were telling it." Exchange. id: . .ii Why turn yourself into a medicine-chest, filling it with every new concoction that cornea along? ( Nature does the caring, not medicine. Doctor if SUNSHINE AND Scott's Emulsion is not Thm tromtmmnt fmr Corngtm omd CoM, Cripmm. OCMf fOf. 11-C2 MURRAY'S WEEK JAN. 29 Alpha Sextette OTHER FEATURES
I .
ss' wsnssswassiw"essssswwpesmusm asr"' 4 to be so Is' to be protected against accident or sickness by a pc31cy""ta the largest company in the world writing accident, health, liability and life insurance, the Aetna Life Ins. Co. - YOD need that prtion RIGHT NOW; just phone 2082 or 1393 and E. B. KNOLL EN BERG will see that you have it. No medical examination
Gold Crowns, $3.00; Full Set of Teeth, $5X0; GcH Fillings $1.00; Silver Fillings, 50c up. All Wcrk guaranteed.
New Yorfr -ttaafal fasfas
904 Main St
SKA
RDEUHATISH easytocuiieV Leo H. Fihe guarantees RHEUMA to banish rheumatism or money tech. That's why he sells so much of .itPeople are coming for miles to get it, because they know it quickly stops the torturing pains, relieves at once the In- t tense suffering and drives the poison from swollen joints. It's a wonderful
remedy, is RHEUMA; a splendid doctor's best prescription : you don't have to take it a week and then wonder whether it is doing the work or not. Start to taxe it today RHEUMA won't waste any time; it will start to act on kidneys, liver, stomach and blood today, and tomorrow you'll know that the poisonous uric acid is quittins you forever. Use RHEUMA for rheumatism, sciatica, lumbago, arthritis, neuralgia and kidney disease. It surely does the work bottle for only 50 cents. Mail orders filled by RHEUMA Co., Buffalo, N. Y. Rubbing It In. Patient (angrily) The ale of year bill makes my blood boil. Doctor Then that wilt be 920 more for sterJllElng your system. Boston Transcript. Laying the Snare. "For whom Is she wearing black,"? her lata husband?" "No. for her next She knows aha; looks well In it" Judge. Hard Goltfo i Qaiehly Ended If you want to end a hard cold or la thought possible, try a box of Pines Cold Tablets. Two doses give wonderful relief, and the trouble is usually completely wiped out inside of -"0 hours. No other remedy will stop the aches and pains so quickly. Pinex Cold Tablets are gentle In action, but very prompt ia results. They reduce the fever, check the nasal discharge, restore normal activity la the pores and are very pleasantly laxative and tonic. Do not contain a particle of opiat or coal tar heart depressants. Simple, barmleas and very agreeable. lon't accept a substitute one trial' of this quick-acting remedy will show you that there is nothing else "Just at good" as Pinex Cold Tablets. Money refunded if disappointed. 23c -per box. If nwMiry, send to The Pines Co., Fort Wayne. Ind (makers of "Pines4 Cough Remdv. . , WINNERS RICHMOND ROSE . 10c Cigar "The Proof la in the Puffing" For Salary All Dealer. ED. A. FELTRIAN MAKER 609 MAIN STREET The Crisp Outdoors Invites Your K O O A IK Kodaks and Everything for Kodakery at i Our Store. , W.HQcssDrcjGo. Phone 1217. 04 Main Street. We Have a Full Line of Flashlight Specialties. ; ALL WdPKK PAHMJESS; Over Neva's
