Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 53, 11 January 1913 — Page 6
PAGE SIX.
THE BICH3IOND PALLADIUM AND S U X-T E L E G R A 31 , S A T I" U D A Y, J A N U A R V" 11, 1V13.
The Richmond Palladium And Sun-Telegram Published and owned by the PALLADIUM PRINTING CO. Issued Every Evening Except Sunday. Ortice Corner North 9th and A Streets. Palladium and Sun-Telegram Phones Business Office, 2566; News Department, 1121. RICHMOND, INDIANA.
RUDOLPH G. LEEDS . .Editor. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS In Richmond, $5.00 per year (in advance) or 10c per week. RURAL ROUTES One year, in advance $.00 Six months, in advance l-j-J One month, in advance 2j Address changed as often as desired ; both new and old addresses must be given. Subscribers will please remit with order, which should be given for a specified term; name will nA be entered until payment js received. MAIL SUBSCRIPTIONS One year, in advance ...$5.CC Six months, in advance 2.65 One month, in advance 45 Entered at Richmond, Indiana, post office as second class mail matter. New York Representatives Payne & Young, 30-34 West 33d Street, and 29-35 West 32nd Street, New York, N. Y. Chicago Representatives Payne & Young, 747-748 Marquette Building, Chicago, 111. The Association of Amor I ffl I ican Advertiser has es aniseed and certified te ike au-cnlatioa f this pmhIication. The figures) of circalatioa contained in th Assaciatien'a report only ore guaranteed. Association of American Advertisers No. 1G9. , Whitehall Bldj. N. Y. City Hearfid'Hearjt; Talks it9 ByAMESrA.;EOGERTON YOUTH IN AGE. f The other day Andrew D. White on Celebrating his eightieth birthday announced that he had taken up the investigation of criminology and expected to make, possibly, some Important soutributloQB to the subject before he la ninety. When a man can take up a new itudy at eighty he ha a the spirit of routh. Many men at Andrew D. White's ige. who have done but a fraction of the good he has accomplished, would be willing to rest on their laurels. This man. it must be remembered, practically founded a great university, ot which he was for many years president, was a distinguished ambassador to an Important foreign nation and has leen for years a publicist and leader of thought. Yet he has no intention of stopping. He sees an opportunity of further good by studying the treatment of the Dutcast and the criminal. The world owes much to its young aid men, those who keep the heart of youth wheu they have the wisdom of age. The trouble with some old men is fossil l.ation. They are unwilling to keep abreast of progress. They talk about the good old times and become a clog against making the present times better. They are not receptive to new ideas. It was Byron who hit off that retrospective turn of mind when he said: "The good old times! All times when Did are Rood." The inspiring outlook is forward, not backward. Even though we may not understand all the currents of our age. this day is the best in the world's history. Tomorrow will be better. The man who keeps a young spirit In an old body and who looks- to the sunrise rather than to the sunset is about the finest and most inspiring spectacle seen in our human world. This age is full of such men also of such women. There was William Ewart Gladstone, leading a new crusade at eighty. There was Julia Ward Howe, keenly alive to the reforms of the present and the future up to her death at ninety. It is a matter of whether the spirit or the body dominates. The spirit is ever young. If that lesrds us we are also young. Keep the heart youthful by living in present day joy, present day progress, present day work. In our thought we should hold eternal youth. BEST COUGH MEDICINE FOR CHILDREN. "I am very glad to say a few words in praise of Chamberlain's Cough Remedy" writes Mrs. Lida Dewey. Milwaukee, Wis. " I have used it for years both for my children and myself and it never fails to relieve and cure a cough or cold. No family with children should be without it as it gives almost immediate relief in cases of croup." Chamberlain's Cough Remedy is pleasant and safe to take, which is of great importance when a medicine must be given to young children. For sale by all dealers. (Advertisement l The Masonic Calendar L Tuesday, Jan. 14. Richmond lodge. No. 196, F. & A. M. Called meeting, work in Entered Apprentice degree. Wednesday, Jan. 15. Webb lodge No. 24, F. & A. M. Stated Meeting and Installation of officers. " ' Friday, Jan. 17. King Solomon's Chapter, No. 1, It. A. M. Called meeting, w ork in Mark Master degree. . Saturday, Jan. 18. Loyal Chapter, No. 4S, O. K. S.i Stated Meeting and Work in Floral degree.
White Slavers in Richmond.
Particular heed should be given by the Richmond public to the warning of Mrs. P. T. McLellan, secretary of the board of managers of the Home For Friendless Women, that this city is not exempt from the evils of the white slave traffic. Despite the efforts of the federal government and the various states to stamp out this most atrocious of evils it still flourishes and procurers of young girls have been plying their vile trade in Richmond as elsewhere. The principal reason these trafficers in women can still find their business profitable in Richmond is the carelessness of many parents in permitting their young daughters to walk the streets unescorted after nightfall and to attend public dances and places of amusement by themselves. Such girls are the common prey of the white slavers and a number of Richmond young women are now leading a life which is worse than death as a penalty for lax parental 'discipline and their own careless folly, for seduction of young girls cannot be charged against the police, because young women have the right to go about unescorted if they so desire, and the white slaver does not flaunt his evil calling In the faces of the police officers. It has not been so very long ago that a white slave agent came to this city and into the trap this fiend laid came several girls employed in a factory. Just before the procurer was to take them to a neighboring city on some carefully framed pretext one of the prospective victims told a more or less sophisticated citizen of the "kindly" attentions the slaver had been showering on the girls and the timely warning this citizen gave was instrumental in saving this group of careless young women from a fate too horrible to contemplate.
Whooping Cough.
Plain old fashioned "whooping cough" which we have been regarding for years and years with the calm indifference we would bestow on a mosquito bite in fact a sort of a necessary evil is now being heralded as a disease so dangerous that children suffering from the ailment should be labeled with a green arm band so that other children may be warned. Dr. W. C. Rucker of the United States Public Health Service informs the American public that "whooping cough is one of the most serious of communicable diseases to children in its immediate and remotest effects. The disease is by no means uncommon in underfed children and is often followed by tuberculosis of 'the lungs. Paralysis and many serious afflictions of the eye have also resulted from the excessive coughing. It is thus seen .that whooping cough, which, it is estimated, killed over 10,000 American children in 1911, is a disease seriously affecting the public health and demanding earnest attention." Parents are also informed by Dr. Rucker that as a safeguard against the disease they should impress upon their offspring that such school practices as trading pencils, swapping chewing gum, etc., are extremely dangerous. Dr. Rucker concludes that any disease which kills 10,000 children annually can be properly listed as dangerous and pointedly remarks that if 10,000 American children were killed in one year by bubonic plague, the whole world would be quarantined against this country. Without going to the trouble of personally consulting Dr. Rucker or any other physician, the Palladium can authoritatively' announce that whooping cough thrives on the present brand of weather.
This is My 46th Birthday GOVERNOR SPRY. William Spry, governor of Utah, was born in Berkshire, England, January 11, 1864. He came to America in boyhood and located in Salt Lake City, where for several years he was connected with the general merchandise house conducted by the Mormon church. Later Mr. Spry engaged in farming and stock raising and in these and other lines of industry, he accumulated a fortune. In 1906" he was appointed United States marshal for Utah. He was the successful candidate of the Republicans for governor in 1909 and was elected for a second term last November. CONGRATULATIONS TO: Harry G. Selfridge, who started the first American department store in London, 55 years old today. Lord Curzon. of Medleston, former Viceroy of India, 54 years old today. Alice Megan Rice, author of Mrs. Wiggs of the Cabbage Patch, 43 years old today. James M Lynch, president of the International Typographical Union, 46 years old today. William J. Mills, former governor of New Mexico, 64 years old today. Deceived by a Cloud. The instinct of animals is sometimes supposed to be. more infallible than human reason, but a scientist's observations of the katydid rather contradict that opinion. The katydid, with its musieal membranes, produces two distinct "songs," one peculiar to the night and familiar to everybody, the other a daytime tune, which is rather a rasp than a melody. According to the scientist mentioned, it is sometimes quite comical to hear the singers suddenly change their tune when a dark cloud obscures the sun, immediately resuming their daytime song when it has passed. This recalls the hens that go to roost during a solar eclipse. The Chatham Chest. Carefully preserved at Greenwich (England) hospital is the famous Chatham chest It is a great box curiously wrought, its iron body being crossed and recrossed by strengthening bands of steel. It was the nearest approach the artificers of Elizabeth's age ver made to the modern iron safe and was worked with special care, since it was the repository of the funds of the great naval charity. In 1GS3 it was felt that something should be done for England's disabled sailors who had so nobly upheld her prestige on the sea against practically the whole world. So the Chatham chest was instituted.
The Advantages of Drinking Baker's Cocoa The Cocoa of High Quality lie in its absolute purity and wholesomeness, its delicious natural flavor, and its perfect assimilation by the digestive organs. Jits thmrmetrm many Inferior Imitations, - 6 surm to got, -gmnmlnm with our.
traammmarK WALTER $ BAKER Established 17S0 -
This Date In History
JANUARY 11. 1785 Eleventh Continental Congress assembled at New York. 1825 Bayard Taylor, noted American author, born. Died Dec. 19, 1878. 1843 Francis Scott Key, author of "The Star Spangled Banner," died in Baltimore. Born in Frederick County, Md., Aug. 1, 1779. 1861 Alabama adopted an ordinance of secession. 1872 Congress accepted from Rhode Island a statue of Roger Williams. 1897 Anglo-American arbitration treaty signed at Washington. 1912 Beginning of the great strike of textile mill workers at Lawrence, Mass. SERVIA AS A NATION; It Originated In the First Half of li e Seventh Century. The birth of Servia as a nation, settled in or near its present home, may be dated in the first half of the seventh century. About 600 A. D., when the Avaric empire of desolation was established on the Danube, two tribes, the Croats and the Serbs, retiring before the ravages of the Tartar horsemen, settled in the countries now known as Croatia, Bosnia and Servia. They were Slavs, but the Croats perhaps had, like the Slavs of Moesia in after years, adopted the name of a Tartar tribe. Both, fleeing from the Avajs, were naturally hostile to them, and it is possible that they settled in the empire with the consent or even at the invitation of the Emperor Heraclius I. At any rate, they appear to have been considered as vassals of the empire. Their first settlements lay rather westward of the country now called Servia, the Drave, the present western boundary, being the dividing line between Bulgar and Serb in the eighth century. Here the Serbs dwelt more or less uneventfully for three centuries. They generally formed a loose confederacy under chiefs called zupans. They were commonly, in a loose fashion, loyal to the eastern empire mainly through fear of their dangerous neighbors, the Bulgarians. About 840 they united under a chief named Vlastimiz to repel the latter. The country rose to great heights under Stephen Dusuan. the czar of the Serbs, but after his death Murad I. conquered the country, and it was not until 1S15 that the Serbs partially threw off the Turkish yoke. Exchange. The wine of life goes into vinegar and folks that hugged the bottle shirk the erne. Douglas Jerrold. onrfno macKugo WCO. . limited DORCHESTER, MASS.
NEWS OF THE LABOR WORLD
Basket makers in Greater New York have organized. Wages in Belgium are lower general-1 ly than in any other European country. w-. . . i oan jrancisco Droom erasers nave; received a ten per cent increase in PayAnother movement has been started; in St. Paul for the purpose of build-j ing a labor temple. I Thirty states have provided factory! inspectors for the enforcement - of health and safety laws. Three counties in the state of New York propose to build hospitals for the treatment of tuberculosis. New York's new equal pay law puts men and women teachers of New York city on an equal pay footing. Plasterers in New York City earned four dollars for a nine-hour day in 1887. Now they get 5.50 for eight hours. Boot and shoe workers are planning an , active organization campaign to organize all the shoe workers in Greater New York. The Brotherhood of Railway Clerks has established new lodges in the states of Minnesota, West Virginia, Idaho and Oklahoma. Compressed air and foundation workers secure a 50 cents a day advance, beginning with the first of the month, making the wage scale $4 50 j a day. j Journeymen Barbers' International . Union is now twenty-five years old. It includes seven hundred locals with a I membership exceeding thirty thousand A hotel for working girls was open ed in St. Mary's row, in the heart of the factory district of Birmingham recently, by the Duchess of Malborough. I In the sixty-third congress the labor group will consist of seventeen members, one of these being a United States senator, William Hughes, of New York. More than $366,000,00 was lost in wages through more than thirteen million four hundred thousand cases of sickness among the wage earners in the United States last year. Following the example of the Women Advocates' Club, of New York, with which it is affiliated, a union of women lawyers numbering twentyfive members has been formed in Paris The building trades department of the American Federation of Labor has decided that the staff work on build-' ings to be erected for the PanamaPacific international exposition belongs to the carpenters and not to the plasterers. Legislation to insure one day's rest in seven for men and women wdrkers, whether engaged in continuous industries or otherwise, was urged at the annual meeting of the Illinois Association for Labor Legislation. Insistence on an increase of forty cents a day has been voted by Plumbers' Union No. 12, of Boston, bringing their daily wage up to $5.30, if they secure it. The master plumbers have given notice that they will resist the demand. j The Gate to Tibet. I Just outside Tachienlu is the stone bridge which is called "the gate to Tibet." Tachienlu is a narrow little city which had to conform its shape to the contour of the mountains which shut it In. There is hardly a foot of level ground within the walls. It is the great emporium of trade between China and Tibet, where the Chinese exchange tea for musk and gold dust Many red frocked lamas are to be seen about the city, most of whom live in large lamasaries outside the walls. On the flat roofs of the houses flutter in numerable prayer flags, giving to the winds the luUvac&ai Tibetan hymn of praise.
FREE TO Y0U-MY SISTER
'xeatment a complete trial : an 4 if you should wish to continue, it will cost you only about 12 rents a week, or less than two cents a day. It will not interfere with your work or occupation. Just send ae your name and address, tell me how you suffer if you wish, and I will send you the treatment .'or your case, entirely free, in plain wrapper, by return mail. will also send you free of cost, my jook "WOMAN'S OWN MEDICAL ADVISER" with explanatory illustrations sboTrinr why women suffer, and how they can easily cure themselves at home. livery woman should havo it. and learn to think for herself. Then when the doctor aays "You must have an operation." you can decide for yourself. Thousands of women have cured themselves with my home remedy. It cures all, Md or young. To Mothers of Daurhters, I will explain a simple home treatment which speed ily -nd effectually cures Leucorrnoea. Green Sickness and Painful or Irregular Menstruation in Young Ladies. Plumpness and health always results from its use. Wherever you live. 1 can refer you to ladies of your own locality who know and will fflad'y tet sr.y sufferer that this Home Treatment really cures all women s diseases, and makes women welt stronc plump and robust. Just send me your address, and the free ten day's treatment is yours, also the book. Write today, as you may not sec this offer aaain. Address MRS. M. SUMMERS. Box H. Notre Dame, Ind., u. S. A.
"The Week of
1913 See our big ad. in tonight's paper The George H. Knollenberg Co.
PLAYING A WITNESS.
Methods of Two Famous Cross Ex- ; I aminers of the Irish Bar. j Two famous cross examiners at the; : The Qf Cross ExaDjination .. were I Serceat SumTan afterward master' ll" "IU UIU!,ieri 1 or ine rous "reiauo. ana sergeant ; A rtrTrint Rart-v A'PrHan In K liiou uui, oil j 3 i a a UK 13 jj. , tri iiua u 1 u j "The Art of Cross Examination." were 1 Sergeant Sullivan, afterward master : " J "Life of Lord Russell" describes their methods with perjured witnesses. j "Sullivan." he says, "approached the; witness quite in a friendly way, seem - - ed to be an impartial inquirer seeking ; information, looked surprised at what! the witness said, appeared even grate - ful for the additional light thrown on the case. '"Ah, indeed! Well, as yon have said so much perhaps you can help us a little further. Well, really, my lord. ,s eT Intelligent man. "So playing the witness with caution J and skill drawing bUn stealthily on. keeping him completely in the dark
about the reol polut of attack. ttaeieB uibire., uus an n.Siu ruu-mi little sergeant' waited until the man the Capes today while revenue cutters was in the meshes and then flew at were seeking her off the coast. She him and shook him as a terrier would j was badly crippled but her crew of 23
a rat. "The big sergeant (Armstrong) had more numor ana more power, our. less dexterity and resource. His great weapon was ridicule. He laughed at the witness and made everybody else Innirh Tho tvitnosa fur corifnsnd anil lost his temper, and then Armstrong j pounded bim like a champion in the ring." LONDON STREET CRIES. They Must Have Made tho City a Bedlam In Olden Days. London must have been a lively city in the days when the street crier Joined in competition with the bell of the postman and the muffin man. The
bov wlK Tioes round the 3 with rug stores, in stationery shops. even fbe earlv moving cry of roTli-! t the county courthouse, where one; MnnLttJttfu,ttul youth went the other day to
DLill 1U IUC UUIC 3ULFU1UO, I'UV i u . ,n. in the land Some of "the ancient cries have been n..,, V,- c.,i. iv n.,L., in hu hnol- "ThP :nrl nirl TimM They include "Cherry Ripe. O!" "Bak-4ri-A ings" (these were early peas); "Lavender, sweet lavender, six bunches a penny," or perhaps "Rabbits, wild rabbits, and when there was a good OI" or "Herrings, alive, all alive!" "Some of the cries." writes Mr. Hackwood, "would sound strange to the ear now, as 'Bandboxes, 'Bas kefs,' 'Buv a broom. 'Hair brooms Hot spiced gingerbread. "Brick dust. Sand, O: 'Bellows to mend.' 'Chairs to j mend. 'Bill of the play.' More familiar perhaps were 'Old clothes,' 'Cats and dogs' meat' and 'Dust O!' "Now we are reduced to little more than the shriek and howl which are supposed to represent milk and coals." London Chronicle. j STREET STORIES Kent Morris, a popular student of the Richmond . high school, is hardhearted, many of the girls of the high school believe. He was recently appointed assistant librarian and is endeavoring to institute a reform system in the room whereby students who are industriously inclined will not be annoyed by jokers and less ambitious students. Thursday, after several threats to detract from the merit records of several feminine disturbers of the peace and quietitude of the library, repeated offenses made it necesary to punish the offenders, and a party of five pretty lassies were sent to the principal's office despite their remonstrances. Frao to You and Every Slater Suf faring from Woman's AUmonts.
I am a woman. I know woman's enfferintfs. I hare found tho cure. I will mail, free of any charge, my noma treat, ment with full instructions to any sufferer from woman' ailments. I want to tell aU woowr bout thiacure you, my reader, for yourself, your daughter, your mother, or your sister. I want to tell you bow to cure yourselves at home without tho help of a doctor, lien cannot understand women's suflermva. What we women know from experience, we know better than any doctor. I know that my hone treatment is a safe and sure cure for rueucorrhoea or Whitish discharges. Ulceration, Displacement or Falling" of the Womb, Profuse, Scanty or Painful Periods, Uterine or Ovarian Tumors or Orwwths; also pains m the head, back and bowels, bearins down feeling's, nervousnnss, creepmr feetlne; up the spine, melancholy, desire to cry. not flashes, weariness, kidney and Madder troubles where caused by weaknesses peculiar to our sex. I want to send yon a complete ten day's treat, meat entirely free to prove to you that you caa cure yourself at home, easily, quickly and surely. Re member, that it will cost you nothinr to rive the
the Thirteenth"
1;
Hobby of Pony to A 11 (Palladium Special.) MILTON, Ind., Jan. 11. A pony be - longing to Sirs. Catherine Swafford Qear Bees?pn-8 8tation diett rwentl v. - . havine in some way contracted nneu. mtmja. The animal was a valuable one and a Kreat pt of all the children in the neighborhood. It was given to Mrs. Swafford by her son-in-law, the late Simon McConalia. and his wife, She has had the animal since it was 'eight years of age and it was thirty ; at the time of its death. ALCAZAR IS SAFE 1 National News Association NORFOLK, Va.. Jan. 11. The j j steamer Ak.ar. which senl out wirel i : . l ..ii ; v . - i men are safe. J INITIATING THE CU3. ! ; Stunts tho Now Boys it, Some Banks I Have to Face. Now. when a tyro goes to work In a machine shop he is sent to the tool room for a left handed monkey w rench A foundry wag will send the new boy in search of "core holes." A printer's; devil is sent to the tyiefonndera with a wheelbarrow for a hair space. Hu morists in certain Kansas City banks have a revised code, says the Times of thit citv Here are sir thincs the beclnner probably will be required to seek at - 1 i inouire diiirentlv for a "sneed ball" to i assist him in his work: There Is the "speed ball." then, and' there is the "check stretcher" nre- ! sumably used to increase the size of checks that do not conform to the fll-( 1 inir cases: the "discount board." sun-1 ; noKpn to rf cneckerea in a manner to facilitate the h.indllmr of discounted paper; the "clearing house key." In search for which half a day easily may be consumed, and for the red and black lines that He artistically on the fair pages what could be more appropriate than "striped ink." and lest the ink becomes too thick should not an "ink strainer" be procured? Ask the new boy. Stomach Weak? Blood Bad? Liver Lazy? Nervous ? 1
aids digestion and purifies the blood. As a consequence both the stomach and liver return to their normal and healthy condition. Nervousness and biliousness soon disappear. The entire system takes on new life. For ovei." forty years this famous old medicine has "made good' and never more so than today, enjoying a greater sale all over the world than any other doctor's prescription. For sale at all druggists in liquid or tablet form, or
vou can send fifty lc stamps for trial box. Addi
DR. R. V. PIERCE, BUFFALO, N. Y.
Mayo's Medical and Surgical Institute 715 N. Alabama St., Indianapolis, Ind.
CANCERS AND TUMORS TREATED WITHOUT PAIN OR USE THE KNIFE
He has treated successfully all forms of Chronic Diseases that are curable, such as Diseases of the Brain, Heart. Lungs, Throat, Eya and Ear, Stomach, Liver. Kidneys Lung Trouble. Bladder. Rectum, Female Diseases, Nervous Diseases. Catarrh, Rupture. Piles, Eczema. Epilepsy. Dropsy. Varicot-ele. Hydrocele, etc. Diseases of Women given special attention.
We Want to Cure
We are particularly interested In seeiii afflicted men and women who have been treated without success, for we know that our services will be appreciated more if we succeed In curing a man or woman who tells us his or her last resort Is to place himself or herself under our care. We have treated such men and women and received their praise and gratitude, and our professional reputation is backed by statements from them, which we have to convince the many skeptical sufferers of our ability to CURE. PILES, FISTULA, ETC- Cured without detention from business. BLOOD POISON We use only the roost advanced methods in tha treatment of Blood Poison and kindred diseases. PROSTATIC ENLARGEMENT Results from inflammation. We reduce the enlargement and have been able to cure about 90 per cent of all cases. VARICOCELE We cure Varicocele in a few days or weeks time without the use of the knife.
Kidney and Bladder Diseases, causing pain, burning. Cystitis, pain in the back, cured or it costs you nothing.
After an examination we will tell you just what we can do for you. If we can not benefit or cure you, we will frankly tell you so. Write for question blanks. Call on or address V. R. Mayo, M. D., President, 715 N. Alabama St.. Indianapolis. Ind.
Follow Funeral Processions
I Ten years ago the animal was hitch1 ed to a post and when a fuueral pro- ! cession went by it broke its halter and joined the procession. It was one .. of the leaders of the procession and ! kept the line as if it were driven. ! When the carriage in front of the j animal stopped, the pony stepped and j kept the line of march so regular that the follow inc carriages had no idea tha it was driverless. Since that time : the pony seemed to possess a "hobby" for following funeral processions. A STEAMER ASHORE (National Xw Association I PORTLAND. Me.. Jan. 11. The steamer Monhegan of the Western SipMiiisliin mniiuinv'ii flt with 1 passengers and a crew of 16 went ashore off Cape Small Point near here at noon yesterday in a badly disabled condition, after drifting helplessly in a fierce gale for several hours. Revenue j cutter! were sent to rescue the pass engers and crew. HOW TO TAKE PILLS. j Take Hlackuurn's Casca Royal Pills. i that rtpvr rrirw nnr nick on Duo irh ; ... aa ,avj,,iv4. T P .hrM. . cath4rtic. After a few. week.. UBe j the trouble is usually corrected. Try a 10c package just once and you'll want no other they are so prompt and pleasant. Advertisement. j Retribution. i A young woman went Into city r 1 tauraut for her lumh, but after a Malice t the tablecloths and sniff ot the cloe air she decided to eat elo--here and started to go out. The pnv P"etor thought that .he was learl, without paying for a me.. and stopped ,1vr In order to avoid hurting bisfealings the girl 8ald: -1 nnd 1 JlZt etlxiok. so I can t eat here now. hbe as hurrying away, but the proprietor was kind hearted. My dear girl." be said. you sit - -- .- - I ! Kln ou ot I1'0 hungry because she hasn't ber mouey with ber. You eat now, and tomorrow you caa come In and pay me." The young woman sat miserably down and tried to eat. and as she left, biding her pocket book, sue mused: "That's what 1 get for fibbing! And to think that 1 must come here again tomorrow too!" Woman's Home Compa u ton. "ATHY go along day after vv day suffering when aid is at hand so convenient and at so little cost. Dr. Pierce's Golden Medical Discovery DR. W. R. MAYO, Specialist WILL BE AT Arlington Hotel Richmond Wednesday, Jan. 15 ond Every Tour Weeks Thereafter OF DiS" Men 1SAPPOLVTED REMEMBER. That In treating with me you cannot lose anything, because I do not charge for failures, but only for permanent cores. Therefore, you should certainly, la duty to yourself, INVESTIGATE MY METHODS, which are totally different from those of any other specialist, before you place " your case elsewhere.
?J-:",:-T.l.,i'W--
