Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 43, 31 December 1913 — Page 4
PAGE FOUR
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM. WEDNESDAY, DEC. 31, 1913 i ?
The Richmond Palladium AND SUN-TELEGRAM. Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Masonic Building. Ninth and North A Streets R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr. In Rlohmond, 10 cents a week. By Mail, in advanceone year, ?5.00; six months, $2.60; one month. 45 cent Rural Routes, in advance one year, $2.00; six month $1.26; one month 25 cents.
Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as S ond Claea Mall Matter.
lost his head, encouraged men to break the orders
of his own police authorities, saw impeachment coming, and, like a baseball pitcher, blew' up in the last inning. This was very unfortunate but the clever fellow capitalized his notoriety by accepting a position on the vaudeville stage. In this way he got the public to pay to see the antics of which Indianapolis had long since tried Mr. Shank is considered the best political joke in many years."
By that time, perhaps, the word 'joke' may!'t
have become obsolete, but we imagine that even an antiquarian will be able to get some glimmerings of its meaning. If a person can't understand what that term means with Mr. Shank's record
alongside as commentary ne will indeed be a hopeless case.
CLOSING YEAR HELD HAPPINESSJN STORE Continued from Page 1.)
The New Year. We sat before the fireplace dreaming over a bed of glowing coals. New Year's eve had come and the hour was past eleven. Silence reigned up and down the streets and each was buried in dreams or sunk in reverie. The whole world
eemed hushed in silent expectancy.
Going Along. A few fundamental inventions lie at the basis of material civilization. The piercing point, the entering wedge, the cutting edge, the rolling ball, the turning wheel and the lever are to all machinery what the alphabet is to all language. The
Presentlv the air stirred and we noted a shad- most complex mechanism will be found upon
mir olnnrr wnll. PprhaDS it WaS
V VT -X ,V--X1 UiVii v ' j fancy alone but the shadow shape formed into; the likeness of an hour-glass and stretched across the wall in the crescent of a scythe. An ancient face formed dimly-before the fire and presently a voice began softly to address us: "I am Time, I carry the worlds with me as I go. I am a constant stream without a hitch or break in my going. The ticking of your clocks, the ringing of your chimes, the divisions of your calendars, what are these! Merest conventions! They affect me not. I gather up into my current all things as I pass and carry them with me into the future and never once do I pause or hesitate. The whole universe flows, forever flows, and I am the name of its flowing. "What you choose to call the past, this year which now expires on the dials of midnight, is as living now as when the woods blossomed in its spring. Nothing ever dies. Every deed you have ever done is immortal. Each act is an eternal act. You cannot destroy that which has been." A band of revelers went by on the street singing New Year songs. They seemed like voices from some vast distance. But Time paid no heed and continued speaking: "It will not avail you to endeavor to checkmate the deeds you regret by deeds you admire. The truths you tell today will not cancel the lies you told yesterday. The noble impulses that now throb through you in this solemn hour leave unmolested those base impulses to which you yielded yourself in forgotten seasons. "You cannot estape your own evil doings nor ' " 1 you counterbalance them with the credit imns of present good deeds. But do not desV. You may cause the failures of violated to serve you in the victories of the future. iihave within you that very secret for which Hchemists sought a thousand years, the powtTt transmutation. By that alchemy you can redeem your )ast and atone for your sins. "Make the lies of yesterday serve in the interests of truth tomorrow. Make the impurity of the autumn grow into the virginity of the
spring. CJause tne un kindness oi last year to work in the interests of kindness next year. Fight your enemies with their own weapons. Use the very experience and knowledge gained from old sin to further the interest of new goodness. You cannot cause your past acts not to have been but you can transform their bad influence into good influence. This is the magician's wand that gives you power over the past itself and makes you lord of your own existence." A far away bell began the stroke of twelve. The fire-castles in the grate had become dimmed over with ashes and now softly crumbled away. The faint shadows of the glass and the scythe faded into the shadows of the year's first morning and one of the group began quietly to repeat Henley's stanzas: "Out of the night that covers rae Black as the pit from pole to pole I thank whatever gods may be For my unconquerable soul. It matters not how straight the gate How charged with punishments the scroll, 1 am the master of my fate I am the captain of my soul."
sons announced. Foremost in the minds of Americans, of course, is the wedding of Mies Jessie W'oodrow Wil
son, beautiful daughter of the Presi-
Barring Mexico's barbarous achivements, there have been few assassinations in countries generally recognized as being civileied. George I,
King of Greece, was assassinated by j
Gulf of Smyrna. One hundred and tomv nt of M"1co 0-J-twenty drowned. 1 Ti"I:ai led Presiden'of Firedamp In Welsh mine entombs ' rtT1 V Inaugurated Oct. 1( j
nine hundred and thirty-one. Five hun- Carson fathers toger
dred rescued alive.
Steamer Volturno burned at sea Oc- rI5nf?Icment the Home .ale
Tjjti, i pass rarument. i nese mobs in Tokyo dend in the United States ore; the ..jtfrnia land question.
jted States forces Great Qtian -ye up attempt to gain oil qnop2 Columbia. filed States warns San Dqingo ,-9 more revolutions " ? gelltoa and overthrow of t ChlEmpire, and establishmei of a
jjupp scandal in Germanv. Uclosres made April 18. j
tober 10. One hundred and thirty-six
drown, 626 rescued. Fifty girls die in factory fire at Binghampton. N. Y.. July 22. Storm at Nome, Alaska, kills eleven, destroys 500 houses, $1,500,000 loss.
Tamplco, but resume assault. United States battleship fleet and International squadron gather at Vera Crua and Tamplco to protect foreign interests.
MORTUARY RECORD AT HOME AND ABROAD
GENERAL EVENTS OF PRDIE LMPORTANCE
a mad anarchist in Salonika, March
Enver Bey. Chief of Staff Turkish Army assassinated Feb. 17.
Henry N. Flagler, one of founders
j of Standard Oil Co., and financial mag-. .rfpoyp i ini ro A
nate, dies.
18. In Turkey the Commander-in-Chief ' "T , '' Tit t 'nn,C,
of the Ottoman forces in the Balkan ' .., -To
i James R. Keene, financier, dies Jan
war, Envery Bey, was slain on February 17. This was followed soon after by the assassination of Nazim Pacha, Turkish Premier. Turkey and Mexico appear to have been contending witn each other for honors in the line of assassinations, with Mexico slightly in
the lead.
Deaths of Cardinals Oreglia, deau of the Sacred College; and Rampollo, within a few days of each other at the Vatican. Luther McCarthy, pugilist, died at
European affairs have gone along nt"tt' I, v,
final analysis merely to be a combination of
these simple mechanical principles. Add to these the discovery of the use of coal and oil and of the expansibility of water and gasoline and we have the materiasl out of which almost all our contraptions of civilization are made. Human social life, a kind of mechanism infinitely more complex than any engine of iron
and steel, is also composed of various combinations of a few very simple social institutions. The family with its shelter, the home, the army, navy, police and fire forces, the school, the church, the press and the library are to society what the scale is to the musician. The modern
reformer and social revolutionist is one who de
sires to rearrange these or to reapply them in new combinations. He does not attempt to create new but merely to rearrange the old.
The chasmal difference, then, between the inventor and explorer of today and he of past
ages is that the former had to create the very
tools with which he worked while the latter uses tools already made. The first social reformer had
to create the social institutions as well as to manage them. He was like the artist who was obliged to grind his pigments out of his garden clays and make his brushes from the hair of his cat. Because the early inventor and explorer were compelled to find their way as well as to follow it early progress was necessarily slow. Like Columbus embarking on the mysterious sea they had neither chart to sail by nor port to make to. If for the sake of illustration we suppose the race to be now 100,000 years old savagery occupied 60,000, or twelve-twentieths, of the time; barbarism held over seven-twentieths of the time or 35,000 years; civilization has passed across barely 5,000 years or only one-twentieth of the total time. If we have traversed the vast stretches since Niniveh and Tyre in one-twelfth of the time it took our forbears to traverse the small distance from the cave-dweller to the bow and arrow user we have reasons to feel encouraged.
We progress in geometric ratio. Each new gain enables us to gain the faster. At our present rate we should travel faster in the next one thousand than in the last five thousand years. All the materials of a perfect human society are in our hands. We know enough to cure all diseases if we but apply our knowledge. We can destroy all poverty if we but make right use of present means. We have in hand the means of educating every individual on the earth. The tools for conquering the world in the name of brotherhood and enlightenment are in our hands. It but remains for us to use and apply and organize. The kingdom of heaven lies at hand. We are going along.
A Political Curio.
Scientists have recently exhumed in South Africa the skeleton of an extinct monster many times larger than an elephant. On looking at its picture one feels most the impression that here
FACTS AND FANCIES
Switzerland plans to establish a national bank in a valley rich in botanical and geological treasures.
"He disappeared one day and stayed away five years. Recently he reappeared and his wife took him back." "Are they happy now?" "No; he says she's unreasonable about trifles." "How so?" "She wants to know where he was during those five years." Louisville Courier-Journal.
G. Lester Plnkham of Flushing, L. I., has had his salary decreased in order to avoid paying his wife as much alimony as she asks for.
is a creature in the wrong kind of a world. Such j Tommy?
a monstrosity these days would find no place to lodge save in a museum. One of these days in the far off roseate future when all our dreams of political administration have come true, some bespectacled, erudite antiquarian will find, while digging about in the historical remains of these dark ages, a photograph of the late mayor of Indianapolis. Attached to the picture will be a brief account of Mr. Shank's record and a bit of his biography. "Ho! Ho!" the antiquarian will exclaim, "what have we here? 'Was mayor of Indianapolis four years. A city of 235,000 population. Was elected by a city political machine largely made up of grafters and parasites. Was controlled by his party bosses during his entire term and never had the courage of his own convictions. Seemed to be honest in a way but couldn't find a way of getting his honesty to work. Furnished a lot of free publicity to the newspapers by selling potatoes at auction when spuds were soaring. Mr. Shank was an auctioneer by profession before being accidentally elected mayor. Got involved in a strike in the last month of his term,
Tommy's Aunt Won't you have another piece of pie,
Tommy (sighing) No'm thank you. Tommy's Aunt You seem to be suffering from loss of appetite, young man. Are you ill? Tommy (sighing again) No'm. What I'm suffering from is politeness. Harper's Magazine.
South Africa's exports of diamonds and gold from $222,330,000 in 1911 to $243,929,000 in 1912.
rose
"You will," said the attorney, during the course of their consultation, "you will get your third out of the estate." "Oh!" exclaimed the widow, aghast; "how can you say such a thing, with my second scarcely cold in his
rather as usual, barring a few extra
startling outbursts by suffragists in England, such as the sensational suicide of the young suffragette who threw herself before the King's horse
in the Derby and was killed. Politically England has been in a furor, which, however, is nothing out of the ordinary. The year has seen the very remarkable "rebellion" of Ulster, under the direction of Sir Edward Carson, and the organization of an "army" of Ulstermen to resist enforcement of the Home Rule Bill should it pass Parliament. British Labor Troubles. England has also had its share of labor troubles. There have been large strikes at home and in Ireland, notably the Dublin riots, led by Jim Larkin. All of the European powers have gone on as heretofore in the construction of battleships ,and the "armed camp" policies of Germany, England and Russia are stronger than ever, possibly made so by the Balkan wars. There have been some few spats between France and Germany but nothing in any way approaching a breach of diplomatic relations. The falling of a couple of German war balloons on French territory created some little excitement, as did the mobbing of some German subjects by French citizens in border towns. In the Far East several things of moment occurred in 1913, among them the Chinese rebellion and establish
ment of a Republic, and in Japan the death of the Mikado and the succession of his son and the anti-American demonstrations and riots as a result of the adoption of the anti-alien land owning law in California. Few Scientific Achievements. In the real of science and exploration there have been but few developments that could positively be designated as history-creating. The discovery of the South Pole and the disaster to the Scott Expedition both occurred in 1912, although the fate of Captain Scott was not made known to the world until 1913. Dr. Frederick Frantz Friedmann, dlecovered of a "cure" for tuberculosis, made his appearance in 1913, but the value of Dr. Friedmann's "cure," and other "cures" for that dread disease announced at about the same time, are very much open to doubt. Aviation is progressing rapidly. Much attention to aeronautics has been paid by the various European governments from a military standpoint, but no means of making aeroplaning anywhere near safe have vet been discovered. The United States has spent some $50,000 during the year in military experiments in aviation. Aviation Fatalities Decrease. The number of deaths resulting from aviation has not been especially large. Aviators have died, just as aviators died in 1912, and Germany suffered a number of disastrous accidents to Zepplin dirigible baloons. Many of the accidents of aeroplanes resulted from fancy exhibition flying and military experiments. The ar 1913 saw the first aeroplane flight over the Panama Canal. In Panama great developments have taken place. October 10 last saw the dynamiting of Gamboa Dyke, being the removal of practically the last serious obstruction in the big ditch. The Canal is now almost completed, so far as a trans-continental water way is concerned, although not yet prepared for the passage of steamers from ocean to ocean. Work has also been begun on the buildings and grounds for the great Panama-Pacific International Ex
position, to be held In San Francisco in -915, as a celebration of the formal
opening of the Panama Canal. Few Grewsome Murders. The United States may congratulate itself that, barring the case of Hans Schmidt, the New York priest, there have been few gruesome and startling murders during the year. New York state furnished the most sensational bit of local politics of the year in the impeachment and removal of Governor William Sulzer, followed by Sulzer's nomination by Progressives and election to the State Assembly. In the world of sports the United States still stands supreme. In addition to humbling the British Polo cup challengers, the United States further shocked Johnny Bull when Francis Ouimet, the youthful golf wonder, walked away fro mthe English experts in the National Golf Championship at
Brookline, Mass., and by the winning of the International Davis Tennis Cup. American's supremacy in sports was further recognized during the year when King Gustave of Sweden presented the American athletes with the medals and trophies won at the Olympic games in Stockholm in 1912. The sporting world suffered a shock however, when it was learned that "Jim" Thorpe, the famous Carlisle Indian athlete, really belonged 1h the classification of "professional." He voluntarily renounced the trophies he had won as an amateur in the Olympic games.
Death of Emperor of Japan.
Nazin Pacha, Turkish Premier, asKing Menelik of Abbysslnia reported dead. His death confirmed on December 23. !
Whitelaw Reld. American Ambass
dor to Great Britain, buried at Sleepy
Hollow, cemetery, N. Y.
Adolphus Uusoh, millionaire brewer
of St. Louis, died October 10.
Charles S. Gates, son of the late
John W. Gates, died Oct. 28. Ralph Rose, famous athlete and champion shot putter, died October 16. Timothy Roodruff. New York, politician, died Oct. 12. Anthony N. Brady, died in London July 22. Col. S. F. Cody, American aviator, killed in England by fall from aero August 7. Mayor Gaynor of New York died on way to England. Timothy D. Sullivan. New York politician, found dead on railroad track after escaping from an asylum. Alfred Austin, poet laureate of England, died June 2.
NATIONS IN SPIRTS
Mrs, Emellne Pankhurst visit the United States. October 18. lmperator, largest steamship in the world, starts on maiden voyage. June 11. Reaches New York. June 18. Gettysburg encampment of Confed-
' erate and Union veterans fifty years
' after the battle of Gettysburg, held on
July 1-5. Viscount Haldane. British Ixrd High Chancellor visits the United States, August 2 to September 2, to attend American Bar Association meeting in MontreaL
j English suffragette fatally injured
by Hinging nerseir neiore me i.ing
jwerica successfully defejs the
fcfrnationa! Polo Cup again ttreat : horse at the Derby
oyfain. June 14 Harry Thaw, slayer of Stanford fc-racuse win the Inteiinegiate White, escaped from Mattewan Insane etta, June "1 t i Asylum and Bees to Canada. He ts arvard ei"ni oami r b , j ejected from Canada and seeks retie June 0 t I fuge in New Hampshire, where the
franclg Ouimet wins thtVtionl ' cag is stlH Pndtog
Oten Golf Championship at Irookline, i States courts.
js8., sept. o. America wins the Da
CALENDAR OF CRIME HOMICIDE TRIALS
Mrs. Fennie May Eaton, wife of Rear Admiral Eaton, acquitted October .31 of murdering herhusband. Rev. Hans Schmidt, discredited Catholic priest, arrested in New York for the 'murder of Anna Aumller, his sweetheart. Floyd and Claude S. Allen executed at Richmond, Va.. March 28 for participation in the famous Allen court house shooting affray. Henry Spencer, confessed murderer of many persons, is convicted of killing Mildred Allison Rextroat, a dancing teacher, in Chicago. Appeal pending. Mrs. Bessie Wakefield is convicted of murdering her husband and sentenced to hang in Connecticut on March 4. Leo Frank, wealthy manufacturer, convicted in Atlanta, Georgia, of murdering girl in his office. Appeal pmdIng. Dr. Frank Craig acquitted in bdianapolis of murder of Dr. Ha en Knabe.
Cf. July 2S. Horse racing resumed injfew York Ate on May 30. t
Jim Thorpe admits he f a profes- i
iKnai ainiete ana resig:
poohies. Jan. 27.
Philadelphia Athletics fefeat the
Sew York Giants in the Hd's chamjlnnship baseball series, Ott .
Mr I nomas l.ipton s oallence for
the America's Cup is acc$ted by the Sew York Yacht club. p-
in the Unites
I Steamshlo Aauitanla to be the larg-
t I jest steamer in the world, launched in
AVIATION, SCIEXCE
AND EXPLORATION Vibliamar Stefansson sails from
British Columbia on Arctic expedition, June 17. i
Robert G. Fowler flics across the
Panama Canal, April Zl
Crocker Land Expedition sails from
New York, July 2.
Dr. Hudson Stuck reached the
summit of Mount McEnley. June 20.
Eneland. April
Cubist, futurist and impressionist art Introduced by French painters and exhibitions held in New York. Chicago
J.J'Vnfctoland other cities of the United States. ujOljniphic Colonel Roosevelt start, on South . . American hunting trip, vlelts Rio Ja
neiro. BraxU; San Paulo. Braxll; Buenos Ayres, Argentine Republic, and Valparaiso. Chile. Mendel Bellis tried and acquitted of ritual murder at the -Holy City" of Kiev. Russia. Gamboa dike, last obstruction In the" Panama Canal blown up with dyna
mite on October 10. Buildings of the Panama-Pacific Exposition started at San Francisco. German and English governments decline to participate.
LABOR DISPUTES
car strike be-
Tndiananolls street
gins October 31. Copper strike in Michigan started
Dr. Simon Flexer anounces the dls-l July 23. n
covery of the germ ef Infantile par-1 Prisoners In the Indianapous uyna-
alyais. mlto conspiracy spena me nri uj Arrival of Dr. Atderich Fran in Fort Leavenworth penitentiary,
Friedman governme test of his tu-i January 1. .
Firemen, engineers ana trainmen m
POLITICAL EVENTS Z IN UNITED STATES
Inauguration of President Woafro'w Wilson on March 4. United States Judge Robert W. Archbald removed from office byCTnited States Senate after impeacement trial. John Purroy Mltchel elected layor of New York on the Fusion tickt destroying Tammany's power. f David I. Walsh, Democrat, ekcttd Governor of Massachusetts, a victory for the Wilson administration. ' I Acting-Governor Fielder elected governor of New Jersey. Fielder is a Democrat and was the Wilson adninistratlon candidate. Minnesota legislature adopted ejual suffrage measure Feb. 11. Passage of Wilson tariff bill. Passage of the Currency bill. Inauguration of Vice-PresHent Marshall, his address to the Senate and administration of oaths to the new Senators. March 4. California legislature adopts equal suffrage measure. Illinois passes equal suffrage till. Japanese land law in California approved by Gov. Johnson, Feb. 3. William Sulzer of New York iro-
berculosis serum staiSid March 11. Discovery of radian as a cure for cancer announced. 4cbt cast upon that discovery by thi American Asso-' elation for the Curerf Cancer. Aviation death Matin Germany for 1913 reaches 30; Fne.ce 37; England 10; Italy 4; Russia I; Argentine Republic 4; Japan 3; farkey 3; Austria 1; Brazil 1; Swaziland 1: Scotland 1; Canada 1; Porttl 1; Morocco 1; China 1. and the Wted States 25.
Eastern railroads demand Increase and better hours. Matter adjusted by arbitration. Hotel waiter In New York City strike January 1. 100.000 lady garmentworkera strike in New York. January 10.
Paterson, New Jersey, silk strike.
NOTABLE M1RRIAGES AND ENGAGEMENTS Wedding of Prteess Victoria-Louise, only daughter ef the Kaiser and Prince Ernst of Qmberland. May 24. Miss Jessie Weidrow Wilson, sec
ond daughter of tte president, marries Francis Boyles fcyre at the White House, Nov. 25' Engagement of Vincent Astor to Miss Helen Huntington announced. Duke of Croy marriess Miss Leishmann, daughter of the American Ambassador to Geran. Oct. 27. Prince Arthur of Connaught marries the Duchess of Fife. Oct. 15. Dethroned KicS Manuel of Portugal marries the PrtBCess of Hohenzollern, at Sinemarineen. eGrmany.
Miss Helen Gould married Flnley J.
Shepard. RESUME OF TROUBLES
BELOW RIO GRANDE General Felix Diaz released from penitentiary in Mexico City and attacked the National Palace, Mexico City. Gustavo Madero. President Madero's brother, Is arrested by General Huerta and Imprisoned in the National Palace, February 19. Gustavo Madero is executed by the order of General Felix Diaz, Feb. 19. President Madero and Vice-President Pino Suarez are shot down while "trying to escape." General Victoriano Huerta proclaimed provisional President of Mexico, Feb. 19. Rise of General Venustiano Carranza in the north of eMxico. Capture of Juares and Chihuahua. Rise of General Francisco ("Pan-
COLISEUM Roller Skating tonight and all day tomorrow.
The Woman In the Case." The Murray theatre was well filled at both performance yesterday when the Francis Sayles Playera offered Blanch Walsh's; sensational success, "The Woman In the Cane," which has proven to be an excellent offerine; for this splendid company. The scene In the last act between Mi as Worth and iMsa LeRoy is rery
sensational, and proves these two ladies to be very clever actresses. "The Woman in the Case" will continue for the balance of the week with a special matinee tomorrow (New Year'n) when all seats will be renenred and the regular night prices charged. The box office will be open mornings during the balance of the week. NOTICEis hereby given that the congregation of the Central Chriatlan church In requested to meet at Dr. Blossom's residence on Monday ere for the purpose of electing three trustees. Geo. W. Mansfield.
grave I
Jreen Bag.
The postmaster of a large city reports that milliners are taking advantage of the new parcel post regulations which allow an increased size in the package.
"That man who paid a fortune for a bogus rare book must be a very indignant bibliophile." "Well," replied Miss Cayenne, "there are bibliophiles, and then there are what John Billings would have called "bibliophools. " Washington Star.
hr"i villa as a leader of Carranxa'a
peached and removed from office and 1 constitutionalists in the north of Mexsncceeded by Lieut. Gov. Martin H. jco. G'vnn. . MexiCan rebels fail In attack on
inaiana passed public utilities comniiofiivii Dul.
POLITICAL EVENTS IN OTHER LANDS
King Otto, known as the "Mad King of Barvaria," removed from the throne
and succeeded by his son.
Sir Rufus Isaacs made Lord Chief Justice of Great Britain, being the
first Jew to hold that office.
Election of President Poincare. in
France, January 17; inauguration on February 18. Election and installation of Sir Vansittart Bowater as Lord Mayor of London. Victoriano Huerta proclaimed Proi
CASTOR I A for Infants and Children. ' Tha Kisd You Havs Always Bough)
Fan Fraooes and Hot Chocolate. You
get them at Price's nutritious and retrhifia. so-:t
Bears the Signature of
MURRAY All This Week Special New Year's Matinee. ALL 8 EATS RESERVED The Woman in the Uase By Clyde Fitch Prices 10c, 20c 30c; Next Week: "MOTHS-
DISASTERS, FLOODS AND FIRES IN 1913 !
Miss Lola LarkhVof Sioux City, la. has established an agency for supplying harvest hanus and raiiroad construction men.
Floods in Ohio, many killed, much suffering and great damage done. Floods in the Mississippi Valley as a result of Ohio floods. Tornado destroys part of Omaha, Xeb. Zeppelin L-2 exploded October 7. Twenty killed. Gas explosion near Pittsburg kills 120 miners. Long Beach. California, pier gives way killing 35 persons. Disastrous floods in Texas, early part of October. Two hunarea and eighty miners entombed following mine explosion at Dawson, N". M. Twenty-three rescued alive. Steamship Nevada strikes a mine in 1 V V
When You Think of Bread
AND DEVELOP! AT ANY AGE cheeks and lips bee one pale, tne body is languid and colds are easily contracted it ndermiaes tke very source of bah and mut nave immediate teabnenL Drug or alcoholic mixtures cannot make blood. Noarislunent is necessary and Scott t Emulmkm is always the physician favorite its concentrated medial nourishment charges the blooi with red corpuscles, feeds the famished tissues and carries fatd value to every tiny nerve and fibre in a
natural, easy way. Take Scott's Emulsion to enrich your blood but thus the alcoholic wbstihifes. 3-n
Think of either
lilflOTIKI
yTTEC-IfCIyST
OR
LDEift
They don't cost any more than any breads, so why not try them next time. ASK your grocer
m
ICHMOND BAKING GO.
' ' ' " if I I
