Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 39, Number 287, 13 October 1914 — Page 5
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, TUESDAY, OCT. 13, 1914.
PAG2 FIVE
Social Calendar The Wednesday Bridge club will meet this afternoon with Mrs. Harry Lontz instead of meeting Wednesday afternoon, the usual time for meeting. Mrs. Lona Huber will be hostess for a meeting of the Central Aid society of the FirBt Christian church at her home, 210 South Thirteenth street. The Good Time Needle club will meet in the afternoon with Mrs. Cecil Clark at her home, 30 South West Fifth street. The Perseverance Bible class of the First Baptist church, will meet with Mrs. Frank Tice at her home, 243 South West Third street. The Queen Esther society of the Grace M. E. church, will meet this evening at 7:30 oclock at the home of Miss Carrie Lesh, 217 North Eighth street. The Tizrah Aid society will not meet in the afternoon. The meeting has been deferred one weeks. An all-day meeting of the Woman's Aid society of the Reid Memorial Presbyterian church, will be held at the church. The C. W. B. M. of the Central Christian church, will be entertained at the home of Mrs. P. T. McLellan, 401 West Main street. A meeting of the Penny club will be held in the afternoon at the usual hour. The executive board of the Federation of Women's clubs, will sneet in the afternoon at 4 o'clock at the Morrisson-Reeves library. The Ladies' Aid society of the First Methodist church, will meet In the afternoon at 2:30 o'clock In the church parlors. The Misses Pauline and Marie Wrede entertained at their home on West Main street Monday evening in honor of Misses Doris Hockett and Aztln O'Connor of Muncie, Messrs, Harry W. Beebe and Stanley Mlnton of Muncie, and Wlllard Stevens of Indianapolis. The evening was spent socially and with games and music. A delicious luncheon In several courses was served. A meeting of the Aid society of the First Methodist church will be held Wednesday afternoon at 2:30 o'clock at the church. All members are urged to be present as matters of importance will be considered at this time. Mrs. H. S. James of this city, was named a delegate to the national convention at Atlanta, Georgia, November 12-18, at a meeting of the State W. C. T. U., which is being held at Brazil this week. Mrs. T. P. Keplinger is a delegate from the Mary F. Thomas W. C. T. U. Wednesday afternoon a 4 o'clock a meeting of the exceutive board of the Woman's Federated clubs will be held at the Morrisson-Reeves library. All members are urged to be present as this will be the first meeting of the new year. Mrs. John Wampler and Mrs. William Dechant of Richmond, who have been visiting Mrs. Charles Moffett, have returned home. Indianapolis News. Mr. and Mrs. Will Jones, Mrs. Mary Jones, Messrs. Forrest and Malvin and Miss Lucile Jones motored to Dayton Sunday and visited with relatives. Tlie many friends of Mr. J. Will Mount, a former resident of Richmond, will be glad to know he is canvalpsclng at the home of his son, Mr. Paul Mount, in Detroit, after suffering with typhoid fever. The Perseverance Bible class of the First Baptist church will meet tomorrow afternoon at 2:30 o'clock with Mrs. Frank Tice at her home, 243 South West Third street. All members r.ro asked to be present. At the meeting of the Woman's Auxiliary of the Y. M. C. A. held Monday nffernoon at the association building the entire afternoon was spent in makHEAVY MEAT EATERS HAVE SLOW KIDNEYS Eat Less Meat If You Feel Backachy or Have Bladder Trouble Take .. Glass of Salts. No man or woman who eats meat regularly can make a mistake by flushing the kidneys occasionally, says a well-known authority. Meat forms uric acid which excites the kidneys, they become overworked from the strain, get sluggish and fail to filter the waste and poisons from the blood, then we get sick. Nearly all rheumatism, headaches, liver trouble nervousness, dizziness, sleeplessness and urinary disorders come from sluggish kidneys. The moment you feel a dull ache in the kidneys or your back hurts or if the urine is cloudy, offensive full of sediment, irregular of passage or attended by a sensation of scalding, stop eating meat and get about four ounces of Jad Salts from any pharmacy; take a tablospoonful in a glass of water before breakfast, and in a few days your kidneys will act fine. This famous salts is made from the acid of grapes and lemon juice, combined with lithia, and has been used for generations to flush and stimulate the kidneys, also to neutralize the acids in urine so it no longer causes irritation, thus ending bladder weakness. Jad Salts is inexpensive and cannot Injure; makes a delightful effervescent lithia-water drink which every one should take now and then to keep the kidneys clean and active, and the blood pure, thereby avoiding serious kidney complications. Adv.
lng plans for the Penny supper which the auxiliary will serve Saturday evelng from 5 to 8 o'clock in the upetairs dining room. The public is in-1 vited to attend. j The Woman's Franchise league of Indiana has been conducting a vigorous campaign throughout the summer looking to the calling of a constitutional convention for Indiana. The league has set apart Saturday, October 17, as a day of special propaganda and con-
' certed effort and has called on the branch leagues of the state to observe the day by mass meetings, the distribution of literature, or in any way they may see fit calculated to draw the attention of the voters to this important question. The women members of the Country club are arranging for a Woman's Handicap golf tournament to be held next week on the links at the club. The Tirzah Aid society of the Ben iHur lodge will not meet Wednesday I gfternnnn nt this woflr Thfi TTlPfitlne has been postponed until a week from Wednesday and the hostess will be announced later. The Protected Home Circle will hold its state convention and Inner Circle degree at Muncie today and Wednesday. Mrs. Edward Eadler is a delegate from the Richmond circle. Mr. Charles Morgan, who has been on the New York Press visited friends and relatives here yesterday enroute to Sioux City, Iowa, where he will be business manager of the Sioux City Tribune. Later he will be joined by Mrs. Morgan and little daughter, who are now in the east. The bans for the marriage of Mr. Herman Otten and Miss Sophia Schwer of Falmouth, Ky., were called Sunday at the St. Andrew's church. Mr. Otten is a well known resident of this city. The annual inspection of. the Sol Meredith Woman's Relief Corps will be held Thursday afternoon In the Post room at the Court House at 2 o'clock. All members are asked to be present. After the program refreshments will be served. Mrs. M. F. Johnston, chairman of the Art committee of the General Federation of Woman's clubs, was a guest at the re-opening of the Shelbyville Coterie club Saturday afternoon at the Elks' home. The committee in charge of the program were officers of the club. Two hundred ladles were present. They were led to the main assembly hall by the president, Mrs. E. K. Montgomery, and presented to Mrs. Johnston, then invited by the members of the committee to the north end of the hall where refreshments were served. The hall was beautiful, the decorations being quite original. Mrs. Johnston was the principal speaker of the afternoon. Her subject was "Enjoyment of Paintings." The Shelbyville Democrat says: "Rarely has there been a talk that so greatly appealed to so large an audience. The regret is that every lover of the beautiful In Shelbyville could not have heard it. 'Color is far more appealing to Mrs. Johnston than 'black and white' in pictures. Her address was intended to refute the charge made by Thomas Carlyle that 'All that man has ever thought, dreamed or accomplished, could be found in printed books." "There is no end In beautiful things in nature which can not be put into books," she said. "Inspiration comes from love of Nature. We receive en joyment through our sensibilities." The initial meeting of the year for the Richmond Chapter of the Daughters of the American Revolution will be held Saturday afternoon of this week at the home of Miss Laura Johnson, 107 North Thirteenth Btreet. The program will be given as announced in the year book. Mr. and Mrs. Earl Stevenson and children, Master George and Miss Thelma, motored to Richmond Sunday from their home in Greensfork and spent the day with Mr. and Mrs. R. C. Conley and family at their home on North I street. Mr. and Mrs. Bert Jeffries entertained at their home on the New Paris pike Sunday with an informal dinner party. The guests were Mr. and Mrs. William Fulton and children, Everett, Russell and Forest Fulton, Flossie and Blanche Fulton of Fountain City, Mr. and Mrs. Frank Veregge, Mr. Howard Burgess. Mr. Elmer Davis, Miss Alice Vore, Miss Ruby Engelbert, Mr. Chester Halsley and Mr. Ora Vore. Miss Ruth Allen was hostess last evening for the meeting of the L. M. C. club at her home, 252 South West Second street. The evening was spent socially and with music and games. Needlework was also a feature. A delicious luncheon was served. The members present were Misses Blanche Mansfield, Vadis Surface, Donna Hyde, Madge Smith, Edith Decker, Fay Denny, Ethel Banfill, Lucile White, Dolores Ellis, Wilhelmina Boggs, Ruby Tingle, Ruby Banfill, Elizabeth Hunt, Marie Paush, Mabel Mansfield. Alta Mae White, Lillian Karch, Mesdames C. R. Banfill and I. F. Burns. Miss Etta Rose was a guest of the club. Next Monday evening the Misses Ruby and Ethel Banfill will entertain the members at their home, 117 South West Fifth street. Prof, and Mrs. Raymond Slasch of j Kenosha, Wis., are the guests of Mr. i and Mrs. Frank Gausepohl of North
Be Sure to Ask Your Grocer For the Guaranteed Flour Occident Costs a Little More than others Worth It Your IVIortey Refunded without Argument v.
Twelfth street. Prof. Slasch was formerly organist and a teacher at St. Andrew's. The Good Time Needle club will meet Wednesday afternoon with Mrs. Cecil Clark at her home, 31 South West Fifth street. Each member is asked to bring a gueBt. The meeting will be in the nature of a social session. Mr. John Vaughan has returned to his home on North Eleventh street after spending some time at Douglas Lake, Mich. Mrs. Maria Schlater, past department president of the Woman's Relief Corps who has been at the Reid Memorial hospital will soon return to her home in Logansport.
In celebration of her birthday annij versary Mrs. Alva Cooper was pleasantly surprised Monday afternoon by a number of her friends at her home on North Twelfth street. Dahlias were used in ornamenting the rooms where the guests spent the afternoon socially and with games and music. Later a delicious luncheon in two courses was served. The guests were , Mesdames William Tiehl, Lewis Vossler, Lawrence Duning, Albert Engel- , bert, Edward Van Etten, Will Van Et- , ten, John Cooper, Harmon Wettig, Roy Cooper. Mary Lawler, Gilbert Hennigar, Edward Ullery, Berlie Pyle, Earl Harris, Oliver Osthrander, Alba Harter. Misses Mary Cooper, Mary Ullery, Dela Van Etten, Ella Marie Van Etten and Master Bryon Cooper. Mrs. M. F. Johnston of North Tenth street has returned from Shelbyville where she attended a club meeting. i miss Knoaa Forterneia or Indiana polis, and who often visits here has gone to Noblesville to attend a house party given by Miss Margaret Curtis. Miss Estelle Bowers, daughter of Mr. D. W. Bowers of Muncie and Mr. Floyd Bowman of Hagerstown were united in marriage at the residence of Rev. Abraham Bowman in Hagerstown. Rev. Mr. Bowman is the grandfather of the bridegroom. They will reside in Muncie. Mr. and Mrs. E. L. Norris gave a prettily appointed dinner Sunday at their home north of the city in honor of County Commissioner Albert Anderson and family, and County Road Superintendent Arthur Jones and family. The table was prettily appointed with flowers and ferns. An elaborate dinner in several courses was served. The Queen Esther club of the Daughters of Rebekah, met at the home of Mrs. Elmer Hall yesterday afternoon. An excellent musical program was presented. A part of the afternoon was spent socially and with needlework. Latter a delicious luncheon was served. Those present were Mesdames Thomas Jessup of Centerville, Charles Arrowsmith, Henry Vogelsong, Alonzo Cox, Russell Stratton, Frank Spekenhler, Earnest Evans, Erastus Bond, Thaddeus Personett, Baltz Bescher, Jeff Wilson, Scott Webb, Fee Ireton, Elmer Hall and Miss Ada Mcintosh. Mrs. Vern Thomas of South Twelfth street, has gone to Indianapolis for a few days visit. Miss Zella Lockhart of Owensville, 1.' . . A T.f A 1 , . "l7 IT1 H ' Vw ti . e -m 1 1 . 1 ,..,. Emanel. Connersville Examiner. Miss Leola Newbern of Greenfield ! spent Sunday here the guest of Mrs. ! Harry Jeffries of South Fourteenth j street. ! A meeting of the Craigy Var club j was held Monday evening at the home of Miss Carolyn Smith on South j Twelfth street. The evening was ' spent playing games and with needlework and music. A delicious luncheon in several courses was served. Miss Helen Richey was the guest of the club. Those who enjoyed the affair were Misses Jean Ellis, Pearl Harris, Bernice Cruse, Carolyn Rodefeld, Carolyn Bradley and Carolyn Smith. The guests were conveyed to their homes in motor cars after the meeting. Next Monday evening Miss Carolyn Bradley will entertain the club. Mrs. I. S. Cohen of Atlantic City, N. J., is the guest of Mrs. Walter G. Butler at her home on South Seventeenth street. Mrs. Harry Lontz entertained the members of the Wednesday bridge club this afternoon at her home on South A street instead of tomorrow afternoon, the usual time of meeting. Mrs. George Kemper was hostess this afternoon for a meeting of the Tuesday Euchre club. Nearly all the members were presPURE RICH BLOOD PREVENTS DISEASE Bad blood is responsible for more ailments than anything else. It causes catarrh, dyspepsia, rheumatism, weak, tired, languish feelings and worse troubles. Hood's Sarsaparilla has been wonderfully successful in purifying and enriching the blood, removing scrofula and other humors, and building up the whole system. Take it give it to all the family so as to avoid illness. Get it today. Adv.
f You Arte Not Satisfied
ent Monday afternoon when the Magazine club held Its first meeting of the fall and winter season at the pretty home of Mrs. E. G. Hibberd on North Ninth street. Mrs. Wilbur Hibberd was a guest. The program consisted of each member giving some experience of the summer vacation and also In giving current events. The meeting was In the nature of a social session. Later a luncheon was served. Next Monday afternoon Mrs. J. H. Mills will entertain the club at her home on North Tenth street. Mesdames I. S. Cohen of Atlantic City, New Jersey, and Frank Braffett were guests Monday afternoon at a meeting of the Ticknor club held at the home of Mrs. A. W. Reed on South Thirteenth street. Mrs. David W. Dennis, president of the club, had prepared the paper for the afternoon. Her subject was "Greek Theories and Experiments." The paper was so interesting it occasioned quite a little discussion and
' took up the remaining time. Next 1 Monday afternoon Mrs. Walter G. 1 Butler will entertain the club at her home on South Seventeenth street. An election of officers will be held Wednesday afternoon when the Central Aid society of the First Christian church meets with Mrs. Lona Huber at her home, 210 South Thirteenth street. The meeting will be called at 2:30 o'clock. Mrs. P. T. McLellan will be hostess Wednesday afternoon for a meeting of the C. W. B. M. of the Central Christian church at her home on West Main street. The program as announced yesterday will be given without change. An all-day meeting of the Aid society of the Reid Memorial Presbyterian church will be held Wednesday at the church and all members are asked to be present. The Woman's Loyal Moose Circle will meet Thursday evening at 7:30 o'clock in the Moose hall. After the business session a program of musical numbers and readings will be given. Refreshments will be served. Mrs. S. A. Lake and daughter, Miss Laura, have returned to their home in Oberlin, O., after a pleasant visit with Mrs. Francis Rich and Mrs. Reuben Rich. Mrs. Lake and the hostesses were former schoolmates. Mr. and Mrs. Francis Rich entertained with a dinner Sunday in honor of the latter's brother and wife, Mr. and Mrs. C. W. Hines of Litchfield, O., and nephew and wife, Mr. and Mrs. Willis Hines of Wellington, O. The guests motored to this city. The table was prettily decorated with fall flowers and ferns. Other guests were Mr. and Mrs. Reuben Rich, Mr. and Mrs. Ohmer Mehaffey and children, Gordon and Marjorie, Mr. and Mrs. Edgar Adams, Mr. and Mrs. Samuel S. Culbertson and daughter, Frances Naomi and Master Dale Rich. Successful in every detail was the 1 dancing party given last evening by , members of the Happy Hour club in I the Pythian Temple. This was the first dance of the season for the club, j and judging from the success of the i party last evening the season promises ! j to be an enjoyable one. Hick's orchesi tra played the order of dances. The affair began at 8:30 o'clock and con-j ! tinued until the "wee sma" hours of i i the morning. Announcement of the j next dancing party will be made at a I later date. I Mrs. George W. Davis and Miss Ag- ; nes Cummings, delegates from the j First Methodist church, have gone to i Indianapolis to attend the convention j of the Woman's Foreign Missionary j society. The sessions will be held in i the Roberts Park church, and began j today to continue until Thursday. The Aid society of the First Metho dist church will meet Wednesday afternoon at a. JO o clock in the church All members are asked to ! be present. Mr. and Mrs. Berlie Pyle have returned from a two week's trip through Michigan. Mr. and Mrs. Alba Harter are leaving the latter part of the week for southwest Ohio, visiting with relatives and friends. Mrs. Marry Kabbes of Effingham, 111., and Miss Christina Maier of TenMakes Stubborn Coughs Vanish in a Hurry Surprisingly Good Cough Syrup Easily and Cheaply Made at Home If some one in your family has an obstinate cough or a hud throat or chest cold that has been hanging on and refuscf to yield to treatment, get from any drug store 2V dunces of l'inex and make it into a imt of cough syrup, and watch that cough vanish. Pour the 2y2 ounces of Pinex (5ft cents worth) into a pint bottle and (ill the bottle with plain granulated sugar syrup. The total cost is about 54 cents, ".nd gives you a full pint a family supply of a most effective remedy, at a saving of $2. A day's use will usually overcome a hard cough. Easily prepared in 5 minutes full directions with Pinex. Keeps perfectly and has a pleasant taste. Children like it. It's really remarkable how promptly and easily it loosens the dry, hoarse c:r tight cough and heals the inflamed mem hranes in a painful cough. It also stops the formation of phlegm in the throat and bronchial tubes, thus ending the persistent loose cough. A splendid reined v for bronchitis, winter coughs, bronchia" asthma and whooping cough. Pinex is a special and highly comvn trated compound of genuine Norway pin extract, rich in gnaiacol, which ' is healing to the membranes. Avoid disappointment bv asking rr.r Iruggist for "2Vs ounces of Pinex,"' an :;p not accept anything else. A guarant jf absolute satisfaction goes with t'ni preparation or monev promptly refundet llie Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne, Ind.
topolls, ni., are the guests of Mr. and Mrs. Harry Wessel .and family of South Fourteenth street. ' The Queen Esther society of Grace Methodist church will meet Wednesday evening at 7:30 o'clock at the home of Miss Carrie Lesh. 217 North Eighth street. All members are asked to be present and bring their needlework. Miss Hazel Mashmeyer was hostess Monday evening for a meeting of the A. N. C. club at her home on South Sixth street. Late fall flowers were used in decorating the rooms. The evening was spent socially and with games and music. A luncheon was served. The club will hold Its next meeting at the home of Miss Nola Russell on North C street, and it will be a masquerade party in celebration of Halloween. All members of Grace M. E. League who intend to participate in the hayride Thursday are asked to call phone 2287 not later than Wednesday noon.
Apply Sloan's Freely For Lumbago. Your attacks of Lumbago are not nearly so hopeless as they seem. You can relieve them almost instantly by a simple application of Sloan's Liniment on the back and loins. Lumbago is a form of rheumatism, and yields perfectly to Sloan's which penetrates quickly all in through the sore, ! tender muscles, limbers up the back ' and makes it feel fine. Get a bottle ! of Sloan's Liniment for 25 cents of ; any druggist and have it in the house ; against colds, sore and swollen i joints, rheumatism, neuralgia, sciatica j and like ailments. Your money back if not satisfied, but it does give almost I instant relief. ! (Advertisement.) - CARD OF THANKS. We wish to extend our sincere thanks to our friends, the lodges and the musicians for the kindness shown j us during the illness and death of our i beloved husband and father. Mrs. Dean and Daughter. For fiscal year ending June 30, 1914 Porto Rico's exports to the United States were valued at $35,000,000. THIN FOLKS WHO WOULD BE FAT Increase in Weight Ten Pounds or More A Physician's Advice. "I'd certainly give most anything to be able to fat up a few pounds and stay that way," declares every excessively thin man or woman. Such a result is not impossible, despite past failures. Thin people are victims of mal-nutrition, a condition which prevents the fatty elements of food from being taken up by the blood as they are when the powers of nutrition are normal. Instead of getting into the blood, all the fat and flesh producing elements stay in the intestines until they pass from the body as waste. To correct this condition and to produce a healthy normal, amount of fat the nutritive processes must be artificially supplied with the power which nature has denied them. This can best be accomplished by eating a Sargol tablet with every meal. Sargol is a scientific combination of six of the best strength-giving fat-producing elements known to the medical profession. Taken with meals, it mixes with the food and turns the sugars and starches into rich, ripe nourishment for the tissues and blood and its rapid effect is remarkable. Reported gains of from ten to twenty-five pounds in a single month are by no means infrequent. Yet its action is perfectly natural and absolutely harmless. Sargol is sold by Leo H. Fihe and other good druggists everywhere and every package contains a guarantee of weight increase or money back. Caution: While Sargol has produced remarkable results in the treatment of nervous indigestion and general stomach disorders, it should not, owing to its remarkable flesn producing effect, be used by those who are not willing to increase their weight ten pounds or more. RED BLOOD And Plenty of It Is the Secret of Robust, Joyous Health for Old and Young. USOLINE Is a Wonderful Blood Purifier. Blood Is made from the food we eat. Kow the blood has got to he rich and red, and It can only be no when the food In comfortably and thoroughly dlgeiited and fully assimilated., After the blood-making elements are extracted from the food, what's left, the wastes, mast be eliminated from the body. The bowels are the great organs of excretion casting or carry ipg ont. There must be no congestion, no con tipation. How ran there be pure, rich, red blood; normal, healthy action of stomach, liver, lungs, kldnr.vs and heart; when the bowels fall to do their part fully and regularly! When theHe poisonous wastes are actually left in the body to back up through the whole system You hare tried cathartics, purgatives, laxative, violent-acting, pain-racking drugs and you know the unsatisfactory results. Now try a pure. natural, internal lubricator V 80LINE. Its effect I. to rr.ntl. .....- 1 1 - lubricate the whole Internal digestive and ImKtlnitl , pi, . . .... . , -- v .uitru inn t-'tiugrsieri I mass of poisonous waste; and to cause the I movements of the bnwels to be painless, ; regular, natural and healthy to remove Lvunurniivu muu iu restoro health. Try rgOLING there are Imitations but nothing like the genuine L'SOLINE, Imported from Russia and re-refined by the OIL , PEODICT8 COMPANY. ! New York. It's odorless, tasteless and colorless. n. . ,, For adults, children and J?l uZ't babies. Sold hv druggists TraA lu generally. 25.-. ,n,l 50c. " " PackaZelarge bottle, and SI a three plat tin Also In capsules. S dm. In box, 50c. Ask or write for printed matter. i Con key Drug Company.
E7
CALL HI PETITIONS FDR BRIDGE AT E
Final arrangements for the mass meeting at the court house Wednesday night will be made at a meeting of the Southwest Richmond Improvement association tonight in the Joseph Moore fcchool. Me bers of the S. W. R. I. A. with members of the committee on the east side of tbe river are still working with the petitions for the E street bridge location. These will be called In for Wednesday night. Will Kelley, attorney, will present the case of those who want the bridge at E street, before the mass meeting. 1 nere will be other speakers and probably a band concert. The county commissioners will accept the invitation to attend as will other county officials. Lownty's Chocolates. 8tores. Quiglsy Drug 13-St "NORMAN" Tho NEWEST Cliett. Feabody Jk Co.. lae. Makara
Special Discount on Plumes To the Ladies of Richmond and vicinity: For the next ten days we are offering an extremely low rate for cleaning and curling plumes. "We are going to save all our customers the usual milliner's commission of one-third. We guarantee to clean and restore old feathers and plumes, making them practically as good as new. We will do this for From 50c to $1X0. depending upon the size and quality of the plume or feather. Thousands of pleased customers are our best references. French Benzol Dry Cleaning
The Chauncey Cleaning Co. Auto delivery.
PHONE 2501.
Mayo's Medical and Surgical Institute 843 N. Delaware St.' Indianapolis, Ind.
CANCERS AND
i cm. .Oris TREATED WITHOUT
THE KNIFE He lias treated successfully all forms of Chronic Diseases that are curable such as Diseases of the Brain, Heart, Lungs, Throat. Eye and Ear, Stomach. Liver. Kit'neys. Lung Trouble, Bladder. Rectum. Female Diseases. Nervous Diseases, Catarrh, Rupture. Piles, Eczema. Epilepsy, Dropsy, Varicocele Hydrocele- etc. Diseases of Women given special attention. We Want to Cure DiS Men We are particularly interested iu seeing afHicted men and women who hare been treated without success, for we know that our services will be appreciated more ir. 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 wid gratitude, and our pro ressicnal reputation is backed by statements from them, which we hare to convince the many skeptical sufferers of our ability to CURE. PILES, FISTULA, ETC. Cured without detention from business. BLOOD POISON We use only tho most advanced methods in the treatment of Blood Poison and kindred diseases. VARICOCELE We cure Varicocele in a few days' or weeks' time without the use of the knife.
Kidney and Bladder Diseases, causing pain, burn ing, Cystitis, pain in the back, cured or it costs you nothing. After an examination we will tell you
not benefit or cure you. we will frankly tell you so. Write for question blank. Call on or address W. R. Mayo, M. D., President, 843 N. Delaware St, IcdisipE,Ii
It Always Does the Work. ' "I like Chamberlain's Cough Remedy better than any other." writes R. E. Roberts. Homer City. Pa. "1 have taken It off and on for years and It has never failed to give the desired results." For sale by all dealers. Advertisement J
GRANDMA USED SAGE TEA TO DARKEN HAIR She made up a mixture of Sage Tea and Sulphur to bring back color, gloss, thlekneae. Common garden sage brewed Into a heaTT tea with sulphur and alcohol ! added, will torn gray, streaked and faded hair beautifully dark and luxuriant, remove every bit of dandruff, top itching and falling hair. Just a few applications will prove a revelation if your hair is fading, gray or dry. ftcraggly and thin. Mixing the Sage Tea and Sulphur recipe at home, though, is troublesome. An easier way ; Is to get the ready-to-use tonic, costing about 60 cents a large bottle at drug stores, known as "Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur Compound," thus avoiding a lot of muBs. While wispy, gray, faded hair is not sinful, we all desire to retain our youthful appearance and attractiveness. By darkening your hair with Wyeth's Sage and Sulphur.no one can tell, because it does it so naturally, so evenly. You Just dampen a sponge or soft brush with it and draw this through your hair, taking one small strand at a time; by morning all gray hairs have disappeared, and. after another application or two. your hair becomes beautifully dark, glossy, soft and luxuriant. (Advertisement) 1030 MAIN ST. Extra Special Ho This genuine Burrows feather-weight Card or Lunch Table, 30 inches square, covered either in felt or leather cloth. Sold for $3.00 the world over. Extra special this week See them in the J1 QQ window DR. W. R. MAYO, Specialist WILL BE AT Richmond Wednesday, Oct. 21st Arlington Hotel ond Every Pour Weeks hereafter PAIN OR USE OF REMEMBER That In treating with me you cannot lose anything, because I do not charge for faHnres, but only for permanent cure. Therefore, you shou'1 certainly, In duty to yourself. INVESTIGATE MY METHODS, which are totally different from those of any other specialist, before you place your case elsewhere. Just what we can do for you. It we
(o)(o) (o)(o)
