Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 44, Number 230, 10 July 1919 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, THURSDAY, JULY 10, 1919.

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co. Palladium Building. North Ninth and Sailor Street Entered at the Post Office at Richmond, Indiana, as Sea ond Claas Mall Matter. MEMBER OF TUB ASSOCIATED FBBSI

Th Aaaoclated Prew Is exclusively entitled to the oej for republication of all news dlcpatches credited t It a not otherwise credited !n this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of ape Olal dispatches herein are also reserved. Latin, Greek and English A man whose children will shortly enter high school has been doing a little investigating as to their probable studies. He himself has some knowledge of Latin and Greek, and believes them, Latin particularly, to be of great use in the development and understanding of a good English vocabulary, and he is a little alarmed at the proposed banishment of these two studies from many high school and college courses. Just by way of experiment, he made up a list of common words, to be submitted to pupils for definition, as he says, "not the nomenclature of botany, of faunal-naturalism or anatomy, but ordinary words, one story above the street." He persuaded the teachers in his home high schoiof to try these words on pupils who had had training purely in English, and also those who had received some instruction in the classical languages. The result was illuminating. The students of English revealed a knowledge of their native tongue so inaccurate as to be appalling, while students of Latin and Greek had little or no trouble in defining the same words correctly. Later the same lists were tried in widely separated districts of this country, and in each case the result was the same,' the classical students displayed, the better knowledge of English. The results of his findings are published in the July Atlantic magazine, and a perusal of the article should furnish both amusement and food for meditation. No matter what one's business in life may be, a good vocabulary is a good asset. If the best way to secure a flexible and comprehensive knowledge of English is to learn some Greek and Latin, it may be well to think it over a little before condemning these studies as a futile waste of time.

Is vital that special measures should be devised by the International labor conference both to prevent such exploitation and to protect the white races from the com

petition that would result Fear of that competition Is In great measure responsible for the opposition of a section of the American public to the Idea of the league; and we cannot allow that fear to be perpetual. Under the title "Social Reconstruction" four

bishops of the Roman Catholic church prepared a pamphlet dealing chiefly with labor questions and the problems of the costs of living. This pamphlet was issued by the committee on special war activities of the national Catholic war council, and has recently been widely discussed in the religious press. A committee of the social service commission of the province of New England has issued a statement, brought out partly by recent industrial disturbances at Lawrence, Mass., which The Living Church reprints in full. We quote in part : It is the belief of the provincial social service commission of New England that the moment has arrived, long hoped for by many earnest seekers after a more Christian form of industrial relations, when great numbers of employers, on the one hand, and worklngmen, on the other, are ready for unmistakable steps toward a cooperative spirit and method in the great task of national production. The commission welcomes unqualifiedly the widespread recognition by leaders in Industrial enterprises of the Justice and wisdom of collective bargaining In the adjustment of issues between capital and labor. The commission wishes very seriously to call to the attention of all responsible leaders of thought and action in New England the fact that several of our most Important industries seem at present to be Involved with a level of income which is not sufficient to maintain an American home that shall rear American sovereign citizens.

Condensed Classics of Famous Authors

The Church and Labor Religious leaders are awake to the new spirit of industrial relations which has become manifest everywhere. The denominational press is giving space to a discussion of the problem, urging their ministers to assist in stabilizing the relationship of employer and employe. At the recent General Assembly of the Presbyterian church and the Congress of the Protestant Episcopal church, much time was devoted to these problems. Reviewing the report of the commission on international labor organization of the peace conference, The Christian Work says :

No person is to be employed in industry and com

merce before the age of fourteen, no person between the

ages of fourteen and eighteen may be engaged on work

unfavorable to their physical or educational development. The right to a living wage for adults is conceded and the

urincicle of equal pay for equal work is sanctioned. Hours

are to be limited as far as possible to forty-eight a week, tubject to an exception for countries "in which climatic conditions, imperfect industrial development or organisation renders the efficiency of the workers substantially different." We welcome most warmly this first instalment of the commission's labors, the final result of which will probably affect the future happiness of the world more than any other set of deliberations; for it is evident that uniformity in conditions of work and pay is es-t-ential if those international commercial rivalries, which have brought so much misery upon the world, are to be held in check for the future. But the last clause we have uuoted cannot remain as it stands. It is precisely those countries where climatic conditions and imperfect industrial development and organization do affect the efficiency of the worker Africa, China and Japan which offer the strongest inducements to exploitation; and it

Weddings and Health A recent issue of the Oregonian has an article about a breach-of -promise suit lately tried in the London courts. After the engagement of a certain young couple had been announced it was found that the young woman had tuberculosis. Notwithstanding, she proposed to go on with the wedding as planned, but the young man refused. She sued, and the jury was unable to agree. It seems that in London tuberculosis is not a

legal bar to matrimony; hence it may be that,

legally speaking, the young man is culpable. But there must have been a strong sprinkling of oldfashioned common sense in that jury, since it failed to find him guilty. Legal or illegal, any person suffering from a communicable disease has no business to marry. If the disease is curable, as tuberculosis is held to be, and there be sufficient faith and affection to bid people wait until the sick one is cured, that is all right ; but that any person who knows himself to be the victim of so lingering an ailment as tuberculosis should hold another person to matrimony argues a selfishness which bodes iil for the success of any marriage. The young man may have been guilty of a breach of contract which will eventually bring him within the action of man-made law, but by all the laws of health, he is right.

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HOPE Anthony Hope, known outside the world of books as Sir Anthony Hope Hawkins, was born In London, Feb. 9. 1863, the son of a clergyman. He

married an American woman. It Is to be hoped he may have many more children of the brain to follow in the footsteps of "The Prisoner of Zenda" and "The Dolly Dialogues." He was educated at Marlborough, and at Balllol College, Oxford, where he took honors In letters and was president of the Oxford Union, which means that he was already a man of mark in his undergraduate days. By way of a profession be became a barrister of the Middle Temple in 1SS7. But If the pursuit of the law interferes with the production of a thrilling tale, may he never have a case to prepare. His first book was "The Prisoner of Zenda," which has probably remained his best known one. It had a large hearing when turned to the stage, and the public demanded a sequel, which came In "Rupert of Hentzau. After Zenda quickly followed "The Dolly Dialogues." which by their easy and debonnalr grace. Inevitably suggest Lawrence Sterne. His books have been numerous, as "The King's Mirror" and "Tristam of Blent," and he has written plays as well, as "The Adventure of Lady Ursula." A touch of sureness and precision lend distinction to his prose he has an unusual power of Interesting his readers in his personages and their doings.

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Anthony Hope, Born 18tt3.

TO SALVAGE HOUSES ABANDONED BY U. S.

THE PRISONER OF ZENDA BY ANTHONY HOPE Condensation by Prof. William Fenwick Harris

Ruritania was not England, or the quarrel between Duke Michael and Rudolf Rassendyll could not have gone on. with the remarkable incidents which marked it, without more public notice being directed to it. It is perhaps as strange a thing as has ever been in the history of a country that the King's brother and the King's personator, in a time of profound peace, near a placid, undisturbed country town, under semblance of amity, should wage a desperate war for the person and life of the king. Yet such was the struggle between Black Michael and Rudolph Rassendyll, both of the royal hous of Elphberg, but of very different antecedents. The one was known to the royal palace as Streslau; the other was at home at No. 305 ark Lane, London, West. The kinship between the two was quite an accident, dating from th year 1733, when a dashing young prince, later known to fame as Rudolf the Third of Ruritania, paid a visit to London. He was courteously entertained and was quite a favorite

with the ladies, especially Amelia,

" 'Tonight,' Sapt went on in a hasty whisper, 'we are to lodge in the palace. The moment they leave us, you and I will mount our horses and ride here at a gallop. The king will be ready, and he must ride back with me to Strelsau, and you ride as if the devil were behind you for the frontier.' " So began those wondrous days of adventure which saw the throne of Ruritania occupied by an Elphberg with all the traces of the stock, though not "of the blood." "The play actor," Rupert of Hentzau called Mm, when he came to know the secret, but as good an Elphberg as ever sat upon it," declared Sapt at the end. The wild ride to Strelsau, with Sapt instructing the English Rudolf most minutely in his past life, his family, his tastes, pursuits, weaknesses, friends, companions, and servants as Ruritania knew them the etiquette of the court, what would be expected at the coronation and above all of the Pricness of Flavia. "God save the king!" cried the people after the coronation had been safe-

Countess of Burlesdon, and Baroness y..man

POINTED PARAGRAPHS

MAX PLAYED 'EM SAFE Chicago News. Maximilian Harden can now say, T told you so." He could have said it no matter how the war turned out, having prophesied in all directions.

Rassendyll. In the end the prince left England rather hastily under a cloud,

but not before he had fought a somewhat sanguinary duel with Countess Amelia's husband. In the years since there have appeared at intervals in the family of the Rassendylls certain sons who have been marked by the long, sharp, straight noses and the dark red hair of the royal house of Ruritania. The years pass, many of them, and another Rudolf of Elphberg is about to be crowned King of Ruritania. The same nose, the same red hair distinguish him. The loyal half of the popplation of Ruritania could not sleep at night till the coronation was safely over. For the late king had left another son, by a second and morganic marriage, Black Michael, Duke of Streslau and Lord of Zenda. Though Michael bore none of the marks of the Elphbergs, he had been his father's favorite, and he cast a longing eye at the throne; all the cut-throats and blackguards of Ruritania seconded his wish, for Michael was a man after their own hearts. Curious that young Rudolf Rassendyll should be moved by an idle curiosity to witness the coronation of Rudolph of Ruritania; still more cur

ious that he, too, should bear the fa

miliar nose, the same red hair, thought Colonel Sapt, aide to

God save 'em both!" whispered

Sapt, as his mouth wrinkled into a smile. But if things went well at Strelsau with Rudolf Rassendyll, now crowned as Rudolf the Fifth of Ruritania and the accepted lover of the Princess Flavia, Fortune did not smile on the other Rudolf at Zenda. For Black Michael had had word from there that cleared for him the mystery of the coronation. Riding as fast as horses could lay feet to the ground, he seized poor Rudolf of Ruritania and held him prisoner. But then ensued a pretty pass. "Aye, but he can't speak," roared Sapt in grim triumph. "We've got him. How can he denounce you without denouncing himself? 'This is not the king, because we have kidnapped the king and murdered his servant.' Can he say that? Hang me if Michael won't expose himself, if he tries to expose you." But the most difficult situation for a loyal gentleman and that was Rudolf Rassendyll arose from the Princess Flavia. "I had to keep the princess devoted to me and yet indifferent to me; I had to show affection for her and not feel it. I had to make love for another; and that to

g0!a girl who princess or no princess

the ! was the most beautiful I had ever

Good Evening BY ROY K. MOULTON

R. A. McCullough. R. A. McCullough has been appointed manager of the salvage division of the U. S. housing corporation and will salvage abandoned projects valued at from two to four millions of dollars. A sales department, with an office and field force of approximately 100 persons, will attend to the disposal of the salvaged malarial.

Dinner Stories

Apropos of the death of the Rev. Dr. Joseph Twitchell of Hartford, a friend of Mark Twain and original Harris in the latter's "Tramp Abroad," Dr. F. P. Perkin said the other day: "Some years ago Dr. J. M. Buckley, the noted Methodist editor, took some of his clerical brethren severely to task for their tendency to draw on the ideals and even the language of Joseph Parker without due acknowledgment. "While the discussion was at Its height Mark Twain attended Joe Twitchell's church and heard one of the latter's finest efforts. "After the sermon he came forward grasped the preacher's hand and said, 'Joe, that was a good sermon, but I have a book at home that contains every word of it.' "Dr. Twitchell was taken aback and then he waxed indignant. " 'If you can show me the book I'd certainly like to see it,' he rejoined. T gave a great deal of brain sweat to that sermon.' "The next day Mark Twain sent him a copy of Webster's Unabridged Dictionary."

SIMPLY STATISTICS We always devour all the statistics we can find. They are wonderful. ListenrIf all the phonograph records made In one year were thrown from the top of the capitol building at Washington, they would break. It would take four men some time to lick all the postage stamps made in Washington in one year, but we don't know just how long. If all the telephone conversations from corner drug stores in one year could be recorded on a phonograph, nobody would listen to them. A mule can climb to the top of ML Popocatepetl in five days. He can descend in five seconds. If all the dnuehnuta moA K

Salvation Army could be linked together in one chain, they would reach from Paris to Somewhere In France. Anent the changing of the name of Rye, N. Y., somebody savs: "Why not call it Wry, N. Y.?" Weil, why not? JAZZING OMAR Oh, mah honey, can't you 6ee That you ought to be with me, Readin syncopated verses 'neath th' bough? Rustle out a loaf of bread. An' some wine that's good an red. An' we'll have a little cabaret, for thou Can sing coon songs, more or less, Till the howling wilderness Is a red-hot, rag-time Paradise enow! It's a Par It's an a It's a Par-a-dise. It's a bunny huggln', turkey trottin'. Eatin', juggln', far from rotten Par-a-dise enow! .' Two-cent stamps are back again. But why jubilate about that when they make it all the easier for the folks who send out dunning letters?

Memories of Old Days In Thla Paper Ten Year Ago Today

CALLS FOR CARD INDEX Philadelphia Ledger. And now must we chart the escapes of the Crown Prince as well as those of Villa?

HE NEVER THOUGHT OF THAT St. Louis Post-Dispatch. Senator Fall, of New Mexico, might make a bigger tioise by Introducing a resolution to abolish the office of presidenL

A little boy at school saw his teacher faint and fall. In the confusion it was impossible to keep so many heads cool, and the little ones flocked round the prostrate lady and her sympathetic colleagues. But this small boy kept both his color and his coolness. Standing on a bench and raising his hand, he exclaimed: "Please, teacher, can I run home and fetch father? He makes coffins." The peal of laughter which greeted this unconscious humor roused the teacher from her short trance, and nobody enjoyed the youngster's saying more than she did when the circumstances were explained to her afterward.

There's Equality In Brazil; Men Wear Wedding Rings (By Associated Press) RIO DE JANERIO, July 10. The women in Brazil have not equal suffrage but they have on equality with the men of their country which is not enjoyed by their North American sisters. All Brazilian husbands are expected

to wear their wedding rings as con-

WILL KEEP OLD BOY BUSY

Philadelphia Press. Bethmann-Hollweg cannot be the goat for the ex- ' kaiser; he has a big enough job being his own goat.

War-Time Prohibition Goes Into Effect

From the Outlook. AT MIDNIGHT of June 30 (or, to be accurate, an instant later, when July 1 began) the war-time prohibition law became operative throughout the I'nited States. Congress began its recess for the Fourth of July without passing legislation defining the terms of the law or giving detailed directions as to its enforcement. This was regrettable. In view of the long notice congress had of the need of such legislation, it seems inexcusably dilatory. A bill has been reported in the house of representatives by its judiciary committee which provides such interpretation and means of enforcement both lor the war-time prohibition law and the constitutional amendment. In some torm legislation of this kind should certainly come from congress as quickly as the importance of the questions involved may allow. A statement of the attorney-general of the United States made on June 30 goes far to define and simplify the situation. Unlike the prohibition amendment, the law which is now in effect provides a penalty (not over $1,000 fine or imprisonment for not over a year, or both), and its statement that "It shall be unlawful to sell for beverage purposes any .distilled spirits." except for export, is exl licit. But questions have been raised as to the further declaration that "after June 30, 1919, until the conclusion of the present war and thereafter until the termination of demobilization, the date of which shall be determined and proclaimed by the president of the United States, no beer, wine, or other intoxicating malt or vinous liquor shall be sold for beverage purposes except for export." President Wilson has properly and rightly pointed out that until actual facts Justify him in proclaiming that demobilization has terminated he cannot remove the inhibition of the law. As regards the latter part of the

clause quoted above a genuine dispute exists. Does it mean that everything known as beer and wine are to be regarded as Intoxicating, or does it mean that only such beer and wine as are intoxicating are prohibited? The court decision so far favors the latter interpretation. If the latter, what precisely does "intoxicating" mean? So far there has been no court decision defining that word. Attorney-General Palmer's statement recognizes this difference of interpretation. While he declares that the law will be enforced by the fdral authorities as other national laws are enforced, and while he states that the government contention has been that the act prohibits the manufacture and sale of beer containing as much as onehalf of one per cent of alcohol (the bill now before congress fixes the amount of alcohol allowable at the same percentage), Mr. Palmer Etates that the course of the Department of Justice as regards beer containing less than two and three-quarters per cent of alcohol will depend upon the rulings to be made by the United States district courts in cases brought before them. This is generally taken as equivalent to saying that prosecution will not be made for the present in such cases, although any one who sells what is called 2.75 beer takes his chances of future prosecution. A decision has already been rendered by a United. States circuit court of appeals. In this case Judge Ward continues an injunction order in the lower court restraining an internal revenue collector from interfering with the manufacture or sale of 2.75 beer. There may be an interval between the end of the operation of the law now in force and the day in January when the amendment goes into .force; at the present rate of demobilization the interval is hardly likely to be more than two or three months and may very probably be even less.

king, and Fritz von Tarleheim, his , seen. How 1 succeeded in carrying close friend, as they came upon the j out my programme will appear hereyoung Englishman in the forest of ( after. Zenda. making his way afoot to Stres- How they fell in love, he with her,

.au. bo, loo, iDougai i ! 1 rv An o Hir tUn If he sclentiously as their wives and genhe annpared a moment later. But Scory. Ana now, lorgetung seir, ne i t. . . . . .

scandals of the past can no more . rescued the king, and robbed himself , Z'VV"7 V-.:

be concealed in Ruritania than in of love and throne and almost life. England. As young Rassendyll later When he had fallen severely wound-

told the tale, first the king frowned, :oa-

r ritz, ne cauea, is tne King sun alive?" "Aye, friend dear friend;" said he, tender as a woman, "thanks to the most gallant gentleman that lives, the king is alive!" All's well that ends well. But of the Princess Flavia? "If I can never hold sweet converse again with her, or look upon her face, or know from her her love, why then, this side of the grave, I will live as becomes the man she loves; and for the other side I must pray for a dreamless sleep." Copyright. 1919, by Post Publishing

Permian oT and VrVaiment with. I the United States- the foreHenry Holt & Co., authorized publish-i codings which many of them expresses. Published by opocial arrangement ed one or two months ago. 1.1. . , .-. M . . V- . . i . . I

All rights reserved.

"then gradually the corners of his mouth began to twitch, his nose came

down( as mine does when I laugh),

his eyes twinkled, and behold, he

j burst into the merriest fit of irrepres

sible laughter, which rang through the woods and proclaimed him a jovial soul. "'Well met, cousin!' he cried, stepping up to mc, clapping me on thn back, and laughing still. 'You must forgive me if I was taken aback. A man doesn't expect to see his double at this time of day, eh, Fritz?' " T muf t pray pardon, sire for my presumption,' said I. T trust it will not forfeit your Majesty's favor." "'By heaven! you'll always enjoy the king's countenance,' he laughed, 'whether I like it or not.' " All the good fellowship in the world, however, could not permit royal scandals of the past to be raked up at a coronation. Rudolf Rassendyll must

i not show his face at this moment m

the capital of Rudolf of Ruritania.

"But by thunder," cried the king, "you shan't leave Ruritania today.!''

For you shall dine with me tonight, j

happen what will afterward." That was just the trouble, "happen

what will afterward." One bottle led

I to another, until they were all as full ! ' of wine as they had any right to be. j

At last the king set down his glass and leaned back in his chair. " T have drunk enough,' said he. " 'Far be it from me to contradict the king,' said I. Indeed his remark was most absolutely true so far as

it went." But still another bottle! j this from Black Michael, praying that i

he drink for the love he bears his brother. Could the king refuse? He could not. Was the wine drugged? The morning answered yes. " 'If he's not crowned today,' cried Sapt, 'I'll lay a crown he's never crowned.' "'By heavens, why? " 'The whole nation's there to meet

him; half the army aye, and Black

Micnaei at tne neaa snail we send word that the king's drunk?' " 'That he's ill,' said I, in correction. "'111!' echoed Sapt, with a scornful laught. 'They know his illness too well. He's been ill before! As a man grows old he believes in Fate. Fate sent you here. Fate sends you now to Strelsau. You'll go?' " 'Yes, I'll go,' said I, and I turned my eyes on the prostrate figure of the king.

gold band, the same as that worn by the wives in the United States. The women in Brazil unanimously are of the opinion that this is about the last word in equality and it is doubtful if they would exchange the custom for the right to go to the polls. BUSINESS REVIVAL SEEN (By Associated Press) RIO DE JANERIO, Brazil, July 10 Business in Brazil, which had been stagnated since the first of October, 191S a month before the signature of the armistice has, since the first of April shown marked indications of an upward trend and a well manifested optimism has taken the place, among

business men here interested in trade

The Associated Charities planned a personal solicitation for the funds for the coming year. Americus Zimmerman, of this citv, son of Mr. and Mrs. E. A. Zimmerman, who graduated from the John Marshall law Bchool of Chicago, accepted a position in the legal department of the London Guarantee and Accident company, of Chicago.

Dr. O. S. Markley was appointed physician for the home of the Friendless. Mrs. Ray K. Shively entertained at the Country club for Miss Mary Shively. who was married to Dr. Harrv Holmes In July.

it

Bastille Day" Will Be

Celebrated In Metz (TSy Associated Press) METZ, July 10 The bishopric has invited Vicars of the Diocese to mark the national holidaj', July 14, Bastille day by the ringing of the church bells. The hymn, "Lord Protect the Republic,"' will be sung here for the first time since 1871.

CATARRH SPECIALIST IS COMING TO RICHMOND WILL GIVE FREE EXAMINATION AND ADVICE

Medical Director of Indiana Catarrh Institute to Give Talk on Catarrh and Tuberculosis.

"Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde," by Robert Louis Stevenson, as condensed by Irving Bacheller, will be printed tomorrow.

A recent patent covers a shoe to cure cold feet, a heated plate being inserted and the heat being retained by the close-fitting construction of the ankle of the shoe.

THE GEORGE MATTHEW ADAM8 DAILY TALK

BE PATIENT

All things take time. Rome was not built in a day nor is anything else ever built in a day, with any hope of endurance. So let's be patient! It is very difficult at times, for the call of the immediate is most compelling. But history's strongest men played the waiting game in their work, their achievements and their rewards. To be patient, alone, may mean to become quite great. Fools rush in, they say, where angels fear to tread. That Is why they are fools. Angels are very patient. They wait; they take care. They administer and guide and understand. They do not have to take risks. Be patient. Some folks think that it does not always pay. But it does. All right things come to pass. Not a one is defaulted by the way. To be patient is to become a kind of seer and to know why some things fail and why some win. Never mind be patient. Tomorrow is never quite like today. Even while you think, new minutes are forming only to pass quickly away. So that time and change are able to make heroes of us all. If we will be patient. And when It Is most difficult to be patient, that is the time when patience is most demanded. Patience in great things is always rewarded and always in better pay than is expected Just as food tastes twice as good when the stomach has been asked to be patient for a long time. So let's be patient!

Chronic catarrh of the nose, throat and lungs is so prevalent and is so often the forerunner of fatal diseases like tuberculosis, influenza, asthma, hay fever and others that the Indiana Catarrh Institute, permanently located at 1436 North Illinois street, Indianapolis, Ind., is sending their medical director to a few points in Indiana to examine and advise sufferers from this disease on how to prevent or cure it Catarrh, besides being extremely disagreeable and annoying, with Its continual coughing, hawking and spitting, is positively dangerous, as it leads to many fatal diseases and undermines the strength and health of the whole system. It is a stubborn disease to cure, requiring the skill of an expert and experienced specialist tc properly rid the system of it in a short time. It is very seldom, if ever sured by patent medicines, mail-order treatment, home remedies and the like. The Indiana Catarrh Institute is a large institution, devoted entirely and exclusively to the treatment of catarh. It has a staff of specialists who have devoted more than sixteen years to the study of this one disease. There is no other institution like it in this country and their methods used

in. curing catarrh are different from . any other in this country. Their j methods can be used either in tha Instltute or in the home, according to i patients' convenience. Anyone visiting Indianapolis is invited to call at ! the Institute and investigate their methods and results. But for convenience, it is well to see the medical director, an expert specialist, when ; he is in this city. His examination, consultation and ! 8dvice is free. He invites everyone 1 who is afflicted with chronic catarrh j of the nose, throat, or lungs, chronic j cough and bronchitis, dropping mucus j in the throat, pains in the chest, shortj ness of breath, clogged up head and I rostrils, head noises, catarrhal deafj ness, hawking and spitting or any chronic catarrhal condition, to be exI amined and get his advice without

charge or obligation. He will be glad to talk with you, giving you the benefit of his skill and experience freely. Beware of tuberculosis and other fatal conditions by taking treatment in time. The specialist will be at the Arlington Hotel Monday, July 14th, from S a. m. to 8 p. m., one day only, and will examine all who call to see him For further information either cali ln person or write th Indian-, n.,

iHituJV4M N- IUiDOis st- Indianapolls, Ind. Adv.