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MAYOR APPROVES mi Holds Up Two, However. Which May Be Effective Without His Signature. LOOKS INTO SMITH CLAIM Council Voted Contractor $753] liccausc Cost Exceeded Amount of His Bid. Mayor Richardson yesterday returned to city Cleric Bon T. August with his approval a large number of city ordi names.. Two papers ho has neither' signed nor vetoed, nor has ho Indi? cated bis Intention with regard to them If no action Is taken they will take effect after live days without executive , sanction, Tho two as yet unsigned are an ordl- ; tmnco authorizing the Committee on | Streets to grade the sidewalk on tin) ?south side of Franklin Street, between Twenty-ninth Street and an alloy n>t of Twenty-ninth Street, beside tho properly of Alderman .lohn Grimes, and naming A. C. Ila'rinan, Assessor 'if Damages, to iix compensation to abut? ting property owner by reason of the change In grade. Alderman Grimes, "ti account Of his position In the Council, declined to place any value on the property, leaving It to he asscssc 1 by law. The resolution Is the first under the new law relating to the As-srssor of Damages, and It may bo that the Mayor has found some defect In the- manner of Its preparation. Tho other reynlu lion unsigned an yet is that making an extra allowance of 1753.02 to I. -f. Smith & Company In excess of the con? tract price on a sewer constructed In Fast Cary street, it was explained In the Council that Mr. Smith had no logal claim on the city, but that since the work had boon more expensive than was anticipated when the bids were opened, as a matter of equity the city .should mike the allowance. Sign* .Many New Law*. The Mayor returned the following papeij to the City Clerk yesterday with Ms approval: Ordinance apportioning n.710 from the bond Issue for the annexed terri? tory to curh and gutter tho south .ilde of Main Street, from Rowland Strcel westwardly to between Addison and Blrn Streets. Ordinance amending the flauch.se ol tho Richmond and Uonrlco Railway Company, granting It a right of way from Thirty-first and Marshall Streets along Marshal! street to Thirty-ninth, thence to tho Government Read, and a loop In Fulton. Ordinance to close an alloy eight feet wide, east of Seventeenth Street, be? tween Marshall and Broad Street, at the request of tho only abutting prop? erty owner, the American Terminal Warehouse Corporation. Ordinance allowing tho building be? longing to J. I.oe Davis, on tho east side of Sycamore Stroet. between Grove and Floyd Avenues, encroaching a few I Inches on alley In rear, to remain. Resolution granting to the American Tobacco Company right to run water UNNATURAL THINNESS EASILY CORRECTED. Ily t.lever Proscription Which Can Be Killed nt .toy Drug Stores, Xo .\cril to lie Thin Son nrt nrportn Show This u.-tliod Ef? fective. People who are very thin aim scrawny ought not to he so. Un? doubtedly they are more subject to disease and contagions than the not tnally fleshy. Thinness Is usually ac? companied by weakness, and weak? ness subjects any one to colds, coughs, consumption, pneumonia, etc. It has been discovered, almost by accident, that tincture cadornene, when com? bined In a prescription with proper celeratiye medicines, becomes one of the most valuable, effective and reliable nutritive or Mesh-making medicines known to science. It Is especially beneficial to men and women between the ages of sixteen and fifty-five, who from lack of proper nerve force and digestion, remain undeveloped In body, limbs, nrnu and bust. A well-rounded symmetrical figure In man or woman Indicates health, magnetism, stamina and happiness. The render who wishes to add from ten to forty pounds should not fail to begin with this valuable prescrip? tion. First, obtain of any well stocked druggist three ounces of essence of pep-iln and three ounces of syrup of rhubard In an eight ounce bottle. Then add one ounce compound CSBcnsc car dlol. Shake and let stand two hours. Then add one ounce tincture ??ad >mene compound (not cardamom.),: Shake well and take one leaspoonftil before earii meal, one after each m< al. Drink plenty of water between meals and when retiring. Keep up thia treat? ment regularly and of a certainty from one to three pounds will be added to the weight each week, and tho general health will also Improve. Sanitary Plumbing Fixtures of the lat? est approved types not only r.re a com? fort in a house, luit a safeguard against disease germs. McGraw-Yarbrough Co. 122 S, Eighth St., - Richmond, Va. Out-of-town orders shipped quickly. It is better not to be without NOLDE BROS. Greatest sale ever held. Means | so much to the buyers. UP-TO-DATE PLAYER MUSIC! 88-NOTE. Large stock at cost price. Come early I to net la-si selection. LEE FREGUSSON PIANO CO., 119 East Broad. To get the heat of Backache Get a Box of Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills Otherwise BacKactso May get the best of you Nothing- disturbs the human system more than pain whether it be in the form of headache, j backache, neuralgia, stomachache or the pains peculiar to women. Dr. Miles' Anti-Pain Pills arc a standard remedy for pain, and arc praised by a great army of men and women who have used them for years. "A friend was down with l.aGrippc and nearly crazed with awful backache. I cave !,rr one Anti-rain I'lll and left another for her to take. They helped hci right nway, and she says she will never be without them again." Mrs. G. II. Weub, Austinburg, O. At all druggists?25 doses 25 cents. MILES MEDICAL CO., Elkhart, Ind. | under Seventh Street, connecting two factories. Inelontirrn In Cemeteries). Ordinance regulating the erection of Inclosures around sections in city cem? eteries. Ordinance granting permission to L. !?". Ulllhan to erect :i brick stable at Fourteenth and Stockton Streets, South Richmond, 1 ordinance granting permission to .1. C. l'haup to erect a brick addition to I stable Iti Haxall Dane, between Thlr | tee:.tli and Virginia Streets. Resolution to acquire land to open Decatur Street from the Atlantic Coast Dine tracks to Holly Street. South Rich? mond, to a width of thirty feet. R< solutions establishing the grades of a number of alleys Resolution authorizing the grading of Nicholson Street from Tompklns [Street to the Government Road. I Resolution instructing the City At? torney to acquire by gift, purchase or Condemnation certain tracts of land to enlarge Oakwooj ?"etnetery, and to re? port the cost of same to the Committee on Flnonce. Resolution transferring 12:.n from First Market expenses to First Market pay roll. Crump Solr Arbltrntor. Resolution confirming appointment of Beverly T. Crump as sole arbitrator be? tween the city of Richmond and the Virginia Railway and Power Company in the matter of Joint use of poles. Resolution confirming the appraise? ment made |.y Roard of State Asses? sors of city property of SI 6,?52-1.654.7*?. and directing the City Auditor to cor? rect his books accordingly. Resolution Instructing the City Audi? tor to pay salaries and pay roll of all [ city employes pending tdoptlon of an? nual budget. Resolution confirming award of con? tract to A. \v. Maynard & Company, at 16,29-1, for .leaning out both basins of; new reservoir, and directing Commit? tee on Finance to Include amount need? ed In annual appropriation ordinance. Appropriating $95 additional for re? pairs to Washington Ward .Tail. Appropriating $2,601.43 to Sinking Fund for redemption of n per cent, city of Richmond bonds, falling due Jan? uary 1, 1911. More City Oilier Space. Instructing the Committee on Grounds and Buildings to Inquire Into the advisability and cost of adding tWy or three stories to the City Hall, Instructing the City Attorney to ac? quire, by gift, purchase or condemna? tion, the block bounded by Eleventh, Twelfth. Broad and Capitol Streets, occupied by Ford's Hotel and other buildings, as a site for a municipal courts building, and to report the cost at which It can he acquired to the Com-1 mtttec on Finance. ROBBERS DESTROY : POST-OFFICE SAFE More Than $525 Stolen During Sunday Night From Windsor Office. (Special to The Tlines-DlSDatch.] Windsor, Vn.j January 10.?The post I office in this place was robbed' some 11111 : last night of $">-jr.. consisting of stamps, stamp money und money ordei moiiey. Five blank money order books and some other articles wore taken ?lao. Tlo- safe was heavily charged with nltro-gl.vcerlnc. as the door was blown Into fragments and was fixrtid twenty feel from the safe, .fudging from the fuse, guncotton and soap found ibis morning on the lloor, the piirttCi* must have been experts at the bUSillcSS. Postmaster B. 1-. Roberts telegraphed at once to the I'ost-Office Department at Washington of the robbery. Noth? ing was left to give any clue to Hie guilty parlies. \ DlllIK T l Oll IIICFKXDAXT. Judgment In I iiique Damage Suit lii-uiigiit In llonnokc. Roanoke, v*a? January iti.? A uniqui [suit was decided here 10-day. when j the Jury rendered a verdict in Invoi of the defendnnt in the caso of .Mrs. Sallio A. Divers vs. the Consolidated 1 lee. Co. The plaintiff sued for $l.f>00 damages, because of injury to her fool caused by a niece of lee being dropped ! upon it by u boy who was employed I by the company. The defendant show? ed that the boy was not an agent for I this company, but was employed b.V one of its agents. It was on this: ground that the jury decided In favor of the defendant, Ulli MIS IMIOVI3 FATAL. Xalhnn Jackson, Who \\ :? ?. Shot by Rudolph Williams? Dien. iSpeclal to The Times-Dispatch.1 Roanoke, Va., January lti.?Nathan Jackson, colored, who was wounded by Rudolph Williams several weeks ago, died at the Roanoke Hospital this morning Jackson was one of (our negroes who wns wounded nt a dance at G22 Sixth Avenue." N. \V? when Willnnis opened fire with a shotgun Into a party of colored -dancers. Hob Trice, Sue ' Dnbney and William Williams were slightly wounded. Jackson's friends moved him to his home, and Williams went there later and iired 011 LODGE CAUCUS NOMINEE' JK.enky CAj30T LOPG-JJ, Bost.m. Mass.; January lfi.?United State* Senator Henry Cabot Lodgo was nominated at the Republican caucus to-day for a fourth term by 126 out of 153 Republican members of the Legislature, or sixteen less than a ma? jority of the House and Senate on a Joint ballot. As the absentees were nearly all from the House, It Is anticipated that tho majority of the Senate's votes will be cast for Mr. Dodg-o to-morrow, but that the House will bo dead locked. Whether this deadlock will continue to the Joint convention on Wednesday noon wag a matter of Interesting conjecture to-night 1 It was asserted In some quarters, that should Mr. Lodge be returned, he would have to seek some Democratic support. Sherman L. Whipple, of Brookllne. a prominent member of the Suffolk bar, was selected by the Democrats at their conference as Mr. Ixidge's oppo? nent. The two caucuses w?re held simultaneously, and while the Republicans quickly nominated Mr. I/odgo by acclamation, the Democrats took five ballots before finally d?eldlng on Mr. Whipple. Tho latter's nomination was subse? quently made unanimous. The Senate will voto for Senator to-morrow after? noon, as will the House. I the w??nd?d man while he was In bed. I Williams was pursued by police, and let them have some of the lire from . his shotgun. Williams escaped the night of the I shooting, and has not boon heard from ? since. YOUTH It HAD 51 OP WILD WES)T| GOES TO DECOMK A COWBOY [Special to. The Times-Dispatch.] I Goldsboro, N". C, .Tanuary Ifi.?Im I bucd with, the spirit of the Wild West. I and the thirst for thrilling adventure, caused by reading "Young Wild West Weekly." "Nick Carter" and other literature of this class, young Henry Scott, thirteen vears.old, son of Mr. ami Mrs. H. E. Scott, of this city, has 'erased the tar from his Iuris and Is j now en route to the land of his ; dreams, that mysterious land beyond I the Mississippi. Before starting out on his career of adventure young Scott ! Informed hia playmates of his inten? tions to make of himself a -daring and rich cowboy of Ibo kind he had read about. The youth's mother Is heart-broken. ; but his father feels that frequent calls i from the Inner man will hrlng the boy to his senses ere he has strayed I far from hts native Heath. TO GEi ITS BENEFICIAL EFFECTS. ALWAYS BW THE GENUINE sold by all leading ? ? druggists, . One Size onlv. so* aBottle I Foster an opportunity to make' your photograph, and you will be ,delighted with the results. His art work in Photography has given j him a well-deserved and widen .spread reputation. Foster for; Photographs all the time. Foster, 112 North Ninth Streit. Our Standard Unequalled Prescription Prices average a bout j the s.J!iic everywhere, but serf Ire vu- j rles. our stock of fiiii' drugs and chemi? cals is the largest in lllchmond?our I pharmaceutical laboratory Is the most i modern, and our pharmacists thor? oughly experienced and licensed. We can. therefore, serve you better' and at no more cost. Our mall order prescription plan is well worthy of your notice, as this particular branch receives our most careful and prompt attention?all mall prescriptions are mittle up and return? ed same dav. POLK MILLER'S, The SEED INSPECTION PROVES OF VALUE State Board of Agriculture Ap? points Fertilizer Inspectors for Year. OFFICIALS WILL TESTIFY Summoned in Alexandria Bank j Case?NTe\v Militia Officers. in the multifarious attractions of! IVirmcrf' 'Week, in Roanoke, the meet- ' ing of the State Board of Agriculture ! passed unnoticed. Ten fertilizer In- j speciors were appointed for the year, i one for each congressional district, and l a good deal of routine business was | transacted. Commissioner Oeorge w. ; Kolner was back at his office yester? day. It was believed r.t the meeting that| the new seed incpcetlon law will be of I great value to the farmers of the State. [ The statute did not go into effect until the seed season of 1910 was over, and 1 no great number of analyses have so j ! far been made. However, a good many ' j samples have been sent in by the food ; inspectors, whose duty It Is to collect i them, and Inspected In the chemistry department. One package of clover seed was found to contain only 9 per I cent, of germination, which would make ; i Its cost to the purchaser high indeed. All the results ot these Inspections are to be published In bulletin form. Rules Are .Modified. One modification In the rules was 'made by the hoard. This was that the standard of purity and germination In orchard grass seed was reduced from 90 to SO per cent. The former figure was regarded as too high. While Wis? consin has a standard of 90 per cent., Tennessee and North Carolina have fixed upon 70 per cent. Mr. K?lner reported $150 collected In fines for violation of the fertilizer In? spection law since the last meeting ot the board. In October. The offenders In these cases had not branded theli products. It is the duty of the depart? ment to report such shortcomings to the Commonwealth's attorneys. The department has so fur purchased, according to reports submitted to the j board, 2.000 doses of hog cholera serum. A portion of this amount Is on hnnd i j for use in Immediate lining of orders. ?When properly used, It has proven Ot great benefit, from nil reports made ot I results. The new lime Inspection law was also reported to he operating satisfac? torily. nudcrl H ndc I p. In the annual budget of the depart? ment, which way made up at this meet? ing. $5,000 was given to the truck ex? periment stntloti at Norfolk, $1,000 to the state Hontlcillturnl Society and $3,GOO to the experimental farms In Charlotte and Augusta counties. Only two changes were made in the list of fertilizer inspectors. B. M. Ar vln. of lAinenburg, succeeds A. B Ar vin. for the Fourth District, while C. R. Morgan, ot Charlotte; succeeds W. W. Ward. In the Sixth. The inspectors follow: First District, ?f. !i. Rend. Second, .1. C. Codd; Third. I j, a. Lester; Fourth, 10. M. Arvln. Fifth. A. U Moore: Sixth, C. R. Morgan. Royr Tenth, D. 13. Pnrrott; F.lghth. T. G, T?te; Ninth, McK. Montague; Tenth. .T. H. Leech. The board adjourned to meet In Rich j mond on April 12. 0FFICIALS~SUMM0NED ] Stair f>Ulcers U lli Testify in Alexan? dria Itnnk Case. ? Clerk ft. T. Wilson, of the State Cor? poration Commission; Auditor of Pub; j lie Accounts Sj R. Donohoe. Commis? sioner of Insurance Joseph Button, State Bank Examiner C. C. Barksdalo and several clerks In those depart I mea ts have been summoned beforo the grand Jury of ihe city of Alexandria Ion Thursday of this week, to give ovl i denco In the case of the Virginia Safe Deposit and Trust Corporation. It 1 seems not unlikely that indictments may follow. Quite a large jictccntagc of the tunds are soda crackers made from the finest flour and the best materials obtainable? That Makes them an ideal are baked in surroundings where clean? liness and precision are supreme? That Makes them Uraeeda Biscuit are touched only once by human hands ?when the pretty girls pack them? That Makes them Uaieeda Biscuit are sealed in a moisture proof 'package? That Keeps them NATIONAL BISCUIT, COMPANY A Package (Never sold in bulk) of the State, deposited hy the Alexan? dria city treasurer, aro believed to have been received by the bank on deposit aftor that Institution had been noti? fied of the unsatisfactory nature of Its assets by the Corporation Commission. Captain Donoline also desires a co-rc celver, fo represent the State. It Is understood there Is quite a good chance tor the State to recover that portion of its money which was received dur? ing- the latter days of the bank. The Interest of the Insurance officials in the matter Is In the surety business d uie by the concern. (?nicer* Examined. Samuel Gardner Waller, former first lieutenant in Company T>, Second Rcpl ment. at Front Royal, has passed hta examination for the office of major in the commissary department. D. Burr Jones, elected second lieu? tenant of Battery C, Field Artillery, of Portsmouth, lias also passed his ex? amination. Commission- tvlil Issue within a dav? or two from lite office of the Adjutant - General. Major Waller will be as? signed to duty with the Firs. Brigade, on the staff of General C. C. Vaujfhan, Jr. Mr. IOurIcMoii Itnek. .1. D. ISggleston. Jr.. Superintendent of Public Instruction, has returned from a trip which covered a good many miles. He made several addresses In Southwest Virginia, one of which was at Hurley, in Buchanan county, near the Kentucky line. He will malte two speeches In Nor? folk to-day?one to the Mothers' Club and the other to the Norfolk Teachers' Association. Get oniclnl Lists, Rlank.? will be sent out to-day by As we adjust, them are correct, neat>, comfortable and substantial. Lowest charges in all cases. Prescription work our specialty, with complete manufacturing. plant on the premises. Thes'GALESKI0p"ca,Co MAIN AND EIGHTH BROAD AND THIRD Kodak Headquarters Secretary ot the Commonwealth R. O. James to all clerks of courts In the State, on which to send In a list of ;\11 county, district and city officers. Such a list Is required to ho Icejit In the ofltce of the Secretary of the Common? wealth. (Continued From First l'nge.) Mtbordlnate aa a soldier. lie referred to the circumstances lending u|i to |ils court-martial. It was through un argu ment he had with a second lieutenant, he said, at Howling Green that the trial came about. For .a minor offense lie was given double picket duty, ami when he was not relieved nfter the usual time prescribed for sentinels, he told the court, he refused to serve the additional duty, which was given him as punishment for not having his nc ? dutrement properly arranged, lie re? ferred briefly to bis trial, and declared ho never knew -what i-he. outcome was. ?'I do know," he said, "that I spent three weeks In the guardhouse, when my colonel restored me to duty, "The incident 1 have always looked : upon as a Joke. I have told it a hun? dred times, r suppose, to friends." After court had adjourned yesterday Major Knright oxplalned Ihn? the rea? son lie did not make this explanation Saturday was that he had no Idea that Mr. Smith alluded to his court-martial. "When be asked If [ was a deserter, I was astounded." he (.aid. In court the witness declared that after the war he was three times elect? ed clerk of the I_ucas, O.. County Court. Full Wnr Record. A letter from the War Department at Washington gives Major Ehrlght's record as follows: "Michael J. Knright was enrolled Au? gust 12, lsii;, at Toledo. O.. and wan mustered Into service Soptember R, | IS62, as a private in Company H. tilth j Ohio Infantry Volunteers, to serve j three years. He was found guilty by a I goncral court-martial of emitting his' post oil November lfi. 1863, without I being duly relieved, after having been duly posted it.-- sentinel; was sentenceil to be confined for sixty days at hard labor, and to forfeit all pay and allow? ances due him; and the sentence was approved and promulgated by compe? tent authority In orders dated Novem? ber "S, lSt>:'. lie was appointed regi? mental quartermaster sergeant .May l, ISG-t 1 was transferred te the non-com-I missioned staff, same regiment, and \ was mustered out and honorably dis? charged the esrvlee June 27, IS?5. at Salisbury, N. f'., while holding l lie ranic of quartermaster sergeant." Major Knright was on the stand rfhnut fifteen minutes. Many specta? tors gathered in court, to hear the evi? dence, it being generally understood I that lie would h? recalled j Major Knright was the st ir witness of the government In Its prosecution >f the Kelly trial, which will likely end to-day. Defense nests 11? Case. The 'defense rested its case yesterday nfter examining two witnesses, John tl Hagau, president of the Main Street' Bank, and Special Ganger Fultz, of the revenue department. By tlie former the defense sought to; prove that the Kell,- Company was j aware of the Watch of Major Knright,j who at that time was an njgcnt of the revenue department, atul wh i gathorel evidence which resulted In the indict? ments against the defendant company. Mr. Hagau is Interested In the Chris? tian Brothers Company. In t!ic rear of whose store Major Knright leasod a room which faced the hack entrunce of Kelly's establishment. and thero watched the delivery of alleged block? ade spirits, as told by him on the wit? ness stand. As soon as he became aware of the Intentions of Major Kn? right. the witness testified, he Informed Kelly. Ganger Fulls was on the stand not a few minutes, The defense bore tested its ciise, and the Jury was dismissed by fudge vVad dill until this morning at 10:30 o'clock, when Instructions will he received.'' After the Jury had been dismissed Georgo K. Hanson, of counsel for the defense, moved the court that he In? struct for a verdict of riot guilty. Argue on Instruction*, in a lengthy argument bo said that, admitting that the Kellj C!ompany had violated some portion ? I Ihc law, he contended that the indictment was base,I oh the wrong slAttltc. Attorney llousoa. aokl that tuo -w.Ula key which Major Enrlght testified to have aeon delivered nt Kelly's store may have heen Illicit, but that If this were a fact It should have no bearing on the case. rtelng a retailer, as well as a whole? saler and rectifier, he said, Kelly had a right, under the law, to receive Into i his retail store whiskey In lo?3 than five-gallon packages. The attorney declared that according to the testimony of the chief witness for the prosecution, the Juga he saw delivered to Kelly were four-Ballon packages. They were not Btamped, branded or otherwise marked, he con? tinued. In view of these circumstances, bo lolil the court, there was no way to keep a record of them, even if it I was required by law. Me impressed the court with the fact I that after liquor Is received in a retail store all track of It Is lost. The only way in which the government can in? terfere with the conduct of a retail liquor house is when It sells packages of live gallons or over.' A wholesaler, on the other hand, can i sell nothing less than a five-gallon ! package; i Mny I'-Dd Tn-Dnr. The defense ondeavored to call the court's attention to the fact that these jutts were received In wagon loads o* twenty-live jugs each, a total of 10U gallons, and therefore a wholesale ; transaction. A record of these receipts, it was maintained by District Attorney Lewis, should have been kept by the defendant company. Following the argument of Judge Lewis. Attorney Smith took up the theme of Ills associate. These argu? ments occupied all of the afternoon session, and court did not adjourn until after ?> o'clock last night. Argument before the jury will begin this morning, and a verdict Is expected before nightfall. Best Goods, Fair Dealing and Lowest Prices Pocahontas Sugar Corn, 9c, or 3 cans.25c Canned Tomatoes .5c Quart bottles Tomato Catsup. .. .10c Best American Cranulatod Sugar, per pound.5c Hamilton Roasted Coffee, l-lb. papers.19c Fresh Eggs, per dozen .27c New Virginia Buckwheat, 4c lb., or 7 lbs. for.25c New N. C. Roc Herrings, 25c per dozen; or, half barrel .$3.00 Stag Brand Gelatine.5c Wine for jelly, quart.20c Lenox Soap, 7 bars.25c j l arge cans Table Peaches.11c Palmetto Condensed Milk, 3 cans ... .25c 7 lbs. Ilcsi Lump Starch.25c j (loud Lard, per lb.11c ; V.i. Pride Coffee, lb.20c Best Sour Krout, per quart.7c ! 6 Fat Mackerel for.25c Large Juicy Lemons, dozen.15c Creamery Butter, best made, lb.35c Nov. Dates, per lb.7c New Lima Beans, per lb.7c Best I land-Picked Beans, "quart.10c j Old Virginia Herring Roc, in 2-lb. tans, 2 for .25c 1 Ionic-Made Mince Meat, lb.8c 1 lb. Rtimford Powders.25c Sii^.tr Corn, per can .8c Carolina Rico, per pound.6?. Whole Grain Kite, per lb.6c Early June l'ra*. 3 cans for.25c Rabbits, Chickens and Turkeys always mi hand. SeUlIman's Son TWO?STOKES?TWO 1820-22 F.. Main. 506 E. Marshall. Two Stores--Phone at Each. W. Fred. Richardson's Storage sad Transfer imwrt?^ Main and Belvidare 8ts. Haullnjt Packing and Storing Wal Oradn HoTisehoId Goods. * 'Phones: Madison 848. 4*y Monrew HEALTH for you On Solid Foundation Results Guaranteed Ask Your Druggist About