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PAGE FOUIX. THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AJfD SU5-TELEGEAM, TUESDAY, APRIL, 5, 1910. Published and twn4 by tb , PAIUDIUM PRINTINO OO. . Issued T days each week, evenings and Sunday morning. Office Corner North tth and A streets Home Pnon till. ' RICHMOND. INCIANA. BsSelph O. L4e .i... BdMe Chat tee El. Msrsaa . . . MaaasiaB Bdltr Cart Bernhardt........ Aesoetat Kdltav W. R. Fssadeteae. ...... .News Bettor. SUBSCRIPTION TERMS. tn Richmond $6.00 par year (In ad vance) or 10a par week. MAK BUBSCRIPTIONa On year, tn advance ......... ...IB.00 Six month. In advance I ; On mon'.h, In advance .40 RURAL ROUTES. On year. In advanc ......fit? Six month, tn advanc On month, in advanc 1.50 .2$ ' Address chanced an eften aa desired: botn new and old addresses must be Stvn. Subscribers will plra.se remit with order, which should be riven for a specified term; name will not be en'.er d until payment Is received. Entered at Richmond. Indiana, post office aa sec-end class mall matter.' The Association of AaWtiaara (New York City) has Eaxaa&iaed and certified to the airoulatlon J f this pabUoetioa. Only to tigarss of i r afreniatloa contained la its report an 1 i. fjasassHee) wy vn iwwwwbi feW Seoetary. ' NEW YORK AND OHIO. Gov. Hughes is to take the stump in New York in support of the policies on which be desires action by the legisfature. This argues two things: ( 1 ) An undiminished interest on his part in those policies, notwithstand ing his desire to retire from public life, and (2) his conviction that much sentiment for them remains to be This man's success on the Btump has been extraordinary, He practices none of what are known as tho stump arts." He Is not a story ' teller. You search his addresses in vain for any specimen of the highfalutln. He sticks to his text. And yet, by a style devoid of tinsel or display, he awakens, and holds, an Interest such as few so-called orators secure. In the Taft cam paign two years ago he was second only to the candidate himself In draw ing power. . It is a safe assumption, therefore, that this new stumping tour announc ed will rouse the people of New York They-believe in the governor. At first., before his day of trial, they be lieved in his sincerity. They accept . ed the appraisement that he was not a politician. Now that he has had a trial two of them they believe not only In hla sincerity, but his ability. They rate him as one of the best execu tives the state has ever had. - It Is almost conceded by the opposi tion that Gov. Hughes as a candidate again could not be defeated. - His own party would of course support hln although local bosses here and there . do not like him and the independents almost to a man. would be found in I his train. He is an asset of very great ' value, and his ' party at present has no' superabundance of that sort of thing, ' Why should it not draft him , for the third race when his .only rea son for refusing the use of his name again is a desire to resume the law practice? '; Two states will Btand out from all the rest in the local campaigns of this yearNew York and Ohio. If both go democratic the republican pros pects for 1912 will receive a severe blow. If both go republican, the Taft administration will feel decidedly com fortable. The republican need in each state is of a strong candidate for gov ernor. Such a man as Gov. Hughes would solve- the Ohio situation per fectly. His party in the Buckeye Mate would gobble him up swiftly. Why, then. In the state where the man himself lives, and where the party's need is e.a great as in Ohio, should not he be pressed again into service? Of course. Gov. Hughes will support the nominee, whoever he may be, and that will help. But the governor him self is the man for the race. Wash , ington Star! items Gathered in From Far and Near xllTf,. Going "Back to the Farm." , From the Chicago News. : In this era of prosperity , for the farmers,', when dwellers in cities are being advised by many .more or less disinterested persons to go back to the farm, the advice is receiving the ear nest attention of thousands who have i no personal knowledge of farming. In t view of both the facts and the theories "which .bear upon the subject, this state i .-. oi innn is entirety natural. " l ne sai- .v vstioa of America moral, political :tt tod economic," we are told, "is the . farm, and the efforts of philanthro- ::; pints and well-wishers of their fellow ( asea should all tend toward encourag . Ins agriculture." To a considerable ex , tent such advice is futile and at var- ' , usee with the spirit of the times. It Is like sighing for the return of the C7 of the stage coach In tranaporta , Ca and of hand labor In industry. It Insurgency Victorious. : Today at Indianapolis the mighty hand of the people swooped down and swept the so-called regular faction of the Republican party in Indi ana off the political map of the state. The Republican party In Indiana is today the Insurgent party. Beveridge, the gallant leader of the Republican party in the state, ob tained the solid support of trite convention and his stand in the United States senate on all questions absolutely indorsed. This is glad news to all lovers of clean, honest government. The convention was a crisis in the history of Indiana; It was a fight of the pepple and for the people against the greed of the all-powerful trusts. Had the convention wavered in its stand and compromised with Watson and Hemenway (who are now down and out in Indiana politics), the fate of the party would have been sealed, and the Republican party would have met with overwhelming defeat at the polls this fall. As it is, the party has shown Itself true blue and it will have the honest support of the majority of the voters of the state. It is a time to be happy and to feel proud that you are a part of the great commonwealth of Indiana. The Indiana Republican State Conven tion being the first state convention held since the passage of the Payne Aldrlch tariff bill, and since the Insurgent movement has gained such a headway,' has been anxiously anticipated by the reactionaries and friends of special privilege. The result of the convention will have a wonderful moral effect over the entire United States. Indiana is to have the honor of leading in the fight of conscience against cash, and the common people of every state will applaud. Beveridge, in his speech before the convention, sounds the keynote of ; Insurgency of the whole country arid upon the platform adopted by the convention the whole insurgent movement will stand or fall; ' , ;, Think of the significance of each vote cast this fall at the polls in In diana. Each vote will be a vote for right or a vote for wrong, a vpte for the masses or a vote for the classes; a vote for honest government or a vote for dishonest government It is an opportunity for you, for every voter in Indiana to decide the queStion: Shall the people rule, or shall the country be governed by a few for the interests of a few? This is the cause that won at Indianapolis today. And every Repub lican in the state can feel proud that Indiana has such a fearless, honest and capable leader in its distinguished Senator Albei t J. Beveridge. would be well if practically all our poulation, especially during the years of childhood could spend much of their time amid rural surroundings. But in the nature of things, the city in the future is bound to be the chief abiding place of even a larger proportion of Americans than it is at present. There are reasons for the massing of people in the cities, and these reasons will continue to operate. Improvement of transportation facilities, , tending to promote the- development )pt suburban as distinguished from strictly urban centers, is a wholesome counter influ ence. Drugging Children. From the Philadelphia Press. If the charges are made good against the druggists who were arrested last Tuesday for selling cocaine to children the utmost penalty permitted by the law should be instantly imposed upon if convicted men guilty of an 'un speakably atrocious crime. The doc tor who makes an invalid and suffer ing woman familiar with morphine, co caine or any seductive opiate runs a very great risk.. He has himself, in his student days, witnessed the ravag es of chloral or morphine1 in the stu dent body, and, if a worthy practition er,, is 'ware of the habit The allevia tion of pain becomes with certain sup pliant temperaments an excuse for dis sipation of time and dolce far niente. The pallid faces, the drooping eyelids of numberless men and women to be seen on the streets tell a ghastly story. Those who are responsible for the il legal sale of the cause of this should made to suffer. But, above all, the man who aids and abets the drugging of a child is a scoundrel for whom no punishment known to the law can be too severe. Crime. From the Nashville Banner. - There was never a time in the his tory of the country when crime was more rampant than now. The news of the day is fraught with accounts of murders, suicides and other bloody crimes, . robberies, forgeries, briberies and all the perpetrations in the cata logue of scandal and crime. And the reports of these criminal happenings that appear in the newspapers com pass but a small fraction of the whole number of the worst class of crimes committed every day. Comparatively few murders, for instance, are consid ered of sufficient news value to be transmitted by the Associated Press as general news, yet the number re ported day by day would be appalling if the public had not become so famil iar with the news of crime as to re gard it among the commonplace events. Road Work. From the Leavenworth Times. The subject of good country roads is f ast becoming the greatest of the important questions of state improve ment, if It is not already so. The enor mous expansion of the automobile in dustry in the west as well as in the denser east is causing a revolution in the matter of private travel and in cross country commerce. Where a few years ago there was a growing lo cal traffic on small roads both in freight and in passenger channels, there is now a standstill of railroad business on the little branch lines There la more Catarrh In this section of the country than all other diseases put together, and until the last few years was supposed to be Incurable. For a (Treat many years doctors pro nounced It a local disease and prescrib ed local remedies, and by constantly faJUnjr to cure with local treatment, pronounced it Incurable. Science has proven catarrh to be constitutional disease and therefore requires consti tutional treatment. Hall's Catarrh cure, manufactured by Y. J. Cheney A Co., Toledo. Ohio, is the only consti tutional cure on the market. ' it is tak en Internally In doses from 10 drops to a teaepoonful. It acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces of the sys tem. They offer one hundred dollars for any case it fails to cure. Send for circular and testimonials. Address; F. J. CHENEY & CO.. Toledo. Ohio. .Sold by Druggists. 76 Take Halls Family Pills for constl ration.- . . - . while the Increase in country road travel by means of the motor car is immense. TWINKLES (By Philander Johnson.) ;' ' Desperation. "John," exclaimed the shocked wo man, "you are eating with, your knife!" "I know it. I'm economizing. When you eat with your knife you have to learn to balance your food. You eat less and it takes longer." Humanity's Terror. There s something wherever your no tice you shift To weaken your courage sq fjrm. You are chased by a comet enormous -. and swift Or an infinitesimal germ. - - A Serenity of the Season. "Did you get that bill I sent you?" "Yes," replied the cheery citizen. I got a lot of bills. I put . 'em all in the Waste basket. My friends can't fool me with their April 1st jokes." No Notes. "Does your daughter sing by note?" "Certainly not," replied Mr. Cum rox. "We pay spot cash for all her music lessons." Speaking of Politics. "Do you think the democratic party has a chance?" said one suffragette. "I don't know," replied the other; "it looks as - if that rooster emblem ought to float into some popularity with the chanticler craze." Sentiment for the Day. Here's to the man who sees the sun And thinks that summer is begun And sets his plants out, one by one April Fool! And here's to him who throws away The garb that suits a chilly day And blossoms forth in light array April Fool! Here's to the man who thinks that he The future clearly can foresee And his opinions scatters free April Fool! A toast to those whose lives have lacked The help of prophecy exact Here is to all of us. in fact! April Fool! ADDRESS OF SENATOR ALBERT J: BEVERIDGE (Continued From Page Three.) cratic party that even good men like Tilden, Cleveland and Bryan could not save it from the dark and for bidding influences which brought its promises to naught With this truth of history before them, will any patri otic citizen vote to give other great affairs to the management of such men? "V.. Take for example the Panama canal the mightiest work of human hands. The process of wedding the world's greatest oceans is being: accomplished even as I speak, ' That, too, was Re publican in origin, enactment and execution. The Panama canal will be remembered when all other legislation of today Is forgotten. What citizen is willing to trust that vast - enter prise to tlie associated Tammany Halls of the nation ? Or consider the government of Porto Rico and the Philippines. No such work for law, industry, enlight enment and civilization ever was done in the same length of time by any nation in the whole history of man kind. Consider our: relations with Cuba. Does human chronicle tell. of "equal wisdom, strength and kindness in guiding a people toward the heights? Or think of San Domingo yesterday insolvent and in i savage chaos; today peaceful and solvent. Reflect on the multitude of problems beyond our shores. Will any patriot vote " to turn them over to the men who dominate the misnamed Demo cratic party of today? We fight not only the battles of the people against the powers that prey upon them, but also we fight the battles o( civilization against the pow ers that oppose It With all my soul I believe in the powers of light against the powers, of darkness. Sometimes those powers of darkness and of light are arrayed in a contest as broad as the state; sometimes they are arrayed in a conflict that embraces the na tion. But in the end they include all nations and all humanity. Always in one form or another old Privilege holds his sway, yet always the peo ple advance upon him and his hosts, and in the end the people triumph. To me public life has but one mean ing; to me this republic has but one meaning. It is this; Here are millions of human beings. Not one of them millions asked to be born, yet born wo were without our consent Not one of us asks to die. yet die we must without our consent. And in the brief space between birth and death all of us, except the favored few, have a hard enough time. What can be done to make the load of these mil lions lighter? That is what civilization means to me. What can be done to help the American people give an ex ample to all the world of the progress or civilization and human content ment? That is all public life means to me. The success of a party, as such, means nothing; but the success of a party as it is the agent of human wel fare means everything. I want the Republican party to be that instru ment It must be. It shall be. It will be. Away with the pleas of individual profit, power or renown! Away with the arguments for party advantage! Up with the banner of justice! Up with the flag of human rights! And let us carry It to the end of the conflict, knowing that the welfare of the peo ple is the only thing worth working for, worth living for, and, as our fath ers have shown us, the only thing worth dying for. Up with the banner of justice and human rights, and for ward to battle, never doubting the out come and certain of victory. For the blood that founded and saved the republic still pulses through American veinB. Americans will still be masters and not vassals. Ameri cans will stand for the flag unsullied, laws unpolluted and that righteous ness which exalteth a nation. Ameri cans will stand for justice and against privilege; for equal rights for all, and against special favors for the few. Americans will stand for those eter nal truths which mads up the "faith of our fathers, blessed faith." Would you know the spirit and duty of the hour? Listen, and you will hear the fife and drum of Bunker Hill and Yorktown shrilling and throbbing tho spirit and duty of '76 and that is the spirit and duty of today. Listen, and you will hear the bugle of Vicksburg and Appomattox pealing the spirit and duty of the heroic six ties and that is the spirit and duty of today. . For again we fight for jus tice and human rights as in those splendid days of sacrifice and glory. PROVEN ECZEMA CURE. For several years we have announc ed, with our recommendation, that we had found a positive cure for eczema; a simple skin wash, oil of wintergreen compounded with other healing in gredients. Yet we know there are people right in this town who have eczema, and sun have never tried this reme ly. Wre have, therefore, arranged with the D. D. D. Laboratories of Chicago for a special offer of a trial bottle at 25 cents instead of the $1.00 bottle as regularly sold. . Be sure of the correct name: D. D. D. Prescription. We offer this trial bottle with our recommendation and assurance that just as soon as, the patient washes his itching skin, this mild liquid will take the itch away instantly. Conkey Drug Co., Ninth and Main streets. "If nature Lad not endowed Caruso with a fine voice he would nevertheless have become a stage celebrity," says Nos Lectures, "because of his powers as a ventriloquist - The tenor told this story when he was asked whether he really was. a ventriloquist: I was a guest at a country- house on the Hud son one day, and had sung for my hostess. We were all on the lawn, and a woman came to me and asked me to give an exhibition of ventriloquism I walked away, and presently, stopping under a tree, shouted loudly: "Well, little boy, what are you doing up there V" Then a shrill voice answered "Nothing; just climbed up to hear you sing." Very well," I shouted; "be careful don t fall r "All right, sir." came the shill reply. Several women had come to the spot, and when the conversation was over one of them said: "I never heard such ventrilo quism!" and I said, seriously, "Neither did I." ' " The total amount of money in the United States treasury to the credit of the patent office at the end of the fiscal year 1908 was $6,890,725.89. MASONIC CALENDAR. Tuesday, April 5, Richmond lodge. No. 190, F. & A. M. S ated meeting. Thursday, April 7, Wayne Council, No. 10, R- & S. M. Stated assembly and work in the degrees. Friday, April. 8. King Solomon's Chapter, No. 4, F A. M. Stated meet ing. , - , MOTHER GRAY'S. SWEET POWDERS FOR CHILDREN, SnTaSjS S pl MW FEU. AdM A. VOiA4STEA. Let sto. Appetite Gone Indigestion is the Cause of it Get Rid of it. People go on suffering from little stomach troubles for years and imag ine they have a serious disease. . They over eat or over drink and force on the stomach a lot of extra work.. But they never think that the stom ach needs extra help to do extra work. If these people would take a Mi-o-na stomach tablet with or after meals it ... would be a great big help to the stom ach, in its strain of overwork. Mi-o-na is guaranteed by L, H. FIhe to cure indigestion or any stomach disease or money back. Mi-o-na for belching of gas. Mi-o-na for distress after eating. Mi-o-na for foul breath. Mi-o-na for biliousness. Mi-ona to wake up the liver. . Mi-o-na. for heartburn. Ml-o-na for sickheadache. ' Mi-o-na for nervous dyspepsia. Mi-o-na after a banquet. Mi-o-na for vomiting of pregnancy. Mi-o-na for car or sea-sickness. Fifty cents a large box at leading dealers everywhere and at L. H. Fihe's Booth's Pills cure constipation 2oc. Heart to Heart Talks. By EDWIN A. NYE. Copy.iaht, 1908, by Edwin A. Nye DON'T GET MAD. Control "your temper, my son. It does not pay to get mad. I know a very competent business mau who occasionally gets a very abusive letter. He invariably answers it In like tenor, and then he Is very careful not to mail his letter. He can't afford to get mad. I know another business man who is impulsive and quick to resent an angry speech who, when he Is thus aroused. Invariably reaches for his bat and goes Into the open air. After a brief walk he comes back smiling. The fact is he who lets go bis temper and explodes in public is greatly at a disadvantage. Do you get that? I know a lawyer of great ability who often defeats himself because of his irascible ways. Other lawyers, know ing bis disposition, put him on the de fensive by deliberately stirring np his anger. - You see, tbe man who loses bis tem per is apt to lose bis judgment. Indeed, it can be stated that he who displays a violent anger in company is temporarily Insane. Though he may be heartily ashamed of bis fit of indignatiou when the out burst Is over, it helps nothing. In tbe temporary insanity of a furious rage a man Is likely to go to extreme lengths. Even murder lies that way. Bottle up your wrath. If you habitually give yourself over to exhibitions of fury you may expect to be lowered in the estimation of every one. A gentleman does not vent his spleen. Beware of savage speech. If you flame up and show your choler to your employer you are likely to lose your job. If you are yourself an employer and indulge your out spoken passion against your employee, who is prohibited from talking back, you show yourself a cogard. Cultivate self control. Control of yourself is fundamental. You cannot control others until you have learned to control yourself. . You cannot command until you nave learn ed how to obey. Mastery of self is the finest exhibi tion of a man. It goes to make what we call force of character. It is con served, unvented reserve power. Do not let your temper be boss. It does not pay. In certain parts of Asia and Europe the customs of salting newborn babies is still practiced. The method varies with the differing nationalities of the peoples employing it , The Armeni ans of Russia cover the entire skin of the Infant with very fine salt This is left on the body for three hours or more, when it is washed off with warm water. -. . The New Summer ArrgvGollar High enough to look welllow enough to feel well. Plenty of room for tie to slide in 15 cents each 2 for 25 cents Cteett. Feabody Ac Cosas j. Mafcen. G..J. KtlOLLEIIBERG RESIGNS HIS JOB Popular Councilman-at-Large Will Move to Oxford, Ohio, Soon. WIFE'S POOR HEALTH CAUSE A SPECIAL MEETING OF COUNCIL WILL BE HELD THURSDAY AT WHICH TIME A SUCCESSOR WILL BE CHOSEN. George J. Knollenberg, councilman-at- large, handed In his resignation at the meeting of the city fathers last evening to take effect Immediately Councilman King made a motion to tbe effect that tho resignation be accept ed, and this action was taken accord ingly. Owing to the fact that his wife Is in ill health, Mr. Knollenberg will abandon bis grocery business on South Thirteenth street and move to Oxford, Ohio, where it is hoped Mrs Knollenberg's health may be improved. In accepting the resignation, Mayor Zimmerman stated that there was no more opportune time to express his deep regret over Mr. Knollenberg's departure. He declared that he had been an excellent councilman, always liberal and conservative in his views and ever watchful for affairs that per tain to the best interests of this city The mayor expressed the hope that the successor of Mr. Knollenberg would be as valuable an asset to the council as he had been and in conclusion wished the latter success in whatever business venture he might see fit to engage. Mr. Knollenberg responded in a hap- ( py mood, thanking Mayor Zimmerman and the members of council for the courteous treatment accorded him and stated that while he hated to leave Richmond, his wife's poor health forc ed him to take that step. He recom mended that council assist Mayor Zim merman in every way possible 'and co operate with him in solving the prob lems of the city's government Meeting Thursday Night. According to law, when a'councilman resigns, his successor must be chosen at a special meeting of council to he held not less than two days after the resignation has been tendered nor more than fifteen days. The announcement of the resignation must also be pub lished once in the newspaper. Coun cllman Bartel made the motion that Thursday evening be designated as the time for the special meeting and the motion prevailed. John Reld, Harry Goodwin, Matt VonPeln and Harvey Brown are applicants for the successor ship. It is also understood that A C. Ogborn. formerly councilman-at large, is an applicant for the position. An Awful insult. "Why, Susan," said a mistress to her maid of all work, who bad been given an evening off, "what was the matter that you came home so early i last night? Didn't you enjoy your- selfr "Up to the supper, ma'am," was the reply, "everything was like heaven. but then I received an insult, and It was my place as a self respectin' young woman to return home.' "Who insulted you?" "My young man. He had the Im pertinence to ask me if my program was full, an I'm sure I'd never bad nothin' but a sangwich an a glass of lemonade, an If you'd been in my place, ma'am, you'd 'a' done as I done." Another Solomon. A horse dealer in a Scotch town hav ing hired a horse to a solicitor, the lat ter, either through bad usage or some other cause, killed the horse, when tbe dealer insisted upon payment by bill if it were not convenient to pay cash. Tbe lawyer bad no objection to grant a bill, but said it must be at a Jong date. The dealer told him to fix his own time, when the man of law drew a promissory note, mukinfg it payable on tbe day of judgment An . action was raised, when the solicitor asked the presiding Judge to look at the bill. Having done so, the judge replied: "The bill is perfectly good, and as this is the day of Judgment I decree that you pay tomorrow." Concord with Ara-Notch Evanston with Buttonhole Troy. ft. V. ARROW CUFFS. S ' 3 ONE T.1ILE SKATING RACE AT COLISEUM Saturday night Haurrsr Sureler. of RlScf Skates Free EAST FOB ORPHANS - (Palladium Special) Eaton, O., April 5. The board of dt rectors of the Preble County Children's Home will -hold a meeting in Eaton next Thursday and will complete ar rangements for holding the annual Bruce Memorial dinner at the home on April 15. The dinner commemorates the birth of the late James Bruce, the man who laid out and founded the city of Eaton, and who at his death be queathed to the home a large sum of money. In giving the legacy it was so stipulated in his will that the Interest accrued therefrom was to be used for an annual dinner, given for the or phans and the officers. : His anniver sary has been annually observed for the past four years, and of such a pleasing nature has become the occa sion that the event is held in eager an ticipation by the inmates. ; : Besides . the families of the directors those who will this year be included in the list of guests are the officers of the county infirmary and of the common pleas, probate and juvenile courts. To man the entire American fleet In time of war would require 3.890 of ficers and 72.2S1 men: and in time of peace, 3,052 officers and 0,903 men, according to Capt N. R. Usher, assistant to the bureau of navigation. These figures do not include officers and men at shore stations. Frca Uuc7 Gc:r.:jy It is well to stop a physical ail ment at the first signs of Us approach, and that is especially true of liver . trouble, which can eventually give rise to so many serious complications. Many have liver trouble and imagine it is indigestion, and hence take the wrong remedy. When the Uver does net store up suf flclent a-astric Juices It becomes slunish. and In this way disturbs the stomach and bowels, with which It to supposed to work In harmony. Then conies the sallow complexion, the pimply face, the dull pain In the forehead, the thiantmir of the blood, etc A very quick and sensible way to stop the trouble aa well as to cur It la by th us of Dr. Caldwell's Syrup Pepsin, which contains InaredicnU especially Intended to promote) the ac tivity of th liver. Among- the many thousands who have written th doctor about th results -achieved with his remedy, and who are (lad to make th facta public so that others can help themselves, are Mr. J as. Kennedy. 8t Louis. Mo.; Mrs. S. A. La Rue of Smith's drove, Ky and many others. ; These, like thousands of others, started th use of Syrup Pepsin with a aample. If you will send your name and address you can atoo obtain a free trial bottle. This will prove to you that liver trouble Is promptly cured with this remedy or money will he refunded. Having- tried It von can then hn It tn th mmtuI way of your druniat at fifty cents and on dollar a bottle, and the totter Is sufficient for an entire family. This remedy is a vast - improvement ever cathartic tablets and salts, which only do sood for th time tela. Shrma Pepsin Is permanent tn Its results. H Pleasant to take and does not snipe. It Is especially ood for an thoaa who can not stand a violent purrttive. Dr. Caldwen personally win b pleased to alve you any medical advice you may desire for yourself or family pertainlns; to the stomach, liver or bowels absolutely free of charge. Explain your case la a letter and he win rely to you in detail. For the free sample simply send your nam and address on a postal card or otherwise. For either request th doctor's address Is Dr. W. B. CaldwelL R.SU4 Cald well buildlns, MoBtloello, JOL Get Hot Water Quickly For Your Kitchen and Bath. MEERHOFF Can show you the new way to get it. Phone 123. South 9th. e 710 8fc nictiuoso Estdied b 1851 . GIVE YOU the best value for your money In Jewelry that it is possible to obtain anywhere. Great care has been ex ercised In tbe selection of the Jewel ry and they are thoroughly dependable in every respect and strictly as repre sented. Our reputation for square dealing is well known to our customers and we would like to have you become one and prove it. WILL YOU? ' DIAMONDS MOUNTED WATCH REPAIRING O. E. DICKENSON Red Cedar Rjftes A mixture of red cedar sawdust with other moth killers, making- the very best protection for clothing from moths during- the summer. The finest thing you can set to put under car pets. - - ' f ' 10 cent per box. tth A Main. The) Rexall Store. 4 ST SP 52 i r '4 tiJS '"jit