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September x, 1909. TH
> I
Commonwealth
Bank
12 Nerth Ninth Street,
RICHMOND, VIRGINIA.
CAPITAL - - $2tl,H9.M
4 Per Cent
ON 8AVING8.
ROYALINE OIL for Aching Feet.
ROYALINE OIL After 8havln?.
ROYALINE OIL for Sere Threat.
ROYALINE OIL, no Greaae, ne Stain.
ROYALINE OIL, the beet Antiseptic.
10c, 25c, 50c. Druggists
For COUGHS and COLDS--CROUPand all PRIMS'
II Rets Instantaneously
DIEZ-BALM
25c R JRR 25c R JRR
RT RLL DRUGGISTS OR BY MRIL
L. B. DIEZ. New Orleans, La.
Geo. E. Egdorf
Practical Painter and Decorator.
231 Constance St. New Orleans.
Phone Uptown 2396-L.
Contractors' and Dealers' Exchange,
Telephone Main 327.
Estimates Cheerfully Given.
S J.Hawes&Co. I
Dealer In
COAL
Also
Lime, Plaster, Cement
RICHMOND, VA.
Bonds and Fine BankInvestments.
ing Connections.
Raymond M. Hudson
ATTORNEY-AT-LAW
Norfolk, Va.
Practices in Supreme Court of the United
8tates. And all Federal and State Courts
and Departments.
CITY BANK
of RICHMOND, VA.
Wm. H. Palmer, E. B. Addison,
President. V-Presldent.
J. W. Sinton, Cashier.
CAPITAL, $400,000.00
SURPLUS 6 UNDIVIDED PROFITS,
$175,000.00
Correspondence Solicited.
E PRESBYTERIAN OF THE SOU
Temperance
WHAT SOME GOVERNORS SAY.
The Governor of Iowa: "The less liquor
sold, the better morals."
The Governor of Texas: "The saving
in court expenses from the decrease In
crime is believed to offset the loss of
revenue from closing saloons."
Governor Buck of North Dakota: "We
have had prohibition so long in North
Dakota that in some counties there are
no jails."
Governor Glenn, of North Carolina: "I
say here and now that the last bridge is
burned behind me, and I stand squarely
with the great temperance forces to drive
out this hideous monster."
The Governor of Georgia: "I will attend
no banquet during my term of office at
which wine is served."
Governor Folk, of Missouri: "The Sunday
closing of saloons has reduced Sunday
crime sixty per cent."
The Governor of Oklahoma: "It will
qost to enforce prohibition five per cent,
of what it will cost to punish crimes,
keep orphans, paupers and criminals that
the whiskey traffic creates."
The Governor of Kansas: "More than
half the territory of the United States,
and more than one-third of the people,
are now under the dominion of prohibition."
PUBLIC CONTROL OF LIQUOR
TRAFFIC.
Does any sane man think that the local
option wave is going to stop at the Ohio
State line? Not much. It will sweep
riirVit fiprnoa intn J ?u
--c,? - ->.? ?. tmiajivaum ttiiu suumerge
every crooked politician who denies
the right of the people to control
the liquor traffic.?Washington (Pa.) Observer.
The sober public looks on and sees the
abuse of the public law by the saloonkeepers
who violate the laws of decency,
as well as the rules of the court and
civil law, in many cases, and they have
frowned on the saloon business in such
manner as to make those who are engaged
in it very, very uncomfortable. At
this stage of the game, the manufacturers
deluge the mails with appeals to every
newspaper and every citizen of
p.vui.uvuvv, noniiig tvruyoiauuu 111 U1U
work of saving the credit of the business.
The task they undertake is a big one, and
decent citizenship will have nothing to
do with it.?Cambria (Pa.) Tribune.
Great caves, larger than the far-famed
Mammoth cave of Kentucky, with
chasms and vaulted chambers in which
an office building could be stored away,
and surrounded by ancient and mysterious
ruins never before visited by white
men, have just been discovered by Pro
feasor Edgar L Hewitt, the archaeologist,
in the northeastern part of Arizona.
The caves have long been told of
by Indians, but white men doubted their
existence until a Navajo guide led Professor
Hewitt to them.
TH. 23
CENTRAL BUREAU OF EDUCATION,
Paris, Ky., Miss Kate Edgar, Proprietor
and Manager. Prompt and reliable information
given presidents of colleges
and superintendents of schools of tear*
ers suitable for their vacancies. Send
for circulars.
SHOPPING
BY AN EXPERT BUYER.
Goods of every description, personal and
household. Trousseaus a specialty. Satisfaction
guaranteed. Guide for ladies visiting
the city and accommodations secured. ,
Highest references. MISS VIRGINIA JONES,
Purchasing Agent, 203 West 81st Street.
New York City.
Belmont College
Far YOUNG WOMEN. Nashville, lam.
College and Preparatory Courses. Music, Art,
Expression, Modern Languages, Physical Culture
and Domestic Science. Matchless location,
* Register now. Catalogues on request. Address
Bo* U.
IRA I.*VDKITH n n 11 n ???
MIM HOOD ud MlM HEHON. i'rlitipaUTULANt
'vNIVERSITYo/ LOUISIANA
NEW ORLEANS
IDWDI B C&AZOB11D. IX. O., Trmtdmut.
Tulint University ia all its departments. is located in the Ckj
of New Orlcaifs, the metropolis of the Sputh. Nine Department*,
with tvfcnty-three buildings.. Modern dormitories, extensive laboratories,
libraries, and mukcdtm.
Fall Coums trs offered In Languam ScienO
Engineering. Architecture, Art, Law, Med.
lcfne, Pharmacy, and Dentistry. *
Separate Department for Women. Fxpemc* low. Low dormitory
rates. Neat session of ail departments-. except N. O.
rlinic, begins Octobrr ist. Polyclinic open. Novcinbei ist. Send
for catalogue. Address. R. K. Italic, Secretary.
TEACHERS WANTED.
We have on file hundreds of applications
from all over the South, for competent
teachers. New ones coming in
every day. Write at once for particulars.
i ne southern Educational Bureau*
Raleigh, N. C
HOME INSTITUTE
1440 TO 1446 CAMP STREET,
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
YOUNQ LADIES' DAY AND BOARDINA
SCHOOL.
Twenthy-slxth term. Latest methods Is
all departments. Term commences OCTOBER
1, 1908. Complete course. *psrlenced
teachers. Special Classes t?
Normal and Business Courses. For catalogue,
address
MISS S. B. WRIOHT,
PrlnetsaL
TENNESSEE COLLEGE j
RWTivMlTVf 1MB* V
{jMQpjRi Religions.MenUU.Phya- w !
l^r"S*SwJ lc*' Training of tke 1 I
^?Ktsy$-? highest order. V .
Write for e>t*lor. OtAt SCHOOL. IDf A1LOCATION. | 1
GEO. J. BURNETT. Pre*. J. HENRY BURNETT, Mgr ,
Henry N. Gastrock
3120-3122 Magazine 8t.
NEW ORLEANS, LA.
RELIABLE SHOE8 FOR THE FAMILY.
Agents, M. A. Packard A Co.'a
$3.50 and $4 00 8HOE8 FOR MEN.
Phone Up-town 2200 W.