Daily Tribune, Volume 17, Number 2, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 2 December 1902 — Page 4
ta
I' of,.-
jfegjjjy-
I
General
A REPUBLICAN NEWSPAPER.
Published by The Tribune Company at 661 Wabash,_Ave* Daily, Sunday and Weekly. w.
If •. •". j§ ^Xiong Distance Telephone No. 378—Private Exchange. Citizens' Telephone No. 378.
Entered at postoffice at Terre Haute, Ind., as. second-class matter
Daily ... '..1 cfBI S11 nday....,............','T 4 cents Ilauy and Sunday, per week, by carrier 10 cents Daily and Sunday, per month, by mail
EJiUiy and Sunday, three months, by mail JLJaiiy and Sunday, six months, by mail jf-jJJ Dauy and Sunday, per year, by mail Weekly, per: yeal-. '.. i\ 50 c6nts
•TERRE HAUTE, IInD., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1902.
Daily Average for October. _.
S
fife,
W1
r&-
W
claims.
Circulation
,• "H
•t -Great Tiews ft'olii down KTe'tfWfiky way. The delectable Mr. Ybutsey, one of the numerous gentlemen serving life sentence fcjjr the alleged murder of the unspeakable Goebel, denies that lif has made any sort of a confession as set forth in the press dispatches. He announces, however, that he is perfectly willing to go on the witness stand and testify for any side that giVes him a chance. Mr. Youtsey's enthusiasm in this regard m[ight possibly cause a slight shade of discredit to rest momfentariiy oft hi.1? "testimony if given. While this man was 11 aver pfovexEigSiilty of the crime for which a partisan court convicted him, he has all along shown such unmistakable signs of! insanity that it is just as well to keep liiin locked tip, although justice would dictate his-confinement in an insane lios:pi|aj ratlief than'"a iMiitentiary.
Uhe picturesque Sultan of Bacolod, who defied the authority of.tlic United States and then repented, has again backslidden ai|d expresses a determination and desire to do us dirt. While tfit gentleman's moods are doubtless superinduced by his in-^jitlgen^fr 'iii^Srlifi absitS'if^n'^e from the native potion kno\vii• asH'bend,"' he "has succeeded 'in "acquiring a conspicuity- in the United States that would prove a fortune for a lecturer. If the old qodger,"can,be made- to .realize the glorious possibilities of his case, the literary'bureau of the estimable Major Pond cafl-be r^hed I'Sfion Jiq,, vk^ hiiife "rich beyond the dream of avgj'ice/"
*."• It is said that .Quce.r^LjUhas fo,ytid some Western senator to urge her claim for three millions of dollars against the government and.,diverting cause will be vigorously aired during/tfi^pre^ift s#»i&i'fofr-e6ttgress. This grotesque old beldam occupy too much tijjj.e that should a consideration of public interests and thoseher cause, no doubt for a contingent fee, shpuld be pi'omptly squelched. The country ha^had a satiety of this opera boufi'e queen and her bogus
J: K. P. Knc-x, one qf the few Democratic congressmen from
Pennsylvania, .1^8 rgsigiicd1 in 'order to qualify for the office of Itate po.$jtjpa. he was recently elected. It fs'ssiid tha#i&noK' is*-'•thbrovigMy out of sympathy with the course of liife^.ji&fty 'in' eohgfess and was with difficulty kept inline during the last session. Just what solace he proposes 'tospiek -up i*y lerV.ice in the legislature of Pennsylvania it is [I difficult to imagine, .hia it is presumable that he wanted tp fmfj a pjsaje wh^re he,,would be good and lonesome. I n--•The recent order of the postmaster general, rendering ineligible to reappointment all women in the classified service whp change their-, names by marriage, is to be commended.
When a woman marries she is supposed to yoke with a bread winner.
After
"Vvgps**
45
c«io!
8,122
her "sphere of activity should be the
home and not a public: office. If a woman finds that the man she loves cairt support her she ought not to marry him. The order from the head of the postoffice department is based on cojnmon
sense
and commends itself to the public. -r
It is repoited that' Germany was actively instrumental, ill preventing the sale of the Danish West Indies to the United States and that her representatives are sparing no paj^s* to make all the trouble possible, for this country in West Indies. There is n«:reason to doubt the hostility and jealousy with which Gerih'a^y ^iews the'cotaihercial and territorial expansion of the United .States and the time may yet come when the commission -of -some overt act will result in her humiliation.
Miles reports that he has had no end of a good
[time the Philippines and, that conditions there are altp ether lovely. Inasmuch as this military peacock was guide, hilosopher, and friend-in-chief to the anti-imperialists during IjAe last session of congress his ostensible change of heart koines as a swprise. Can it be that the hero has forsaken his political ambitions? Or does he see glory, dominion and power in pursuing the opposite course?.
President Roosevelt makes a strong plea for the speedy establishment of the department of commecrce. During the period of our rapid national growth added duties and responsibilities have been crowded on the other departments of the government and there is need of relief. In this era of commercial expansion a department of commerce is especially imperative and there is no doubt but that congress will act on the executive suggestion.
The Hon. Joseph Cannon has the speakership safely cinched, but if he needed any further endorsement he would find the best sort of a one in the bitter manner in which
u-J
selves.
such as
MT.
tacks his candidacy. It is pretty safe to do exactly that against which Mr. Bryan inveighs. _—_1_I .» .y.,, -..v
The recent election in Indiana cost the public nearly 15 cents a vote. Voting1 machines when established will not entail a cost l^jsides, result in the elimination of ^e "lost vote," now such an annoying and potent factor in oW5'elections
Another revolution haB broken out in Hayti. So fast do social eruptions come in this land that they seem to tread on each other's heels. Her disturbed history long ago demonstrated to the world the inability of her people to rule them
Judging from the manner in which Mr. Bryan sneers at Grover Cleveland's tariff views, Mr. Bryan has become a high tariff" man. He displays no hesitency in attributing many of iur national ills to the temporary success of the frpe traders.
Bryan at
yNm
THE
THE WIDE WORLD ROUND.
President Eliot and the Church.
President Eliot, who has made an unusual number of public discourses of late, and put an unusual number of ideas into each of them, talked the other day to the Methodist ministers of Boston about the work of the church. He felt it, he said, to be closely aKin to the work of education, but he thought tiiat in his lifetime the influence of the churcn had visibly declined|| ffle found that steady work seemed to lie tiie greatest of civilizers. It lifted people out of want and misefy^ and, up suggiested^ that it was the greater necessity teri(^:atJ^zo|ies that had cause4 ,tChristian^ 'to^revfel* rastr in thos*""zpnes than in the tropical ones. He thought the ministers might advantageously modify their methods by -tryjiig to get more personal exertion out of thejr congregations. He said he went to church twice on Sundays and twice on Thursdays, and probabiy heard more preaching among all denomiations, from the .^Jevvish to .the Roman Catholic, than any otjier mail irf Ih4 United States, but lie found that he was not called upon for personal exertion. He merely nb,s.orbed. The ministers worked, but he didn't. He though there ought £o be more laboratory practice in the lecture courses thq ministers were giving. He doubted if stirring sermons were of any value unless they resultd in action. "I find it does me no good," he said, "to have my sympathies touched or my indignation stirred, unless I can do something about it." The point seems well taken, though is a, church-goer Dr. JDliofs position is probably exceptional. Presumably he hears sermons chiefly in the chapel of Harvard University, where, by the necessities of the case, the preaching end of the minister's work is most cultivated. The pastors of the great churches in the great cities nowadays do try unquestionably to get work out of their congregations, and some of them have pretty good success. Take, for example, the report, issued about November 1, of St. George church in New York. The church has over 8,000 members, and its annual expenditures is nearly $100,000. The rector, Dr. Ranisford, has fqiir clerical assistants, a secretary, deaconess, and volunteer lay-workers, to help him. In that cliuich there are thirty-nine organizations for getting work out of of the members. The list includes a grocery department, a clothing department, an "employment society, a boys industrial trade-schoolfi, a sewing school, a cooking class, a millinery class, and many othei's quite as much outside of what in old times we were used to think of as church Avork. There are many other churches in New York and elsewhere that work in this same way, and some of them to as great an extent. The "institutirional church," is no longer a novelty, and its purpose seems to be this very one which Dr. Eliot commends,—to get work out of the members.
A Royal Musician.
If one would conquer the world as a music-maker, one should be extremely careful to avoid being born a nobleman. Musical art haB,.been poor in Byrons. Haydn was the son of a wheelwright: Handel's, father was official barber to the ducal court of Saxony Schubert was the son of a schoolmaster—his respected mother was a cook the composer of "Tristan und Isolde" was the son of Leipzig's chief of police, and the sire Qf Antonin Dvorak kept an inn. So when Don R.offredo Caetahi, son ot the duke of Sermoneta (of the Roman family of Caetani)j set about the writing of the Symphonic Prelude which the Philharmonic society performed at its first concert of the season, he should have considered that the circumstances clearly necessitated a superlative activity of inspiration. It was Huckleberry Finn, if our memory is not at fault, who graciously observed that "kings is kings, and you got to make allowances." No doubt potential dukes are entitled to the benefit of a similar generosity, and we are more than Teady to make the proper allowanced dukes being as assuredly as "kings is kings." But the noble Don goes too far we think even that admirable humanist whom we have quoted would have hard ended his heart in the presentee of this product ol the Muse of the Caetanis. If his Symphonic Prelude—it is his op. 8, the first of a group of five—is fairly representative of the Don's abilities, one wonders if it was really worth while for him to exchange the not very enorous occupation of merely being the son of a duke for the nerveracking labors of composition. It is music of a peculiarly disheartening sort—forever seeming to be on the point of achieviiijj some finely cumulaitve climax, and invariably stopping just short' of the attainment,-with an effect euriosuly like that of a speaker elaborating what promises to be a sidesplitting storv, and then, at the crucial moment, forgetting tiie point! But let tis be magnanimous. The nobility make a poor shift at composition but after all—again to quote the unforgettable
Huck—"it's the way they're raised."
"International Investment" Tends to Peace. One of the strongest influences for peace among the nations is the growing habit of borrowing and lending money, or "international investment." Everybody recollects how IVance abused the United States when this-country had to take Spain to task for the misgovemment of her colopies. The root of it all was a huge amount of French money in Spain. France has now invested in foreign countries, chiefly Russia, England, Spain and Italy the sum of six billion dollars. England, on the other hand, has ten billion dollars invested abroad, and a good sum of it is in France, but perhaps the greatest part of it is in the United. States. But the American millionaire is also abroad, and he is frnyipg everything he can lay his hands on in Europe, and much .oiit he can't bring home his trunk,
underground
Railways, mineral springs,
THE PIRATE'S CORNER.
Women are built so queerly that there can be no regular system for measuring them up.
An engaged couple can be happy anywhere and after they are married unhappy in just as many places.
You can generally tell by the things a man doesn't eat the next morning the things he didn't drink the night befoie.,....
When Jim Sang Low.
Jfin had a big revolver and he made an awful "bluff,", Pretending on accasion to be very brave and "tough." He kept peace lovers nervotis with his sanguinary threats That no one cared to tackle him was one of his regrets
He liked to hear his comrades say, "Oh, please don't do that, Jim!" ".V "Their pleas for peace and quiet were extremely dear to him, And so on every pretext he kept reaching for his gun. Until he chanced to meet a man who had another one.
He blustered with the quiet men who always went unarmed He talked about his prowess and he told of those jie'd harmed He showed them tricks of juggling with his awe-inspiring gun, Until he chanced to meet a man who had another one.
"Now, what," his comrades pondered, "can have made this change in Jim? He hasn't let his anger rise, and that seems strange in him. 'Oh, as to that," the stranger said, '''of mystery there's none merely chanced to say StTVawBC1? .fT" -'pi
It doesn't take a great all their sweetness,
kissing of .ps
Not one woman in a thousand knows the difference between loving and being lovedA &
When a red-headed womaii hafn't a red-headed teni^en it is a sign it is bleached. ",
Seldom does a woman love a man without, and seldom a man loves a woman with, complete self-abnegation.
The trouble with girls is that they adulterate sentiment with sentimentality. ^.
THE DAILY TRIBUNE: TERRE HAUTE, IND., TUESDAY, DECEMBER 2, 1902.
Man
is more interested in securing his family against wantthan the wage earner. You can buy your life insurance at lower rates now than you can a year hence, when you are older^S
:Why
not buy it in the com
pany that has larger assets and has paid more to policy-holders than any other life insurance company in. tl^e world ..
Assets, over #j
1:
2,0'Q0:,000
Amount paid tp Policy-hftldas, over
A young man, considw then fpr.'VWhere sh^t lnsurer'
THE MUTUAL LIFE INSURANCE COMPANY OF NEW YORK RICHARD A. MCCUBDY, President.
WILLIAM A. HAMILTON, Manager, Terre Haute, Ind.
IMPORTANT TO LABOR
REAL EFFECT OF LAST WEEK'S FEDERATION MEETING
SECRETARY WILSON'S OPINION
Every Effort Now Centered on Congress for the Passage of Several Bills Which Mean Much.
Secretary W. B. Wilson, of the United Mine Workers of North America, who returned from New Orleans Friday, where he had been attending the convention of the American Federation of Labor, said yesterday that the convention in New Orleans was one of the most important yet held by the federation. Many questions were considered at the convention by the .301 delegates and all of them, settled. Nothing remains unsettled out of the convention except a number of complicated mine ore propositions that were referred to the executive committee for final action. The election of Mr. Gompers. as president of the fed eration was accomplished without any opposition. Although, it is understood among the laboringmen that there has been a determined opposition to Mr. Gom pers on the part of some union men, nothing tangible in the form of opposition was found by Gompers's_ supporters.
There was much talk in New Orleans of the proposal-to enter John Mitchell, president of the'Miile Workei,s^ 'as'a candidate to s'ucc'('.u§ri.Gonip(]fS. Secretary Wilson stopped all of this ifcalk immediately aft^tgs ari-i^l^'gnn^^Si^!^ tj Mitchell's supporters. that, ^jfr. ]\IiteheU was persistently-Jrefusing to be a candidate and would not accept the office in the event of an election. Secretary Wilson was so informed by Mitchell in a telegram received bcf&rc "goiiijj to New Orleans. The friends of Mitchell accepted this decision as final and contented themselves with enthusiastically commending the work of. the Mine ^Yorkers' Union under his direction.. The report of the termination of'thc 'anthracite coal strike was received by'-llie "federation, and Mr. Wilson was commended for his part in the work. *Th'fe executive committee will appoint a legislative committee which will try to induce con cress to pass many bills thought, necessary for the good of labor Chief among them is the proposed law making eight hours the length of a day^s work
1
hotels,
ivy:tfad tuins, shoe ^tores, electric factories, foreign brogues, and anti-American prejudices.-^ ,/
castles,
government contracts. The lab
oring o.gaiiizations are insisting on this measure and success is hoped for by the officers of the American Federation. Another law which may be proposed is a federal statute which will prohibit the importation of labor to districts where strikes are in progress. A law similar in purpose to the interstate-commerce law is suggested. To make it a violation of a law and a misdemeanor to employ men to be taken to other states and fill the places of striking employes would be a help to unions prosecuting stlikes, the labor men say. "The growth of the sentiment in favor of organized labor was apparent at the convention Reports from all branches of labor were received and they showed growth in the membership of organizations and^sij^ in the sentimgnt in faj)Gr of them among men of other vocations. •The miners are. steadily increasing their membership. The strike has helped us in that it demonstrated the posibility of success when a proper organization is maintained and headed by men who will stay with their union's interests.",
CATARRH CANNOT Efp CURED. with LOCAL APPLICATIONS, as they cannot reach the seat of the disease. Catarrh is a blood or constitutional disease, and in order to cure it you must take internal remedies. Hall's Catarrh Cure is taken internally, and acts directly on the blood and mucous surfaces. Hall's Catarrh Cure is not a quack medicine. It was prescribed by one of the .best physicians in this country for 'years, and js a. regular prescription, it is composed of the best tonics known, combined with the best blood, purifiers, actins directly the mucous surfacees. The perfect combina^ tlon of the two ingredients is what produces wonderful results in curing Catarrh. Send for testimonials free.
F. J. CHENEY & cp.-,-5px)ps, Toledo, O. Sold by druggists, price 75c. Ha|)'s Family Pills are the bestt.
Are you going to the A. O. U. W. masquerade ball Wednesday evening, December 3, at the Naylon:Cox building
Don't forget the Kireliner Coal company, new phone 133. Old 1527, A
HT
COMBINE GETSr BODY BLOW IN MISSOURrCOURTS
CANNOT ^COLLECT DEBTS
Appellate Court Overrules An Attempt to Enforce a Collection
1
WEAVER A SUICIDE
Said But
to be a Terre Haute Man Nothing Is Known of Him Here. The following dispatch was received last night from Robinson, 111.: "James Weaver of this place committed suicide here this afternoon by cutting his throat with penknife. He leaves a wife and two children who live in Terre Haute.
ill
fM
by
the Trust.
KANSAS CITY, Mo., Dec. 2.—The Kansas City, court of appeals decided yesterday that the combination of brewers. .that exists ..in ...this city is, a trust and as'.such it is expressly forbidden by the statutes of Missouri and is unlawful, and, that any man who owes one of these brewers in the. combine need not pay his bill and the brewer can not collect the debt, even by going into the Courts. This decision was made in the suit of the Ferd Helm brewing company against A. G. Belinder, a saloon keeper who owed the brewing company. In the lower court the brewing company won the case and got judgment against Belind er. This judgment was reversed yesterday by the court of appeals, which says: "A recovery of this debt by the brewing company is forbidden by the express terms of the statutes of Missouri, section 8970." This section reads as follows: "Any purchaser of any article or commodity from any individual company or corporation transtcting business contrary to any provision of the preceding sections of this article shall not. be liable for the price or payment of such article or commodity and may plead this article as a defense to any suit for such price or payment." "The only evidence" says the court, "which we can consider was that given by the plaintiff's chief officer and that was that plaintiff and the other brewery corporations in Kansas City had an understanding and agreement that they would not sell to anyone who was in debt to either of the others until he paid the debt. This evidence was as follows: "Question (to brewery official). If Towed some one else and wanted to buy beer from you. you would not sell it to me?" "No, sir.' 'You had that kind of an agreement?' 'Yes, sir.' The result of the evidence." concludes the opinion, "is that a. recovery by the plaintiff is forbidden by the express terms of the statute andl the judgement must be reversed."
P. WALKER."
There is no such name as James "Weaver given in the city directory, and "the police do not know him nor have they ever heard of his family living here.
Wenonah Council Nominations. Wenonah Council No. 2 D. of P-, nominated the following for officers for the ensuing term:
Prof.—Sis.. Ida Eisman. Poca.—Sis Emma Foshee. .Weno'—Sis. Ida Hager, Eva Risk.
P'W—!Bro.. C. E„ Dickersan, P." K. P.einboltl. K. of W.—Sis. Martha Thompson.
K. of R.—Sis. Anna Copeland. -™T*TOStT?^a^'*^Sltl t~J3Lne" Cowan.
Child Drank Coal Oil.
A small child of William Doerr, living at 1524 Chase street, drank a tea-cup full of coal oil Saturday before its intentions weTe discovered by the mother. Prompt medical assistance saved the child's life. Doerr is a section man employed by the Vandalia.
Won Twenty Dollars.
Mrs, Charles Graf won the $20 gold piece raffled at St. Benedict's fair.
DR. FENNER'S
KIDNEY Backache
All diseases of Kidneys, Bladder, Urinary Organs. Also Rheumatism, Back ache,HeartDisease.Gravel, Dropsy, Female Troiibles.
Don't become discouraged. There is a cure for you. If necessary, write Dr. Fenner. He has spent a lite time curing just such cases as yours. All consultations Free. "For years I had backache, severe pains across kidneys and scalding urine. I could not get out of bed without help. The use oi Dr. Fenrier's Kidney and Backache Cure restored me.'" G. WAGONER," Knobsville, Pa." Druggists. 50c., $1. Ask for Cook Book—Free.
ST.VITUS'DANCEPCT,Cu~0'rcu'"D-!Fredonia.N.YFenner,!
RIPANS
For years I had been a sufferer with chronic stomach trouble, pressure of 'gas^and distress of .my bp\vels. I contracted what the doctors pronounced a low type of malaria. I could not take solid food at all and only a very little of the lightest of diet would create fever and vomiting. The druggist sent me a box of Ripans Tabules saying he sold more itipahs.than anything else for stomstch trouble. I not only found relief, but believe I have been permanently cured.
^. TX
At firusreists.
The Pive-Cent packet is enough for *n ordinary occasion. The family bottle, 60 cents, contains a supply for year.
lieved. It is a SURE CURE. It will cure any cough in 24 hours if the patient will use it as directed.
CURED
WEAK LUNGS.
Dear Sirs: Having suffered with weak lungs, severe cough and loss of appetite I tried nearly all medicines, but without benefit. A few weeks ago on advice I commenced the use of your Pure Malt Whiskey. My appetite improved almost immediately, my cough stopped and my lungs are as strong as ever, my strength has returned, and I shall continue its use. Respectfully, FLORENCE WHITING, No. 1106 St.,
N. W. Washington, Jan. 4, 1902.
Hart Schitrncr fir1 Marx Hand Tailored
FOOD
8
You must stop that coughing at once, or before you know it your-S lungs will be affected and your dangered by pfeeuinoni^ pj\. consumption. At tJWsyXD$ine of the year "you miisf-' b^ particularly careful, as throat and lung troubles are hovering around,' 'ami
DEATH IS NEAR
oftentimes nearer than you can possibly" ira, agine. Only last week a strong, robustVyo'Ani man, in the prime of life, who lived in Whita Plains and did business in New York City, had a slight cough. It was so slight that^ ho paid np attention to it, and in a spirit of bravado continued his office work. In fSfl? days it went to his lungs, and he died from pneumonia within a week. Many such cases are happening every day, and every one of tnem can easily be cured by 1—
UDUFFY'S PORE* 13ALT WHISKEY:
The dose is a teaspoonful in a half gjas^fot water every two hours until the cou^h
STOPPED HEMORRHAGES.
305 Cedar Avenue, Scran ton, Pa. April 9, 1902. I
Gentlemen—My lung trouble is two years old. Had about eight or ten hemorrhages, which broke me down in weight and strength. The last, in February, wasj the worst of all, so that I thought and believed myself that I could not see an-" other summer. When I comme'nded to take Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey my weighti was 117 pounds my weight to-day: is 129 pounds made a good improvement. ig^J every respect. I feel stronger from day to day no hemorrhage since I usedt the Whiskey—GOTTFRIED EBER.
IT IS ABSOLUTELY PURE:
Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey cures coughs,colds, consumption, grip, bronchitis and-' pneumonia. It stimulates and enriches the blood, aids digestion, builds up £he nerve tissue, tones up the heart and fortifies the system against disease germs. It-pr-oloifgs life, keeps the old young and the young strong. It contains no fusel oil and-i£5it£a,j'" only whiskey recognized by the Government as a medicine. This is a guarantee.
CAUTION.—When yon asls for DniTy's Pure Malt "Whiskey le sure yon(
ffet the genuine. Unscrupulous dealers, mindful ot the excellence of this preparation. Ttvijl try to sell you cheap imitations, and so-called MeltWhiskey substitutes, which are put on the market for profit only, a-.idi wJiicli, far from relievlnj? the sick, are positively harmful. DemaJiav' "Duffy's" and he sure you get it. It is the only absolutely pure whiskey which contains medicinal, hcalth-Kfiving qualities. liook^forf, thii trade-mark, "The Old Chemist," on the Ialel. *"j'
The genuine Duffy's Pure Malt Whiskey is sold by all druggists and grocers,'' or direct at $1.00 a bottle. White for free medical booklet containing symptoms and treatment of each disease and convincing testimonials, to the Duffy Maltj Whiskey Company, Rochester, N. Y. j- .:
8'
k:.
Xt-Of-
""Your Style Maybe
ing the regular single breas^ ed sack suit so long /that.?[ you'd like a change. vtqil 'f Here's a change that's 'rf very becoming to somif rfi&tf'*
THE PEPSIN CELERY WHEAT FLAKE
Makes Bone, Muscle and Rich Blood for growing children. Look for -Union Label. Also ^sk for TRYABITA HULLED CORNa Extremely delicious.
A
1:
Maybe you've been wear-
!.
A—might be you. If think so, you can find out any day by dropping in here and trying a suit on. We hayei this style in good|||ssortment of nobby patteYna: and when you see yourself in one of them, the chances 1 are you'll keep it on.v
We have plenty, of othe** things to show yo|t i^ t^| doesn't suit they're1 Schaffner $. f/larx qipdef. quality guaranteed. Vf His Roejof Hat tops ou^. the suit. We have 'em- .. Come and See.
See all the«.magazines-^ ,f McGlupes, page 163. Scribn^rs, page 1S9.
Foryouf grocers name and 4 cents
in stamps we will send you a startling novelty, a doll receipt book and a sample package Jrygbita Food FREE.
substitutes or imitations of Tryabita Food.,)
JBYABITA FO0? CQ., Ltil, 4 BATTLE CREEK, MO.
«TRY THE TR|lBUN^?WlT COLOJ
I «S
0RD & HUTTON
I
(Refuse
