Indianapolis News, Indianapolis, Marion County, 16 May 1903 — Page 7

■ —■ —-—-...I — .... Qliy i TWO WOMEN ARTISTS FOR THE JOHN STEM FESTIVAL

■ I

11 iji

Dr. A. W. Brayton Tells of His

I M I k

Wi

^s-vj

CaQ or write tor erthnate*

IER

FURNITURE CO.

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TIKE Pin ON TODI FACE

TRY

COKE SHAVING FOAM

and find oat what a REALLY comfortable shave is. Collapaible Tubes 25 Cents at Barbers aid Druggists

A. R. Bremer Cs.

Chlcsgt

.

Visit to the Place and of the Disease.

SOME CASES ARE CURED | - i Leprosy is Not so Repulsive as Small* pox—Disease Said to be on the Increase.

cmilt IRKS TO HIS dSTITUENTS

luabandn to *s;

FREE TRADE MAY BE ISSUE AT GENERAL ELECTION.

DISAGREES WITH BALFOUR

t

LONDON, May lfl.-SpeakJnf to hla constituents «t Birmingham last night. Colonial Secretary Chamberlain made a speech which seems to loreahadow the direct raising of the Question of free trade versus protection at the next gen-

eral election.

Mr. Chamberlain's announcement shows a variance of opinion with Premier Balfour's speech of yesterday on the abolition of the grain duty. “For him,"' Mr. Chamberlain said,"local questions were comparatively unimportant beside the great Imperialist policy on which the fkte of the empire depended, namely, whether we stand together one free natlpn against all the world, or whether we shall fall Into separate states, selfishly seeking their own Interests and losing the advantages that unity alone

can give."

The colonial secretary urged the necessity, in order to preserve the great empire, that the trade of the colonies should be secured. Canada had offered exceptional advantages, he said, which Great Britain did not dare to accept because of the narrow interpretation of the doctrine of free trade, the policy of dictation and Interference by foreign powers. Mr. Chamberlain said he was justified by ths belief that Great Britain was so wedded to Its fiscal system that it could not defend its colonies. This was a pos; tion not intended by the pioneers of free trade, who, if they were alive to-day, would agree to a treaty of preference and reciprocity with the empire’s children. The speaker said he believed that an entirely wrong interpretation had been placed on the doctrine of free trade, but that the country ought not to be bound by this, and it should not hesitate to resort to retaliation, if necessary, wherever the : Interests between the colonies and the home country were threatened. Mr. Cham beriain avowed himself a free trader, but he objected to the artificial and narrow Interpretation of free trade. He potntoo 1 out that Cobden had made, and that 1 Bright had approved, a preferential treaty with France, i • ; : •; ' ■ In conclusion the colonial secretary said be desired that the discussion of this subject should be open. It was an issue graver in Its consequence than mere local

*T do not see,” saM Dr. Brsyton. “why there should be so much Interest in leprosy as there appears to be. I went with some twenty other physicians of the MOO at the New Orleans meeting of the American Medical Association to visit the Louisiana State Leper Home, simply because it gave me an opportunity to study clinically and personally a type of skin disease with which 1 was not familiar. "There are not many lepers in the United States, probably forty or fifty within 200 miles of Sc Paul, all emigrants from Sweden or Norway; possibly thirty or forty on the Pacific coast, and four or five In the Atlantic coast cities, used for clinical teaching In hospitals and colleges. There are iao or more

in Lctiirlsna.

"Only one person born In Minnesota has contracted leprosy, one In Baltimore, auc

only cue In Ban Francisco.

"Some even doubt It* contagiousness In 1W7 the Royal College of Physicians, in London, declared officially that leprosy was not contagious, but they recanted twemy-two years later, when Hansen discovered the bacillus of leprosy. The contagiousness Is now denied by but few. "As to heredity, leprosy agrees with tuberculosis; no fetus or no new-born living child has been known to show at birth the symptoms of either disease. No child under three years old is known to have had leprosy, though living with leprous pa-

rents or other relative*. Inoculated Himself.

"Danielson Inoculated himself and also twenty others with pieces cjf leprous tissue and secretions put directly under the skin, without any effect. Like tuberculosis. the disease is taken by respiration at close and continuous contact with other lepers. The disease does not etart with a ■Ingle sore on the body, as lues does, but in most cases affects the nasal passages first, with ulcers, nosebleed and breaking

down, often, of the nose bones.

"People live with lepers all their lives without taking the disease—one woman at Molokai, where there are eight hundred

lepers living, had three leper husbands die successively on her hands did not take the disease No ch*

ten years is known to have ledrosy In

Louisiana.

"Warm and moist climates seem to favor the disease. Most lepers belong to the lower races and classes; the disease may get well of Itself after many years, leaving a widespread loss of sensation and even some mutilation. "Indeed. I saw some at the home doing so well under treatment, outdoor life and good food and nursing by the four devoted Sisters of Charity—the Order of St. Vincent—that they will be discharged In a year or two and will not be a menace to their families or the community. “Still, the future of most lepers is dark. Those who have been eight years at the home were pessimistic as to a cure; the younger ones. In the early stages, were hopeful, and. Indeed, were improving. The remedies used are strychnia, chlorate of potash and arsenic, but the most useful seems to be chaulmoogra oil, procured In India and brought to this country by Parke Davis & Co; It Is nauseous, but they work up to 100 drops three times a day in capsules. Lepers in South. “There are probably about 150 lepers In south and central Louisiana, of which sixty-five have gone to the home. Twentythree are dead, after a leprosy of from five to twenty years. Strange to say, lepers rarely die of the leprosy; they die of tuberculosis, exhaustion, malaria, Bright's disease very frequently, and also from swelling of the glottis and windpipe. The voice Is raucous—often very harsh. One could not speak at all. Only two or three were blind. “Of the thirty-nine which Dr. Jay F. Schomberg, of Philadelphia, and I spent six hours in careful industrial study as they were brought Into the dispensary by Dr. Ralph Hopkins, the attending physician, I saw cases which, without a very wide and thorough knowledge of skin diseases, I should never have thought of as being lepers. Leper spots look like common ringworm; others like leucoderma; again, cases of leprosy are mistaken for acne rosacea, and even lupus. One case we saw Dr. Schomberg at once called by name, as he had treated him

City Hosa sailor.

Ip and was overlooked In vari-

ous city clinics In Boston, and even, so he said, at Johns Hopkins University. He was identified at the New Orleans Marine

Hospital and sent to the home. "The caaes with marked loss of sensa-

tion In the hands and arms or feet and legs and mutilated fingers or toes, are easily recognised. The digestive organs, the brain and spinal cord escape wonderfully, which is unlike the congeners of

tuberculosis. If a leper ... my college clinic or of-

;— **—**■>. I would recognise it even

in the beginning stages.

"Dr. Hardoway last year found a leper— a woman In good clrma^tances-at a

aterfng i'

MIPS CLARA MURRAY. Harpist

MMEL SUE HARRINGTON FURBECK. Contralto.

Northern watering place, and a wealthy Westerner was found with leprosy at At tantlo City last summer by a Cincinnati

dermatologist.

Cates Might Occur Here. "I should certainly not be more surprised to find one here then to find many other rare diseases I have diagnosed, and

THE OLD RELIABLE i~p; ■ .• £ " '0 .

which have been described as my cases from this locality by eminent authors both in this country and Europe. "Dr. Isidore Dyer, of New OrlesJis. has made the leper colony of that city and State known to the world. He has made extensive studies in the use of snake venom as a cure for the disease, and to this . charming gentleman and eminent scientist the suppression of leprosy in Louisiana, if ever accomplished, will be largely due. "He was so kind as to give a supper to Dr. Town ley French, who was for a half year leper physician to the Molokai leper colony, to which I was Invited, and also Drs. Hopkins and Menage, Dr. Dyer s assistants. We discussed the disease until past midnight. Dr. Dyer remarking that Dr. Schomberg and myself were the only physicians who had visited the home and i made a detailed study of each of the j C "Three lepers walked into Dr. Dyer's I skin clinic in one week. Of the fifty- j nine parishes, twenty-two have the dls-. eaae. The State appropriates $12,000 a 1 year for the Home. ? location ia ideal—an old deserted plantation mansion, where the Sisters live, a house for the priest and the physician, the old slave cabins under the great oaks one hundred years old. and new- cottages building, with steam heat, for the anaesthetic lepers often burn themselves at the open fires. •The day berfore our visit one woman found a mouse gnawing her leg; he had nibbled off two square inches of skin before she saw it It was a strange looking lesion. "Dr. Dyer says the disease is steadily increasing—that it came with Bvangeiine and the other French Acadians in the latter part of the eighteenth century. As a colony the disease was fought by Louisiana. but not until 1S04 did the Legislature appoint a board and grant funds for a

home.

Not so Repulsive as Smallpox. "The disease is not so repulsive as many think: there is little pain; It Is not more a “living death" than tuberculosis, for indeed both diseases are endurable, not controllable Hygiene, bathing, nunring, the avoidance of auto-infection and the use of medicine keeps it in control and cures some cases. The mutilated hands and feet, the lion-like faces, the saddle noses, the hairless lids and eyebrows are pitiful, but still the patients help themseive* and each other. "A. leper home Is an Eden as compared with the smallpox hospitals I have seen In our own city. "Personally, I do not fear the spread of the disease in our communities. If Louisiana will segregate her lepers, not more, probably, than 150 In number, I do not doubt that the disease may be eradicated within twenty-five to fifty years without the aid of the national Govern-

ment.

"The public is apathetic and politics has interfered with the work of the home. Things are better now. If a bishop or a Governor were to come down with the disease, public interest would be aroused and such a harsh awakening as this may occur. Had Senator Gibson, of Perry county. Infected some of his co-legislators with the virulent smallpox of wrhich he end his children and brother died last March, those who were left would have tumbled over each other to secure school vacilration and the suppression of small-

pox in Indiana. A Greater Blot.

“The occurring of an epidemic of smallpox, with 700 cases and 115 deaths the last winter and spring, in Indianapolis, is a greater blot on our fair city than the existence of so mild and Infrequent and so difficultly contagious a disease in Louisi-

ana for a century.

"Emerson said men are either fools or criminals when they are sick, and the occurrence of such readily preventible diseases as typhoid fever, venereal diseases, smallpox and leprosy substantiate hia wide generalisation. “Less than twenty years ago one out of every thousand people in Berlin died of typhoid fever each year. A system of sand filtration was installed, and now but one person out of 52,000 in each year, dies of typhoid. And by compulsory vaccination the Germans have reduced their deaths from smallpox from 150,000 in IjCI to lees than fifty each year at the present

time.

"I do not study diseases, such as leprosy, smallpox, etc., from idle curiosity; the study has no personal financial outcome. Disease should be studied as affecting the life and well being of Uie individual. the family, the community. And such diseases as leprosy, smallpox, end, indeed, the pathology of the merest pimple, have wide relations with national life, progress and character." SOLOISTS FOR FESTIVAL

They will Arrive Monday, When a Final Rehearsal will be Held. The orchestra and soloists for John H. Stem’s music festival next week will arrive Monday afternoon at 2:40, and will go at once to English's opera house for rehearsal. The sale of seats after to-day will proceed at English's. Mr. Stem says that arrangements have been made to admit persons holding tickets for the gallery at the main entrance of the theater. A special feature of the festival will be the performance of the Austrian Hymn, which both the Damrosch and the Thomas orchestras have played here, but which has never before been given in this city with a chorus and soloists. Injured Are Improving. The condition of Mrs. Winnie Fielders, of Peoria, IU-, and Dr. Generva Warbls. of Lohrvilie, la. two of the women who were hurt in the street car accident in Central avenue. Thursday night, was improved today. These women were more seriously injured than any of the others. Mrs. Fielders is at the Denison and Dr Warbis Is staying at the Imperial. The other women in the collision have all recovered from the shock. Mrs. Fielders and Dr. Warbls are expected out to-day.

SUPREME COURT.

remained unattorney. (2)

Abatracts of Opinions May 15—Assignment of Error* — Signing— Jurisdiction. 19,814. John C. Rubey et al. vs. John Bough et al. Randolph C. C. Appeal dism!eeed. Jordan. J. Monks, J., did not par-

ticipate.

An assignment of errors In this court is & pleading and must be subscribed by the appellant or nls counsel or this court can not acquire

jurisdiction of the appeal.

Wages — Penalty for Non-Payment—

Constitutional Law.

19.906. Toledo* 6t. Louis & Western Railroad Company vs. Charles J. Long. Clinton C. C.

Reversed. Monks. J.

U) In the absence of an allegation that there was no written contract between plaintiff and defendant for the postponement of payment of wages, a complaint by a workman against his employer based on the latter’s alleged failure to pay wages when due, as required by Sections 7056 et seq. (Bums), does not state a cause of action for the recovery of & penalty of one

dollar per day while the wages paid, and a fee for plaintiff's

Where a cause must be reversed for errors even though a statute whose constitutionality is as. sal lad by appellant should be valid, this court will not determine whether or not it is consti-

tutional.

Solicited Error—Double Cause at Action—Evidence. 20,033. Irwin E. E. Thorne, et al. vs. Frank Cosand, et al. Boons C. C. Affirmed. Had-

ley. C. J.

(1) Where appellants asked and obtained a trial by jury over the objection and exception of appellees, they will not be heard to complain on appeal that the case, being of equitable jurisdiction, was not triable by jury, and the verdict will be treated as a verdict In a case at law. (2) The fact that a complaint to set aside a deed. In addition to alleging undue influence contained averments of mental and physical weakness and incapacity to do business Induced by sickness, suffering and medicines. as descriptive of the conditions under which the influence was exerted, but without alleging unsoundness of mind, did not make It allege more than one substantive cause of action. (3) One who has mental capacity to make a will may deed away his property in consideration of love and affection, (i) Where the grantor’s mental condition was in controversy what she said as to her reasons for making the conveyance were competent evidence, whether the facts so stated would have been otherwise admissible or not

tens and curb and sod in Hoyt avenue, from Shelby street to State avenue. Estimated cost,

216*606.

For resurfacing the roadway of Virginia ave-

APPELLATE COURT.

Township Warrants — Order of Commissioners. 4.395. Margaret Coombs vs. Jefferson Township. Boone C. C. Affirmed. Robinson, J. Acts 1887, page 222 (the township reform act) requiring the township council to audit warrants drawn by a township trustee did not repeal Sections 8,081, 8,082,. Bums, enacted In 1875, which require a township trustee to obtain an order from the board of commissioners before Incurring any township indebtedness, and township warrants issued for money borrowed without such authority can not be enforced, although approved by a township council.

BOARD OF WORKS ROUTINE.

Final Action Taken. For cement walk, approach walks, brick gut-

nue with asphalt, from the alley north of Stevens street to alley south of Prospect street

Estimated cost 125.450.

Taken Under Advisement. For brick roadway and curb In Missouri street, from Kentucky avenue to Market street. For cement walks and curb in Central avenue, from Fall Creek to Thirty-fourth street All Action Rescinded. For local sewer in East street and the first alley east of East street from Downey street to a point twenty-four feet north of the first alley south of Cottage avenue and branches. Resolutions Adopted. Flint rock macadam roadway, brick gutters and curb in Roosevelt avenue, from Gale street north to Brightwood avenue, north. Concrete steel arch bridge over Pogues run

ip Ne w land avenue.

Petitions Filed and Referred. For the vacation of the first alley east of Commerce avenue, from Brooks Ido avenue to

the first alley north.

For the vacation of the first alley east of Fayette street, from Tenth street to Eleventh

street.

For permission to lay, under private contract, a cement driveway at side of 1922 North Alabama street. Final Remonstrance Filed. Against asphalt roadway, brick gutters, curb and cement walks in Cornell avenue, from Thirteenth street to Nineteenth street. Completed Improvements. Local sewer in Seville avenue and alleys east and west, from Michigan street to St. Clair street. WHllam Bossert. Cement walks, etc., In Central avenue, east side, from Washington street to Lowell avenue. Marion Caldwell.

MML EMMA CALVE RECOVERS

She will Resume Singing in Pari* ToMorrow Evening. PARIS, May 16.—Mme. Emma Calve, the singer, who was unable to appear In “The Damnation of Faust” at the Sarah Bernhardt Theater Thursday night, owing to having accidentally taken an overdose of acohite as a remedy for the grip, has recovered. She will resume singing tomorrow. No announcement has been made here of the engagement of Mme. Calve and Jules Bloia, the well-known Journalist, having been broken off, and the fact is not mentioned by any of the newspapers, but a rumor to that effect has been circulated in theatrical circles. The Mean Thing. [Tit-Bits] He was an awful "Johnnie,” and if there was one thing more than another that he prided himself on it was the fit of his clothes. "I can never get a dress coat really to fit,” he said to his partner, as he glanced down at a perfectly made garment, with a hope, of course, that she would at once disclaim the insinuation. "Look at this thing.” "Well, it Is atrocious,” she said, coolly. “But why not save your money and buy one? It is so much cheaper in the long run than hiring."

The celebration of the bicentennial of the birth of John Wesley, founder of Methodism, will be held In this city, Saturady. May 33* and Sunday. May * It ! will he a local affair, reetrictod to the laity and clergy of Indianapolis Methodist churches, though a few prominent pastors from central Indiana may he present. It was at first thought that a number of Presbyterian clergymen and those of other churches would ha invited, but that Idea was given up. as there will be more than enough Methodista to fill ail the available apace, both at the banquet and the mam meeting. The banquet will be held on the evening of May 33, at the Denison House. Five hundred covers will be laid, taking up the fun capacity of the two dining-rooms of the hotd. Governor Durbin wlu be toastmaster. The Chief Guest. The chief guest will be Bishop Charles H. Fowler, of Buffalo, considered the most eloquent man in the Methodist clergy. He will respond to & toast. Other responses will be made by Senators Fairbanks and Beveridge. Charles L. Henry, Frank E. Gavin, Congressman James £*. Watson and J. Frank Hanley, of Lafay-

ette.

The great mass meeting to be held at Tomlinson Hail at 7:» p. m.. May 34, will have as its chief orator Bishop Fowler. The committee on arrangements consists of the Rev. Messrs. Stansfield, Bacon and Haw is, for the clergy; James W. Noel and W. C. Van Arsdel. The usual Sunday services will he held in the morning of May 24 in all the Methodist churches of the city. At Epworth, England. One of the features of the bicentennial exercises at Epworth, England, where John Wesley was born, and where there will be a great gathering of people, will be a stained glass window to be placed as a memorial In the Wesleyan church erected there a few years ago. John Wesley was born at Epworth. England, June 38, 1703. The bicentennial of his birth is celebrated In this city at this time for the reason that if deferred until this end of June, many would be away on their summer vacations and would be unable to take part in the celebration.

DR. SUSIE RIJN HART.

Christian church. Mr*. Rljnhart's story of the experience of herself and husband in Thibet Is one of the moat thrilling of

modern times.

They had successfully entered the towns on the border, but when they determined to press into the Interior of the country, they met hostile tribes from whom they suffered much, and by whom Mr. Rijnhart was murdered. Hla wife escaped and for

hart is now under appointment and will

return to Thibet soon.

IN CITY SUNDAY-SCHOOLS.

Celebrations of Epworth League Anniversary will Alto be Obaorved. To-morrow will be celebrated in the Methodist Sunday-schools of this city as Epworth day. It being approximately the fourteenth anniversary of the organisation of the Epworth League of the Methodist Episcopal church, which took place at Cleveland on May 15, 1889. The exercises in the Sunday-schools will vary, hut will have reference to the work of the league and also to the two-hundredth anniversary of the birth of John Wesley. The Epworth League of the Methodist church, South, and of the Methodist church In Canada, were organised twelve years ago. The sixth biennial International convention of the Epworth League will be held at Detroit, July 16 to 20, Inclusive. The Epworth League Herald published at Chicago, is claimed to have the greatest circulation of any denominational paper inf the world. The profits of this paper go to the support of the superannuated ministers of the Methodist Episcopal church. NEW METHODIST CHURCH.

SOME BUILDINGS IN THE LEPER COLONY NEAR NEW ORLEANS

ADMINISTRATION BUILDING.

:.r-. h. . '■ :' JS?. SLiL.—

COTTAGES FOP* LEPERS.

Now Holding Meetings in Eighteenth

Street and Sugar Grove Avenue.

The Lewellen Methodist church, of Indianapolis, has organised with William H. Lewellen, as pastor, and Edward P. Gordon, David J. Ulrey, Louis Peltier, Charles H. Maurer and William E. Goodnow, as trustees. It is holding servlcee in a building, formerly a storeroom, at Eighteenth street and Sugar Grove avenue. The pastor Is a butter dealer in the East market, stand No. 10S, and the congregation is composed of working people who are endeavoring to build up a

church by their own efforts.

“The name of this church or mission," said Mr. Lewellen, “has been the Marion Park M. E. church. We are now an independent organization. Our purpose In In-

corporating was to acquire real estate upon which to build. Hiram W. Miller, who Is owner of much ground in the neighborhood of our place of meeting, has promised to give us a lot upon which to

build. .

"We have a membership of sixty and a congregation of nearly IDO. The Sundayschool has an average attendance of fiftyfive pupils. We shall ask to come into the regular M. E. conference when we haVe acquired property and a solid footing. I am a licensed preacher of the Methodist Episcopal church, and have been preaching at the Marion Park church for six years. The congregation is made up of persons living in the district between Twelfth and Twenty-first streets, Montcalm street and Sherman drive. It is a good field for a Methodist church. There is only one other church in this neighborhood, that is the Union Congregational church, of which

Mr. Mills ia pastor." HOLINESS REVIVAL.

Association Begins a Ten-Days' Seriea

of Meetings.

A ten-days’ revival meeting of the Indianapolis Holiness Association was begun In Penlei temple. Senate avenue and Eleventh street, last night, by the Rev. W. E. Shepard and the Rev. J. H. Woweil, assisted by Lewis Mitchell, organist, and A. F. Ingler, soloist. These evangelists, are of the staff of the "Burning Bush," of the Metropolitan Church Association of Chicago. Services will be held every afternoon and evening at the temple, and on Sundays there will be three services. Street services will be conducted by the rescue missionaries, Mamie Johnson, Susie M. Kraft, Freda Goldman and Kate Mes-

of Chicago.

are beln

Among the prominent members of the Holiness Association who are expected to assist in the services next week, are V. M. Messenger, of North Grosvernordale. Conn., who gave up a position with a cotton mill that was paying him 815,000

a year, that he might take work; D. M. Far son, a

money broker; E. L. Harvey, of several hotels in Chicago, and the Rev.

The revival services

enger, or H ppap ... re being held for the purpose of arousing

iverest in the work in this city.

raying mm

ke up evangelical wealthy Chicago arvey, the owner

D. B. Curtis, of Connecticut.

Fenlel D Temple?

Dr. D. M. Bye, of this city, who built

le, for tf

elation, said, to-day. that the associa-

the use of the asso-

tion had the same doctrines as the oldfashioned Methodists, but that there are two factions * of the association in this country. The national faction believes In the supremacy of the bishop over the congregation, but the other faction, ©t which the Indianapolis association is a bianch, believes in the supremacy of the congregation. It is said that the association has a number of very wealthy men, especially throughout the West.

Changes in Church Choirs.

An unusual number of changes are taking place in the city choirs. Clifford Tyler has resigned from Meridian-street church choir, and has been succeeded by William H. Morrison, Jr. Raymond Lynn, of the Christ church choir, will go to the First Presbyterian church, and so will Mrs. Fremont Swain, of Meridian-

Baptist Young Paopla'a Convention. The Baptist Young People's state convention will be held on June 23 and H with the church, at Lebanon. This meeting will be followed June 25 and 2$, with the Baptist Bute Sunday-school convention. The Rev. J. W. Clevingor, of Marion, Is president of the Sunday-school convention. F. B. Bachelor, a gtudent in Franklin College, is president of the Baptist Young People’s convention. The Rev. Mr. Morrla’e Record. The Rev. J. F. Morris, pastor of the East Seventeenth-street Christian church, has been doing a little calculating recently. In his five yean* service he finds that he hxs preached eight hundred sermons, made one hundred conversions, has msde thirty-live hundred pastoral calls, performed seventy-one marriage ceremonies, and conducted fifty funeral services.

Children’s Day.

The second Sunday in June will be observed In all the Presbyterian churches and Sunday-schools in this city and the United States generally as "children's day." The Sabbath-school j missionary work of the church depends for nearly one-half its income upon the offerings of

children's day. ——■ Church Notts.

The Indianapolis Gideons will conduct gospel services at 7:30 p. m. to-morrow at the Seventh Presbyterian church. Dim and

Cedar streets.

At the

(flower church vesper

Mayl

service at 4 o’clock to-morrow, the Rev. W. M. Tippy, of the Broadway M. E. church, wiw speak and Oliver Isensee will

sing.

The Rev. Charles B. New nan. pastor of the Third Christian church, will, to-mor-row night, observe the twenty-fifth anniversary of his beginning in the ministry. He will preach at 7:30 on "My First Ser-

mon.” t

At Christ church, to-morrow morning, the offertory will be sung by Romeo Frick, one of Cincinnati's well-known barytones, and a teacher at the Conservatory of Music of th*t city. In the evening there will be a duet. ’The Cru' x" (Faure), by Miss Jeffries and Mr

M ill Otter RnIiI ite litistlial DIsusr Ctrai Wilted Ptli s tte Kilfi.

NOT i DOUiR REED BE PAID WITH. CURED

dflx'

Lynn. All Souls’ church Is a permanent addition to the congregations of this city.

porate under the laws of the State. Regular Sunday services are held In the Hebrew temple at 3 o'clock. The Rev. William Dawe. of Albion Col leg* Michigan, will speak at the anni versary services of the Epworth League at the Meridian-street M. E. church tomorrow evening at 7:45 on "Wesley and the Eighteenth Century.” No admission fee win be charged to the services, but the regular evening offerings will be made. The pastor of the church, thd Rev. Joshua Stansfield, will deliver his regular sermon In the morning. Shy of Thoughts. [Chicago News] Maude—When I met young S&pleigh this morning he had such a thoughtful expression on his face. Clara—And yet there are some folks who claim that appearances are not deceitful

A SwWen Twlijt

Of pain is generally the first warning of an attack of rheumatism. It feels as if the disease were in the bones or muscles, but the real cause of rheumatism is found in impure blood. In order to cur© rheumatism the blood must be cleansed of the poisonous impurities which §n

the cause of the disease.

Dr. Pierce’s Golden Medical Discovery has been very successful in the cure of

rheumatism, be-

it entirely cleanses the blood from the poisonous substances which are the cause of the disease. It not only purifies the blood bat by increasing the activity of the blood-making glands. It increases Die supply of pure, rich blood which adds to the vigor of every physical

organ.

Mr K. A-McKatebt of Cades, WlSE:

twelve years,

at times I could not tesve my bed. I crippled. Tried many doctora sad j

r ~ " i. None

The pains In my JbedcTfel

gave me up to die. good. The pains

(sad st times la my heads me. My appetite was very U

who «sw me Mid I must die. I took 1 _ of the ’Golden Medical Discovery,’ and tom vials of ‘ Fellet*,’ and to-dsy my health to food after stiflering twelve years with rheumatism * The sole motive for substitution Is to permit the dealer to make the little more profit paid by the sale of less meritorious mediriues. He gains; you lose. Therefore accept no substitute for •vyoldcn Medical Discoverw Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cteanos the bowels and stimulate the sluggish

«

am.

ACLD, If. D. > Chicago's celebrated specialist *tn Rectal Intestinal Disease*, who treats patients'personally.

Fistula l* the most baffling of Rectal eases; it burrows and grows from week week, eating away tlesue and westing at life. Fiatuln are breeding places for germs of tuberculoste, typhoid fever and fatal diseases. Hundreds of thousands are ing consumptives' graves as a result of lected or unskilfully treated Fistulas. The ablest general practitioner almost Invariably falls to euro * Fistula, or even to locate Its source and channel its treatment requires the attention of s skilled specialist, one who has devoted years of study to Rectal and Intestinal Diseases. Twenty yean o{ my life have been exclusively to the study and treatment Rectal and Intestinal Diseases—Fig HEMORRHOIDS (FILES). CHRONIC STIPATION. CHRONIC DIARRHEA. FISSURES, PROCTITIS, ITCHING PILES, DYSPEPSIA, and the numerous other diseases of the Rectum and Inteetlnea I have studied In Europe and America every method of treatment of these diseases known to science. 1 have lectured for nine years on Rectal and Intestinal Diseases In the medical colleges of Chicago. For ten year* I was specialist in Reotai and Intestinal Disease* In on* of the principal hospitals of this city. I cur* permanently, and absolutely. FISTULA. HEMORRHOIDS (PILES). iffcHINO PILES, FISSURES, CHRONIC CON8TIPA-* TION, CHRONIC DIARRHEA, PROCTITIS, and all other Rectal and Intestinal Diseases without pain or the knife. * Thousands of cured patient* attest the sue-, esse of ray treatment. The greatest proof of my ability, however, Is that NOT ONE DOLLAR NEED BE PAID UNTIL CURED. I make no charge for consultation, in person or by mall, and will be pleased to give you my expert opinion as to your condition, I My°fsM "are reasonable and I do not wish any sufferer from Rectal and Intestinal Diseases to be without my services on account t of financial circumstance*. 1 . m wrt WlSlB3«a“- FREE BOOK Sect fit usd totatlnti Dlut&sesTheir Caiumi hfldi (MV ^

J. M. AULD.n.D. Reotai end Intestinal Speclalleta - Rooms 201 to 205 80 DEARBORN ST., CHICAGO, ILL.

W. L. DOUGLAS S3.50 SHOE mi Ton eaa Save from $S to $6 thi* Spring by wearing W* L, Donglas $8.50 Shoes.

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have been

proves their : superiority. ; You should - have two: pairs during the spring and summer months, a pair of high cuts and a : pair of ox- j ford#. Don *t pay $10 to $12 for these two pair* when you can get as much style, comfort, and service in two pairs of W. L. boujflai shoes for $7. W. L. Douglas makes and sells morn men’s S3.50 shoes than Any other manufacturer la the world. MM* oftM* Utt Import** mn* Amir loan loathen ineiuilng Patmnt Corona KM A Patent Corona CoH. JBIwusMSam dto## ±MA m gwmm atrwa arsr.L. ooutmam moo, pK.utj mtw mlmtmm Fant Color Eyelet* used exclusively. CAUTION! *~JttXIZZa££lS m - .TWisrikt’miii. ssssms'* INDMNAPOUS: 2 Elit WltMqtM St

SCABBY CHILDREN

Yeu’ve seen them fees* severed with seen*. This shews had blond* sad tt’a ta the system till yeu get it out BLOOD WINE mil purify toe system and relieve It *< all poisonous nutter. Just try a fire* bottle at Henry J. Huder** drug store.

* ' KNOCKS D-Y-8-P-E-P-SI HENRY J. HUDER. Druggist.