Hammond Times, Volume 3, Number 191, Hammond, Lake County, 1 February 1909 — Page 3
Mondav, February 1, 1909.
THE TUXES.
EAST GHICIGO ill llDlilft HfiRBDR
RUNG NOTE
EAST CHICAGO. Miss Fay Morgan of Hyde Park spent Saturday and Sunday in East Chicago is the guest of her cousin. Miss Mary Lewey of Wegg avenue. Mr. and Mrs. C. L. Jedleigh spent Sunday afternoon with relatives in Hammond. T. R. Ladd was a Chicago theater visitor last evening, witnessing the performance at McVicker's theater. -Chris Jordan, formerly connected with the Interstate mills, but now in Birmingham, Ala., is spending a few days with friends in East Chicago and Kensington. Miss Martha Lauder and friend, Fred Hlggins, of Valparaiso were the guests of East Chicago friends yesterday afternoon. Mrs. T. W. Spencer was the guest of her parents, Mr. and Mrs. 5ohn Bohrman, Hammond, last, evening.
cnoia ninev of the East Side
wan an East Chicago visitor last even
ing, accompanied by Alfred Deegan of
South Chicago.
John Dollas. proprietor of the Maine
-t .n 1 the latest advocate of
the roller craze. Dollas can be seen almost any afternoon at the Lewis'
rirJt. plowing his weary way across the floor, falling every few rounds, but
sticking to it everlastingly. Albert Lewis of Magoun avenue re turned on Saturday morning from In
dianarjolls. where he has been spend
ing a few days as the guest of rela
tives. Albert also took a few looks at
the legislators.
Mrs. George W. Lewis of Magoun
avenue is confined to her home with a
severe attack of the grippe.
Dr. J. F. McMichael of Tolleston was ho truest of friends in East Chicago
yesterday afternoon and evening. The Misses Florence Lewis and Lll
lian Williams saw Elsie Janis in "The Fair Co-Ed" at the Studebaker theater
Saturday afternoon.
Mr. and Mrs. Sidney M. Veaco were
H-iiPsts at the home of Mr. and Mrs.
John E. O'Neill on Sunday evening,
James Stewart of Whiting was the
guest of friends in East Chicago last
evening.
COKE OVENS
FOR REGION
(Continued from Page One.)
INDIANA HARBOR.
Mrs. Eugenia Briney, who has been
confined to her home on Grapevine street with diphtheria, is reported as
progressing nicely. Mr. and Mrs. Jas. Doherty of Grape
fine street are entertaining Mrs. Jas,
foyce of Zanesville, O., and Miss Lucile
Donovan of Muncie, Ind.
John Drummond of Commonwealth ivenue will leave in a few days for I'&lnaralso. where he will take a two
rears' preparatory course before en tering the university in that city.
The Baptists are holding their Sun
Jay services in Cline's hall and report
i good attendance.
Al Foster of Pennsylvania avenue is
pending a few days in Dayton, Pa., ajs
the guest of relatives.
Mr. and Mrs. M. E. Reed have been
sntertalrring the former's parents from
Valley Junction, la, this week.
Miss Anna Hiles is assisting Miss Stormont at the Field school for a few
flays.
ing of the coal much cheaper, as It makes possible the utilization of the
gas, tar and other bi-products.
This makes it possible that cheap
gas will be furnished to the entire region, as Is the case where this new
process is adopted. At Solvay, eight
or nine miles north of Hammond on
the Erie railroad, this process is used
and the gas, which was formerly al
lowed to escape, is turned into the
mains and is used for heating and
ighting purposes in the earby suburbs.
The plant will be capable of supply
ing enough gas for Chicago and many other towns in - northern Illinois and
Indiana. It will take the place of
700 ovens which were to have been
built at Filbert, 600 at Ralph, and 500 at Sarah, Pa. In the meantime the
company is opening new mines to sup
ply the ovens with coal.
Big Savin of Byproducts.
It was the intention of the steel
corporation to build more beehive ov
ens in the Connellsville region in Pennsylvania, but it has decided to build an extensive series of bi-product ovens instead, thus saving all the gas
now wasted in coking coal, besides
saving the ammonia and other coal tar
products. . .
Bi-product ovens have been in suc-
cessiul operation in Germany many
years, and experiments with them in the United States in the last five years
have proved remunerative.
'
CALENDAR OF SPORTS FOR THE WEEK.
MONDAY, Marvin Hart va, Jim Barry 40 rounds, at Hot Springs. Six-day bicycle race Mtarta In convention hall, Kansas City. Annual meet of the Lone Star Field Trials club of Texas, near San Antonio. TTESDAY. Freddie Welsh vs. George Memslc, 10 rounds, at Los AnKeles. Bill McKlnnon vs. Harry Lewis, 12 rounds, at Boston. International championship skating; races begin at Saranac Lafce, X. Y. Canadian outdoor championship skating races at Montreal. WEDNESDAY. Opening; of Florida state fair race meeting at Tampa. Twelfth annual tournament of Nebraska State Checker association at Hastings. THURSDAY. Abe Atteil vs. Eddie Kelly, 10 rounds, at New Orleans. FRIDAY. Alfred Shrubb vs. Tom Longboat, Marathon race, New York City. SATURDAY. Annual tournament of National Ski Association of America at Eau Claire, Wis. Opening of annual Chicago automobile show. Annual Indoor games of Boston Athletic association. Palace Hotel handicap at Oakland; Holland cup race at Arcadia.
I
PACKY OFF TO GET MATCH WITH HELSOM
Leaves Los Angeles for San
Francisco to Bind Fight
for Championship.
CHUTES TEAM
II AT G1E
Autocrat of the Building Workers.
With Cooksey and Nellis as Stars Chicago Team Defeats Lewis.
Los Angeles, Cal., Jan. 31. George
Memslc and Freddie Welsh will meet in a scheduled ten round battle before
the Pacific Athletic club at Naud June
tion Tuesday night. Reports from both
camps state that the men are in good condition. It is within the little Bohemian's power to put a deep crimp in
the British boxer's championship aspirations. A win for Memslc will shatter
Welsh's hopes, while the predicted victory for the Englishman will leave the later free to continue his aggressive claims to the 13-pond title. Packey McFarland is reported to be en route for San Francisco, where he hopes to sign up with Coffroth for an early engagement with Battling Nel
son, f alling in mis tne cnicago Doy
MSKET BALL SQUAD LOSE "Big Bill" Carroll Quits Playing With the East Chicago Team.
(Special to The Times.) East Chicago, . Feb. 1. With Cooksey and Nellis, of the Harbor polo team, playing with the Chutes Park aggregation, the Lewis rink team was defeated on Saturday night by a score of 3 to 2. The game was fast from start
to finish. Ward, the Chutes Park's famous little star, made good for his
team, playing a furious game from the minute he entered the rink. Cooksey
and Nellis, while unfamiliar with their
will take on any good man before the fellow players, played to advantage and San Francisco club that holds the Feb- to them a great deal of the credit is ruarv nermit. McFarland stuck to his due. Heintz and Barnes, as first and
colors to the last, claiming that while second rush for the East Chicago team, he was able to do ringside weight, the Played well. Kimble was indisposed
best he would do for Welsh was 133 nd was unable to play in his usuald
pounds at 6 o'clock. position at goal, that important field.
'The opinion prevails here that Mciteing covered by fckeiton.
Farland, despite his boast, is unable The game at the Lewis rink on last
to fight at ringside weight, or if he Thursday evening also resulted in de
can, that the stock yards champion feat for the Lewis polo players. The
is afraid to take a chance with Welsh Harbor boys succeeded in handing the
SUMMARY OF
SATURDAY SPORT
SUSPICION UNFOUNDED
Athletics. Dana of Notre Dame boats KInkead
of Purdue in 1,000-yard race in First Regiment meet.
Maroon board of control votes to play
seven games, enlarging the college
on even terms.
The departure of McFarland leaves
Welsh In command of the local situa
tion. The British youngster tonight
clinched a match with Young Corbett,
to occur before the West Side Athletic club of New Orleans during Mardi Gras
week. Welsh gave in to Corbett's re
quest for catch weights and instructed the South Chicago players. "Mac" Mc-
MfiTl CmilH "Writ. Prnw AliVll football schedule.
" ' aa. v W W I Tr
a nisuui5 iTiaiaiiiuii
in Connection With' Recent Robbery.
Is run In a
snowstorm and many are affected by severe weather conditions.
Wisconsin coaches rearrange the
basket-ball team before meeting the Maroons.
Baaeball. Ed Walsh of the Chicago Americans
takes charge of the Yale team.
Announcement is made that the De-
(Special to The Times.)
Whiting, Ind., Feb. 1. Meros
lov Rozich and Louis Pelles of
One Hundred and Twenty-first street troit bal1 C,UD wIU havo a new PRrk
and Schrage avenue, who were ar- President Comiskey announces that rested by Officer Vacha on suspicion of the sPr,ng Journey for the White Sox
being implicated in the recent robbery1'1 soou ue r8-
of Fink & Wlnsbere's stnrP wr. President Kinsella of Springfield de
before Mayor F. J. Smith on Saturday
evening and were discharged.
Rozich is employed at the Standard Oil company and Pelles at the glucose company. When Officer Vacha was traveling beat in the vicinity of One
iunarea and Twenty-first street and White Oak avenue he noticed three bundles under the stairs of the men's
ooaramg nouse. Upon opening the bundles he found them to contain un-
aerciotning. Going to the landlady
he inquired as to whom they belonged
and she told him the men's names. Tyn4-u - a ,
jjviii wcie put unaer arrest on suspicion, but when their case came up n Saturday night they proved a satis
factory alibi and were released.
ctaes to give tne salary limit rule a
trial, thereby making peace in the
Three-I league.
Turf.
Secretary of the Columbus Driving
club announces a 35,000 harness stake
for the Grand Circuit week.
King James wins the Burns handi
cap at Oakland from Dorante and Mil-
ford.
Jack Atkins picks up 138 pounds and
runs a fast six furlongs at Santa An
ita.
Boxing.
Governor of Indiana announces that
the "lid" must be kept on the ring
game.
Billy Papke"s brother decides to as
sume the role of manager for his rela
tive. Golf. Laporte Country club seeks admis sion to the Western Golf association.
A Thankless Task. T think I shall marry him to reform him," said the romantic girl. "I have seen that experiment tried," rejoined Miss Cayenne. "Successfully?" "Well, I won't say the men were reformed. But they always seemed more or less repentant and dissatisfied."
A Qlft Time Thought. Pessimist 'Tm going to quit grumbling about my lot. I seem 'io be comparatively well off." Optimist "Ah! What made you see the light?" "I've .just been thinking how many poorer relatives I have."
Good Plays But Poor Actors. The trouble (of the stage), in the provinces is not a dearth of plays. There is now a large repertory of modern plays of every kind on which the provinces can draw. It is the acting that has heen and still is at fault. London Stage.
WARMER WEATHER WITH SNOW
THE FORECAST FOR REGION.
Many Casea of . Destitution Expected to
Follow Saturday Nlght'a Bllzaard.
Monotony being a pet aversion of the weather man, he expects to send the
mercury up and snow down today and
tomorrow. W hether the mercurv will
be allowed to climb high enough to turn the Calumet Region's new white blanket to muddy mush has not yet
Deen rorecast.
The cold snap that followed the bliz
zard was at its worst yesterday morn
ing, when the temperature hovered
arouna zero ana went below in other
districts. The snow storm Is annmarh.
ing rapidly on strong west winds.
j.ne ranroaas had recovered last
far as the peratlon of trains was conCALUMET REGION
cerned, but there still remains much wire stringing to be done before the
service will be in good condition.
World's Oldest University. The oldest university in the world is at Peking, China, and is called the "School for the Sons of the Empire." Its antiquity is very great and a granite register, consisting of stone columns, 320 in number, contains the names of 60,000 graduates.
WAGNER AGAIN QUITS
Pittsburg, Pa., Jan. 31. Hans Wag
ner, the world's greatest ball player
has come out with the cold, hard state
ment that he does not intend to play ball nex year; that the Pittsburg ball club owners know he does not intend to
play and that the local club has no two
year contract with him, etc. Wagner
says he has signed up with an automo
bile firm to sell machines. The formal
statement of Wagner has caused some
what of a sensation, as it has been
understood that he had a two-year con
tract with i-ittsburg at $10,000 a year,
Lambs. Experience isn't much of a teacher when it comes to speculating on margins.
For Bargains in-
INDIANA HARBOR - PROPERTY - See Win. Blumenthai, Phone 773 3336 Michigan Ave. Ind. Harbor
CARL ANDERSON GENERAL CONTRACTOR Building and Sidewalks A 8PBCIAUTY Telephone I. H. 642. Res. 621.
Elephant on the Track.
An extraordinary railroad accident occurred recently in Siam, on the Royal State railway between Ban Phaji and Bangkok. Late one evening while rounding a slight curve, a heavy goods train, drawn by two engines, dashed into a large wild elephant which had strayed onto the track. The iorce of the Impact was terrific, and
both the engines were overthrown, the leading one plunging over the embankment and the second capsizing and falling across the line. Two men were killed and several Injured, the
brakeman was smashed into a shape
less mass, and 13 trucks were derailed
and six telescoped. The elephant was killed and its body hurled 60 feet from the track. This Is the second accident of the kind that has occurred this year in Siam, an elephant having been killed last February near Lapburi, with, however, only Slight damage to the train. The Bellman.
pill of defeat in a capsule about 4 to
3 size.
The series of defeats for the Lewia.
rink was added to on Saturday night?
when the ewis basketball team went to Bessemer Park to meet the husky-
quintet at that gymnasium. The score was astonishing, 60 to 13 in favor of
Promoter McDaniel to send his trans
portation immediately,
SI WANTS THE TITLE
Intosh played a splendid game as did
also Jackson, of Gary, who filled one of the f6rward position in the absence
of Swartz. Douglas and Hascall cov
ered guard positions well and divided
losing honors with Henry, who was
listed as a guard.
Followers of the Lewis polo team
will regret to learn that Will Carroll,
C,i 11 ',"".,"!'"" f "M'""'l".',' njiy iV'S ''', ,ri -V hi v t' & ' f i - , v , !
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tl-V MU- ill
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LanglOrd Will Claim Miaale big, genial "Bill,", has resigned his con
nection with the local players., car
Weight Honors Unless Ketchel Meets Him.
San Francisco, Cal., Jan. 31. Unless
Stanley Ketche'r-gives him a bout in
the near future Sam Langford intends
to claim the middle-weight title. Ha
made this announcement today, when he
posted $1,000 as a forfeit and said that he would bet $5,000 on the side if
Ketchel so desired.
'I have signed up for a bout with
Jack Johnson in England, but that need not affect this bout," he said. "I have been trying for months to get
roll has been one of East Chicago's
star players and to him has been due credit for the winning of many of the local team's games. The resignation is
the result of a disagreement with other members of the team. Bill says he will
still be there with the "big noise be hind the megaphone," however.
TO LAND SOX STARS
Browns to Seek Players
From Comiskey. -
St. Louis, Jan. 31. If craft and base
ball strategy are properly applied the
the white boxers to meet me and they Browns will yet land one or two of the
are all afraid. They dodged me just as
they all dodged Jack Johnson. When Jack got his chance he proved what
he could do.
"What difference does color make,
anyway, it there is anything in tne talk of boxing being a test of strength
and skill and also of its being a sport? George IMxon and Joe Gans both were
champions, and I never heard of eith
er doing anything to lower the sport?
Neither did Peter Jackson. If Ketchel won't agree to box inside of a month
I'll claim the championship. Reports
from Grand Rapids say he weighs 185
pounds. He can scale what he pleases
if he'll only fight."
Langford's manager said that the colored boxer had plenty of backing
and that there would be no difficulty
about the side bet.
stars of the Chicago White Sox team
without losing any of the high class material on the St. Louis club. Man
ager McAleer and Owner Hedges are planning one more assault on the "Old
Roman," Charles Comiekey, to take place in Chicago Feb. 16, when the American and National league mag
nates will gather to adopt the schedules and complete plans for another season;
1 1,
The bngm or Tsirmny- maaoen and his coterie In the Associated Building Trades again is threatening to bring on a period of stagnation In the building industry of Chicago. Leading contractors, who have been sub
jected to the methods practiced by "Skinny" and architects conversant
with affairs in the building trades, yesterday pointed out that the prospects never were brighter than at the present . time for a period of gTeat activity and prosperity in the building line. The unite in declaring, however, that if these favorable prospects are to be taken advantage -of "Skinny" Madden and his gang must go. The contractors declare they1 have been blackmailed and compelled to pay extortton money to the limit of their endurance and they are now prepared to reveal the "whole rotten system," fostered by the gang of union misleaders, to State's Attorney Wayman, with a view of prosecution. It was pointed out'' that contractors are afraid to toke contracts for fear of being tied up by "sympathetic" strikes, called by "Skinny" Madden and his "board of business agents' on the slightest pretext. The system of extortion and blackmail practices at the present time, the contractors say, is far worse than, anything that prevailed under "Skinny's" regime during the existence of the old building trades council. Not only do the employers suffer under the dictatorial eway of this evil genius of the building, trades. The "rank and file" of the workingmen composing the building trades unions are said to lose from three to six months every year due to jurisditional and sympathetic strikes. And the. vast majority of such strikes, the contractors say, are engineered by "Skinny" Madden for revenue ' only.
L&BOR MEWS
NO HOPE FOR RAC
ING IN ARKANSAS
STICKS TO REFUSAL
Italian Marathon
May Be Dropped.
TO SEE FIGHT
Sports in the Calumet region will be given an oportunity of viewing the moving pictures of the Burns-Johnson
fight in the near future. John Krone
the Chicago sporting man who now i
in England managing Frank Gotch, has
closed a contract with a London concern for the exclusive right to exhibit the fight pictures in America, Krone will meet Hugh Mcintosh, the promoter of the Sydney fight, in London tomorrow and secure ten sets of films. He will start Imediately for America
to exhibit them. Krone, in a lengthy letter received yesterday, says he is doing well abroad. He is to referee the
Britt-Summers fight in London.
Stars Seen by Naked Eye. The total number of stars exceeding the seventh magnitude is 5,900. Therefore the naked eye can never see from any one spot of the earth's surfact more than 3,000 stars.
It Surefy Do.
"Speakin' of de law of compensation," said Uncle Eben, "an automobile goes faster dan a mule, but at de same time it hits harder and balks
longer."
JOHN L. GOES TO
COAST WITH OFFER
Pittsburg, Pa., Jan. 31. John L. Sul
livan left Pittsburg tonight for Chicago, en route- to the coast to see Jim
Jeffries. It is possible he may cancel his tour around the world and get
ready for the fight which he expects to book for Jeffries and Jack Johnson. Said John: "I have heard from Jeff. He wants me to come to the coast
and look in on him. It's more than likely now he has found that he can handle himself all right and that he will consent to go into the ring after the big black boy. I can assure Jeff on the coast that the money, $75,000, is all right for that fight. I will tell him something else, too, perhaps not so pleasant, and that is that the fight will not be brought off in Frisco nor on the
coast. I have a place more centrally
located."
After a two hours' session with Dorando Pietri and his brother Ulpiano
yesterday afternoon J. J. Callahan and L. M. Houseman, the local Marathon
promoters, practically concluded to
drop negotiations with the Italian runner and endeavor to secure the winner of the Longboat-Shrubb race Friday night at New York to meet Hayes.
Johnny Hayes, Dorando's prospective opponent, was the only person heard from, a telegram to Callahan in re
sponse to tne announcement oi loi-
ando'a refusal reading:
"Will bet Dorando thousand on side
to stiffen backbone. Have written.
Dorando yesterday reiterated all his
previous objections to meeting Hayes
and that he was not afraid. He also
had two more reasons for declining
to meet Hayes.
"He fouled me twice in New York," the runner declared through his broth
er, "and it i run him again I want a revolver in each hand. I also want the infield cleared so Hayes' friends cannot yell at me or try to trip me.
Some of Corey's friends tried that
here."
Whether Harry Pollock and Pat Pow
ers, Dorando s American backers, will
tolerate the Italian's refusal to carry
out their contracts remains to be seen.
It is not impossible that Pollock may come here to enforce the contract
through the courts.
Memphis, Tenn., Jan. 31. Turfmen
anticipating a meeting of the runners at Hot Springs have received advices
from Little Rock to the effect that
practically no hope can be entertained
for favorable modification of the Amis law. Owners of the rival tracks at Hot Springs Oaklawn and Essex Park
are at loggerheads, it is said, and
Rimner I those controlling the Essex Park (the
old tracKj noia tne wnip nana ana win
not lend political aid to the movement to make exception of Hot Springs alone in the effont'to repeal the law, because. It is charged, owners of Oaklawn will not consent to equal distribution of
racing dates. N
SIX-DAY RACE BEGINS
Kansas City, Mo.. Jan. 31. At 2:30
o'clock tomorrow afternoon in Conven
tion hall eight classy cycling teams
will start on a race that is scheduled
to end at 10:30 o'clock next Saturday
night. The bikers will ride from 2:30 o'clock p. m. to 10:30 o'clock each night.
eight hours a day. The following teams will start: Mo ran and Kramer,
New Jersey team; Fogler and Root
New York team; Bardgett and Mitten,
Iowa team; Demara and Hill, California
team; Walker and Palmer, Australian
team; Wilcox and Senhouse, Mormon
team; Wiley and Cameron, Brooklyn
team; Devonvitch and McKay, Rus
sian team.
If yon eu trutk fully say that TBI TIMES) la Kxd newpapr, pleas mmy
NOT OUT OF THE GAME
SEEK INJUNCTION
TO HOLD FIGHT
Little Rock, Ark., Jan. 31. Promoter
Marre, who insists that his match of
Wednesday night between Brooklyn
Tommy Sullivan and Ad Wolgast of
Milwaukee will not be a prize fight
but a sparring contest, and that it is
permissible under the law, will apply
for an injunction to restrain Governor Donaghey, Sheriff Roberts and the city
officers from interfering with the bout,
Marre had pulled oft bouts until re
centfy, when, according to his state
ment, a legislator lost $10 by betting
on the wrong man after he had been
"Ed" Corrigan does not intend to quit told that It was "a f rameup." Wolgas
racing entirely even if he has sold his arrived today to finish training for the
stock farm near Lexington. The mas- go,
ter of Hawthorne made this statement
yesterday when he registered at the
Auditorium Annex after a trip to the
south. He said that the southern rac
ing situation was Indefinite just at present, but he was "letting the other
Turfman Says He Does Not
Intend to Quit.
First Printed In United States.
The first book printed in the United States was entitled "The Freeman's
Oath."
WET SO "WEAK!
A comparison shows that as regards
wages, the rates paid in the united States are startlingly higher than in Great Britain, the difference varying from 80 to 200 per cent.
It has been recommended that a na
tional department of labor be estab
lished in England, presided over by a minister, with a seat in the cabinet, charged with the direction of that labor which has not been absorbed by the ordinary course, and that a permanent unemployed board be set up.
According to the industrial insurance
experience, the fatal accident rate of electricians and of electric linemen is excessive. Of 645 deaths of electricians, 14.7 per cent, and of 240 deaths
of linemen, 46.7 per cent were due to accidents.
The initial step has been taken look
ing to the enactment of a law by the Minnesota legislature requiring that all
meat cutters be subject to an examination as. to their qualifications before a board appointed by the state authorities.
Some trouble Is feared in the mining
districts of New South Wales, Aus
tralia, where the agreements as to wages terminate at the end of the year. It is expected that the employers will seek a reduction in wages, and the men
in the Broken Hill district are on the alert to resist it.
Women employed as ordinary day
laborers in the construction of buildings, mixing the mortar, sifting and carrying bricks and for unloading coa.', are the unusual conditions described as
existing in Prague and elsewhere In Bo
hemia. The women are paid from 32
to 40 cents a day. The working day for these women is from 6 a. m. to 6 p. m., with an hour for dinner.
CCidjker TrnUt sr-r 85sppaT Tet Life Awar Himma a Pevple iMrM TUia Fact. TOaa a,hea.lthr man ..or woman oa-i rtua. -to run .down -without apparent cause, baoom.es weak, languid, depreaavd. toftera backaoJie, headache, dizzy spglta and urinary Claordera, look to tbe kidney for the causa of it all. Keep the kidneys well and they will keep you well. Do an' a Kidney Pllla rureslck kid nays and keep them well. JTeTe- is Hammond testimony to prove It. j. Mra. R. V. Porch, of 4S7 Sibley street. Hammond. Ind,, Bays: 1 "My husband suffered for years from kidney trouble. He had frequently headaches, his back was weak and parnedhtm continually. He' had aharp, Shooting twinges that centered In the small of 'his back and-ex tendad through hi loins and even Into his shoulders. His appetite became poor, bia vitality
was Impaired, and hla constitution gradually but surely weakened under the stress of the pain and agony he endured. Doan'a Kidney Pllla procured at Bicknell & Co'e. drug store, corrected-att of these symptoms and re. Store him to .good health." i Far aale by all deader. Price 50 cents. Foster-Mllburn Co., Buffalo, If. f., sd agents for the United states. Remember the name Doan's and take no other.
Eternal Providence. What in me is dark, illumine; what Is low, raise and support; that to the height of this great argument I may assert eternal Providence, and Justify the ways oi God to men. John Hill-ton.
'$s&k Once you rtWtx owna
Dudlsh. When a dnde seems to be lntelllpent, remember that "things" are seldom what they seem. Philadelphia Bulletin.
coat, you will give it the hardest service ever required of any gar
ment. Kenreign coats are built and guaranteed for that kind of work, dressy for fair days, yet rain-proof, and to hold their shape as long as worn. Ask your dealer. GASCTVOTVCO, NEW YORK.
THE HAMMOND P1ST1LL1NO OO. DAU.Y CAPACITY 20,000 QAIXON&
tmfm trie ad aad get him to aukacritoa
fellows do the worrying.'
