Ligonier Banner., Volume 43, Number 47, Ligonier, Noble County, 11 February 1909 — Page 7

| igonier Banncr’ LIGONIER, ; INDIANA. | e Z .- . Latest News Told in Brietest and Best Form. ' WASHINGTON NOTES. Plsowey Mgl B BIRtS el = e Sy €3 MO e L 1 b 5 th g v i {he i o $l2 00 1 frGviie i { it 5 5 the 110 iothert Knox Bmith, comt of « st 5 Nis 13 £ urgesd 4 | ¢% to chock t 5 ; faur army puty ¥ ¥ $ ulii: . Senatur Allrich prewes 1 n i \ prog i ; PERSONAL flio 00 ¢ At } % xfal £AOP BB 1 Sy e Foadsward ¥ 4 ¥ i g T L btk : of Hasaia bas heoly arresiad ou n y‘“‘fl of Blgh Lreas ihois aliegy tBal he belvayed government secred S .4_,.y,,<‘.‘-.‘ f Eltho L Jlowae tunking £ at Pt S § AR wl ¢ Ha i untii thiae B janne s h &% el alor from New York : FEdwird Lautechach has sued th city af New Yark fos §l5O 000 for thi dentd { hilg 808 10 an Gytesnoblie cident : . Warden Armstiong of the . pri .:~ it Jackson, Miclhi, was arresiad on s chiarge ol ad epting a bribe Mres James Harry of Sharon. Pa confd sxedd that she & urdered Ler hus s band because he scolded her’ . § GENERAL NEWS. : Gov. Churles X Haskell and six Qkiahomat wore indic i oOon a 5 Of eanspiraey to defraud (he govern ment in connection with dials Mus Koveo towln lots : 1 [ho United Mine Workers of ‘Amerd ci in convention at I!vai:‘»i..x:-*,'.- I'e elected Thomas [ Lewis as president The California assembl) redectod the Drew bill which was {utended to prevent aliens owning lands in the plate and was almed ‘ehiefly at the Japanese = The Tennesgee senale passed (e prohibition bill over the velo of Gov Patterson, ! i Pr George T. Vaughan of Washing | ton successfully grafted the knoee of a | dead’ man onto the Jeg of George Al ..(3\ a ;w.tfimi in the Georgelown: l‘.\“w'*;w'li'. Secretary of Agriculture Wilson re fused to lift the guarantine agninst Maryviand cattle an account of the foot and mouth disease, _The bodies of 5008 Chinese which | have been dug from graves in all-partg | of the United States will be shipped to the Flowery Kingdom for burial The house of representatives of | Jowa voted down a resolution offered by Representative Scheeper, proposing | medals for each lowa born member of 4 . the naval fleet just completing thv‘:, tour around the world. . | Fred Walton, former grand master | of the Odd Fellows for the state &f Jdaho, was shot twice by John H. Cra- | dlebaugh in Denver, Col., and dh-di shortly after bt.‘il}g removed to a lms~i pital. Both men are from Wallace, | ldaho. Cradlebaugh also is a prominent Odd Fellow. Walton was dying | when the hospital was reached, but gasped: “That man thought I stole his wife.” Clarence M. Jones, president of the Commonwealth Feed Company of St ‘Louis, and brother of Police Commissioner Jones, was murdered. Herman A. Kretschmar, & discharged official of the company, has been arrested. _ The supreme court of the United States decided against the wall paper trust in & suit filed against ‘Lewis Voight & Sons, jobbers of Cincinnati. . Jacob F. Gmelich, Republican, was inaugurated as lieutenant governor of Missouri, following a recount of the votes by the legislature. ',‘ A resolution declaring against Japiam‘se- fmmigration was introduced in the Nevada legislature and President Roosevelt was censured for his stand on the matter. . ; - In a fire among a fleet of Chinese flower boats at least 250 men lost their lives, being burned.or drowned. i The attorney general of Venezuela has begun preparations to sue former President Castro for the plot to assas- ~ ginate Gomez. _ - - Herman Billik is now convict No. 1,139 at the penitentiary in Joliet, where he is a member of the force making brooms, : Bloodhounds were put on the trail of burglars§ who stole $3,5600 worth of jewelry from W. H. Poole's store in Mdntevista, Col. ‘ Fire nearly destroyed the town of ‘Milton, Fla,, causing a loss of $200,000. Two bDanks and the city hall were among the buildings destroyed.

C A Beverancs, Instead of F B Keliogg, will represent the government In the sqit agaiost B H Harriman and others, ' 5 Walter Weoaver, son of 8§ M Wea yer. & mamber of the sapreme court of fowa, was held 16 the grand jury in tha disirict court st lowa Falls on a charge of having isssed forged papers.’ Three trainmen were kilied and another was fatally injured when (wo plock irains on Ihe Chicags Milwan koo & Bt Pagl ratirosd were in a bead on collislon st Poweraviile, Mo The crew lost contrnl of ote Lraln, causing fhe crash - The deadiock in the negotiations be tween W, I Huarhanan, Americas sperial cominiasioner, and the Venenasian government retaaling anbroken thraged thie reCanul of silther side o '3’» 8 in the dispdie aver Ibe melbod of arld tratine the cases of Ihe Noew. Yorg and Hermoudey Asphiail Ceapjany snd - Lhe Uiflnoes curpmration : : A G iy of the Nevads iegls nture adopied IHE feeoiniion agains the Insggese ffter ouiting oul -the sensare of President Rogevelt Heien Maloney Saughier of Marin Malobey, 4 wealths Phiigdeipliat, wad msrried o sdenad time Y Horhert O wirn of New York their first masriage Horsce Hotlie Rilber of an ol New York fan Y fearing he was going Haßne cang el waiokde tiv shoo i Vorna Ware sbho? four men dy frg the orogress of 8 fris! in a Teoxas Coaritimdn . %o Bt expelied Aje ~‘ fen. fve white angd 1. tegrons, wers Kitieal by R paaian powaiting (o B wingdy ahot In an Ada AR Tosl mine The Weat Visginig sénn‘e was arbused by g slatement thay § 090900 Wasl been raleed fo prevent ;f' Bibition Minera In the nalionsl conrention af Indianapalis rebaked Prosident Lewis for his actiiog fp coßnection with 1 Ransas siiike ; {st James DNeown ufv.iv ‘u. s i '; of a prriy that Kerarehe i for thy {amog Loms cjeian T Aroanure (R 0 aatied wEsin e Ihe Buutl CHE Ih fechser the Blniie of the Mianisl freshoniors taken from them by Capd (Fire of unknowsn origin destroyoed the piant ol Ihe Xicevican - Tabualar Syl Comnany 2 Joledo O, cagsing 8 lnes of $125 000 - A iocal optlan Bl fathered by the AntiSaioon league of Pennsvivania was Introdtuced 1o the lower house of {he Veunnssyivanle Jegininiiir ‘ A Bill e quising that apnlicapts for marriaxe licepse In Urepon be pro vided with 8 certificate of good Bealth from a leense PRYEICIAn was unani mosely passed By the siate penate ““v children of Natl dtiel Wark man. Hving near lesingion Ky, were harted 1o dedth when hHiz house was dents el by lire ; Py A bank pusrantes biil prepared by the toint commißes froty the Kansas Dodse and sente sfter consaiiation with Guyv. Stubbs and other moinsinds {ration beaders. will be tntroduced it provides a levy of onetwenticth of one ;'iz(r cenl on &l Lank deposils ; The allvgod carelsssness of 8 Begro porter in putting & man in the swrang Cberth of a sleeping car was the basis of & 310,000 sult bßrought In the fed eral rlxt;ri at New Orieans by Mrs Amelin: M. Dubourg sgainst -the Pull man Company, = . The snuual mapeuvers of the naval réserves will be held at Toledo thig summer at the same time that the maneuvers of the United States army, department of the greatl lakes, are beiug conducted. o : The adminlstration of Thomas F lewis, president of -the United Mine Waorkers of America, was supported by the delegutes to the national convention in Indianapolis. A roll eall showed 1627 approving and 1,064 dissenting . Secretary Taft inspected the Culebra cut and approved the Gatun dam of the Panama eanal . The Turko-Bulgsrian deadlock over the amount of money to be paid be cause of Rulgaria's declaration of independence has-been settled on a plan proposed: by Russia, . Failing to give bond, F R MecDon: ald, deposed secretary treasurer of the E Hlinofs-Indlana eouncil. No. 4, International Union of Electrical Workers, §.‘}'t‘xzt to jail on & charge of larceny as | hatlee. : : . In preparation for the obscrvation of the Lincoln centenary at the birthplace:of the emancipator, near Hodgenville, Ky, the cabin in which Lincoln ?‘a‘s' born was removed to the memorial farm. . « Without amendment the senate passed the house hill making February 12, 1909, the ge hundredth anniversary of the birth of Abraham Lincoln a legal holiday and recommending its celebration throughout the Uniled. States. George Busse, brother. of Maryor Busse of Chicago,. who accidentally shot. and killed Mrs. Lucius Tuckerman, was exonerated by the coroner's jury which investigated the tragedy. The widow of Father John of Kron. stadt, the well-known Russian priest who died about a month ago in .St Petersburg, has been given a yearly peusion of $2,000. : . H. Labodie of Sounth Bend, Ind., Las arranged to file suit in behalf of the Labodie heirs to recover the site. of Walkerville, Canada. The suit will involve $20,000,000. * President Roosevelt will lay the corner-stone of the memorial hall to be erected at Hodgeville, Ky., the birthplace of Abraham Lincoln on February 12. Several prominent men are to deltver addresses. ' ~ The relations between President Gomez and Vice-President Zayas of Cuba became seriously strained over . the appointment of a man to fill thé post of chief of the secret police. _ Friends of C. W. Morse, the convicted banker and former “Ice King” of New York are preparing to peti tion the United States court to admit him fo bail. He is a prisoner in the | tombs under a 15-year sentence to prison. e : United .States District Attorney Stimson told District Attorney Jerome ~of New York to proceed with the pros--ecution of the libel cases growing out of newspaper charges in connection with the Panama canal scandal. Doug: las Rob'necon, the president’s brother in-law probably will be the complain | ing witness.™

-y . 8 i _ s HARPERMEMORIAY :'.,-'{"“;{fa; ,’}’?) :’_: rv. "‘m‘/ M* ey f g N e eD | \wy IB AR § REMARKARE TRIZUTE TO FORNMER DOCSEN T OF FIAI IR} SNNI I A MRS Tt LA R, ¥ LY VL e ‘T‘} C/‘* R 0 Yj ¢ ae iBS e B o ;p,.«:fsfi ; : by N G “s b k - [ y®e § ) 4 - ,\ ol 4 Tia.go-44 oy \:‘-«x-.g‘:_ g : G S Ni) SRS > . §£fi xi ‘&é szfiw&mwmg -‘Q ~' ,‘m g,{ ‘; IR AR ee, T lg el ¢ e iiel s “#“:v v aIT DAR e % & §3 ooy, < 5 x 3 R o e s Y ,A = ; L 54 4 £:;{ il 5. Sasons 5 e PR w se(w e oW eB R Wl P Se A WW e B e RN = sl R i, SN e K g¥ oo THNE Y P lAN lIRNEY MERPER PMENNORAL LIDKARY A 2

Tre William Hanier Harper Metno | rial library, to he erected At the Uni | yirsity of Uhivags. Sedms now to e an axeured thing the ithied snniver pary of the desth of the distinguished roliege president bedng miarked by the | ptactical compietion of the 'Sz’,fi},i‘fifl}i fund for the erection of the bullding. | To those who have foilowed the des. | tinies of Ihe 55?4’!*3&'}; institntion sihce | {ix oondation. as well as o s later | friends. (e {nu;az;r‘e of thefr dream | for a memorial to the universiiy s first preefdent (0 whom doubtiess the in stitution owes ils Delng s & - vivid, [iensuie . 3 o such men as Harry Pratt Jodson,l the present president: Thamas W o Goodspeed, registrar mad secretary of | the board of trusfees: Whallsce Heck. | man., business mansger. the several | members of the faeuity, the trusteen of the three deparimpents of the ani | versity and the slnmonl and student body, past and present feel 8 wense of | personal gretification st the approach. | fng frultion of one of thelr most ardent | desires _ ' o Lsr. Harper himsetf knew for a con- | giderable tfme lefore his death that | he ceculd live only to an appolnted | time. When he realized he was af | flicted with a faia! malady his nmj thought was to place the affairs of the | greal {ustitiulon in whose formation | be had played s fmportant a part fo | good condition. His next cherished | desire. was the completion of ofe of | the series of treatises which are b:a{ legacy to the worid,as a scholar, { In both of these efforts be was suc- § cessful, and ounly a few of his closest | intimates knew, up to within a short | time YBefore he died, the destiny which bung over him, the effort his last deeds cost him, and the desires he had most cherighed, 0 o 1t was these Intimate friends, {nclud. ing John D Rockefeller, who knew‘ the kind of testimanial the unmxenu-t tioug executive of the university would ! most have wished During his ,bus}'i Hfetime he never so muoch as intt maled a thought that bis meuixaryi would hé perpetuated in anything but ! his accomplishmenth. : ] " He did. however, express regret that | in history his name would probably be | remembered more in connection with | his finaunclal achievements in finding | money for the upbullding of his.iife | dream of a great educational institu | tion than as a servant and scholar, | which basically was his highest am- | bitlon. - ' 1 Within a week after the body of | Dr. Harper was laid to rest John D © Rockefeller, Jr., telegraphed Dr. Good. | speed that, {f the friends of the iate president contemplated the erection.of | a memorial library, his father would | be giad to contribute, ! . i Within three months the effort | which is just now being completed | was begun simultaneously by the tac-'g ulty, the board of trustees of the sev- i eral departments, the alumnl and ;suti and present students not graduated. | Without invitation from agents of the university the professors undertook among themsélves to raise a fund for the memorial. Altogether, from.z 160 to 170 members of the various facuities have contributed, = roundly, $20.000, : o e : ‘Similarly, without' being asked, the; alumni took up the work of raising an | additional fund by subscription among | their members, a 8 well as from ztu‘-i dents who had not matriculated. Ap- ! proximately 1,600 of these have sub seribed a total of about $15,000, in amounts ranging from §1 to s§soo, The popularity of the testimonial| subscription among the former stu-| ‘dents of the university indicates that, had the institution been a little older, the entire sum conslered desirable for thig purpose would have been raised from this contingent.’ The few vears the university has been In existence, however, has made the number

Had Planned Trip to Europe

Got Caught in Folding Bed and | Stranger Tock His Wealth. | For more than a year Henry Da- ' vidson has been planning a trip to | Europe, the New York correspondent 'of the Cincinnati Times-Star says. In { order to aid the travel fund by sa%ving he has occupied a cheap room ion One Hundred and Twenty-fourth i street. The principal object in the | room was a large folding bed. The | other night the bed seemed uneasy, !so Davidson tried to re-arrange it. To ! do so he stood on it, near the head, | and it shut up on him like a trap. }Only his head protruded and he | screamed - murder in the three lan- | guages he knows. A tapping came | at the door. ‘ : { “Come in!"” shrieked Davidson. | “Come, help me!” = | The door opened slightly and an unpleasant face peered in. Seeing that Davidson was fast, the owner of the face followed it im. “Can’t ye' get

o former siudenls compsratively sinall and most of the alutanl are still young pecple, just starting thelr iife wirek, Afd coneeguenlyY i fAnasciaily abie to contiribule Enzi{a"mmmmtl it was among the trustees of the three departments those of the unh yersily proper and those of the Rush Medical coliege and the divinity school, that the iargest copiributions were re cofved Many of the tlrustees. of these departments serve on all three hoards Otbers are duplieated on two of the boards In all 34 (rustees have subscribed $65,000 and just recently, when, the desired amount is $l5OOO short of completion, certain of the trustecs have agreed to coniritiute the last $l6 000 miaking the taolal subserip tion of the trusiees §:5.000, leaving $5 000 yet 1o be falsed to complote the SXOO,OOO originally plasned for the a«rection of the bullding sod fls main. tenance. : - Of the total amount of $300.080 the plans rontemplate the expenditure of $6OO. 060 for the building $2OOOOO to be sot axtde as an investment fund, the returns from which will be used in the maintenance of the bullding, &od the extension of the university Hbrary. The building ltself will complete the original plans, with but slirht varia. tions, of the Midway Plalsance front age of the university bulldings. It will stand on the ground between Haskell museurmn and the Law bailding, and will be near the middie of the south frontage ; Its architecture will conform, as do all the balidipegs &t the university, with the original. homogeneous plan, simple but distinctive. It will exieéend three floors ahove the ground level, While {ta chief function will be that of a library, it will contain siso the executive offices of the university, which now are in the Haskell museum, ' : : » This change, as well as the removal of the library from its present guar ters in thé University Press bullding, will relfeve a great deal of the congestion which at present is something of an inconvenience, even with all the bulldings at the great university. In addition to {ts exceptional provisions as a library bullding, which, ac cording to Dr. Harper's own ildeas, should be the real center of university life, it will contaln & number of class rooms. These too, will make for add ed comfort and convenlence of both faculty and students. . When the question of a memorial bullding was first broached there were three propositions. Chiet of these next to the plan of a lbrary building was & memorial chapel. This was the plan advocated by the religious ele ment among the supporters of the memorial project. Its appropriateness was urged on account of Dr, Harper's exceptional accomplishments as a stu dent and author of religious works, It was eventually decideéd however, after a thorough canvass of the sentiment among friends of the late president, that, inasmuch as his life work had been upon broadly Intellectual lines, the lidbrary bujlding would be the most appropriste memorial : Dr. Harper always had malntained that & librafy should be the laboratory of an entire lpstitution such as the Midway school. It should be a place, he declared to his closed confidants, where faculty and students could gather and commingle. : , In conformity with this idea the new library building will be in reality the heart of the institution, from which and around which the life of the University of Chicago will radiate and coliect. ‘ L - ‘Another dec!ding consideration in the adoption of the library plan as a memorial was Dr. Harper's great love of books. His own private library was one of the largest and best in the entire country. : -

e e out?” he queried, sympathetically. 5 Davidson replied, with some excess . of heat, that he wouldn't have yelled | if he had been able to release him- ! self without assistance. ‘ “Hurt bad?”’ asked the stranger. % Davidson said: *“No; just bruised.” | “Well,” said the visitor, “you will ; be hurt bad if I hear a yip cut of | you.” And he deliberately went | through Davidson's belongings, while | the owner, in a folding bed and mental ! agony, watched the procedure. The | visited rified Davidson's trunk, took | his little bits of jewelry and the ? money he had saved for that European | trip. Now and then a groan burst | from Davidson, always to be stified ! by a threatening motion on the part i of the thief. *“Good-by,” said that | person affably as he left, “I'll close the door after me. You needn't get up.” : When, an hour later, Davidson was finally released by his landlady, his | first act was to send for the kitches hatchet and destroy the bed. -"

I'VE BEEN | About American Fathers - By Charles Battell Loomis

&@} e‘:‘“ ,‘} %i ],. 3 pe . >:‘ L . e ~ 2, . - i ¥ ] 9 4 / ’J‘ fl‘': 3 : o~ ’(':\‘. ._m 7 gi‘,/—j ‘\\ [email protected] b % % 2 , %=/ S N e R \ / b : Fan ki e 5, : ’,‘i' ; / ) \ / g 7 \‘zw ‘iA» : tt Ylk b, 194 Ve N \ )'"" ‘ ) t /'. Y .y ¥ F £ : \ \ ’ ! iy « ;- : ..4L- . : g - A Y/ ,=¥ g \ TYND X A\ Y L T v X i ' 4 § D - i- ‘ : » /) ARt ¢ T TR 1[ A\ \\- :l‘ “" i \ x| p * * i ‘ 4-‘ A' B¥§‘ A s ¥ . : t PNk 11 AL ;NL4 ¥ i E ’ : ‘\ \ A LAY ! 4 i 4 s AR i / ¥ ¢ ol ; b . Rl o e © | 2 ) :‘i 2 » TR m The Head of the Family. :

To speak exactly, I do pretend to influence . ity but everybody fn my fam: {y I 8 on to the pretense and we all leugh at it together i . My oldest child, John, is 22, and he has voted once. = o I bave aiwavs voted the Republican ticket. I did it because my [ather did’ it before me and because | was brought up to think that a muygwump was a disgrace to any family, and it was, of course, out of the guestion to be a Democrat. So I voted the Repub lican ticket #nd was secretly glad when Grover Cleveland was elected. John voted for a Democrat who was known to be inferior o every way to the Republican candidate for governor of my state and he did it just to show his independence. 1 couldn’t help be ing proud of him even while 1 de plored his pig-headedness, : . The' evening before eléction day 1 hat taken him aside and 1 had sald to him: “John, you are about to énjoy the most blessed privilege that an American has—lf he doesn’t hap pen. to be 8 woman paving taxes sod

responsible for debts and owning real estate—you are about fo cast a vols, and ! hope that you will show your party loralty by votlng as your fa ther and grandfather did before you even though the Republican candidate be the devll Limselt” : And John, who s taller than 1, looked down at me benignantly and sald: “Father, 1 have 8 mind of my own and .a vote of my own, jand just to show that a Courtlay I 8 nol neces sarily a faithful dog with & collar on his neck I will vote for Mulrennan. ab though 1 do not think he is as good a man as Bradford.” _ _ “Are you a mugwump?” I aldiost wept. - : “There is no such thing as & mug wump now,” said he. “but they were honorable men with donvietions who dared throw off the party yvoke. Most men of my generation refuse the yoke, father, and you are a dear old moss

UNCLE SAM, BOOK PUBLISHER

e e 2 3 Is Running the Biggest Printing Qffice : in the Worid. Forty-four carloads of paper and five of binder's boards will be required for the next annual edition of the yearbook of the department of agriculture. This is one of the biggest jobs that come every vear to the biggest prind; ing office in the world, and the quantitles of the various materials -required for the great edition of 360,000 copies are staggering. ; : For the covers of these books 62,000 yards of cloth are used and the pages are held together with 9,600,000 vards of thread. @ When thé ‘last volume leaves the bindery, there will have been 21,810 reams of printing and 3,100 reams of plate paper, and 167.500 pounds of boards for covers. ' Each book is secured by linen tape sewed on by machines, and 195,000 yards of this material will be used in the edition. : . : . For securing. the covers 8,000 pounds of glue and 30 barrels of flour

Heve tha! Uy nest year Il volo the Socialist tieksd” - Yer, that's what 'be sald i TFake my daughler also 1 don? mwean take ber away because we are oot thinking of wiartiage for her undt’ she 18 27 at leas!. and she is oniy 18, ‘1 am & Christian. Well. of course. 1 dan't toean that | act like one That would b expecting too mach A fel low dopsn't Bave to act fike a Chris tian iy/ order to be one gniess be bap Jbe a Usitscian And 1 anipot one. Some one referred 1o & Usiariss ihe other day s & “near Christian “Yes” said motber, “ihey are neares Christianity thas any oiber acet” Bt fo pol back to my daughier. 1 ot a Christian. - : o RBhe oan spraetle. e . It only indepesdence. | e you what, 1€ 1 bad uhilerstosl bow this tew ghuerstion waAs golsg lo act ) would have lecome an isfidel whep ithe ehilldren were borg 8 a 2 1o Insurs their being Christians. . My dauhter fs a well Bekaved o%ilg and i think shé s well iniéntiomed, and 1 know shie s ponersus aod kind baearted, bt ahe will Bot g 9 1o charch 11 makes it very hand on tne, bocauve as Jubn Siays away frem church be z"«fil‘;‘i,?m? be doean b approve of our pad 2;‘:;:"3‘ hegtns 1 have fo £ 1o chinred wiise il o eies bet wy wite go alone U'd vather play goifif | knew how Taks one more sxample We had o pill un stakes and mive ks fail ‘i;;!};x'«r wanted :‘o“k‘.fl«y _him.&»‘}‘amzw i oam natgrally a man of decisive hind (lve been buqmflm i bask ness| and that counts for sometbing thess daysi and | pade Gp my mind at onee that we wounld try the oty Baving lved in the suburbs for & nam by of years e AN my s ts oa ostndent st Yale @

{didn't - make any difféerence fo him wn.»?; we spont the winter, »o he did fnol Offer any oblection, bat my daugh gwrfiumt “That's idabmt, father. You i know how 1 like out of doors.” We'll %s:ay where .we are. . lUH be easy : enough 1o ge!l another rent” . iMy daughter used 3o authoritative éan"air,' and there séemed so mucl to i Tecommiend a . suburban lite, that 1 I Oh, very well; we'll sce what wa lean do here™ : ;» Thet my wile sald: “No. I'm sick fof snburban life. It's neither one g thing nop the other, and as the efty I 8 bdd ii; all our throats we'll move |lo the ¢Guniry Hrother George was i sa¥ing the other day theres an i abandoned farm not three miles from ihxs ylace, -and _it would be Jovely { there.” 5 S % “Very good,” sald 1. "I'm perfectis ; dgrecable” {and | amy. “lal's go and

ook at the abandoned farm.” - i i “What, and be country frumps® g safid my daughter ‘ i “Ah; I hadn't thought of thar” said §I, wavelng. (I was born in the coun [ try, but thal was years ago) i ?"“ Joha eih% up.. “The best i thing for you to do will be to move o { New Haven and then | ean see some | thing of 'you old folks” (I'm not yet | 50, mind you, and I feel as voung as il'dtd when 1 didn't vole for Cleve | land ). : i “The very thing to do.” said I, bt ! that afternoon my wife tald me that ! our. servant whom we have ‘had for Cthree years {we've thought of exhibit §lng hert utterly refused to leave the i'suburb in whieh we live, and soo we all {of us bowed Wo superior force, and | we're living across the street from i our old house and I'm still running for trains. e el : And 1 am also still the nominal heat of the family. s 1_ And | want to shake hands with thousands like me all over this broad l land. e . We might be divorced.

e b—— are necessary. The sliver lettering represents 130,000 sheets of aluminum, which in recent years has superseded ! gold leaf, though the cost is the same. 2 A train of 60 cars would be. re- { quired to.deliver all the materialis entering into the year-book: but, anyhow, the post-office department will distribute the books to 60,000 different points.—Sunday Magazine. . Quick Remedy Needed. Y “Oh, mamma,” said little Lola, “I've got a awfiil pain. Won't you please lg“e me some of that medicine with ‘sugar in it? Quick, mamma, before the ’pam goes away.” No Aeroplane Competition. The proposal to hold an international aeroplane competition in Rnussia next summer has been abandoned onm account of lack of funds. i : Immensity of the Pazific, , The area of the Padiic ocean-is about the same as the s@arth’'s land area—i. e., 55,000,000 sglikre miles.

HiB GOOD MONEY THROWN AWAY, %Ti— . o g Why Oid Man Potts Regretted Giving S B Coliage Educatisn. & - - S ”'-‘ £ "Well” ohserved old man Potty "Tve spent & beap of moséy. of my bay Blil's edgeation, more'n $5OO tewt o see Rimn tßrough Yale And | ainy through ye! 1t shorely wmaies me Bore fa think of Ihe money 1 mwastin’ o 6 & Doy Who 3int-gof Al much sense Gow as be bad belire Be went 1o 00l foge ™ : : : i What's the malter tather™ gaked ssfa Polts “Mebbe youre a littie bard o BT ) No, 1 sintt Mary 7 arswersd the ol man Teat o sk v a Httle White ngo § suye 10 Xim ! Ihinka 2 was £HSE 10 B IGarrawm ',';sks, :“J« Roawer @' ve Naprase he mzde e P osure 1 dan’t knew farkg e bogred sy s - 2 s BEYS Y A 5. CANAIPET S Weekiy . ; . : . THE PERUNA ALMANAC. The draer TT"— inve sgirea? £ SUD el wiih e FParuta aimEnae fur Y Ey ' i e X Yoy -2% o Wit A L = A £53% AT ,lRre waewy T Ty * - N ot . "3‘»‘. A..‘ia,vi ¥ et ey 8 s 3 SES nre 3 i owirk g :.' ‘A s # 3 ?7‘; ey . & i fa v it ?g.. r;.f... e ( a 5 % 4 - 3 --x::‘ . SN aimanacs, free of charpe Addrees The Peruna (s oty O - AND THEYVE GOT 17! . L T - - - > : i » *.,‘5 P N.B Y I . 5 £ How g 0 your Lk the vew siyios i gochwonr dege” ) . A Hiitle roff arcund the nick, luve ™ 2 5 - ; MiX FOR COLDS i epeßai pint oot whiskey 844 Ond Gulce ayrup sarssrarfiia oand T 4 Gunces Terda oo whlel van Lo TPy - ;-"J, ’-_._"‘ Ay 1 'x‘ = v ! 3 vn Leod B nes: ‘\! before reiiring ivlinees i 34 h . Bad cures gaid that s CUraae W e . N g ; . Awfyu *“Na WAt sork a froieaciad fare wel P rail B 53 % "that T lost gy trais i o . ) : Youg shonbt have 1 farewel) BTORRN Rt he reipaiked s ¥ % moment they dooked Al Bim with the Chosnin fuseral MANCH X pregaing Het o eventually ther .re solved 1o et Bim Uve T ». e 4 « How's This? . We Mow oe 3 -‘ rund - Delace Hewasd Fe sty T 2 s lASTE i vcheod e sREeI ¥ Hal Cndarrh gt { SR F 2 iHiNEyY 213 Trdats, U 3 f 2 LB3 pelery ¥ . % o ¥ : 8y Al E e @ * WA, L Sz sy Vs 4 % & Wamuiw A RPN Tl . T Cnnaren " % tak ey scting i Ty Wi ® i s 2 s Wit iEcee ! Lo sl Cowtiveeegnis Wit Yoy Froe T tenis peg & Ry 0d 5 ¥ 5 iWi lake Hai e Fas iy Fia v esslignte . o Btock 4 “My wife I» alwayvs ¥icking me for money.” Thal must be-pin monsy “~EX change ' s L PILES CURED IN 6 TO 14 DAYS, PALG HNTHMENT (s goamutent ic oaMe ANY ok of Joebing Bied Bieddivg or Prsraditg ive 1o $ b b Aare o setey relanded e - A Bappy nmedidim ought to make grod Bt a spiritual seanceé TONMIORETE ADDYeiale Ll 2 a \*." e :31 fewis' Single Bind gat. . Youdr dealer or lewn Factors, Pecria, "l 0 ¢ The rule in a gprohibition state seen:s to be “har npone’” . Those Tired. ‘rh‘lni Feet of Yonurs Beet Aot s Fooie-Fage e 24 ;At Lruiagist's Write A B imated, Lo Hoy N Y. {ur sampie ~ The more & girl smiles the less she means L i ‘ '

ARLLLIERD, [ xIDN E:; e NN Wz AChE TS AV 'y 'D'SHT'S olsgg s o lABETES i, 375 “Guarfl“uea (

e 0 eE ’ “® Munyon's Cold Remedy Relieves the head, throat and 'ungs simost Immediately. Checks Fevers, stops Discharges of the nose, takes away all aches and palns caused by colds. It cures Grip and ob stinate Coughs and prevents Poeumonla. Price 25c. - Have you stiff or swollen joints, no matter how chronie? Ask your druggist for Munyon's Rbeumatism Remedy and see bow quickly you will be cured. If you bave any kidney or bladder trouble get Munyon's Kidney Remedy. Munyon's Vitaiizer makes weak men sirong and restores lost powers.

(e ] S!NCE'IGISG ASRELIABLE . S TRADE MARK LANTEN PC 3.Cor BL ACK CAPSULES SUPERIOR REMEDY:-«URINARY DISCHARGESex DRUGGISTS o= sy MAIL on RECEIPTor 50¢ HPLANTENG SON 93 HENRY STEROOKLYN N.Y

OPPOB"I‘I’NITY ENOCKS ONCE at your door, then you should respond. Write for “Golden O]ipnn.nnlkv."- - Co-Operative Stcck & Frolt Growers Ase’s- (Lnine. ), Metropolitan, Minueapolis, Minn, ‘Watson E.Coleman, Wash- || R e references, Best

Would Enj good Bealth, with s Wessings, must umdervtand guite chearly that it involves the guestaon of right byving with adl the term LA e With proger knowiedge of shas i taest . each hour of recreal; { ¥ mest. of contemplation and offort pay b mncde (o contrigie o ) z arght. it the um d ; e InRS " in pended with 1o advanisges, bt r o A 7 ; TE 5 THANY Slances B ."W* N ' . % e al the proser *iy (s pur i Bevcin 1 tie tr 3 S . « el insat » ; i - 3 =) 8t -~ ¢ 18 2 ~ { g . § Ihe s ve. Prayer oy “. { The } 3 ' 1 3 - p ) M agaiine ‘ : extra T ; X 1 WOln- ¢! lears to e i froe IDGBS < ;- s 4 S y ——— I __y - of a e N ol § N.o ! Retail i A L 201 eweler Tx ' booog- R — & 3 : . At .. 5 A South Bend Watch Frozen in Solid Ice kraps peffect tione i tieriy a 8 ~V i >' su _\v th Bend ¢:i n 3. Y ¢ R . ¥ %d r - . wi Bl s P it tsi 3 3 & sl A ih v M - a Sowth Bead "\ s ai A $ { e YSend e % e ifs ADY : South Bend Watch Co. South Bead, Indiana MORE BIG CROPS IN 1908 Ly IN | Another 60,000 sete - M “ { tiers from the United nR BR 1 S Aies New dise ST pfl tricis opened for sete !wa flfl tismient., 310 acreg i cfl cflandtoeach sete L-v - tler,— 160 free homestead and 160 at $3.00 per acre. “A vast rich country and a ntented progs per s propile.” ~Kaivaif Prom ierreiy rmce #7 2 N of F v, WA 1 citere (Canada, 1w Angurt, 1§ L Ypdk am imigiralism, Many have paid the entire cost of thely farms and had a balance of from $:10.00 w $20.00 per acre as a result of cne crop, Spring wheat, winter wheat, cats, barley, flax and peas are the principal crops, while the wild grasses bring to perfection the best cattle that have ever been soid ¢o the Chicago market. Splendid climate, schools and churches in all localities. Raiiways touch most of the seitled districis, and prices for produce i are alwavs good. Lands may also be puri chased from railway and land companies ‘ FPor pamphiets, meps and infrmation re- ' garding w taiiway rales, appiy 1o Superin- ! tendent of Immigral . Niawa, Canada, or i the authorized Canadian Qovernment Agent C.J.BROUGHTON, 412 Merchants’ Lean £ Trust Blig, Chicags, 11l; W, B, ROGERS, third Nocr, Traction Ters mins! Bldg., Indianspelis, lod ; or T. 0. CURRIL, 199 3rd Street, Milwaskee Wis. | Pl AR % L 0 5 oL . PSS - ‘ ¥ %" By A~ o= L el D i L Sl Y T AT e } S % rod: ;.-»Xa’ T e « ity | e 8 g £ % 3' B ’;i ’. . Z % I 3 = - fag* ¥ : = S : i - - : x = r§ ’ 4 & e ]' a i s $% e il ¥ o 8 BFES { . % .""f” = - .? B HOIESRRIN GS:-ARK A_w.-“ ~f ; "J"“\Z;'x_;,“ 'T,.;' i - FAMOUS BPOR ITS -l Playground and Restspot i HIGH UP ON THE SUNNY SIDE 3 OF THE BEAUTIFUL OLARKS | A Night | Ir.LOUIS t Fms . . THROUGH SERVICE SPLENDID TRAINS AND CONNECTIONSATUNION STATION RS Send for literature and informaticn B. H. PAYNE, Genersi Passenger Agent, t Bt. Louis, Mo. £ TA A A S

1 : \ MISSOURI , | PACIFIC SR : A ’_