Ligonier Banner., Volume 44, Number 27, Ligonier, Noble County, 23 September 1909 — Page 2

- . ! The Ligonier Banne: LIGONIER, : INTHANA -—-——M‘m—‘—m‘. - Latest News Told : in Brietest and Best Form. A | T NOO ERRIIS, 4SSO S SAR - . PERSONAL. ‘ 5 g Yiiy : : . e sio s b itig 3 § iy Robiort 8 Jovety o 3iii e ! & ¥ ek, v biires si¥ ail o i (Ptisent Bin vg bily 0 biitlen at Washingion after ¥ N ,-g‘v\-_. . i gaist the LOEA Bvii i lahn Kiing thu i catehie i the o :W v 1 4y it Rline 38! ; vise Kipg f ihe vet 1 B £ > appainted . fie bl of the Hritish aiiny GENERAL NEWVS B A Tahnecgy of Minn e i on Lor an it ol ab- | i fewbhivati Minn Lisal 4 CAi '* critigal He W g fhee Oierating talaie AT ¢ el Chatlan B imng ot Lo Mivs Gerds Sebbelov, a lag W endineg collere In New York el too have reevived Litie Ereas ek i Greenland W hers Ihe Epetid ren o yours saving Dir Uook did dizscover the north pol - President Taft deolded in favor of Becretary | ;a‘;;’z\.;"w i the controversy with Giftord Pinchot and ordered the discharee 68 1,1 t Glavig chiel of thel ficld diviziin of the general land offoew - 3 . ! The vonvention of the Yeomen of Amuerica rescinded at Springfield, 11 fts. action making the temporary ot ganization of the conventidn perma et - Commmercial fishermen along the i nois river in central Ilnois are fay ored by a decision of CUircult Judgpe Highes in refusing to grant an ininmw tion asked by \\v:l'i!!;& menibers of Chicago, St. Louis and lndianapolis clubs controlling lands inithat section Besides electing dJames Sweeney of the Chicago and Eastern Hiinois rail- | road as president, the Roadmasters’ | and Maintenance of Way ;\:a.wv!.afiu_n.% {n session at Washington, picked Chi | cago for the meeting place in 1910 f - By an agreement tatween the attor ; ney general and c¢ounsel "at Union, | Tenn.. in the indictments against 100 | men as night riders, the cases ;m-{ continued until November and bonds | of $25.000 are allowed | The twenty-third annual convention of the. Association of American Cemetery Superintendents is in session at New York. Their hosts are entertaining them with trips to the metropolitan cemeteries. Virginia has obtained from the federal government -the large figure-head which formerly . adorned the prow of the battleship Virginia, but the state officers are at a loss to make proper use of the ornament now that they have it. : . Governors -and merchants of four states will -attend the convention of the Ohio Valley Improvement associa‘tion at Cincinnati October 14 and 15. “ William Starr, a bridge builder from Chicago, was killed near Kenosha, Wis., by a collision of a freight train with a caboose, 3 : Speaker Cannon told the American Bankers' association that he didn't believe the next congress will pass a new monetary law, rapped the uplift magazines and defended the present rules of the house of representatives. - Striking miners of Crown Hill, near Clinton, Ind.,, have returned to work. ~ The charter of the Central Trades _and Labor union of St. Louis has been revoked by the American Federation of Labor. o J. E. Sayre, a merchant of Racket, W. Va,, was arrested on a charge of having murdered his 17-year-old wife . on her wedding day, three weeks ago. The American Hide and Leather Company’'s tannery at Lowell, Mass., was damaged by fire to the extent of $250,000. : : o

United Spanish War Veterans opened their sixth national encampment at Tacoma, Wash. Chicago seeks the next encampment.

Promoters of the recsp! Baralogs antérence of New York state oo Tty are planning (0 extend the par ¥ orehabiifialion moavement 1o oiner Lo L : : Pwira Grifin of Doston, tepresen : e D H O Toiman of GBleagn v {oxn et it wue senienced atl Tlartfond o 60 days fn Gl e o 8 resull of the var oh losn agents ‘ - Excitepment in Menbii fs 83id by | Mashingion oficigle B 0 be no gronier hats Z.?,-Sa' in a pPresmidential rainpaign B the United Ptates and falk of a wvnlation is scoated : STI 26 Gohtor Battiesbip to be Luflt ?1:. i MW ‘.Difi ""'.z".',} e ¢ &1 mny will bhe Xpown ag e ATEansas ind Ihit ?‘} Willlam Cramyp Bots & ampany as the VWyoming A -cential bank with s eapital of L (e 07 the povergment o xhare | B s profits. was ueged in the snnual ddress of George M Repnolds. prest | wnt of the Ampricap Hankers [0 o fatian if Chicago 1 Fontractors In Rkmn U, nedd I 8 VSR 1 Hé-),-, sttt rac i olaalnedd b reiwgse of tHred foen from prison fler they had promised fo work fur z??w beanrd of publie. proands and, aildings of Ponnesleania ook up the Senticie of fhe SERTSE OF Ihe late 10U o Mtates Sopntor Qusy which ig at e Harristorg frelght station await Yaced by i “I‘ll'“"’_3 : Propider Hiolypin Has pga:n =oBl 3 irculat- o Bunsiay posernors genaTai P the Gisiricls GUAder efiing iaw trgcting theni ta peatrier thv : alion of arailh pebalily ar much "‘, (e Telvral LmrE 8l Marouetle dich . BUY larean fopmner vactier of he g Fus L Ml Bstional Laoe ol s el pleadel gy Yo e bhonaie g sy s b aetie e W‘a;:xy Heivyred Sk popvimits o et W e ey bLawy sy raninted Wit feea b 3 nETH ho foll the Ameriean 3 indow Gl oTkRe at Jeansedte gol Moroyrgalhivin, The moverment todivide Unliiornia aln e slates loek ifinite 0 bhen thes Boutheeg Lalifornis Sialy CHENE T WaAR urganieegd at o (itiiens pdss moeling 0 L 8 ARy s : ssnalor fLa Folkate has NTHien Tealdent Tait dßbing silention to EXAIN L ORI ST e Tores! Yool FeR fn the Wisgnsin thd ian lésays §‘£~ sident Taft foft bla « pnner ) it e ;;v Masgk onothe 1 p Ihroug ‘ Be west and south Whick will taks fi throgeh 00 siates anid over noaris 000 willes of rallrosd Chivag: s bis Iret wtof : Juhn Washburn & Hevearoid bar e, sho! and kbiled hinaxel!l st Free portC Mich - after attempting to <lay & feputy shertff whe tried (o arrest him - Aveording to 8 "hßigh personag 1 PParis Mise Katherine Eikins may w 4 he duke of the Abrusel If she chovses it beltig her owg faalt apd not that of the roval famidy of HMaly thal the wed Hing has not taken pisce : : Theresa Poreiplo, seven years old, At Ferdingud afusine, Sls years old, Wire shot o dedtl atid Fannpy Infast o, aked wix badly wotnded o tiea N.o¥. by postvanie sian soppossd o be an Italian. CRORE ot know: ; The Nations) Securilics on .} any s e i Minneapolis wag closed by the Biate buank examiner _ ‘ A fire siarting ip the telephone ex chanpy a2t My nrow Gity ind destroyed it, & Darber shop 8 drag store, Two re: taurants and a *2';"‘\ goods store. with 8 losg of §in 040 e, Revex hag weitten a Ez“:.’ de clining the nomination for viee pres diént of Mexico : ‘ The Missourf Waterway commission glected W, K. Kavanaugh of 8t louis | president ‘and M L. Jones of Kansus City vice president. . » | The Farmers' and Merchants® hank | atl Malakoff, Tex, wah robbed of $2, 500 by.men whe blew open the safe. o \\';:g::#r, 8 wealthy farmer of : Posey county, Indiana, drank =a usitie of carbolic acid tn the presencs of | nis family and as he did so remarked : | “Here is my last drink” He died Dr. Jobn A. Vinmcent of Springfield IL, whose son, Dr Bdward A Vin cent, now dead, accompanicd the Peary expedition 16 years ago and attended Mrs: Peary when her child | was born in the arctic regions, de | nounced the commander as a “graft er’ and declared his son had declared | Peary was the "meanest man he ever Knew.” : : x While leading a band of boy sol diérs in an attack on an imaginary enemy 13-vearwold Joseph MeNerny fell from & New York pier into the North river and was drowned - Three men broke into the office of the Banque Provinclale at Yama chiche, a village pear Three Rivers, Que., blew open the safe and stole | $4.810. The Aero club of Belgium has ar’ ranged to hold a series of air Taces during the week beginning Oc¢tober 1. Dirigible balloons and aeroplanes. will be entered. - o Despite the efforts of their father and a small sister and brother to save them, three children of Robert A. Walsh died in fire which destroved their summer home at White Bear lake, Minn, . George F. Peabody, a first cousin of George Foster Peabody, the well known New York banker, philanthropist and political worker, died at his home in Appleton, Wis. ' . : A terrific rain and thunder storm in the vicinity of Harrisburg, 111, did great damage to fruit and shade trees. ~ Five hundred delegates will attend the Daptist state convention which will be held in South Bend, Ind, October 12 to 15. : - The post office department has decided that a mail carrier need not ‘deliver mail at a house where a vicious dog is kept. ; } President Taft and Attorney Gen eral Wickersham discussed the Bal-linger-Pinchot controversy and it was said the president will decide in favor of Ballinger, which probably will result in the resignation of the chief forester. e - Six liners brought 3,423 cab‘u pas sengers to New York Friday. This breaks the New York record. - _ Willilam T. Aldrich, son of the Rhbode Island senator, is to wed Miss Dorothea Davenport of Boston, | A torrential rain, accompanied br wind and lightaing, fell in centies

oy A e ; % A 2 : 5 o e - Lo S ey . Mo e e ) L f G el (A > / S & = iR : : i o ot 9 ' £ - gl b i ! i r‘ ‘ P 3 e *\“ 7 - T - B \ g ~ el i i S W ii%2 - G O 7N 8 B O .._'us,“e 4 o / ; BT 7 S UV S < ¢ " £ o SIS S 3 5 A S §Qq X 4 e & 2% /Rl x. g # oD . ¥ % — ARy 1 . (1) B FJ ey » L $ ol e s £ o o . . ) % o 3 s 3 ' " % LAI G % »#.‘?“fi’» ol g S A o Harey HRube Covalessi, the star sculbpaw ¢ the Philsdeiphia Na $ als, wh rabibed the New York Giants of the pennant las! season, by pitehing tals shul it games aga ot Mclraw'e aggregation, has not shown v sty of mig Giart spirit 30 Y 57 this seaton. The big miner has At nearly every came he hag pitehed for the Quakers The oniy fas} ¢ form Cov yieghk: has show Wie against Cincinnats aboul two monrths ago, when he ghut syt the Reds allowing cnly four Bits When the Nativasl league s¢a s cpened last spring. Harry Covaletss WK wed upcn ‘as one of the ot promiking southpaws in the Bus ness Mis great work againgl New York was the tak atound the MRational league gircunt Covalexki has not wihreed ¢ the Prillies Tor over two months

N g a, Tgi PO PTN N ISN B O gMg T BACKSTOP KEEPS TAB O ~ WEAKNESSES OF HITTERS. Clifton of Wentern Association Team | Hax Faiiings of Mis Opponents ‘ : on Fite in Book A Arine } ¥ ‘-_' £ 1t ‘§ S wWER RRO ;,? At G evory naver i the Weostern association. Yesls ERIE ivoand safely in oan biside ponkel of the enit worn by Jesse OHBan the P 1 E Cate e ,g;;g,,(;;;g'f,;:, it ! Western assoviation teas It 18 gn derad b that Cliften has recelved of fers Troni eyery U e...'g I the lesgie whe nre desirous o olitaining e side information. but Be hap refused taoreveal any of the book s \%:%.-'Kiyfrv even to) in closest {riends. Phis tx Cliftons firsl year In or ganfzed bagebal Far several years e hi caughl on tndependent leans in western atid central Okisboma, but wae signed lasl spring by Manpager Howard Price of Gulhrie who logked gpon K S 8 B comer tie Las piore than muade good. AbGut 23 vears old noOR teacher in the \;;i-’r[ e he has develaped Into oene of e bes!? o in the Wegtern aissociation: being a wonderful thrivwer (o the bases, and probubly the fuktest wman on bises L solf in (he wsxociatlion . _. Whet CHfton loined the Guathrie tessd last year all the plavers in the ‘aseoctiatic: wWeres new to bl wit! vere few exrentions He wan of ¢ s, anxious fo kpow the weak posses of 1h x,'.z‘,r‘i\"!-’ batters, angd f{or this reason he carried with him to the varfous cities in the lesgue a smal note book, o wlhiich e wrote down the nanies of all the plavers, and as sooon 8% possible. noted after each name the wenkness of the man at bat This book he has carrfed with him the | entire season and when & new plaver | joing the team his name and his ba!-? ting weakness are added to the it | During the first days of the ' season, | when, between innings, the Guibrie ! manager observed Clifton on the far | end of the bench studiously scanning the pages of a small book he knew that he was stmply preparing for the men who would come to Lat during the next inning. Of course, after a few gumes with each team Clifton heid in his nind the weaknesses of the varicus batters, and during the last davs of the gn;n-i?z; has had to re fer to Lis note bHook but few times ! A FAVORITE IN MILWAUKEE LN - | £ \) . f Y T . - *“xty : | o LN LN 3 .\ L \:".« 1 i BA § | ¥/o & TahY | - %‘h‘m« f} | o ARI | ; SN ‘ i TR R o FI e B NN oo Cona el LR Tty el /o o o ] IR foiiviepsi iU eSst oY o %“%@%% AR SRR SNy | MR L R =R SR e R - NN R R e E Charley Moran, catcher for the Mil- { waukee American association team. He is popular with the fans of that | city. i - v bR L : x Giants to Winter at El Paso. l That the New York National league club will winter in El Paso, Tex, is } the announcement made by Col. . Winne of the Mexico Jockey club. In | preparation for their coming, he stat. ed that the Mexico club was construct. ing a diamond and erecting a handsome clubhouse on the club's grounds, near Juarez, for their use. He stated the Giants would tome at the close of

N e N et e o N N S N gl N N S S P S ONE OF THE GAME’'S VETERANS (S . if \i "' \ - o % A \ 2 ! . \ ‘ t R o o o L. George Davis has during the greater: part of the present season played the utility role with the Chicage White Sox. When Istell has been cut cf the game he has filled in at the initial sack and has shown that he is not yet a back number. - Davig has been piaying the national ‘gamc for so many years that nobody just remembers when he first broke in. 5 ONE TIME WHEN MANAGER - M'GUIRE MADE A MISTAKE Youngster Who Looked Them Over Right Focled Veteran Backstop B the First Day. . Jim McGulre, the new manager of the Cleveland Naps, has the reputa. ton of starting that feiwous saying, ‘He looks over the bint! better than anyone 1 bave ever come across but he can't hit ‘em” : This was back In_ 1888 when Chl CARD WAS U")"!!‘g out 8 recrult against MeGoire's team In the- east This voungster completely focled Jimmy. He came 1o bat and the first ball pltched he watched ft all the way, shook his lg(‘,'ui slightly when it drew near and didin't even move his bat I'he nmiplre called {t & bhall The next was the same way, and It was a ball “Gee!” sald Jim, afterwards: “that kKid had me gueseing [ had slways been leary of that kind ‘Céf fl.a‘:i!{!t‘r. who waits untll he gets one fust where he wants {t and then slams it over the fence” Well the plaver got hiz baze on balls then, and a couple more the same day., Jim was afraid to have his pitcher cut the plate On the following day, however, Mo tGiulre determined to give the youth the test. Hrooklyn had made five runs ‘n the second inning, and MeGuire wasn't afraid of consequences. So he signaled for a straight ball, right over the heart of the plate. It eame. and the recrult went through the same old motions, never made a try for it. “But he surely did look it over sweetly,” gald McGuire. He fanned four times thatday and lasted a week. “He was one of the few who had me bluffed the first day,” exclaimed McGuire later. .= GOSSIP OF THE DIAMOND . Christy Mathewson has shut out the Cincinnati club three times this season. - ‘ Catching is apparently good training for those who would be managers. Eight of the big league helmsmen are ‘or were catchers—Bresnahan, Sullivan, Lake, Stallings, Chance, Mack, Jennings and Smith (Boston Nationals). : v }. There is not an Eastern league team without a former big league star playting with it. Rochester has several of i- them, nearly all of whom are from Brooklyn; Buffalo has Davy Brain, George Smith and Dummy Taylor: fh‘ovidence has Anderson and Court ney: Toronto, Joe Kelly; Newark, Harry Wolverton and Joe McGinnity; Montreal, Jimmy Casey; Baltimore, Slagle, Lewis and Strang; Jersey City, Hanpifan and Moeller. : Walter ’Mara, stockholder of the Jersey City club, as well as a Philly director, thinks young Foster, the Skeeter shortstop, on whem Billy Mur. ray was said to have an option, is as fast as Earl Gardner, the Jjeraey City second-sacker. who goes 10 tic Yanke

BYARS OF THE ODIAMOND NOTED AS GREAT INFItLDERS VARY AN THEIR MOCTEMENTS. : SOME CARELESSLY GRACEFUL Lainie ts Good Examplie of Thia Kind, While Colling s Minutely Asgurate —Dakien Not Gracefu! Bul One of ihe Moat Reliable in the Game There sre &8 many kinds of threw, I as s_s..‘}‘ are ball playoers--<cany graczeful., fTasmiatap throwmers, iong sxtng thenwers--but whpiever mar be the sivivs of difflerent inlieldars n 0e rrafessional Fanky they, übe. 354 all Bave the sane purpose (G view, to pet ihie Bl fo the Dase ahead of (Be run fiay | : . } : Thers's DL Daklen for eXamipin, He is potl & pretiy throwsr. He lola 80 wilh & sidenfm and rather GRE UG T‘Al""f."."»" thrawers In the big 1 BEues Isahlen In an excelleont Jodgs of 4= taher, Bb Tioies R Lrows with s onderfnl evactnisn i Whep 1 romes 1o 8 Ihriaer shise methoet iz w Treal 1o the £se 5‘:7 its Erace speod and uperring aitline Bight Harery Sleinfelde the IRird baac man ol the werld's champlons, s an secomplished actor s has & power ful arm and while he rmakes Big sbare oF wikd throwe there bk bes :“‘:';:_).‘; Linr maonisiog of HIY and svend 10 Wis i He ig the prettiesr thrower from e third porner we have seen sitee HHL Nush's it ' _ There 8 oo more wonderfol thrower I either lndgie than Capt Mike Dneidin nl the Phijties Pwacdin is wne of lhe hardest threwers ig the ganie and one ol the (riest i sbillty W throw from any position s his sitOBE paimt bßoweter and | 4y i in lorating first bage withoul xirnighlening p to maxe the throw, or apparently lookiog shore he s throwing has stamped bl a 5 & marved Another attractive throwir I 8 Jine my Colline. Mis throws do pel go with the whigaing Bight (_:«f’ Steinfeldl's hut hede eastor and more graceful Nabody ever was Colline equal In natural grace. From the mowent he gous after n bali--up o the Al or scooping & ¢ifficult bunt--all of Col Hins” muscles and movements aie in ;--:-rf‘-z( harmony.: - i A thrower of the Dahlen type 18 George Davis. Davis® stele is more useful than ernamental He too, i 3 =& sidewhesler. He suggests the lnmber fng. rather than the !.i:i.:“:!" but makes no false movements, A ' Hal Chase] the brilliant first base man of the Yankees, has & marked mannerism in his throwing It is a peculiar It of the ball to & point fust over and close to the loft shouider, There iz an almoat lmperceptible Biteh or break in the movement of the arm just before the ball is thrown, then the hand shoots forward-just past the ear 4 5 ? The great Latole throws, as he doey evervihing else on the ball A«i? in an indifferent, careloss manner. He s the persopification of careless supple grace, There is rather & wide swesp of the arm, but with the movement so well attuned to the requlrement of the occasion that §t has (he vase of everything eise lajole does Quite different in bulid s Lalole's great rival in popular opinlon as . to who iz the greatest ball plaver In the country. Dutch Wagner is less symmetrical than massive, Massive though he is, he s boundiess in his activity When it comes to throwing the Duteh. man can vary his style lust as he ean’ for batting. Sometimes he tossés the ball—merely flonts it over (o firct base, as if 1o show bis contempt for the gpeed of the runner. Sometimes © “hen the time is.short his arm describes a swinging swishing arc, and then he cuts looge with gy ;ai farce, . Kid Elberfeld is & determined, vl elous thrower, who whips them across on a bine and uses bis arm fTor afl there §8 in it He bas a powerful aroy, and, although bhis almm may be had st times, the ball goes sirnight, whether into the firsl baseman's mitt, into the ground or Into the grand stand Hill Bradiey, the il and cangy third basemap, makes o lariat of his arm, throws with & swinging woetion. and has such s reach that he geoms to be handing the ball to the first baseman - Joee Tinker {8 anotlier who-might be described as ap enthusiastic thrower. He copveys the impression. that he would rather throw than eat Every bit of him is mixed up in the throwing motion, some way or other, and he goes at the job with the gusto of a hungry man tackling a hot meal . Theére 18 plenty of action in the throwing of Bobby Wallace, who how: - ever, appears o have more control over his movements, more finish than Tinker, . . Arthur Deviin, third baseman of the New York Glants, a very accurate and reliable thrower, gets the ball away without a great deal of exertion. He skips it across with a side arni move- ' ment, the arm remaining for a second in the air, as if it, like the eye, were following the flight of the ball. ; i Frank Chance, manager of the cham- ' pion Cubs, is another who takex it ieasy when h_e throws, the play of the gshoulder with the arm being compara- ' tively gentle, but so nicely balanced 'as to make the ball travel fast. Fred ' Tenney of the Giants throws with i_;nare of a push, the hand being on a level with the top of the head, and the forearm and upper arm at right aggles. : e ; L Is Slated for the Minors. It is rumored persistently that George Edward (Rube} Waddell, the famous left-handed pitcher of the St. Louis Browns, formerly of the Athletics, Pittsburg, Columbus, Louisville .and other teams, will be relegated to 8 minor league. The Louisville club of the American association has, it is said, secured the services of the erratic twirler, who has been the most wonderful left-handed pitcher baseowner of the Browns, is said to be ‘financially interested in the Louisville club, which lacently was purchased by a close friend of his, William Grayson Bt Yool E e

. ‘ . ‘ . o'o For the Best Ear of Corn To be Known as the N 1 (#(¢ellg3 National Corn Trophy ¥ o | To be Awarded at the § National Corn Exposition, Omaha, 5% § vy One sdred thomesrd n o (100 WY MY NE) eara of vy W ETe (,-» Wi in ke Seat .‘ st ¥e ', | é :* »\;:« 'r t~. w&: ’ -"’ “‘ ":'.lv".:\ 1 ;._~.; .V ') i tates aré teginnisg W iears bow ‘*. s & eces e aed 3o realise - Lot Yaiue ‘ : V Reiloge s Tonated Core Viakes Las giacad oorn among ¢ bt lirwemntie tloenis of da y Tare ’;:‘ “\\:‘."" ...3:: ; .:,; Aare ;,‘»*,“ 3 ..‘_‘ :~_ gok . , :":“vf"z' s ? ,:vnllowo‘vvunéwicn, " ‘:'m', n Rimia 4 £ 5 rON ‘& . . b i . cienad Lha petes a 4 19 Lo N aiiona 5 Eoxpeomit 2 5t niih ? T 8 L y LR ‘ ra 1 3 B LTt b mciiee oF the Katleatat Carn & awocints ’_ b thoada; B fore K ot = g B 12 Llfy - ¥ %y . 3 y ¢ & : v 3 53 g ¢ R sl ther w ¥ g a " ! twy Sifnereot T H o o S P oyt 3 % § 3 > LA e g a L * i . a 5 e tes it : o % e 8L % 1 Prof cesce Hodden w &t R Y e = ¥ * & "®log ‘.» o Bore %et st . 2 et of s swand : a varpime of W foutder of Voo WU LY W ot ) Increasing the Quality of Corn Used in Making Kellogg's -9 TOASTED CORN FLAKES ", g KELLOGG TOASTED CORN FLAKE (0., Battle Creek, Mich. Genuine "4 . . & Corn Flakes "S | - S X has this . % Sofs . - S i R Ignature eVI o N SSfl ’ ";t:f*;‘,g-:{:, oy F s "'*"j

A Bign of 1t The airship uanufaciurer over the w 5 t e I 4.11.?;5' maney. 1 nottes be snd bis lag iy are Oy "-': vory high ¥ ‘Muny a man Is the moviog picture . T GOVERNMENY HOMESTEADS e oand onebal! millen acres of farming wud grasing jand Wil Dbe cpened Tor settiement Yo the (hey enne River and Standlug Book indian Reservation October 4th to 234 Fast gatly through itradns ll'!;,r!‘%! ; Plattre and Aberdeen H. 12, the registiration poeints, via thie "“,;v.t;-fin & Xorth West s Ry Write for descriplive pamiph lets giving maps and full particulars to W B Kniskern P.T. M, C & N W. Ry. Chicago, NL By Automebile Up Mount Rainier, United giaten Kogineer Faugene Hick secker celebrated Independonce day by throwing open the government road in the Mount Ralger Natiomal park. Vebicles and horsemen pow have gn exeeilent thormghiare from Udewater o Marada falls, pear suow Hine 1 Paradise valley. Mr Rick geoker kave thatl autos . and sapoans AL wow maßy the Lrip with comfont The maximun grade on tke road s four per cent. Nearly a score of au towobiles, all loaded, . went to the ousniain s Women in Postal Service. The distinction of first appointing a waman postmaxier does not belong o America, nor i the employment of women in the postal service a pew idea. As varly as 1048 a woman pos? master was appointed to look after the malis of Braine le Comte, an important town of France. - ln the try ing times of the Thirty Years' war, the principal office In the postal sery lce of Europe was held by a woman, Alexandrine de Rue From 1828 1o 1646 she was in charge of the malls of the German empire, the Nether lands, Durgundy and - Lorraine Rie was kpown as & master general of the maila. o Awmerica, Elizabeth Harvey was the first th bold a place in the postal department Sbe bad charge of the letters in Portsmouth, N 1 in the beginning of the seventeenth cen tury. A-half century alterward Lydia Hill was placed 1n charge of the postgifice in Salem, Mass, PRESSED HARD 5 Cotffee's Weight on Oid Age. % When prominent men realize the in Jurious effects of coffee and the change in health that Postum can bring, thay Aare glad to lend thelr testimouny for the benhefit of others, A superintendent of public schools in Narth Carolina says: - "My muther since her early childhood, was an inveterate coffee drinker and had been. troubled with her beart for a number of years, and complained of that ‘weak all over’ feeling and sick stomach. v : “Some time ago I was making an official visit to a distant part of the country and took dinner with one of the merchants of the place. I no ticed a somewhat peculiar flavor of the coffee, and asked him concerning it.. He replied that it was Postum. *1 was so pleased with it, that after the meal was over, I bought a package to carry home with me, and had wife prepare some for the next meal. The whole family liked it so well, that we discontinued coffee and used Postuin dntirely. “1 had really been at times very anxfous concerning my mother's condition, but we noticed that after using Postum for a short time, she felt so much better than she did prior to its use, and had little trouble with her heart and no sick stomach; that the ‘headaches were not so frequent, and her general condition much improved. This continued until she was as well and hearty as the rest of us. “I know Postum has benefited my self and the other members of the family, but not in so marked a degree as in the case of my mother, as she was 8 victim of long standing.” . - Read “The Road to Wellvfllg," in ~ "Thore’sa P "som - Ever read the above l&t«fl A new SrL EEhuin, ‘rae ‘and full of Buman

WHY NOTT il/ A 2 ) T~ = e | e ; ‘."/',“f':v \‘;/\\’? \\&‘ . \ One of the preachers has asied ' members of hbs BETER itian i bring their cansry. bird bureh W Lol Iry 19 save » ¥ oof the parrols? _ WHAT 18 PAINT?® The patnt on a house 15 the extrame outside of the house The wood is simtdy & aliucy *n. itider A vier :‘flt i ax i should be. Unprob .(5,3 W will sot well witherand wentdy ¥ Par paint made of pure white lesd pnd linseed 01l ls an Invulterabis armor apAinst suth aad rain, heat-and eold Sueh paint protects and’ -breserves {’if'{ff_’i?fi,fl the perishalile wood with' s compiele metallic caning ) And the gutside of Ihe hegse ix the fooks of the housé A wellconsiruct (ed huliding may be ;:'«a'.éij. d ;‘,'.-. | ciated by lack of painting or by poor: painting i s . - National Lead Company have made it possible for every bullding owner to be absolutely sure of plure “fi;?e lead patn! before applying They do (this by putting upon évery package of their white lead their Dutch Boy - Painter trademark. That trademark is & complete guarantee. Not Ashamed of Economy. - i Discussing Hogland gnd the Enpglish ! from an American point of view, & re cent American writer in Enpglagd ob BETYER N ‘sx:-.!f-:. from the king of ;| England down, is cither gshamed. or afraid to be econommical lieré a man or & woman {8 thought to be g fool or a vulgarian who s not carsful of i‘iifl‘!}i,’i?;}"‘. while in - Amerkea our waivers bhave been clever epough (o xz;ak-* i appear that econniny I 8 meas, and as & nation we suffer acx ording: iy We are {ools to be fooled in ihis wmanper.” ) ) FREE LANDS IN WYOMING. Chicago & North Western Railway. - Send . for booklet telling how to o cure 320 acres of U. 8 Government lands In Wyoming free of cost: and describing various irrigation projecis “and the most approved methods of sclentific dry farming Homeseekers' { rates. Direct train service from Chicago. W.B. Kniskern, P.T. M., Chicago. s et : : Sub Rosa. . 5 7 ) . She—Bhe told me you told her that i secret I told you not to tell Her, - =- i He~—The mean- thipg! [ told her i not to tell you I told her. * . £ ! She—l promised her I wouldn't tell i you she told me, so don't tell her I itold you. oML S ; ) i . i A Rare Good Thing, - . “Am using ALLEN'S ‘}’M)&EASE. and : can truly say I would not have been Withi out it so long, had 1 known the rellef it : would give my aching feet. I think it & i rare good thing for anyone having sore {or tired feet.—Mrs. liamda‘ Holtwert, | Providence, R.- L Sold by all Druggists, Half Done. o : First Lady — Your husband has merely fainted. S Second Ditto—Dear, dear! these men always do things by halves. § Good for Sore Eyes, -~ ! for 100 {ean PETTIT'S EYE SALVE has | positively cured eye diseases everywhere. i All druggists or Howard Bros., Bufi:;?;‘,'»l\’.-Y.‘ , At a rose competition in Paris recently, 69 entirely new varieties of ! roses were exhibited. : i I¢’s the judgment of many smokers that Tewis' Single Binder sc¢ cigar equals in quality most loc cigars . Woman thinks she will be man’s superior when she gets her rights. - e e : [ ety e cures wind coilc. 25cabotile. { A dead beat always gets more credit

W. N CHICAGO, NO. 381900 f % _Posiltively cured by ;CARI ERSi these Little Pills. ' Ty A r erw e 3 m jreas | « praim, Lo i ‘ Sige . o flearty HiVER o o= i jely 2. Naw |l PILLS. [= /0 e 3 iaste t M £ W 3 !r' 3 i E's is ™He St B 3 3 ¥ P LIVER n}g; reguisis Lhe owela 3 re.y Vegeialia SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE, i et e D e i g e e o rums} Genuine Must Bear i Fac-Sim.!e Signature 3 ;Tfl! ’ | ot ‘ PILLS. 22 { ) BEFUSE SUBSTITUTES. Nothing Too Good for you. That's why we want you ‘. -~ " 8 TTN w—to take CASCARETS for liver and bowels. It's not advertising talk—but merit—the great, wonderful lasting merit-of CAOCARETS that we want you to know by trial, Then yvou'H have faith—and join the m:l--lions who keep well by CASCARIETS alone. 9 CASCARETS loc a box for a week's tréatment sl druggifts Bigges! seller in Ihe worikl Million bozcs a roouth. LIVE STOCK AND MISCELLANEOLS Electrotypes IN GREAT VARIETY FOR. SALE AT THE , LOWEST PRICES BY WESTERN NFMSPAPFR UNION 73 W. Adams Bt Chicago This Trade-mark £~ Fliminates All d: 48 l : , e > ncertainty -~ I - Py % in the purchase of ’ - it . vt el b o }At a rigis. o =~ t is an absolute P~ - R guarantee of pur(A o ity and quality. TR T X 4 For your own 8 == protection, see H that it is on the side of every keg of white lead ; you buy. NATIONAL LEAD COMPANY 1902 Trimity Buiding New Yok N INVESTMENT THAT WILL YIFL A 501 PER ANNUM., We u«n‘ ')”,”) WIOAS rsctwalerinihe United Nates in which Spanges €3O b grown and protedied they have been grawn from secd i these vory waters by the U 8 Government are worth 600 per pound and require i.- % 1 A’x»;f An cabages We own 230 acres on the rida Keys where frosta are impossibis, screse yields from E 0 1o B 0 yearly In Omanges 4.~,3‘.'.. Froit, Bariy Vegetables, et Crops mature in .‘;nBary. A small invesiment means indépendence and a Winter home in the sgricultural paradise of Amerira. Write for particulars. Best ¢ ‘J;"f'.'-,,n'.‘.‘. Address Chas Chase, Pres., Plorida Keys Sponge & Frot Co., T Hoval losurance Building, Chicago, 111. - O‘t}fupoptrdceaders vz oy e tised in its columns inn® upen || having what they ask for, refusing all | subdtitutes or imitations. | FREE HDHESTHDS 14,000 quarter sections, splendid fertile lands, open to settiers, on Cheyenne RHiver and Starding Rock Reservations, in Softh Dakota. Appiicants should register at Pierre October 4th to 22nd. Complete dispiay of products of open lands, exhibited at Gasbelt Exposition during registration. Pierre nearest point to lands, which are chiefly {n Plerre Land District, and ail filings must be made there. Unique diversions everyday. Ampie hotel accommodations. Address Plerre Board of Trade, Plerre, 8. D, : Safe! Can’t Cut Your Face NO STROPPING NO HONING ENOWN THE WORLD OVER P ~ ‘T ER'S - ’ ‘HAI BAI-SQ.. = m a isct growth e e A ’ s R 4 100 st Drugg