Walkerton Independent, Volume 33, Number 41, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 27 March 1908 — Page 2
I HOOSIER HAPPENINGS | Latest News of Interest from Various h Towns in Indiana
TAGGART FOR BRYAN. Chairman Says Indiana Delegation Will Be Solid for Nebraska Candidate. Indianapolis. — Thomas Taggart, chairman of the Democratic national committee, declared that William Jennings Bryan would be the choice of the Democratic national convention for president. The national chairman came out emphatically in his views reregarding Mr. Bryan. He has been somewhat nettled over gossip which contained a grain of criticism because he did not attend the Bryan banquet held at the Claypool hotel some time ago. “Mr. Bryan will undoubtedly be nominated by the convention,” said Mr. Taggart, “and Indiana will be solid for him.” The national chairman asserted that there were no grounds for the insinuations that at heart he is not an admirer of Bryan. “He will be nominated,” he said, “and will make a great race for the presidency. I am taking no part in this campaign for a governorship nomination,” he said. “I am, working neither for nor against any 'San didate. lam sure that the convention will nominate a good, square ticket. I want to say that it is both pleasant and amusing to me to see a lot of Indiana men who fought Mr. Bryan most bitterly in the campaigns of 1896 and 1900 now clamoring loudly in his interests. It is also gratifying to me. I am glad that the great light has finally shed its generous rays upon these gentlemen.” Takes Woman on Trial. Hartford City.—After keeping his intended wife on probation for two weeks, James Bradford applied for a marriage license, but was refused. The woman was Mrs. Lucy Tweedy. Bradford’s first wife died in an asylum about a year ago. He tired of single blessedness and cast about for another mate. In Mrs. Tweedy he believed he found his affinity, and he engaged her as his housekeeper for twa weeks with the understanding that if she proved satisfactory he would marry her. The clerk refused them a license, informing them that before they could secure the necessary papers they would have to appear before Judge Sturgis and have him pass upon their fitness to wed. Elkhart Man in Trouble. Elkhart. — Finding himself about to be cast aside by the woman whose charms had lured him to abandon his wife and child in Elkhart 13 months ago, Earl T. Sigerfoos, an employe of the Lake Shore railroad, created a scene at the New York Central depot in Rochester, N. Y„ and was arrested. He was arraigned in the police court there and was taken into custody by United States Marshal Vithman on the charge of opening mail not his own. Makes Charges of Bribery. Columbus.—Before the Bartholomew county council Walter Galbraith charged Nathan M. Wilson ■of Scottsburg, a tax ferret, with having accepted S6O as hush money in a recent tax collecting case. Mr. Wilson did not seem to catch the full meaning of Mr. Galbraith’s accusation at first, and asked that he repeat what he had said. This was done and it brought Wilson to his feet with a bound, a denial following. '
To Remove Plant. 'Greensburg.—The Hamilton Bros.’ canning plant, which has been ■operating .in this city for the last three years, is to be removed to Trafalgar. Inability to interest the .farmers in growing vegetables suit- : able for their purpose is the reason given by the proprietors for the removal. Conduits Are Too Expensive. Richmond. —Because of the fact that it would cost $75,000, the city authorities announced that the city’s wires now on Main street and required by ordinance to be removed, will not be placed in conduits, but put on poles elsewhere. Some of the private companies may follow’ suit. Prefers Prison to Farm. Terre Haute. —Offered the choice of a job on the farm or a term in the Boys’ Industrial School, Daniel Manuel told Judge Piety, in the Juven’’e court, that he preferred the Plainid Institution. Manuel was convict-
ed of petit larceny^iagePietFsentenced four other offenders. Lonely Neighbors Wed. Evansville— Because they pitied each other in their loneliness, Mrs Sarah Daide and Theodore Ditzer, each aged 73 years, were married. They had been next-door neighbors for years and grew tired looking through the windows across yards at each other.
Hold a Jubilee. Anderson. —The new factory committee and the officers of the Commercial club held a celeb*.ation on the success of the two movements at the Grand opera house. The sale of lots was started at the meeting. Aged Invalid Assaulted. 'Goshen. — While alone in her country home, Mrs. Anna Lantz, 78 years old. and an invalid, was aseaulted by an unknown man, who, under the guise of an itinerant doctor, gained admittance to the house. Miniature Twins Buried. Columbus. —The smallest children ever born in Bartholomew county were buried at Garland Brook cemetery. The twins were the son and daughter of Mr. and Mrs. James W. Perkinson of Garden City. Each weighed less than 2^ pounds, and a quart cup or cigar box made a comfortable bed for each. broker Held for Forgery. Frankfort—John D. Barton, a welliKnown citizen of this city, has been .Arrested on the charge of forgery.
SALOONISTS INVOKE THE LAW. I Demand Those of Their Number Who Violate Statutes Be Punished. > Columbus.—Behind closed doors In I the city building the Columbus saloon ■ keepers met with Mayor Cochrane and ’ Chief of Police Dryden and held a long conference. They asked the mayor i for protection from the local saloon ■ keepers who are not complying with i the agreement made some time ago i that all liquor laws of the state and • city be strictly kept. The saloonists wanted to know why the violators of । this agreement were not prosecuted. । They said that the law was not being enforced in this city on Sunday or any other time, and that those who refused to obey the law' w r ere stealing the business from them. It was the first time in the history of the city that the local saloon keepers have demanded that the law be enforced. O'Keefe Enters Race. Plymouth. — William O’Keefe, extreasurer of Marshall county, announced that he wa^ a candidate for the Democratic nomination for governor. It was while Mr. O’Keefe was county treasurer that he came into prominence by his contention that, the interest collected on public funds belongs to the people. He carried the matter to the last legislature and worked for the depositary measure, w’hich is now on the statute books. Cravens Quits Race. Madison. — Charging that the brewers and saloon men are in control of the state Democratic committee, that the “serpent has drawm its sinuous length” across the Fourth congressional district and that the liquor men favor Lincoln Dixon for renomination for congress, Joseph M. Cravens, in a statement, declares that he, in the interest of Democratic success at the polls this fall, will not be a candidate at the primaries this fall. Seek Assaulter’s Life. Indianapolis.—For more than an hour a mob of more than 500 men and boys surged around the dwelling of Douglas Todd, 1014 North West street, with angry demands for possession of Charles C. Atherton, who had, it is charged, a short time before criminally assaulted Todd’s nine-year-old daughter. The girl was greatly terrified and shocked, but was not injured. Ex-Saloonkeeper a Suicide. Danville.-j-J. T. Hayes arrived here with 1 the remains of his son, C. Edgar Hayes, who committed suicide by shooting in Lafayette. The body wat interred in the family burying ground here. “Ed” Hayes, as he was familiarly known, was always an eccentric character from his youth. । In early life he went west and became a cow'boy. He was once a saloonkeeper. “Dry” Town Gets Religion. Frankfort. — Following the great temperance wave w'hich resulted in this city’s giving an overwhelming majority in each ward against the liquor business there has come the greatest religious awakening ever experienced here. The services are being held at the First Christian church, of which Rev. Ernest J. Sias is the pastor.
Preachers Run Convention. Madison. —At the Republican Fifth I district convention, which nomi- ' nated Perry Bear for judge and , James Wright for prosecutor, Rev. | James W. Lanham presided. Rev. W. I W. Snyder nominated Bear, Rev. J. T. Lawson nominated Jarvis for prosecu- | tor and Rev. R. Ferguson nominated | Wright. All made speeches. Phone War Threatens City. Danville. —lt is apparent that Danville is soon to be involved in a telephone war, as a franchise has again been asked for by L he Farmers’ Telephone company. The board of towm trustees held up the application for investigation, as it has been charged that the Bell people are behind the farmers. “Embalmed Beef” Poisons Fifteen. ' Atlanta. —Fifteen people in At- • lanta were poisoned by eating canned dried beef. Those most seriously affected w'ere Mr. and Mrs. .Ernest Tomlinson and Mrs. John 1 a n
ously ill- Several physicians were with these three patients for more than a day. Takes Poison in Theater. Shelbvville. — The local theater was selected by George Platt as the place to end his life. He took I strychnine while sitting in a seat | watching the most exciting part in the first act of a play.
Tells of a Robbery. Fairmount.—Mrs. Jennie D. Swistler giving her home as Lexington, Va„ and telling to the local police a story of being robbed of more than S2OO at Columbus, O„ was given transportation to Marion after failing to fine employment here. New Bank Opens. New Washington. —The New Washington State bank, with a capital stock of $25,000, opened. Over 500 people were present and a banquet in honor of the event was given. Foster Is Renominated. Princeton. — Republicans of the First district, in convention here, renominated John H. Foster of Evansville as a candidate for congress. I There was no opposition candidate. Charles W. Fairbanks was indorsed . for presidential nomination.
Ask $19,000 Appropriation. South Bend. —In order to reorganize the police department of - South Bend, the board of public works i has asked for an appropriation of $19,000.
J WALKING SUIT' I 1 1 ’.K- \ 1 ’ ' ■ Tm ji < tow va Km in * W — Im I] fuMi 111 ll 1 fill fl -3 IVI H M fl 7# ll Iri Ir ' Ba * ! Ml--" B V ' I ! 1 u Simple In construction and becoming when . ..... tailor-suit of navy blue serge, which Is particular! ’'nA ' . jaunty little mg the morning and early afternoon hours. T1 ° » w dU a 1 cutaway model, with a seam at the center-back “A f onebutt ° ned a decided curve at the waistline, and the fronts Seam ! hu ' e the slight curve at the under-arm seam. The reve L nR ,o faced with black moire silk and trimmed along » k im^ki ai u silk braid. The skirt as shown is a 15-go, ? edgPS ^^ box-plait at the center-front; closing at the back i it daie . mode • , a The wide trimming band, which may be outlined u e< < T’V? 3 j with the braid. kt of the material striped For 36 bust the coat requires 5% yards of m ’ .>» . . .. yards 36 inches wide. 2^ yards 42 inches wide o n'* as Illustrated. % yard of silk 20 Inches wide and a, s v 2 t d ? e; For 26 waist the skirt, made of materia! with im" tO V™ inches wide, 5% yards 42 inches wide, or lU yard I ’^‘imi^s 1 yards 20 out nap, it needs 10 yards 20 inches wide. 5U vard c < nC . ‘ es Wlde ; or . "hb 42 inches wide, or 3% yards 54 inches wide; 2 yan i >ards 36 inches wide, 1% yards 42 inches wide, or 1 varc-? ln c hes 7/°' yard trimming bands. Width of lower edge about 44 yt c* lnches wide > extia - for V
NOVELTY IN GIRLS' NECKWEAR. ' Introduction of Colors Has Proved Welcome Innovation. The introduction of color is a novelty in neckwear for the smart giri. White, alone, and unadorned, is seldom to be found among the newest styles in neckwear. In shape little change is to be seen. The most popular is a high turnover, meeting at the top as well as at the bottom. In the outer collar, or turnover, however, there is no limit to variety. As tw’o tones are popular in dress materials, so have they made their way into collars. For mornings in the country, golfing, riding or motorI ing. there are pinks, blues and greens. I The edges are either scalloped or finI ished with narrow hemstitched lines. Many of the solid colored linen collars have fronts or tabs to match, the ends in white sprays of French embroidery. In this case the edge of the collar is scalloped in white, and there is a small flower design in each corner. MODISH CHAPEAU. } f > * I Pale Gfleen Felt with Pink Roses and Green Leaves.
Addition to Layette. Every one likes to make things for baby’s layette, and a miniature cluster of drawers may be made so easily and so very inexpensively that they are well worth trying. A pasteboard box, measuring five or six inches square, is selected, and six small jewel boxes are found to fit into it like drawers. The large box and the front of the small one are covered with silk aud white shoe buttons are sewed as handles on the latter and the gift is finished. It is intended, of course to use for the little details of - ’ the infant toilet, and some people I mark each box so that a glance at the same will tell the contents. The six > necessities are large and small safety . pins drawing strings, little mouth - rags, small bits of absorption cotton, • while nail scissors and gold studs may ■ be kept in the same drawer. .
Fortunate New Yorker. A New Yorker diving in the Passaic river to recover a diamond pin, which he found, had a mussel close its shell on his fingers. On smashing the molI lusk he found it contained a pearl | worth Si.ooo
USE F WORN WAISTS. xed Up J^Jttle, They Make Fine y^rset Covers. f 1 Most woven dislike to throw away lingerie waists even after they are too worn f |r further use because of the work h wished on these expensive and perishable things. There are Jai ds of pt -fectly good lace and embrodiery in them and the body part is hardly won,, but the collars are hopeless, the j ikes are worn and the sleeves and cuffs are split and worn. If you he re any waists of this description bi^ng them to view and see i it when the collars and yokes and sleeves are cut off they could not be made into perfectly beautiful corset covers. You will find at least one or two which can be made over. Rip out the sleeves and cut off the yoke to the depth which you desire your corset cover to be. Bind the top’ and arm holes with narrow bias bands and sew a row of beading and lace to the top and a row of lace in each arm hole. Now try it on and carefully mark the belt line. Remove it and cut anv material below the line away. Now gather it into a band and finish the band with a button and button hole. Mend any little places which need a stitch or two, and you will be rewarded with the daintiest and prettiest lingerie corset cover which you could hope to possess. __2 Y Ginuham Dresses. Gingham d Y,ses are mostlv all made with gu • )e and sleeves of linen, lace or nt sook. The necks of the ginghJ * iverbodices are cut square, and f ctimes trimmed with । made of the h«m- • handkerrm^r A it ea Gown. Picturesque # ss j s the note struck by a gracefu a gown j n a soft, deep rose red v eile®k W ith mushroom brown । chiffon, and a ^ a j n ^y mushroom net embroidered yK t h damask roses and foliage, and t A lule d with mink tail.
New A u tterfly Bows. Most c ^ a ™«ng and original bows to wear with! co n ars may be i made of net e ljg ec j w jth Valenciennes. > If a butterfly Idesign i s selected that requires to be to s h ow to best advantage, theffi nes t w hite hat wire may be purchased . in j sewn around where the lace and n j Q . n yhis will make : it both stiff an j attractive, and so long as the . g not allowed to bend out of oh ipe ^ QW always ! look fresh. When wasl time comes the whole thing n ay p e thrown into the tub, but, of < ourse n ot wrung out, ' l or the w * re ' rin break. Such bows as these aie deal f or traveling, for j they may he t out and allowed to dry ovei ni ^t. an(} w jj en t be time comes to put t tj em on the lace edging may be P u ^®i^out with the fingers, ; while the w vWmay be bent back to | keep the net Jp rea( j ou t. : Jl ;ating Sorrow. i We perceiv e no( . fu n y either our I wretchedness Qr Qur dangers, or the I- j fury of our en em i es> un til after events •] of extraordin. ~ y sorro wfulness. —Phil- | ipp Melanchtl OQ .
Wmes LIFE OF TRAPPER , WOODMAN SEES DEAD ANIMALS IN TRAPS AND KNOWS SOMETHING IS WRONG. FINDS MAN ILL AND STARVING Peter Lovejoy Comes on Little Cabin in Ravine, After Two Days’ Search, Where Fellowman Is Bedridden with Rheumatism. Woonga, Ont.—That the simple life is not always simple or filled with unalloyed joy was brought to the attention of Woonga villagers when they were called upon to go to Big Cat lake and bring Eugene Hardy, a trapper, who for nearly three weeks had been slowly starving because bedridden with an attack of rheumatism. That the man ’s alive to-day is considered remarkable. Hardy, who. In spite of his name, is anything but robust, was found by a fellow trapper through the merest chance, and wa aßj(kin such a wasted condition thef it y-aT?^os-j tak e him oy t of the woo^ for six days. By administering coar^£* broths made from venison and partridge bones, he finally strengthened his charge enough to move him over 20 miles of trails on a litter. From that point the trip to civilization was i made by ox and horse teams. Peter Lovejoy, the woodsman who fortunately came upon Hardy, was prospecting for a new camp when he discovered traps with dead animals in them. His experienced eye told I him that the animals had been dead from one to two weeks and they had probably been caught some days before death occurred. The latter fact was pretty conclusively established by the wasted condition of the bodies. Lovejoy immediately deducted that the owner of the traps had met with a mishap and he set out to find him. At the end of a two days’ search he heard a couple of wolves howling in a
sheltered ravine and a little later he came upon a small cabin built against a ledge of rock. There was no indication of human life about the place. Snow, untracked save by wolves and other marauders, covered the ground, but a pail turned upside down, showed that someone had placed it by the door long after the first snow had fallen. When Lovejoy opened the door, which had been securely caught with a drop latch, Hardy was seen lying on his bunk apparently dead. He was white, emaciated and still. The cabin itself was in disorder. Most of the rough furniture had been used for fuel and broken tables and chairs lay strewn near the fireplace. Some . potatoe skins and strips of deer hide 1 m < J VX*-. He Discovered Traps with Dead Animals.
were soaking in a rusty pail of snow water and a few grains of wheat lay on a hollow stone where an attempt had been made to grind them. A bear skin, three blankets and an old coat covered Hardy while another skin lay within easy reach. Lovejoy first determined that his fellow trapper was alive and then he set about to care for him. First he built a rousing fire and when this had begun to warm the cabin he went to a grove of spruce nearby and shot a coupi" o* A’- . also knocked over. With this supply of provisions and some coffee and jerked venison from his own sack he prepared a substantial meal. The principal dish was a rich but coarse soup, , and when a cupful had been forced
down Hardy’s throat he opened his eyes and looked about. “Rheumatism,” he said feebly, and then relapsed into a stupor from I which he did not arouse for several hours. On awakening he was fed more soup, but it was not until the following morning that he could give ian account of himself. In the night | wolves appeared, but they made no effort to enter the cabin. Hardy’s story when finally told was | pitiful in the extreme. He said that he had begun experiencing twinges of i rheumatism in one arm early in the I I fall, but as they did not increase he j I paid little attention to them. Three weeks before he was found he got soaked in a chilling rain and next morning was in a high fever. W hen j he tried to arise he was attacked by ‘ shooting pains in legs and arms, and I it was with great difficulty that he | could prepare his breakfast. He got j through with the ordeal after intense i suffering and managed to gather a lit- ■ tie wood. I Work was out of the question and Hardy remained in his bunk lor three | days, getting out only to feed himself and keep the tire burning. All this I time the fever kept up and the sup- ' ply of wood and provisions dimini ished. To make matters worse wolves । put In an appearance and howled । about the cabin both day and night.
making it dangerous for Hardy to creep out for wood. How the time passed after the first week he scarcely remembered. He said that when the wood gave out entirely he managed to break up some of the furniture by rolling a heavy rock up an inclined board and letting it fall on tables and chairs. With the food gone he resorted to unground grain, tallow candles and strips of deer hide boiled in snow water. Lovejoy saw he could not take the man out alone, so after getting supplies from his own camp, nine miles ! distant, he came here for help. Vol--1 unteers went into the woods and Hardy was carried out. He will probably be able to walk in a month. DOOMED COW TRIED TO BREAK INTO A CHURCH I ■ DISTRACTED MEMBER OF HERD, BLOCKED BY DOORS, VAULTS INTO PAROCHIAL HOUSE. Cleveland, O.—With a slaughter house at the end of the trail a distracted cow tried to break into a Sai She Stuck Her Muzzle Against the Door.
, church the other afternoon. Her efforts to climb a long pair of stairs bringing nothing but derision from a large crowd, the animal with a moo of despair fled in the direction of an insane asylum. When a drove of cattle, piloted by a man on horseback, padded out Broadway, pedestrians stood open-mouthed in astonishment, as the sight is not so common as in days gone by. The prospective steaks and half soles were orderly except for one white-and-tan cow. Somebody must have been reading Upton Sinclair to this gentle kine, because she clearly did not wish to be killed in a manner that would make a muss. Near Harvard street the cow sighted a church and. deploying from the common herd, started up the steps. The steps are long and not meant for bovine feet. She stuck her muzzle against the closed doors and the sad look in her soft, brown - eyes made the crowd promise themselves not to eat her. Her departure had not been noticed by the chaperon on horseback, but, to be on the safe side, the cow vaulted over a low iron fence and landed in the yard of the pastoral residence. Her moo then was one of triumph and the other members of the herd also clutched at this last straw. They spread out on the pavement just as the children of a nearby school were pouring out. The man on horseback had his own troubles. The children were squealing and at a respectful distance there was a deep fringe of grownups. By dint of much dashing about the herder got all his drove together ex- | cept the fugitive cow. She dashed i out of the pastor’s yard and started I on a run for the Newburg insane I asylum, in Bedford avenue. If the cow contemplated obtaining ! a stay of sentence on the ground of i insanity she was doomed to disappointment, as the man on horseback rounded her up. She took her place 1
at the head of the line and journeyed to the place where things happen to cows. Boys Peek on Girls’ Dance. Bloomington, Ind. —Forty-five young men of Indiana university are fearful of expulsion from the institution because they intruded on the sacred precincts of the annual panthygatric dance, an affair governed by the sorority co-eds. The young women at--^jiec^utYdns’were'taken to keep tne afr fair from prying masculine eyes. The 1 other night two score students rushed 5 in upon the betrousered girls, and ’ after being driven out peered in • through cracks under doors and holes 1 bored in the walls.
Two resourceful young men climbed to the attic, from which vantage ground they looked down upon a brilliant array of co-eds and costumes through ventilators in the ceiling. Upon leaving they dropped a polite note which read: “We enjoyed the dance, thank you.” Finally put to flight, the students . made off with all the refreshments, 1 consisting of dainty cakes, iced ■ fruits and sandwiches. To Race for Coffin as Prize. Winsted. Conn.—A race for a coffin, i not to see which will occupy it first, i but to determine the ownership, will ; be pulled off here Saturday, May 2, at I two p. m. The contestants are Charles Hyde ‘and Charles Millard, each of whom, i thinks he can cover seven miles in quicker time than the other. The ' men arranged for the contest, and ■ agreed that the loser shall buy the j 1 winner’s coffin. ■ The course selected is once around Kingland lake, go as you please, out ; lon foot. Hyde is about a foot shorter , ! than Millard, and >n the event of his losing, would have to pay more for a . coffin than would Millard in case he ; lost. Furthermore, Millard is emI ployed where casket trinn v ngs a. manufactured.
ixir ifSenna acts gently yet promptly on the bou els, cleanses the system e^ectu ally, assists one in oveiToming habitual constipation permanently. To get its beneficial ejects buy the genuine. FlQnu|actured by tbe California FlcSxuvpCo. SOLD BY LEADING DRUGGISTS- sO< p.-BOTTU Just mere shadows cf their former selves. Billion Dollar Grass. Most remarkable grass of the century. Good for three rousing crops annually. One lowa farmer on 100 acres sold $3,81*0.00 worth of seed and had 300 tons of hay besides. It is immense. Do try it. Fok 10c asd this notice send to the John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis.. to pav postage, etc., and they will mail you the only original seed catalog published in America with samples of Billion Dollar Grass, Macaroni Wheat, the sly miller mixer. Sainfoin the dry soil luxuriator. Victoria Rape, the 20c a ton areen food nrodneer. Silvpr Kin<r
a ivii git-eu i»ruuucer, Oliver iving Barley yielding 173 bu. per acre, etc., etc., etc. And if you send 14c we will add a package of new farm seed never before seen by you. John A. Salzer Seed Co., La Crosse, Wis. K. & W. Druggist’s Generous Offer. “I am sorry to disappoint you,” said the old-time druggist to the suitor for his daughter’s hand. ”1 can’t let you have Amy because I’ve promised her to the son of my partner. But I have five other daughters and give you something just as good.” important to Mothers. Examine carefully every bottle of CASTORIA a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that it Bears the Signature of In Use For Over 30 Years. • - The Kind You Have Always Bought Fer His “Animated Nature.” Goldsmith got $4,500 for his “Animated Nature.” Garfield Tea—a simple and satisfactory laxative! Composed of Herbs, it regulates liver and kidneys, overcomes constipation and brings Good Health. It’s easier for a woman to hold a strong man than her own tongue. ONLY ONE “BROMO QUININE” Tha. is LAXATIVE BROMO QUININE. Look lot the signature of E. W. GROVE. Used the World ever to Cure a Cold in One Day. 25^. After calling a prisoner down the judge is apt to send him up. Lewis’ Single Binder cigar—richest, most satisfying smoke on the market. Your dealer or Lewis’ Factory. Peoria, 111. Many a man is buried in oblivion long before he is dead. Mrs. 'Winslow’s Soothintr Syrup. For children teething, softens the guns, reduces inflammation, shays pain, cures wind collu. 25c a bottle. Many a man gets left by sticking to the right.
OqS The White Washer saves half the time and about all the a labor on wash day. It saves soap II too and washes the clothes snow [I white; and it does away with wet d feet and scalded hands and colds || and backaches. Why don’t you try the White Way? W e hare a:: t bo ) k i ■, t cat led Laundry Lessons which contains M lots of helpful in- M BPMSragJiw formation about pl | wasbi: ■ ar.l i: ning. We shall be kjETS s glad to send you |J Vh' a copy FREE for the asking. WHITE LILY MFG. CO. 1561 Rockingham Road, DAVENPORT, 10WA NORTH BUTTE EXTENSION Will be shipping ore i‘it wmVu’k^ioiVorJlS.iw before the ndof^e year. Sendforfnll informer l tion and quetations. Free on re.i'SMl. E, M. BUCHANAN & CO. investment SECURITIES i I 42 Broadway New York City
