Walkerton Independent, Volume 34, Number 24, Walkerton, St. Joseph County, 27 November 1908 — Page 2
WALKERTON INDEPENDENT W. A. ENDLEY, Publisher WALKERTON. - INDIANA | They can send the suffragettes to jail, but they don’t seem to be quite able to shut them up. Oregon produces a peacii weighing ' 17% ounces. Cleveland has hundreds I of ’em that average 125 pounds. ■ Prof. Starr denies that the Filipinos are lazy, and thus Chicago takes the credit for settling another world problem. It begins to look now as though balloonists fall to earth not less often but more easily than aviators of aeroplanes. Society, says Lady Randolph Churchill, has no brains. For society’s retort read that sentence without the commas. The New York Times says: “Old gas meters must go.” Must? Great Scott, do the old things ever do anything else? Exchange says: “Cranberries are a good liver corrective.” But what possessor of a good liver wants any corrections made? A Danish woman with 24 children has just landed in New York. A few more families like this from Denmark and the servant girl problem will be solved. The crown princess of Germany is colonel of the regiment in which her j husband is major. That’s about the i relative rank of ordinary married cou- ; pies in this country. ^b far there are 16 signs of a severe winter and only seven of a mild one. The old-fashioned forecasts are getting to be almost as mixed as those of the weather bureau. In a recent address to the people of Servia Crown Prince George said: “I hope that in a few days we shall be I able to give our lives for the king and ' the fatherland.” The crown prince I should take something for his liver ' and try to get over his pessimism. A foreigner at Stoughton is fined S3O ' for conducting a raffle. He should learn the American metnod, says the , Brockton Enterprise. He should run his raffle under the sanction of some church or society, call the prizes “donations” and snap his fingers at the law. It is all in the form, not the spirit, of the doing. The smallest orchid grown has an | imposing name. It is the Bulbophyl- ; lum Lermiscatoides. The B. L. would ; not make a buttonhole, as you can only see the blossom under a micro- j scope, and it will be best to stick to the royal gardenia for a manly decora- ’ tion. Nothing has ever proved superior to that ideally fragrant flower. Notice has been given to British subjects at Tangier, Morocco, by the British consulate that his majesty's government will refuse henceforth to advance money as ransom in the event 1 of their being captured by brigands either in or outside the town. This decision has been received with great 1 indignation by the British colony. New York has discovered a new and unique use for prisons. A man there who killed two very bad men in selfdefense pleaded guilty to manslaughter, so he might be sent to prison, out of reach of the “gang” of the men he killed. In other words, he saw no way of saving his ow-n life except to be locked up. As havens of refuge this is a decidedly new role for prisons to play. And the incident does not speak In trumpet praise for the metropolis’ ability to protect life. William M. Chase, at the request of ■ the Italian government, painted a portrait of himself this summer to hang i in the saloon of modern painters in the Uffizi palace in Florence. The picture was done at a single sitting of , three hours. It hangs opposite a portrait of John Singer Sargent, also I painted by the subject at the request of the government. The only other 1 portrait of an American painter in the gallery is that of G. P. A. Healy. The two saloons of painters in the palace contain the portraits of famous artists of all nations nearly all done by the artists themselves. The French concern which has ordered 50 aeroplanes of the type designed by American inventors refuses to explain as to what use the flying machines will be put, saying the mat- I ter is a secret, but it is intimated in ; dispatches from Paris that the air- ' ships will be for naval purposes, and ’ that hereafter such appliances may be expected to play an important part in war maneuvers on the water. And i those who are watching the experi- ; meats at Fort Myer, Va., are certain the army must have flying machines. Things are being revolutionized rapidly. No, the new comet isn’t bob-tailed. : Its caudal appendage is not “naked to ■ the visible eye,” as Mr. Aldrich remarked to the telescope man who had his instrument turned on Venus, but it can be detected through a powerful telescope. The New York Mail maintains that “Bulgaria” is the name of a sleeping i car. The Richmond Times-Dispatch | is sure that “Herzegovina” is an order of goulash. Then Bosnia is a glass j of slivervitz. And this encourages the ; Cleveland Leader to ask: Which can , we Servia? The government contemplates a new issue of postage stamps. We don’t care what color they change to but let them be mighty careful about the : flavor. A professor of archaeology at Yal‘ gave his bride a necklace of jewels and pendants dating 300 years B. C , Other learned people will envy the bride, but her women acquaintances will probably pity her for having to ; wear such an old-fashioned ornament. Real happiness, as supposed to be the 1 aim of presents, depends, after all, on ■ the point of view. I .
JOHN D. IS QUIZZED SHARP CROSS-EXAMINATION OF STANDARD OIL CHIEF. i IMMENSE PROFITS SHOWN Earnings of the Octopus in 1907 Were About sßo,ooo.ooo—Witness’ Memory Concerning Rebates Is Not Good. New York. — For over five hours Friday John D. Rockefeller, witness for the defense in the government suit to dissolve the Standard Oil Company, faced an unceasing fire of questions from the federal counsel, Frank B. Kellogg, and when adjournment was taken until Monday the head of the oil combine was still being cross-examined on the charges that the company in its early days accepted rebates to the disadvantage of its rivals. Mr. Rockefeller’s cross-examination will probably not be concluded until late Tuesday, as Mr. Kellogg made it known that he would inquire into every detail of the company’s business. Enormous Earnings Shown. The enormous earning power of the oil combination was sharply brought out in Friday’s hearing when Mr. Rockefeller, after stating that the Standard had paid dividends ...mounting to $40,000,000 in 1907, said it had earned as much more and that this was added to the company’s surplus, which was stated by the government’s counsel to be $300,000,000. It was further stated by Mr. Kellog that the company within the last eight years had earned nearly half a billion dollars. The course of Mr. Rockefeller’s testimony in the hands of government counsel ran not so smoothly as on Thursday when he told his story under the direction of friendly counsel, but the rapid fire interrogations of the prosecutor were always met with unshaken imperturbability and readiness to answer except when, as he explained: “It is quite impossible for me to remember after 35 years. I do not recall.” Remembers Only One Rebate. Mr. Rockefeller was questioned closely regarding rebates which the Standard was charged with receiving, but with the exception of the agreement with the Pennsylvania railroad, which, Mr. Rockefeller explained, gave the Standard a rebate because it effected an equalization of oil shipments, he could not recall any other rebates, though he thought it was likely that he might have heard of it at the time. The president of the Standard Oil Company when he learned that the government counsel would not be able to conclude the cross-examination by Saturday night, suggested an adjournment until Monday, which was agreed to by counsel. Cross-Examined by Kellogg. New York. — With the telling of the story of the first score of years of the industrial development of the Standard Oil Company, the testimony of John D. Rockefeller, president of the oil combine, on direct examination in the federal suit to dissolve the Standard Company, was brought to an unexpected close Thursday afternoon. The head of the Standard told of the processes and causes of the company’s growth up to the trust agreement of 1882 and, after he identified the parties to that agreement, counsel for the defense announced that Mr. Rockefeller had concluded his direct testimony and requested an adjournment until Friday. Friday found Mr. Rockefeller on the witness stand under the sharp fire of the cross-examination of Frank B. Kellogg, special assistant attorney general, prosecuting the case for the government. The cross-examination by the government will be confined to the period from 1562 to 1882, except where the testimony has direct bearing on developments in the company's affairs in its later period. New Revolution in Hayti. Port an Prince, Hayti.—Gen. Antoine Simon, commander of the south for 20 years, having refused to comply with the recent request of President Nord Alexis to come to Port au Prince and confer with the president on the political situation, has been declared a rebel. The revolutionary movement appears to be serious, as Gen. Simon is in the possession of arms and ammunition. Communication with the south is interrupted. Tries to Burn Mother Alive. Muscatine, la. — Enraged because his widowed mother would not give him money with which to pay his excessive gambling debts, George Dalton, aged 20, set fire to the house and his mother was barely rescued by neighbors. Dalton is being hunted with hounds and it is feared that he may be lynched. Earth Shocks in Portugal. Lisbon. —Earth shocks were experienced Sunday at Alhandra, Alverca, Villafranca and Arruda, small towns near Lisbon. The residents were thrown into a panic, but there were no casualties. The walls of some of the houses were badly cracked. San Juan Arch Unveiled. Santiago, Cuba. —The dedication and unveiling of a memorial arch on San Juan hill in honor of the American, Cuban and Spanish soldiers who fell in battle in 1898 took place Sunday. Actress Weds Viscount’s Heir. London. —Another romance of the stage was recorded Thursday afternoon in the marriage of Eileen Orme, a musical comedy actress, to the Hon. Morris Hood, heir of Viscount Bridport. Miss Orme is 18 years old. Woman Convicted of Murder. Sioux City, la. —Mrs. Mary Harbour, accused of the murder of Miss Rose Adams, her foster daughter, .was Thursday found guilty of murder in the second degree. The jury deliberated 17 hours.
AWFUL BLAST FATAL 10 25 GAS EXPLOSION IN BROOKLYN TEARS UP A STREET. One Woman, Five Children and About Nineteen Workmen Killed—Remarkable Escape of Four Laborers. — New York. — Twenty-five persona are believed to have lost their lives : in an explosion of gas which tore j up a great section of Gold street, j Brooklyn. Friday. It is definitely known that 15 persons were buried under the hundreds of tons of earth and timber that were thrown into the air bj' the explosion, and ten more persons are reported as missing. The exact number of dead cannot be determined yet. for those working to recover the entombed bodies must dig through 50 feet of dirt, rock and a tangle of pipes and timbers. The explosion occurred in a 50-foot deep excavation that had been made in Gold street between York and Front streets where a water main was being laid. The gas main recently sprung a leak and in a manner unknown a spark came in contact with escaping gas. Immediately there was a terrific explosion that lifted the surface of the street for half a block in both directions and hurled dirt, paving stones and debris into the air. Gold street Was crowded with school children when the explosion oc- I curred and that scores of children j were not killed or injured was re- , markable. A woman and three children were almost opposite the excavation when the earth crumbled under their feet and they were swept down into the hole under tons of wreckage. Two other children were on the opposite side of the street when the sidewalk caved in and they lost their lives. Only four of the men working in the excavation escaped, and their es- I cape was remarkable. These men were digging near the opening of a four-foot sewer and the force of the explosion blew them to the entrance of it. Arthur Strand was hurled farthest in and he pulled the other men after him. Water from the broken main began to pour into the sewer and the four men, in danger of being drowned, ran to the river where there was an outlet to the sewer. MAYOR TOM JOHNSON BROKE. Fortune Is Gone and He Must Give Up His Mansion. Cleveland, O. —Mayor Tom L. Johnson, who for years has been credited with posession of a very large fortune, ' Thursday announced that he had lost ' everything and would be compelled to 1 ■ fife? r • they- ' A.- 'XX•■••A A Av'’;®: Mayor Tom L. Johnson. give up his beautiful home on Euclid avenue and move into smaller and less expensive quarters. The mayor also stated that he would give up his automobiles and other luxuries because he could no longer afford to keep them. His fortune was wrecked, he declared, by his devotion to the affairs of the estate of his dead brother Albert, who was heavily interested in traction properties in the east. Destructive Forest Fires. Evansville, Ind. — The forest fires in Dubois county, Indiana, that have peen raging for the past four days, were started by several schoolboys, who burned a pile of leaves in the woods near the Kyana public school. The fires have spread over hundreds of acres of valuable , timber lands and are still burning. ! Farmers are fighting to save their homes from destruction. The drought in southern Indiana has prevailed for 174 days and is the worst in the recollection of the oldest inhabitants. Bank in Missouri Robbed. Sedalia, Mo.—The bank of Sweet Springs, at Sweet Springs, Saline county, was robbed of $5,500 in currency at three o'clock Sunday morning by professional cracksmen who blew open the vault with dynamite. Veteran Ohio Jurist Dies. Chillicothe, O. —Judge Thaddeus A. Minshall. aged 75 years, an ex-justice of the supreme court of Ohio, died here Sunday. He was one of Ohio’s ablest jurists and was Chillicothe’s leading citizen. Missionary Dies in Egypt. Philadelphia.—Word was received . here Friday of the death in Cairo, Egypt of Rev. William Harvey, a missionary for the United Presbyterian church since 18G5. His relatives reside near Detroit. Lawton’s Son Gets Commission. Washington.—Marley Lawton, a son of the late Maj. Gen. Henry W. Law- I ton, who was killed in the Philippine j islands in 1900, has been appointed | second lieutenant of the Philippine scouts. |
LITERARY OPPORTUNITY. ... Volume • x > TROUGH^’' 11 READV 1
CHILDREN "• Wl PLAGUE FOUR HAV ?I^AND MOUTH DISEASE । DANVILLE, PA. Officials Believ O oread of Contagion Will Be Ch» id—Cattle Shipments Are Stopped. Washington—Alarming results following the outbreak of a contagious foot and mouth disease in New York and Pennsylvania, causing those states to be quarantined against interstate shipments of cattle, etc., were shown Friday in ad vices which reached Secretary of Agriculture Wilson, stating that four children in Danville, Pa., had contracted the disease. A rigid investigation is in progress in Danville and elsewhere to determine whether others have become similarly affected. The officials believe that the spread of the contagion will be checked, although admitting that the situation is grave and will require energetic and concerted action by the state and federal authorities. New York. —• Cattle shipments to foreign ports from New York and Philadelphia were brought to an abrupt close Friday by the cattle quarantine established In this state and in Pennsylvania on account of the outbreak of the foot and mouth disease. The quarantine does not affect ports outside of New York and Philadelphia, except as to cattle from the two states affected by the ruling. Western cattle may still be shipped abroad from either Boston or Baltimore. Buffalo, N. Y. — Business at the stock yards here was completely tied up when at a meeting of the East Buffalo Livestock association Friday nieht the members adopted a resolu tion calling on the Railroads to cancel all orders for shiidnems of cattle or swine to or through Buffalo. The association formally approved the stringent measures of quarantine used by Chief Melvin of Washington and Com missioner Pearson of the state department of agriculture. Two cases of foot and mouth disease were found Friday on a Niagara county farm and one in feet cd herd in Erie county was destroyed. London. — Confidence is expressed here that the energetic action of the American officials soon will stamp out the foot and mouth disease. Officials are not alarmed concerning the possibility of a beef shortage. In this connection John Burns, president of the local government board, called attention to the rapidly growing consumption in England of home-grown cattle. Bryan Campaign Cost $619,410. Chicago.—The Democratic national committee received in all $620,644.77 and spent $619,410.06 during the recent presidential campaign, leaving a balance in hand of $1,234.71. So reads a statement made public by the officers of the committee and the itemized statement will be filed for record in the office of the secretary of state of New York in compliance with the resolution adopted by the national committee last July. The statement includes a certificate of audit by Myron D. King, auditor of the national committee. Vast Quantity of Whisky Burned. Louisville, Ky.—Two warehouses of the Tom Moore Distilling Company of Bardstown', in which were stored 15,000 barrels—of whisky, were burned late Wednesday, entailing a loss to the firm of about $409,000. The loss to the government is $750,000. Hundred Girls Have Bad Fall. Dayton, O.—A platform bearing over 100 girls employed at the Mercantile Corporation’s plant in this city collapsed Friday afternoon, while the young women were being photographed. Fourteen were injured Sad Tragedy in New York. New York. —Lying side by side on the floor of their apartment in the Bronx, the bodies of Charles A. Walters, an aged veteran of the civil war, and his daughter, Emma, 40 years old, were found Sunday. The room was filled with gas and all the cocks of a gas stove were turned on. It is the theory of the coroner that Miss Walters died first and that her death was due to heart disease. Later, the coroner thinks, the father entered and upon beholding the body of his daughter, committed suicide. Finds But Cannot Have Her Child. Bellingham, Wash. —After prosecuting a search for her child for 13 years, finding the boy in Bellingham last June the adopted son of A. W. Deming, Miss Maude Fields of St. Louis failed Friday to secure possession of the child. Judge De Tiere of the superior court gave the boy into the charge of its adopted parents. Richmond Publisher Dead. Richmond. Va. —Joseph Bryan, owner of the Richmond Times-Dispatch, died suddenly Friday night.
500 LIVES ARE IN DANGER. Two Steamers in Serious Collision Near New York. New York.—The lives of more than 500 persons were imperiled Sunday when the fruit steamer Admiral Dewey, inward bound from Jamaica, crashed into the steamer Mount Desert, outward bound from Bay Ridge for the fishing banks. The Admiral Dewey, coming suddenly out of a fog bank, struck the Mount Desert almost amidships, opening a gash in the fishing vessel that extended from the upper deck to the water’s edge. There were 450 passengers, including 20 women and six children, on the Mount Desert and the Admiral Dewey carried 45 passengers. In addition there were the crews of the two steamers. Panic immediately followed the collision and it was due to the prompt action of Capt. Davidson of the Dewey that a catastrophe was averted, for the passengers on the fishing steamer began piling over the guard rails of that vessel and leaped for the deck of the Admiral Dewey, Capt. Davidson kept the vessels together until all the passengers had got aboard his steamer. BELL COMPANIES ENJOINED. Mustn’t Interfere with Business of Independent Concerns. Cleveland. O.—United States Judge Taylor granted an injunction against the American Telephone & Telegraph Company (Bell long distance system) and the Central Union Telephone Company (Bell company operating in Ohio, Indiana and Illinois), restraining them from interfering with the business of the independent companies operating in those and adjoining states. The injunction was granted upon 1 the application of Clarence Brown, i general counsel, and James S. Brailey, , Jr., president of the United States ' Telephone Company, which is the independent long distance telephone com- ; pany operating in Ohio and adjoining states, in a suit brought by that company. BIG LABOR BODIES MEET. Building Trades and Railroad Employes Convene at Denver. Denver. —Two national labor bodies, adjuncts to the American Federation of Labor, convened here Monday. These two organizations, representing over 4,000,000 men. are the building trades and railroad employes departments, the latter an organization of 500,000 m^n formed in Denver on Saturday last. The build- i ing trades department represents ' about 600,000 men, and the first session was called to order by President James Kirby of Chicago, a leader in the United Brotherhood of Carpenters | and Joiners. H. B. Perham, president of the Order of Railway Telegraphers, called the railway employes together, and P. J. Flannery of Chicago, president of the International Freight Handlers, was the sem-etury. Insane Farmer Kills Nephew. Danville, Ky.—Hugh Thompson, a wealthy young farmer, became suddenly insane Thursday and shot and killed his nephew, Frederick Garrison, aged 18 years. The boy after being shot fired one shot at his uncle, the i bullet lodging in a lower limb. The wound, it is believed, will prove fatal ■ because of the large amount of blood I lost. Thompson had only recently been released from an insane asylum. Injured During Initiation. Lincoln Neb. —Gov-elect A. C. Shallenberger sustained a fractured leg while being initiated as a member of the Shriners Wednesday night. Naval Officers Court-Martialed. Manila—A court-martial convened on the battleship Louisiana Friday for the purpose of trying Lieut. Com- ! mander Jewell of the Ixmisiana and j Lieut. Bowers of the Rhode Island on i charges of personal misconduct dur- i ing the visit of the fleet to Japan. Forest Fires in Southern Illinois. Evansville, Ind. —Information received from Grayville and Carmi, 111., states that forest fires have been raging in southern Illinois and the damage has been serious. Immense Tobacco Deal Closed. Louisville, Ky.—The big deal between the American Tobacco Company and the Burley Tobacco society for the ; 1906 and part of the 1907 crops of tobacco was closed Thursday. The transaction, said to he the largest of its kind ever put through, involves nearly 80.000.000 pounds of tobacco held in the pool by the Burley Tobac- i co society and an outlay of something | like $14,000,000 on the part of the American Tobacco company, practical- ! ly all of this money being placed in cir- i cillation at once in central Kentucky. |
THIRTY LIVES LOST TWO TORNADOES SWEEP OVER WESTERN ARKANSAS. PROPERTY LOSS IS GREAT Many Towns Partly Laid in Ruins by the Furious Storms—Details Are Slow in Coming In. Little Rock, Ark.—Two tornadoes, one north and the other south-bound, swept over west Arkansas Monday afternoon, destroying many lives and much property. All means of communication were destroyed and only indefinite reports have come from the : ■ districts visited by the tornado. From j ■ reports received at least thirty lives were lost. The property loss will reach ■ hundreds of thousands of dollars. One tornado started in the extreme j j southwestern part of the slate and ' ' went north, following the second tier 1 of counties from the western bound- ; ary line. The other started in the northwestern corner of the state and I went south. The counties through which the tor- 1 nado passed are Lafayette, Columbia, I Miller, Pike, Howard, Hempstead, I ■ Montgomery, Yell, Pope, Johnson, Franklin and Carroll. According to advices received, the I storm was at its height when it : ' swept through Piney, a German set- i tlement on the Iron Mountain rail- ' । road between Knoxville and London । ; Late reports from Russellville, the nearest town with which communica- I । tion can be had, are that between twelve and twenty persons were killed and about thirty injured at that place. . Five lives are also reported to have i been lost ten miles from Mulberry, where one of the tornadoes did great ' damage. The storms also visited Ozark, whence nothing has been heard yet; j Lodi, near Texarkana, where three ' buildings were destroyed and a woman injured; Lewisville, in Lafayette county, where great damage was done to timber and fences, and several buildings destroyed; Berryville, where eight people were injured but not seriously, and a number of residences were wrecked; Palmos, where great damage is reported, and Jethro and j Wallersville, which towns are reported j to have been completely wrecked. Some reports stated that nothing had been left in many districts, that homes, timber, buildings, fences and everything had been uproc»ed and blown to bits. A report from Fort Smith states that it seemed that 25 lives are lost in towns outside of Piney and Mulberry. This dispatch declares the destruction of the town of Cravens was complete. Four persons were killed, two fatally injured and eight missing at that place. IMITATION DUEL IS FATAL. One Lad Shot Dead by Another in Michigan. Marquette, Mich.—While playing duel on a hunting trip, Robert Warren. 13 years old, of Marquette, was shot and killed by Robert Miller, 15 years old. At the coroner’s inquest it developed that the boys played at duelling, pretending to shoot each other as a practical demonstration to younger companions of how affairs are settled on field of honor. They pulled the trigger of their guns, supposing the weapons to be empty. Miller’s contained a shell, and Warren fell dead, shot through the head. CUTS OFF A WOMAN'S HEAD. Shocking Murder Committed by Man at Carona, Kan. Pittsburg, Kan. —Following a neighborhood quarrel at Carona, 20 miles south of here, Hezekiah Stradler, a carpenter aged 20 years, slashed Mrs. ' Butts, his next-door neighbor, with a razor, cutting her head entirely off. The murdered woman was housekeeper for Stradler’s cousin, who lived next door. Trouble started between Stradler’s wife and Mrs. Butts, following an old ’ieighborhood feud. Missouri’s Vote All for Taft. Jefferson City, Mo— Gov. Joseph W. I Folk Monday afternoon decided that, under the Missouri statute, all the electoral votes of the state should go to William H. Taft. This decision was made in spite of the fact that Brannock, the Bryan elector for the t.xteenth congressional district, received more votes than Kiel, the second Republican elector-at-large, who received the lowest vote on the Republican electoral ticket. Capt. Patrick Henry Is Dead. Clarksville, Tenn. —Capt. Patrick Henry, who spent much time in Washington for 20 years as the official representative of the levee board of the Mississippi river, died at his home here early Monday. He was a collateral relative of Patrick Henry of the revolutionary period, and was 62 i years old. Priest Stricken at Mass. Shenandoah. Pa. —Stricken with apoplexy after reading mass Monday, Rev. Henry F. O'Reilly, for the last । 40 years rector of the Church of the । Anunciation here, died within a few | minutes. He was a native of Ireland j and was 69 years old. Harlan Revisits His Alma Mater. Lexington, Ky.—After an absence of years. Justice John M. Harlan of the United States supreme court returned Monday to do honor to his alma mater, Transylria'a university. Death Bed Bride Gets $25,009. Seattle, Wash. —One-half interest in property valued at $50,000 was award- । ed to Mrs. Hanna Adler, widow of Fred Adler, the wealthy manufacturer, who died in New York city September 16, 1907, four hours after he had wedded his fiancee. Negro Lynched in South Carolina. Charleston. S. C. —Jim Gilmore, a negro, was taken from the guard house at Luray, a small town in Hampton county, this state, Mem J .:.y nd lynched.
F Wb This woman says she was saved from an operation by Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compounds LenaV. Henry, of Norristown, Ga., writes to Mrs. Pinkham: “I suffered untold misery from female troubles. My doctor said an operation was the only chance 1 had, and I dreaded it almost as much as death. “Cine day I read how other women had been cured by Lydia E. Pinkham s Vegetable Compound, and I decided to try it. Before I had taken the first bottle I was be’ter, and now I am entirely cured. “ Every woman suffering with any female trouble should take Lydia E. Pinkham’s Vegetable Compound ” FACTS FOR SICK WO For thirty years Lydia E.‘ 1 maham’s Vegetable Compound, made from roots and herbs, has been the standard remedy for female ills, and has positively cured thousands of women who have been troubled with displacements, inflammation, ulceration, fibroid tumors, irregularities, periodic pains, backache, that bear-ing-down feeling, flatulency, indigestion, dizziness or nervous prostration. Why don’t you try it ? Mrs. Pinkham invites all sick women to write her for advice. She has guided thousands to health. Address, Lynn, Mass. THE DIFFERENCE. Jones—You never hear of a fat criminal, do you? Bones—Certainly not. Look how difficult it would be for a stout person to stoop to anything low! Immigration and Emigration. In nine months of the current year 310,000 aliens came to this country and 570.000 foreign-born people went back to Europe. During the similar period of last year there arrived in America 1,135,000 aliens, while thosewho departed from these shores numbered only 330,000. BjAWKIAg! SICK HEADACHE A A JPositively cured by CARTERS theseLitiiepn,s - They also relieve Distressfrom Dyspepsia, InITO digestion and Too Hearty | y R Eating-. A perfect remma 1 a O edy for Dizziness, Nau* » I sea, Drowsiness, Bad WM ISR Taste in the Mouth, Coated Tongue, Pain in th® Side, TORPID LIVER. They regulate the Bowels. Purely Vegetable. SMALL PILL. SMALL DOSE. SMALL PRICE. PA Genuine Must Bear uAnltno Fac-Simile Signature ^ittle _ “ | IVER | PILLS. ■Mi REFUSE SUBSTITUTES. ■^^^COM Bl NATION I f A $3 Razor a C O - $2 g a j r Strop A 25c Dressing • l !': for Strop U*tb«r) All for $2 M Ifci Cs»m>3lim * it X 6.25 ill Postpaid anvwbere in America. Money bark i' l a&tisfactory after SO dare trial Specify yeur choice cf Rare rs — “WOSTEN- Wgß||j 7 EOLM. "BIPE,- ’T X L. -WADE A BUTCHER." “SHEFFIELD.- “WILLIAM ELLIOTT’ AU of J them bigteal grade full hollow gro'-nd. roacy WHUi for uee. No eecosd qualities a*, any pnea II I THE BAIR RAZOR CO., Limited, Agts.W 316-317-31 S-319 320 Shkl Bldg., Indianapolis, Ini » g j i Quick relief and a RhoomatisißSi? discovered for this terrible disease. Does not put the stomach, kidneys or other organs out of order. Send 25c. fcr sample bottle. ENSIGN REMEDIES CO.. Battle Creek. Mlcb. H “ 'A vk™ Sportsmen’s Supplies Sua « 3s vk WE SAVE YOU money Ph S i Kaulog fir ;:e. stamp Sfl UI ' aMPOWELL&CLEMENTCO. wS H 410 St, Cw.-i.cMJ, (X sis sg ? i SB I R Gunther’s Confectionery 212 State Street, Chicago, HL "GET FJONEY QUicir By shipping your POriTKV.V EA ! . F<;<. S and BUTTER to ■ COYNE BROS.. 160 So. Water St,, CHICAGO, t Wrlte for prices and tags. |
