Illinois News Index

McHenry Plaindealer (McHenry, IL), 17 Jan 1907, p. 6

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mem >man *ged 106 Issuing It !• never too Itto to physician says sm. Now watch Cor jay* lias plenty of «bh, but the so good that It dislikes the H._ ~ of being forced to an the coal ISWlth ft Wf l It Is a sad thing to hear of $500 Worth of ostrich feathers going tip In •llpEe when they make a smell no pMpiasanter than can he produced from burning the plumage of an ordinary 40-cent barn-yard fowl. One of the high officials of the Sfckndard Oil company admitted on the witness stand recently that he didn't know what his salary was. He must have a patient and extraordinary un­ obtrusive wife to have allowed htm to go on in this foolish way for so Ions & time. John Howard Larcombe, 86 years old, a veteran employe of the pension oSce and the man who taught Andrew Carnegie telegraphy, has just died at Belles ville, Md. When he retired from office some months ago Mr. Carnegie Save him a pension of $100 a month *|r life. The natives of the Sandwich Islands estimate women by their weight Hie Chinese require them to have de­ formed feet and black teeth. A girl tatooed sky-blue and wear a nose ring to satisfy a South Sea Islander. Certain African princes re- Quire their brides to have their teeth filed into the semblance of a saw. By placing a negative at the focus Jf'-dt a telescope during the hours of the """" nltfrt Miss Harriet S. Leavitt, one of upabers of the Harvard photo* examination force, has recently 30 new variable stars, latest additions to the known points of light make a total stars which Miss Leavitt has •During his school career the kaiser -Was a model of the studious German Ttiiif&. He took his place as an or- dt|(jiry pupil in the public school at Capful, and studied and played with scholars. At the final ex- he was, indeed, only tenth t; but then he was two years i his companions, anil was .^considered to have done so Hilt his tutor was immediately ifc ireoent report of the bureau of it is shown that 93 per Of the enlisted men in the navy ||MSve-born Americans, and that pie year 43 per cent, of the jWWffl tor reenlistment did re- It is highly desirable that th* behind the. gun, 1» a man of ex»- and it Is best that the man 'pay be called upon to fight be born under the flag that | floats above his ship. ;wtu> jamm tvLLeN hanged by mob AT CHARLE* eitY, IA. e, a prominent was traveling througfr In- White strolling around he met an old colored wom- semed to be an Interesting and asked: "Amity, how people are there In this cityf Wress considered gravely for a and then said: "Well, j'r^ckon there's about 25,000, in- e white folks." Col. Barns- lie thereupon saw a first it- ^of how much depends upon nttwipefait. ^Oklahoma's star will be added to the .July 4 next year if the formal of the state to the union before that time. The §HM navy departments have upon the arrangement of the to accommodate the new one, |ftke it easy to add two more Mexico and Arizona are ad- The plan provides for four | eight stars each, and two rows stars each. The rows of ::Jjure the second and the fifth, lips of seven can be made into eight when the other terri- Bdmitted, and the arrange- then be absolutely regular. flpost powerful Individual in So-day is Yuan Shi Kai, the of Tientsin. He is virtually itor of the empire, having as the aged empress dowager. No dtivee is issued from Peking without kftliiproval. He is credited with hav- tng caused the Chinese government We the recent anti-opium decree. Is a man of great force of char- . and a believer in progress. He iken many steps to modernize his ry. Numerous attempts have t ^dade to assassinate him. It is that through his efforts China transformed into a progressive Caoutchouc was introduced to by M. De la Condamine on ff§furii from Peru in 1736. "It Its discoverer, "a most sin- lin, as much by-the use to Is devoted as by its nature, a problem to ear moat t lists." that when a letter writer muck-rake the editor he al* in with, "I have been a Ider of your paper, and considered you just and Avery Mcllhenny, recently service commls- Oftly 36 years old, has around the earth, has in Africa and real (though small) war. ft former Hough Rider, of the richest men in Louis- is giving King Leopold the hi# Congo Interview Altgbting SMASH WAY INTO Ministers, Women and Leading Cltt* . sens in Crowd--Victim Hnj|.s,:,, * filled His Spouse aa» * '! ' Young Step-Son. ; Charles City, la. -- James Cul- len, a white man GO years old, who had murdered his wife and ybung Step- son, was taken from the jail here Wednesday night by a mob and hanged from the bridge that crosses tt 3 Cedar river. The lynchers, who were headed by some of the leading! citizens of the town, made no attempt to disguise themselves. The summary execution, was wit­ nessed by more than 1,000 persons. in­ cluding; soml ryomen and children and four ministers. A prayer service pre­ ceded the lynching. The crowd gathered about the Jail at nine o'clock. With a railroad iron they battered down the door and with picks and axes qu&kly cut through the wall and secured possession of the prisoner. Immediately after hanging Cullea the crowd dispersed. Peeved He Would Escape Death. Judging from the expressions about town the, hanging was largely the re­ sult of the commutation granted to Louis Busse, the Bremer county wife murderer. Busse, who murdered his wife within 15 miles of Charles city, was twice granted reprieves and then his sentence was commuted to life im-( prlsomnent. One of Cullen's sons, it is said, was hanged by a mob in -Missouri near Jop- lin a dozen years ago tor horse steal­ ing. Cullen had been married three times, his two former wives leaving him. His brother, Richard Cullen, a bilker, from Warren, 111., who was in the eity, did not hear of the lynching tmtll it was all over. Men who participated In the hang­ ing stated Wednesday night that they did not fear prosecution. They said that they disliked mob violence but considered that if lynching was ever justifiable, It was In the case of Cul­ len. They declared that the estate of $60,000 which he had accumulated as a contractor here, would have been used to fight his case In the courts and that it would be years before he would have been punished, if ever. James Cullen, « wealthy contractor, killed his wife and his lfi-year-old £tep- son at four o'clock Wednesday morn­ ing, at his home on Bast Clark street, and attempted to commit suicide, but failed. He first murdered his wife with a large knife and then went to where the boy, James Eastman, was steeping. When the lad felt the knits touch his throat he battled bravely with his step-father and gained possession of the weapon. Boarders In the house were aroused, as was also Cnllen's brother. He with Prof. Rudd and Royal Jacobs took the knife away from Cullen and the boy started to town to summon the mar­ shal. As he went out the front door Cullen shot him twice, killing him in­ stantly. He then attempted to kill himself by shooting. Lynchers to Be Arrested. Des Moines, la.--Gov. A. B. Cum- Thursday ordered immediate prosecution of as many as possible of the mob that lynched a murderer at Charles City. The leaden of the band •re known and will be arrested. and OewAM Are Well. rrn^mmumm **** with « broken shaftbit sa*s 1* rMto* m G*o**tf*bay> the .£1* crowof $3 person* Mi aboard ai% «%* STOVE WORKS DESTROYED ̂ Fire Loss of Detroit. f76CMX» HI Detroit, Mich.--Fire gutted a great portion of the large plant of the Mich­ igan Stove woifcs on Jefferson ave­ nue Tuesday eyening, causing a loss estimated at f|t0,060, while the en< tire plant was insured for but $380,000. Upwards of 15,060 gas and coal stoves were ruined, and of the tre­ mendous plant covering an area of ten or twelve acres only the office buildings, the foundries and part of the storage building were saved, less than two-thirds of the entire establish­ ment. SeVeral firemen were Jnjured by falling debris and half a dospn spec­ tators were hurt when the horses at­ tached to one of the fire department wagons ran away into the enormous crowd that lined the street the burning plant. Shaw of Persia Dead. Teheran, Persia. -- Official an­ nouncement of the death of the shah at 11 o'clock Tuesday night, waa made at nine o'clock Wednesday morning from the office of the grand vizier. The' news of the death of the shah was recel people. Jived quietly by the Bsd 8leet 8torm in Southwest. ; . Kansas City, Mo.--An unusually "845- vere sleet storm in western Kansas and throughout Oklahoma and Indian territory Friday crippled wires sooty from Kansas City. Fire Causes Loaa of $1,000,000. l<ancaster, Pa.--A fire which start­ ed in the tobacco warehouse of S. R. Moss & Co., here Friday from the fall­ ing of an electric arc light spread to adjoining property and caused ft estimated at $1,000,000. Hundreds Die by Tidal Wave. The Hague.--A tidal wave has devas­ tated some of the Dutch East Indian islands south of Achin. The loss is very great. According to a brief of­ ficial dispatch 300 persona perished cm the Island of Tana. Tragedy In Idaho Town. Rigby, Idaho.--Miss Irene Miller, ft teacher in the public schools at Lew* isvllle, near here, was shot and killed Wednesday night by Prof. II F. Com principal of the schools, who then committed suicide. ' / Smith to be MIchigan's SilMltor. Lansing, Mich.--Congressaftfttt Wil­ liam Alden Smith of Grai^ Aftplds was nominated Thursday night to suc­ ceed United States Senator R. A. Al r TMa K egiulv^leut,to ***]«* hk * ported "all This asi from Capt. e w«« received direct A. Harvey by the own­ ers. the New York sad Porto Rico Steamship company, Friday evening. ItWay's cable reported ttiat the 1<hk overdue steamer had reach©d the for­ tified harbor in tow of the German steamer Bllsaheth Rlckmers. bat ft message from the master himself had been eagerly awaited by Genera! Man­ ager Mooney of the line and still more anxiously by the captain's wife in Brooklyn. Mr. Mooney stated that ft represent­ ative of the company would sail on the steamer Bermudlan for Bermuda Saturday, furnish bonds for the in­ demnity of the Elizabeth Rickmers and immediately after arrange for ft tow to bring the Ponee to New York. The passengers will be ofTered the option of coming to New York on the Ponce or taking passage on the next Quebec Steamship company's steam­ er leaving the islands toe New York. The Ponce, it appears, was but two days' sail from New York when her machinery was disabled. She sailed from Ponce. Porto Rico, December 26, and on December 30 broke fh$ Shaft ia the stern tube. Roughly estimated, the vessel was then 369 miles from this port which ordinarily she would have made on New'Year's day. Help­ less, the Ponce drifted for ten days, her signals of distress being picked up by the German steamer on Janu­ ary 8. The Rickmers, Capt. Walsen, had failed two days earlier from Phil- adelpbift for Nagasaki and Shimon- esekl. * M 4HANQMAN* PAVIOFF SLAIN. Csirto Advocate General Is Sitot Down by Assassin. St. Petersburg.--Lieut. Gen. Vladi­ mir Pavloff, the military procurator or advocate general, generally known since the days of the late parliament as "Hangman Pavloff," from the epi­ thet constantly applied to him by the radical deputies, was shot and killed at ten o'clock Wednesday morning while walking In the garden of the chief military court building near the Moika canal. The assassin, who was disguised as a military elerk, was captured after ft long chase through the crowded city stveets, dazing which he fired, about 40 shots from two revolvers which he carried, killing a policemftn and wounding a small boy. Vice Admiral Doubassoff, ex-gov­ ernor general of Moscow and at pres­ ent a member of the council of empire, has received notification that another attempt upon his life will be.made. Lodz, Russian Poland.--Col. Patko Andrieff, chief of the gendarmes of the Lodz district, was shot and killed Thursday on Poludnlowa street. An infantry patrol fired a volley «fc the assassin, but he escaped. CONFESSES TO THC COX MURDER Prisoner in Kentucky Case Implicates jMirgls and Csliahan. • " Jackson, Ky:--John Smith, one of the men under indictment for the murder of Dr. B. D. Cox, has made a confession, which hi now in the hands of Commonwealth Attorney Jouett. Smith names ex-Judge Hargls and ex- Sheriff Edward Callahan as moving spirits in the crime. He says that Hargis and Callahan induced himv to enter the conspiracy against Cox, making promises to see that he was acquitted and to give him a Job. He declares Callahan gave him $100 after the killing, saying "Jim" Hargis sent it to him. f Governor Demands Bade Taxes. Springfield, 111. -- Governor Den- efen sent a special me--ago to the legislature Thursday recommending an emergency appropriation of $150,- 000 for the purpose oi preparation and trial of the suit against the Illinois Central Railway company to collect back taxes claimed to be due the atate under it8 charter provision requiring the payment of 7 per cent, of Its gross earnings yearly to the state. To Probe Senator Bailiff, '̂ n, Tex.--A resolutioa was In­ troduced Friday in the senate of the Texas legislature, signed by 14 mem­ bers out of 30 composing that body, demanding an investigation of Senfttor Bailey and Attorney General Davidson and their connection with the read- mission of the Waters-Pierce Oil com* pany into Texas after its ejection un­ der the anti-trust laws. Decapitates His MothejMn-Law. Milwaukee.--George C. Wftpp, sup* posed to be insane, Thursday killed Mra. Fredericka Freund, his mother- In-law, by catling off her head with a rkzor. He confessed the crime, say- iAg his mother-in-law talked too much. Archbishop Montgomery Dies. Saa frftnclsco.--Archbishop ,Mont- gomery died Thur^day afternoon. He was operated on for appendicitis a few days ago. He rallied after the operation and was believed to be re- eovering when a relapse occurred. Aged Woman Pound Dead |n Woods. ft; *3kwd. Minn.--Iters. Maria ack, : a»ed 70 years, wtte of Thomas NQVfck, living near fielding, was ftmnd dead in the woods about two miles from her home Tuesday evening. She had, it is thought, become lost ' Bank,.. Robbers Oe* §SOO. Bonfield, 111.--Severlag communlcar tlon with the owUrtde world by cut' tingall tel̂ grapli and tele îone wires, mjt1" day and made oft with over WOO. by loiar mil wise conditions will become so treme as to be impracticable of real; ":V : jilM' wftti an expenditure of the president says, the if V ' * t: // Ruth is working overtime on all the railroads and If congress can redeoe his labore lt cant be done too quickly. , •i NEAR II HOUSE TWO congressmen have spir­ ITED ALTERCATION. Galnss of Tennessee Tries to Attaok Mahon of Pennsylvania, But : Wght le Averted. j / •Wishttrgtbn.--The houaf latV l^rs* day took on the appearance of the iclosing days 04 the Fifty-fifth con- gross, commonly fctiowtt as the "War congress," when altercations between members were frequent. Late in the afternoon Mr. Gaines of Tennessee and Mr. Mahon of Penn­ sylvania were only presented from meeting in a personal encounter by the intervention of other members. Mr. Gaines was making a speech on his bill to "dock" members' pay for absence from the f house and he charged Mr. Mahon with being absent from the house 95 per cent, of 'the time. - ..'.-r-., Mr. Mahon thundered: ^ ^ "Any man who charges me with being away from this house 95 per cent, of the time tells an untruth." Mr. Gaines started down Jhe aisle from his seat. "No man canted me I lie!" exclaimed Mr. Gaines. When order had been tutored Mr. Mahon again arose. Having been cau­ tioned by the chair that it was against the rules to address a mem­ ber $i the second person, he meas­ ured his words, saying . heff - would speak in the "fourth person." He then said: "The charge of the gentleman from Tennessee that I am away from this house 95 per cent, of fipgr time ifr a deliberate falsehood." With a rush Mr. Gaines reached tbe center of the chamber, making dl- retcly toward the gentleman from Pennsylvania, insisting as he went thftt no man could call him a liar without personal chastisement. The rush of Mr. Gaines upon his adversary brought a dozen members before the speaker's desk. Messrs. OUie James of Kentucky, Taylor of Alabama, Bell of Georgia, Williams of Mississippi, the minority leader, and Stafford of Wisconsin* grabbed Gaines, who, resisting vigorously, was bom# back to Mb seat. The friends of Messrs. Gaines and Mahon engaged in an effort to bring about a reconciliation in which they were auccessful. Both gentlemen apologized, Mr. Mahon rtished across the chamber and the two clasped .hands amid loud applause. ^ WORKMEN DIE IN HOT METAL. TOBACCO TRU8T 10 GUILTY. Its Companies Con Lioeriee Paste Trial. In York.---A Jury In the tTtttted States circuit court Thursday re­ turned a verdict In the so-called "to­ bacco trust" trial, which had berafon healing before Judge Hough for the past'three weeks. The Jury acquitted Kftrl Jungbluth and Howard E. Young On all the counts charging conspiracy In restraint of trade and combining to control the licorice paste industry, but found the MacAndrews & Forbes com­ pany and the J. S. Young company guilty on two counts, one of forming an Illegal combination and the other of being a monopoly. Hie corporations named, which were Joint defendants with Jung­ bluth and Young, were acquitted of the charge of conspiracy. Gives His Life for a Boy. lUverdale, Mich.--Elbert W. Gibson, principal of the- schools here, wks drowned Friday while trying to save 14-year-old Harry Valance, who bad broken through the ice while skatingr .Gibson leaves a widow and six chil­ dren. . Explosion K'fls Wilmington, IlI.~Ti»o men were killed and more than a soore of per­ sons injured, inclikfiMf several wom­ en, by an explosion Of aeetylene gas at a card party in Woodman's hall here. Japanese Squadron Not Coming. Tokip.--The Japanese government has decided that on aoqennt of anti- Japanese agitation o|;, 'tiW! Pacific ooaat that the training *i|gin>j(1 ron # not visit the Pacific coast, but will go as far as Honolulu only. > . ym*:i Mail Is Frightened to Death. Philadelphia.--Albert. Lindsay was frlgjitfened to deati an£- wergt feverely burned by OC Mten metal In the ~ at Baldwin's Locom< 1 Tharsday. '* 5 . . . v . ' . . • Over Score of Llvef Loat In a Pitts­ b u r g f u r n a c e . - Pittsburg, Pal.' -- the explosion of molten metal at the Eliza steel furnaces of the Jones A Laughlin's company, limited, the charred trunks of seven men are at the morgue and 12 badly burned and crippled employes are in hospitals, while auctions workers, with crowbars* picks and shovels are digging through a mass of steel and cinders for the bodies of several more who are miss­ ing. It is thought 22 altogether met death. Of the injured tSTee will probably dW» A E. L. Meissler, the superintendent, thinks the Accident «wag caused by the loosening of one of the steel bands about the bottom of the fur­ nace. It fell, he says^fcnd that made that portion of the shell weak. The great pressure of the steel charge and gas agaitfst the weak point re- sult^WII^*§i^:#li^r.iei^ an4 al- lowing the avalanche of .molten steel to- Thirty-five men were at work about the furnace.. One man alone of the 36, George Knox, escaped injury. The others not a<&auttted for Were con­ sumed by the avrful fiery flood. Cbarle* Bennett, a yard brekeman, who waa passing near the furnace on a freight train when the expioelon occurred, describes what saw, as follows: .. v . •; » _ .1. ̂ 11 1.. -Mi . n ; MANY LlllUIS BUT ONE CONTHOL Facts About Harriman 8ystem Drawn from J. C. Stubbs. ' Chicago.-^Determined efforts were made by the attorneys Representing the government be|6rt the interstate commerce commimft^lRi^^ to sho# that the Unfcm I^MtfUc said South­ ern Pacific ownersh^Jtar^ ISt* Harri­ man comprised a ooniblnation which restricted competition. J. C. Stales, opfrating director of the Harriman sysf^n of railroad and steamship lines, wits on the witness stand for houra under the closest ques­ tioning by. Attorney F. B. Kellogg. According to the oplnibn expressed by Mr. Kell<%g the government had made oni a clear case. "The evidence of Mr. Stubbs s^ows conclusively,^ he said, "that there ia no competition between the two sys­ tems; that both are controlled by the same set of officials; that rates are the same, and the general agencies In this part of the country have been consolidated." \ Mr. Stubbs, however, maintained that the control of the Union Pacific ',:>K out appears only one tr^tfoj^the river, t^ pnggitertt eowwiy. T^meimmpt ^ shouif.pi:iKi$ the •ewiWW-5 sln$i|'tie b^eak of November 4 is one for Mtwre consideration. * WOflK FOR PEACE. ̂ to Organixe Branch o#- il̂ ile F e d e r a t i o n i n C h i c a g o . " / ' -l#bor and capital, tfie of Chicago wad their enlpley- ers, met Saturdity . nlght on ,ooai- mon ground and The pro­ ject of settling thin* ^ifljculties by C(Mo^ation broaght/thein together at the residence of Mrs. Potter Palme*, 100 Sake. Shore drive. It was a ctmference under the am. pices of the National Civic F< and was attended by more than persons. ,Perhaps half of them were trade unionists and probably every labor organization in the city was rep­ resented. The object of the meetf$s was the organieation of a branc& ef the Civic Federation for Chicago and the central west. As a result of the conference mee^lng wlll be held In Chicago this wee|| ** wWch a western branch o1! the jKattoiial federation will be organ­ ized.- €%lcago, according to the plan, "will become the central from which tile efforts of the Nati^Ml Civic fedeiv atlon will be tiiroughout the central and mtddle western stats«^«i .they have beenjmret^fore in thcy^ltr- «m and 'New jM^aild '.<ilate8. - /TV' Chaa. W. Bowman, 1st Iieut ,. _-- more •' ,=t ̂ a taeee m columns ip# writ* -.'vf 4 the . curatf̂ Jtower* t .canaI ̂- "'"v, . •• Nashville and, New York Men offer Figures Lower Than Anticipated. Washington.--Proposals opened by the canal commission for t|6 en- of the Pitting a» hadbeen tire 00; canal ed by Several belleved|Ni' mated be tract p: The Id1 liam J. dl: fhy by tlm cofiiolsiHon. ' propo«l,,t|^^fWll- Anson M. Bangs o£jlfir York, who offered to do the work- for 6.76 per cent, of the estimated cost, falls evpn lower than had beea hoped for. Grantr lng that the eettmate of $140,000,006 for*the constm<s|ioii of the canal la accurate, the p&muaoration of the Oli- ver-Bangs -comblhation would be $9,- 460,000. Much discussion was caused by the great differonce in the only four bids received, at:fliey ranged from 6.75 per cent to t$ per cent DAKOTA COAL FAMIN< * J Grfftr'llNofthern Presldwt Again ' f: Urged to Relieve It. Washlngton.-~Tbe interstate com­ merce commission again urged Presi­ dent James J. Hill of the 0r«at North­ ern railroad to further effortf to re- by the Southern Pacific did not affect j lieve the fuel famine in North Dakota, competition between the two systems. { Commissioner Harlan, moved.by ft-W- ' tor from Senator HanslMrong ̂ Aselar- Hopkins Defends 8moot. j lng: conditions were growing worse Washington.---Senator Hopkins spoke • an\t that starvati<»i might be added to In favor of Reed Smoot Friday. He j the sufferings from cold, wired to took the position that'senators were | Preslde»t l|ill that the latter was ex« not federal officeflk to the extent that pected to do all in his power, "regard- the senate could impeach them for high crimes or misdemeanors. If a senator was to be, punished, it rpurt be done by the state, or -federal courts. r'/-'.'r1 Must Pay Quake Losses. Hamburg.--The North German Fire Insurance oompany, according to a de cislon rendered by the local court in a. test caee, most pay the ̂losses Incurred as a result of the San Francisco earth­ quake of last year. Curtis to Be Kansas Senator. Topeka, Kan.--Congressman Charles Curtis was nominated for tJnited States senator to succeed Senator B^osna, by the eaucas of Republican legislators Friday night Hie action of the caucus is equivalent to election. Millionaire's Son Is Kilted. ^CWcago.--Walter 8. Bogle, Jr., *on of the millionaire president of the Cregeent Coal company, waa UUed by a pistol ahot Friday in a roOal at his home. Membeii of the family, declare the death was accidental. Santa Fe Railway Indicted. lm Angeles, Cal.y-The federal fAQd Jpry* Wednesday reamed two IndictmenU againat the Santa Fe £t*% w»d company, containing 7« oouats. The railroad "is charged with giving abates on lime. Tired of th«/'Rareblt Dream." New York-fPinning to his clothes ;a note WHTlng that 'life is a j "*: J«|ert A. Chittenden, an itilited suicide by ii iil' in his apartmrata <m West ty-nlnth street. * i •̂ ̂expense or other sacriflee." Officer Leads Mob. Chelsea, Mich.--Armed with a heavy sledgehammer, State Treasurer Glac­ ier of Michigan led 200 husky em­ ployes of hi* stove works here In a raid on tiK> siot machines in the sa­ loons and poolrooms *of the town. A couple of hours later every gambling device in town vfes in a pile of blaz­ ing r&use on the main corners of the town. wasefeee Result «f a Feud, Clneicnati, O.--As a result of ft two f&nF>qawrr9l over the Hne fenoe be* tween the farms of Newton and two brothers by name at which culminated in a counter, Newton Mitchmo was shot and Instantly brother-in-law, Redmond, through the right hand. wast; assisting. Mitcbmore. are loeated cm Oie ttdla ... within three miles of the city llttlts. The Fisher brothers have been ftr ̂ rested. E.*cu^ fatally injured land men were woimded . _ englnea on the CM- ll^Alton railroad collided during • iiiiW, • The Hill road Flke iwrl iHngs othfl^ 3#> Railroad Man Dead. . Laredo, Te*a«--Capt. Thomas W. It of the tarn* ray, died at his residence tn tWs city ear :̂.IWl̂ r;.Aftei;;̂ f»«- ten of P- ' « / h a v e by Itt use throat, myaelt ef m imnt t&dlrtcik»ta*iutmit nh>(wrrsr HtiiMttetHut "Members of f iiiy -- ^ lt fbr ttke ailments. "We laiw mending it to our friends." \ " --Chas. W. Bowman, i . A*k Y°ur^giMt /or^Prte Penta^r:/' , aiso SAVES HER VISITING CARDS, t - ' • -- ' . .. f' One Wenian'a Pet Economy Certainly - ' ft̂ Jueer One. Women are provrbially nlnnrdly ? on one or two points; every woman ̂ that ever existed had son* pet eoon ̂ lay, no. matter how • t mar he In some respae .̂ Tlmp'a, A •" the woman who spend* J&undreda. dollars on imported gimpp, but hafeH ̂ . y" ' to give up one penny ter t p^per -'off" pins. Tlte^piper^ating person who>- drops into department stores and ho-; . V. . . teis to: borrow stationery rather than . 1, \ < • apand ^y vpxmfr «pcm the oo»mp4H3r If always la *tth «s; we all tatos1 th* stamp stealer and the match borrow­ er; but the visiting-card economizer •, is a new brand of woman who-e*iet»: v'̂ o n l y I n t h e m o s t M e l u s i v e n c M y . 1 ̂ S o n i g g a r d l y i s s h e o n t h e p o i n t 0 * 4 v f / her visiting cards that she dem them back from her intimate IrH froln her mere acquaintances she steals them at an opportune moment; " ̂; when the servant's back hl torned, Cr|, "JJht I": w h e n t h e m i s t r e s s h « s l e f t t h e r o o m t . [ J , - ^ fflie puts them slyly hack into her. ** card case. By a clevw amies of ma- v, 5'J« 1 i d p u l a t l o n a I t i a s a i d s h e c a n m a k e ; / . / ' - - 1M of them go aa far aa 600 went be-1\ torn » »<• 1 " t ' ' ... i*-j* W BCALV ERUPTION oil BODY. . ' ** ^ ^ Doctors and Remsdles Frufttsaai Buf-i'?-1̂ . 10 Years --Completely Cured by Cuticura. *Who« I waa about nine year* oldi/f ' mf small sores appeared on each M »y ; r:f lower limbs. I araratched than "with a-r brass pin and shortly afterwards both . ̂ ̂ - of those limbs became so Mre that| ; | V : : ̂ I could scarcely walk. When I ,hadg „ ̂ ' been auffering for about a month the sore* hegan to heU, but Maly erWtlqn* a»pej*«ed where bnd been. •From that tfnie on- p; t'i? Wl^LI Wia troubled by -r-1" 1teldiH( that, until I becaate kccus-J ;j,. t o m e d t o I t , I w o u l d s c r a t c h t h e * 0 ^ 1 # . . X until the blood began to flow. Thl* would stop the Itching for a few' vtsf ' £ days, but scaly places would nppaar f/'.' again and the itching would 90000- pany them. After I suffered about ten year* I made a renewed effort to * v ; effect a eure»>. Tlie eraiwi-W'this time had appeared on every part of { .1 my body except my face and bands. The. best doctors in-my ty adviapd me to use' •" do8«i and a salve. X .i^wlea v .. ^ • hathe the aofea in a Whtth - gave almort iMiik. » *d-? "S/ dition I uied other *nch ' 5 as iodine, sulphur, ainc salve, ----'a \f Salve, Ointment, and In fact I was continually *frrf»g some remedy 4- -, a fair . uslikg .less' thai . * # one or t^tlaA or bottfea. All tIM* tfw firp^ess. Finally my hair ' ' and I was rapidly I used >s -- iW-,. it did l» «(»0d. A few months ;•< after, havtm naed almost everything •id**, I thOttght I would try Cuticura '"i *#ing previously used :'/•„»;« •'[ *nd being pleased witk Jh X Wtog three boxes I waa pad my hair waa fourteen years of suf- and an expendfture oT aHeaht |I0 in vainly end*wtag to » itoe. I shaU glttd to write to any one who may be:1*Miated In my cure. B. Hiram Y» * million, & Dak., Aus. It, 1 • . . . Sixty Years a Lamplighter. ' TlgMthy Beldra, who. haa dieTlî Yarmouth, î gland, at the a«» Of 82 ̂ year*, had be î in the aervfei at the moKOlhfHi «0 years, before that, as a youth, was em- | to the street oil with a flint and steel. t!t» a oou> in oms nxiT' QH!"(o«Tab!«ta. nrafr oti Mb box. tk. A man's good Judgmenl ipiallî shows up the day after. * fWimtt ̂ •>

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